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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Mild to moderate overweight in dogs and its effects on blood

By Vieira, Aline Bomfim et al.·Published in Veterinary research communications·2022·Biomedical Department·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Mild to moderate overweight in dogs: is there an impact on routine hematological and biochemical profiles, echocardiographic parameters and cardiac autonomic modulation?

Species:
dog
Canine obesityAppetite & weightDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs, including 24 overweight dogs and 9 healthy lean dogs, were studied to see how being mildly to moderately overweight affects their health. While the overweight dogs had some increased protein and phosphorus levels, all their blood tests were still within normal ranges. There were no significant changes in heart structure, but the overweight dogs showed signs of reduced heart function related to the nervous system. This suggests that even mild overweight can impact a dog's heart health, indicating that pet owners should be aware of their dog's weight and its potential effects on overall health.

People also search for: dog weight management · signs of overweight dog · heart health in overweight dogs

Abstract

Obesity is considered the most common nutritional disease of dogs. Even though overt obesity is more likely to impair health, even moderately overweight dogs are at greater risk for requiring medication for chronic health problems earlier in life. Although the number of overweight dogs far exceeds the number of obese ones, most of the studies published so far focused on derangements in a mixed overweight/obese population (Body condition score - BCS ≥7/9) rather than in separated groups. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of mild to moderate obesity on routine hematological and biochemical profile and cardiovascular parameters in dogs. Nine healthy lean (BCS =4-5/9) and 24 overweight dogs (BCS = 6-7/9) were enrolled. Complete blood count, serum biochemistry analyses, echocardiographic parameters, and cardiac autonomic function by heart rate variability (HRV) were determined. In our study population, although total protein, globulin and phosphorus concentrations were increased in overweight compared to lean dogs, all complete blood count and biochemical parameters were within reference ranges for both groups. Parameters usually increased in obese dogs, like triglycerides and cholesterol concentrations, were within reference ranges in our overweight population. There were no significant changes in echocardiographic parameters, but HRV had a significant decrease in high frequency (HF) power (P = 0.02), suggesting a depression in parasympathetic activity. Our findings show that mild to moderate overweight dogs do not show the hematological and echocardiographic alterations already reported for mixed overweight/obese populations but might have impaired cardiac autonomic modulation. Although not enough to make conclusions, our data raise the question of whether research studies should place overweight and obese dogs in the same category.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35018593/