Abstract

Simple SummaryObesity in dogs can induce many adverse health effects including musculoskeletal problems, respiratory distress, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular diseases. In humans with obesity, heart rate variability (HRV) is used to identify and predict the risk of cardiovascular diseases. However, this predictive tool has never been used in veterinary medicine, and the relationship between obesity and HRV has rarely been investigated. In this study, we investigated HRV, plasma oxidative stress (MDA), and cardiac function in obese male dogs. We hypothesized that obese male dogs have decreased cardiac function and impaired HRV compared to non-obese dogs. Our study found that obese dogs have decreased cardiac systolic function and impaired HRV, as indicated by reduced percentages of cardiac contraction and impaired cardiac autonomic activity compared to non-obese dogs. We concluded that obesity can decrease systolic function and cause HRV impairment, which might increase the risk of cardiovascular disease in dogs. In addition, HRV might be used as a predictive or prognostic tool in the prevention of cardiovascular disease in obese dogs.Obesity can induce cardiovascular diseases in both humans and animals. Heart rate variability (HRV) is an indicator of sympathovagal balance and is used to identify cardiovascular diseases in humans. However, HRV and cardiac function have rarely been investigated in obese dogs. This study investigated the effect of obesity on oxidative stress, HRV, and cardiac function in obese and non-obese dogs. The nine-scale body condition score (BCS) system was used to determine obesity. Thirty small breed dogs were divided into a normal weight group (n = 15) and an obese group (n = 15). All dogs underwent physical examination, plasma malondialdehyde (MDA) measurement, electrocardiography, echocardiography, and two hours of Holter monitoring. This study found that obese dogs had increased plasma MDA and sympathovagal imbalance, which was indicated by impaired time and frequency domains compared to normal weight dogs. Although cardiac function was within normal limits, the echocardiographic study found that the obese dogs had reduced cardiac wall thickness and lower systolic function, as indicated by a reduction in %ejection fraction, %fractional shortening, increased left ventricular (LV) internal diameter during systole, and LV end-systolic volume compared to normal weight dogs. This study concluded that obesity in dogs can induce increased plasma oxidative stress, impaired HRV, and reduced cardiac systolic function compared to non-obese dogs.

Highlights

  • Obesity is a nutritional disorder that can be found in dog populations [1]

  • We investigated the effects of obesity on blood profile, cardiac performance, as indicated by echocardiography and electrocardiography, Heart rate variability (HRV), and oxidative stress in obese intact male dogs compared with non-obese intact male dogs

  • This study found that the normalized values of the left ventricular posterior wall end-systole (LVPWs) and end-diastole (LVPWd) were decreased, whereas LV mass and LV mass index were increased in obese dogs compared to normal weight dogs (Tables 3 and 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity is a nutritional disorder that can be found in dog populations [1]. 29–34% of dogs were classed as overweight and 5–8% were judged obese [2]. A 25–52% prevalence of obese dogs has been reported in developed countries [3]. Another study suggested that there are various methods for assessing body composition, observed body weight (BW) to standard body weight and determining BCS category [4]. Regarding comparison of observed BW to standard BW, if the observed body weight is greater than 15% of the standard BW, the dog is considered obese [5]. BCS category is the most widely accepted clinical method which uses visual and palpable characteristics [6]

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