Retrospective evaluation of the association between admission blood glucose and l-lactate concentrations in ponies and horses with gastrointestinal disease (2008-2016): 545 cases.
Abstract: A recent study described increased l-lactate concentrations in ponies with gastrointestinal disease compared to horses, but blood glucose (BG) concentrations were not considered. The study tested the hypothesis that BG and l-lactate concentrations are correlated in horses and ponies with gastrointestinal disease and that BG concentrations, not equid type (pony vs horse), are an independent predictor of L-lactate concentrations. It was further hypothesized that equid type was an independent predictor of BG concentrations. Methods: Retrospective study 2008-2016. Methods: University teaching hospital. Methods: Admission data from 545 animals (384 horses and 161 ponies) with gastrointestinal disease. Methods: None. Results: Data collected included signalment, clinicopathological findings on admission, and nature and location of the gastrointestinal lesion (strangulating vs non-strangulating and large vs small intestinal lesion). The association between admission blood l-lactate concentrations, equid type (pony or horse) and BG concentrations was investigated in a multivariable model. Admission l-lactate and BG concentrations were strongly correlated (n = 522; r = 0.63; P < 0.001). Ponies had significantly higher l-lactate (2.7 mmol/L (0.5-18.0 mmol/L) vs 1.4 mmol/L (0.3-19 mmol/L); P < 0.001) and BG concentrations than horses (8.4 mmol/L (4.2-24.4 mmol/L); 151 mg/dL (76-439 mg/dL) vs 6.9 mmol/L (3.4-26.8 mmol/L); 124 mg/dL (61-482 mg/dL); P < 0.001). In the multivariable analysis, l-lactate concentrations were significantly and positively associated with admission BG concentrations in all animals and also with equid type. For each millimole per liter (18 mg/dL) increase in BG, l-lactate concentrations increased by 7.9% (5.9, 9.9); P < 0.001. In comparison to ponies, l-lactate concentrations were decreased by 27.7% (37.4, 16.5); P < 0.001 in horses. Admission BG concentrations were significantly and positively associated with l-lactate concentrations in all animals. For each millimole per liter increase in l-lactate concentration, BG concentration increased by 6.2% (4.7, 7.6; P < 0.001). Admission BG concentrations were not associated with equid type. Conclusions: Admission BG concentrations and equid type are independent predictors of blood l-lactate concentrations in equids with gastrointestinal disease, but their relationship requires further investigation.
© Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society 2019.
Publication Date: 2019-06-19 PubMed ID: 31215733DOI: 10.1111/vec.12851Google Scholar: Lookup
The Equine Research Bank provides access to a large database of publicly available scientific literature. Inclusion in the Research Bank does not imply endorsement of study methods or findings by Mad Barn.
- Journal Article
Summary
This research summary has been generated with artificial intelligence and may contain errors and omissions. Refer to the original study to confirm details provided. Submit correction.
The research study investigates the relationship between blood glucose and l-lactate concentrations in horses and ponies with gastrointestinal problems. The researchers found that higher levels of glucose in the blood increase l-lactate concentrations and that ponies typically have greater l-lactate concentrations than horses.
Research Aim:
- The objective of this research was to assess whether blood glucose (BG) and l-lactate concentrations are associated in horses and ponies with gastrointestinal diseases.
- The researchers hypothesized that BG levels, rather than the type of equid (horse or pony), are independently predictive of l-lactate concentrations, and that the equid type independently predicts BG concentrations.
Methodology:
- The study was retrospective and spanned from 2008 to 2016. It was conducted in a university teaching hospital.
- The sample size comprised 545 animals, including 384 horses and 161 ponies all suffering from gastrointestinal diseases.
- Data collected included information about each animal, such as species (horse or pony) and clinicopathological findings, as well as the nature and location of gastrointestinal lesions.
- A multivariable model was utilized to study the association between admission blood l-lactate concentrations, equid type, and BG concentrations.
Results:
- The results showcased a strong correlation between admission l-lactate and BG concentrations.
- Ponies had remarkably higher l-lactate and BG concentrations than horses.
- The multivariable analysis indicated that l-lactate concentrations were positively associated with BG concentrations in all animals and also with equid type. As BG increased, l-lactate concentrations did too.
- Compared to ponies, horses showed a 27.7% decrease in l-lactate concentrations.
- Admission BG levels were significantly and positively connected with l-lactate concentrations in all animals.
- However, admission BG levels were not associated with equid type.
Conclusion:
- The conclusion drawn from this study was that BG levels on admission and equid type are independent predictors of blood l-lactate concentrations in equids with gastrointestinal diseases.
- The researchers suggest further investigations are needed to understand their relationship better.
Cite This Article
APA
Dunkel B, Mason CJ, Chang YM.
(2019).
Retrospective evaluation of the association between admission blood glucose and l-lactate concentrations in ponies and horses with gastrointestinal disease (2008-2016): 545 cases.
J Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio), 29(4), 418-423.
https://doi.org/10.1111/vec.12851 Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Clinical Science and Services, The Royal Veterinary College, Herts, UK.
- Department of Clinical Science and Services, The Royal Veterinary College, Herts, UK.
- Research Support Office, The Royal Veterinary College, Herts, UK.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Blood Glucose
- Female
- Gastrointestinal Diseases / blood
- Gastrointestinal Diseases / veterinary
- Horse Diseases / blood
- Horses
- Lactic Acid / blood
- Male
- Retrospective Studies
Citations
This article has been cited 4 times.- Dunkel B, Knowles EJ, Chang YM, Menzies-Gow NJ. Influence of endocrine disease on l-lactate concentrations in blood of ponies.. J Vet Intern Med 2021 May;35(3):1582-1588.
- Vitale V, Berg LC, Larsen BB, Hannesdottir A, Dybdahl Thomsen P, Laursen SH, Verwilghen D, van Galen G. Blood glucose and subcutaneous continuous glucose monitoring in critically ill horses: A pilot study.. PLoS One 2021;16(2):e0247561.
- DeNotta SL, Divers TJ. Clinical Pathology in the Adult Sick Horse: The Gastrointestinal System and Liver.. Vet Clin North Am Equine Pract 2020 Apr;36(1):105-120.
- Dunkel B, Knowles EJ, Chang YM, Menzies-Gow NJ. Correlation between l-lactate and glucose concentrations and body condition score in healthy horses and ponies.. J Vet Intern Med 2019 Sep;33(5):2267-2271.
Use Nutrition Calculator
Check if your horse's diet meets their nutrition requirements with our easy-to-use tool Check your horse's diet with our easy-to-use tool
Talk to a Nutritionist
Discuss your horse's feeding plan with our experts over a free phone consultation Discuss your horse's diet over a phone consultation
Submit Diet Evaluation
Get a customized feeding plan for your horse formulated by our equine nutritionists Get a custom feeding plan formulated by our nutritionists