Abstract

This study examined the influence of sex steroid hormones on lipid metabolism in horses. The group of 34 clinically healthy Standardbred trotters aged 2 to 4 years was studied during an exercise test. The horses were divided into groups according to their sex. These groups were: 11 stallions, 16 mares, and seven geldings. Concentrations of testosterone, 17-β-estradiol, leptin, ghrelin, glycerol, free fatty acids (FFA), and triacylglycerols (TG) were measured in plasma obtained from blood samples taken at rest and after the end of the exercise. At rest, plasma ghrelin concentration was significantly higher in geldings than in stallions and mares (1,541 ± 206 vs 1,280 ± 288 and 1,310 ± 267 pg/mL, respectively; P = .012). Leptin was lower in geldings than in mares (2.65 ± 0.93 vs 4.70 ± 2.31 ng/mL; P = .036). The post-exercise rise in plasma ghrelin and TG concentrations was significantly higher in mares than in geldings (+220 ± 330 vs -25 ± 206 pg/mL; P = .049 and 0.31 ± 0.14 vs 0.13 ± 0.15 mmol/L; P = .016, respectively). The increase in plasma FFA level was higher in geldings than in stallions (535 ± 178 vs 334 ± 191 μmol/L, P = .046). In conclusion, lipolysis rate in geldings is higher than in noncastrated trotters.

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