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    Influence of feeding and other factors on adrenocorticotropin concentration and thyrotropin‐releasing hormone stimulation test in horses and ponies (2024)

    Art
    Zeitschriftenartikel / wissenschaftlicher Beitrag
    Autoren
    Drozdzewska, Karolina (WE 17)
    Winter, Judith
    Barton, Ann Kristin (WE 17)
    Merle, Roswitha (WE 16)
    Gehlen, Heidrun (WE 17)
    Quelle
    Equine veterinary journal : official journal of the British Equine Veterinary Association
    Bandzählung: 56
    Heftzählung: 2
    Seiten: 342 – 351
    ISSN: 0425-1644
    Sprache
    Englisch
    Verweise
    URL (Volltext): https://beva.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/evj.14030
    DOI: 10.1111/evj.14030
    Pubmed: 38010866
    Kontakt
    Pferdeklinik

    Oertzenweg 19 b
    14163 Berlin
    +49 30 838 62299 / 62300
    pferdeklinik@vetmed.fu-berlin.de

    Abstract / Zusammenfassung

    Background: The basal (bACTH) and post-thyrotropin-releasing hormone stimulation concentration of adrenocorticotropin (pACTH) are recommended for diagnosis of pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction (PPID). Many factors influence bACTH (e.g., disease, age, month) and some affect the results only in autumn (e.g., breed, colour, sex). There are discrepancies about the impact of feeding on b/pACTH.

    Objectives: To determine whether feeding, month, age, breed, colour, sex and body condition score affect b/pACTH.

    Study design: Prospective crossover.

    Methods: Sixty-one animals were divided into groups: healthy, PPID, treated-PPID. The b/pACTH was measured three times (1 mg protirelin; blood collection after 10 min; mid-November to mid-July) after different feedings: fasting, hay, hay + grain. Friedman's test was applied to evaluate the influence of feeding on b/pACTH and linear mixed model to evaluate impact of further factors.

    Results: The b/pACTH was not significantly affected by feeding (p = 0.7/0.5). The bACTH was lowest in healthy (29.3 pg/mL, CI 9-49.5 pg/mL) and highest in PPID-group (58.9 pg/mL, CI 39.7-78.1 pg/mL). The pACTH was significantly lower in healthy (396.7 pg/mL, CI 283.2-510.1 pg/mL) compared to PPID (588.4 pg/mL, CI 480.7-696.2 pg/mL) and treated-PPID group (683.1 pg/mL, CI 585.9-780.4 pg/mL), highest in July (881.2 pg/mL, CI 626.3-1136.3 pg/mL) and higher in grey (723.5 pg/mL, CI 577.5-869.4 pg/mL) than other colours (338.7 pg/mL, CI 324.8-452.5 pg/mL). The size of effect for those variables was >0.5.

    Main limitations: Small number of animals, subsequent bACTH measurements were significantly lower in each horse.

    Conclusions: There was no evidence that feeding influences the b/pACTH. There was evidence that pergolide affects the bACTH but it had little effect on pACTH. Further investigation of the impact of month and coat colour on b/pACTH is warranted to better interpret the results.