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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cortisol and blood sugar levels in dogs and puppies by birth type

By Lúcio, C F et al.·Published in Domestic animal endocrinology·2021·Department of Animal Reproduction, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Perinatal cortisol and blood glucose concentrations in bitches and neonatal puppies: effects of mode of whelping.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study looked at how different birthing methods affect stress hormones and blood sugar levels in mother dogs and their puppies. They found that when a mother dog had trouble giving birth (maternal dystocia), her stress hormone levels were higher right after delivery compared to those who had assistance with the puppies' positioning (fetal dystocia). Puppies born through difficult births, whether assisted or via C-section, had higher blood sugar levels than those born naturally. Understanding these effects can help veterinarians provide better care for both mothers and their puppies during whelping.

People also search for: dog whelping complications · puppy blood sugar levels · maternal dystocia in dogs · C-section recovery in dogs

Abstract

The decision on how and when to assist whelping is crucial for the survival rate of puppies and health status of the dam. However, medical or surgical therapy in dystocia can impact both maternal and neonatal stress and glucose response differently. This study aims to compare perinatal cortisol and glucose among different modes of delivery in bitches and neonates. We analyzed 50 puppies derived from 27 healthy bitches. According to the condition at birth, bitches and their puppies were allocated into either a Eutocia Group (vaginal birth with no whelping assistance), Fetal Dystocia Group (whelping assistance with fetal manipulation), Maternal Dystocia Group (whelping assistance because of partial uterine inertia corrected by oxytocin administration), or Cesarean Section Group (fetal or maternal dystocia bitches subjected to C-section). Maternal blood cortisol and glucose concentrations were analyzed during the perinatal period (prepartum, intrapartum, postpartum, and 1 h after postpartum). Neonatal blood samples were collected within 5 min and 1 h after birth for assessment of cortisol and glucose. Maternal dystocia bitches had higher cortisol concentrations at postpartum than the Fetal Dystocia Group. At 1 h postpartum, the Cesarean Section Group had higher cortisol concentrations compared with fetal dystocia bitches. The Eutocia Group presented increased cortisol concentrations at intrapartum and postpartum, whereas fetal dystocia bitches had higher intrapartum cortisol concentrations than at 1 h postpartum. The Maternal Dystocia Group presented higher postpartum cortisol concentrations than at prepartum and 1 h postpartum. Maternal glucose had a progressive increase throughout peripartum and was higher during postpartum and at 1 h postpartum. C-section bitches had the highest blood glucose concentration. Neonatal cortisol concentrations at birth were higher than 1 h after birth. Fetal dystocia puppies had higher cortisol concentrations, whereas caesarian section puppies had lower cortisol levels. Fetal dystocia and C-section puppies had higher glucose concentrations than the Eutocia Group. In conclusion, maternal dystocia leads to high cortisol concentrations in bitches immediately postpartum, whereas only fetal dystocia causes increased neonatal cortisol concentrations. Moreover, fetal dystocia and C-section are hyperglycemic obstetrical conditions for neonatal puppies; on the other hand, only C-section causes hyperglycemia in bitches.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32615505/