Document detail
ID

oai:www.zora.uzh.ch:237163

Topic
Institute of Veterinary Physiology... Department of Small Animals Chair in Veterinary Epidemiology Department of Clinical Diagnostics... Center for Clinical Studies 570 Life sciences biology General Veterinary
Author
Kämpf, Sandra Fenk, Simone Van Cromvoirt, Ankie Bogdanov, Nikolay Hartnack, Sonja Stirn, Martina Hofmann-Lehmann, Regina Reichler, Iris Margaret Bogdanova, Anna
Langue
eng
Editor

Frontiers Research Foundation

Category

Subjects = 05 Vetsuisse Faculty: Chair in Veterinary Epidemiology

Year

2023

listing date

10/12/2023

Keywords
parameters lower objective plasma veterinary significantly bc dogs nc boas compared blood brachycephalic
Metrics

Abstract

IntroductionCranial and upper-airway anatomy of short-nosed, flat-faced brachycephalic dogs predisposes them to brachycephalic obstructive airway syndrome (BOAS).

Periodic apnoea increased inspiratory resistance, and an inability to thermoregulate effectively are characteristic of BOAS, but internationally accepted objective markers of BOAS severity are missing.

The objective of this study was to compare the selected blood parameters between non-brachycephalic (NC) and brachycephalic (BC) dogs, exploring the possibility of developing a blood test for BOAS severity grading in the future.MethodsWe evaluated blood biochemistry, complete blood cell counts, red blood cell (RBC) indices, reticulocyte counts, a blood-born marker of intermittent hypoxia (glutathione, NO production), RBC hydration, deformability, and blood markers of metabolic changes and stress between BC (n = 18) and NC (meso- and dolichocephalic, n = 22) dogs.ResultsReticulocyte counts and the abundance of middle-fluorescence immature reticulocytes were significantly (p < 0.05) higher in BC dogs compared to NC dogs.

BC dogs had significantly more NO-derived NO/NO in plasma than NC dogs.

RBCs of BC dogs were shedding significantly more membrane, as follows from the intensity of eosin maleimide staining, and had a significantly higher mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration than NC dogs.

Intracellular reduced glutathione content in RBCs of BC dogs was significantly lower, while plasma lactate was significantly higher in BC dogs compared to NC dogs.

Plasma cholesterol and triglycerides were significantly lower, and cortisol was significantly higher in BC dogs compared to NC dogs.

Eosinophil counts were significantly lower and the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio was higher in BC dogs compared to NC dogs.DiscussionTaken together, our findings suggest that the brachycephalic phenotype in dogs is associated with alterations at the level of blood cells and, systemically, with oxidation and metabolic changes.

The parameters identified within this study should be further investigated for their potential as objective indicators for BOAS.

Kämpf, Sandra,Fenk, Simone,Van Cromvoirt, Ankie,Bogdanov, Nikolay,Hartnack, Sonja,Stirn, Martina,Hofmann-Lehmann, Regina,Reichler, Iris Margaret,Bogdanova, Anna, 2023, Differences in selected blood parameters between brachycephalic and non-brachycephalic dogs, Frontiers Research Foundation

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