Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Insulin and hormone levels in diabetic remission cats versus healthy
By Gottlieb, Susan et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·The Cat Clinic, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Measures of insulin sensitivity, leptin, and adiponectin concentrations in cats in diabetic remission compared to healthy control cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 20 cats that had diabetes but were in remission for about 3 months were studied to see how their hormone levels compared to 21 healthy cats. The researchers found that the diabetic cats in remission had higher blood sugar and insulin levels, indicating ongoing insulin resistance, which is a problem that can lead to a relapse of diabetes. They also noted increased levels of leptin, a hormone related to fat storage, but no significant differences in another hormone called adiponectin. The study suggests that even when diabetic cats seem to be doing well, they still need careful management to prevent a return of their diabetes.
People also search for: cat diabetes remission management · insulin resistance in cats · diabetic cat hormone levels
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Firstly, to compare differences in insulin, adiponectin, leptin, and measures of insulin sensitivity between diabetic cats in remission and healthy control cats, and determine whether these are predictors of diabetic relapse. Secondly, to determine if these hormones are associated with serum metabolites known to differ between groups. Thirdly, if any of the hormonal or identified metabolites are associated with measures of insulin sensitivity. ANIMALS: Twenty cats in diabetic remission for a median of 101 days, and 21 healthy matched control cats. METHODS: A casual blood glucose measured on admission to the clinic. Following a 24 h fast, a fasted blood glucose was measured, and blood sample taken for hormone (i.e., insulin, leptin, and adiponectin) and untargeted metabolomic (GC-MS and LC-MS) analysis. A simplified IVGGT (1 g glucose/kg) was performed 3 h later. Cats were monitored for diabetes relapse for at least 9 months (270 days). RESULTS: Cats in diabetic remission had significantly higher serum glucose and insulin concentrations, and decreased insulin sensitivity as indicated by an increase in HOMA and decrease in QUICKI and Bennett indices. Leptin was significantly increased, but there was no difference in adiponectin (or body condition score). Several significant correlations were found between insulin sensitivity indices, leptin, and serum metabolites identified as significantly different between remission and control cats. No metabolites were significantly correlated with adiponectin. No predictors of relapse were identified in this study. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Insulin resistance, an underlying factor in diabetic cats, persists in diabetic remission. Cats in remission should be managed to avoid further exacerbating insulin resistance.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35968003/