Naslov (eng)

Association of acute Babesia canis infection and serum lipid, lipoprotein and apoprotein concentrations in dogs

Autor

Milanović, Zorana
Vekić, Jelena
Radonjić, Vladimir
Ilić Božović, Anja
Zeljković, Aleksandra
Janac, Jelena
Spasojević-Kalimanovska, Vesna
Buch, Jesse
Chandrashekar, Ramaswamy
Bojić-Trbojević, Žanka
Hajduković, Ljiljana
Christopher, Mary M.
Kovačević Filipović, Milica

Publisher

ACVIM American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine

Opis (eng)

ABSTRACT Background: Babesia canis infection induces a marked acute phase response (APR) that might be associated with alteration in lipid and lipoprotein metabolism and disease prognosis. Hypothesis: Dogs with B. canis-induced APR develop dyslipidemia with altered lipoprotein concentration and morphology. Animals: Twenty-nine client-owned dogs with acute B. canis infection and 10 clinically healthy control dogs. Methods: Observational cross-sectional study. Serum amyloid A (SAA) was measured using ELISA. Cholesterol, phospholipids, and triglycerides were determined biochemically. Lipoproteins were separated using agarose gel electrophoresis. Lipoprotein diameter was assessed by polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis; correlation with ApoA-1 (radioimmunoassay) and SAA was determined. Results: Dogs with B. canis infection had a marked APR (median SAA, 168.3 μg/mL; range, 98.1-716.2 μg/mL) compared with controls (3.2 μg/mL, 2.0-4.2 μg/mL) (P< .001). Dogs with B. canis infection had significantly lower median cholesterol (4.79 mmol/L, 1.89-7.64 mmol/L versus 6.15 mmol/L, 4.2-7.4 mmol/L) (P = .02), phospholipid (4.64 mmol/L, 2.6-6.6 mmol/L versus 5.72 mmol/L, 4.68-7.0 mmol/L) (P = .02), and α-lipoproteins (77.5%, 27.7%-93.5% versus 89.2%, 75.1%-93.5%) (P = .04), and higher ApoA-1 (1.36 U, 0.8-2.56 U versus 0.95 U, 0.73-1.54 U) concentrations (P = .02). Serum amyloid A correlated with high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) diameter (rho = .43; P = .03) and ApoA-1 (rho = .63, P < .001). Conclusions and clinical importance: Major changes associated with B. canis-induced APR in dogs are related to concentration, composition, and morphology of HDL particles pointing to an altered reverse cholesterol transport. Parallel ApoA-1 and SAA concentration increase is a unique still unexplained pathophysiological finding.

Jezik

engleski

Datum

2019

Licenca

Creative Commons licenca
Ovo delo je licencirano pod uslovima licence
Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 - Creative Commons Autorstvo - Nekomercijalno - Bez prerada 4.0 International License.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode

Predmet

acute phase response; apolipoprotein A-1; high-density lipoprotein; lipoprotein diameter; serum amyloid A

Deo kolekcije (1)

o:25140 Radovi Instituta za primenu nuklearne energije - INEP