| Literature DB >> 26101630 |
Anna Salas1, Carmen-Loreto Manuelian1, Marta Garganté1, Núria Sanchez1, Sonia Fernández2, Marco Compagnucci1, Jose Joaquín Cerón3, Isabelle Jeusette1, Lluís Vilaseca1, Celina Torre1.
Abstract
Fat digestibility is decreased in old cats for unknown reasons. Subclinical gastrointestinal diseases and pancreatic dysfunction, both related to ageing, can affect food digestibility. The aim of the present study was to elucidate the prevalence of subnormal cobalamin concentration and pancreatic disease in old cats and study the relationship between both markers and fat digestibility. A total of sixty-four cats without evident signs of gastrointestinal disease were included and grouped according to age: (1) fifteen middle-aged (MA), aged 3-7 years; and (2) forty-nine old, aged 10-17 years. All cats were tested for serum cobalamin, specific feline pancreatic lipase (fPL) and feline trypsin-like immunoreactivity. Then, sixteen of the old cats were selected and grouped according to cobalamin and fPL concentrations: control (normal cobalamin and fPL); low vitamin B12 (cobalamin <290 ng/l; normal fPL); and high fPL (normal cobalamin; fPL >4 µg/ml). A food digestibility trial with a high-fat diet (21·6 %) was performed. In the old group, cobalamin was lower and fPL higher than in MA cats. Of the old cats (n 49), 14 % had subnormal cobalamin, 8 % had a severe increase in fPL, 2 % had both alterations and 14 % had a slight increase in fPL. By contrast, MA cats did not have cobalamin deficiency or an increase in fPL concentrations. Fat digestibility was lower in low vitamin B12 cats than control cats. Decreased fat digestibility is not present in all old cats but could be a characteristic of subclinical chronic gastrointestinal disease. Cobalamin concentration, as a marker of gastrointestinal disease, could be useful for the routine evaluation of old cats.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Cobalamin; Digestibility; Feline nutrition; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; MA, middle-aged; fPL, feline pancreatic lipase
Year: 2014 PMID: 26101630 PMCID: PMC4473153 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2014.59
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Digestibility test with old cats fed a high-fat diet: cats with normal cobalamin and feline pancreatic lipase (fPL) (controls), cats with subnormal cobalamin concentrations (low vitamin B12) and cats with high fPL
(Mean values with their standard errors; n 16)
| Control ( | Low vitamin B12 ( | High fPL ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Mean | Mean | |||||
| Initial BW (g) | 5314 | 534 | 3476 | 210 | 4963 | 632 | 0·103 |
| Final BW (g) | 5384 | 587 | 3498 | 231 | 5085 | 568 | 0·078 |
| Food intake, DM basis (g/d) | 47·1 | 5·7 | 46·6 | 2·1 | 46·6 | 7·1 | 0·836 |
| Food intake, DM basis (g/kg mBW) | 13·2 | 1·0 | 18·5* | 1·1 | 14·4 | 2·2 | 0·065 |
| Faecal output, as-is basis (g/d) | 16·4 | 2·6 | 26·8 | 4·5 | 18·9 | 2·4 | 0·127 |
| Faecal output, DM basis (g/d) | 6·2 | 0·86 | 8·3 | 0·79 | 7·3 | 0·99 | 0·327 |
| Apparent total digestibility (%) | |||||||
| DM | 87·7 | 0·37 | 83·0 | 1·00 | 83·9 | 2·0 | 0·153 |
| OM | 91·2 | 0·27 | 86·9 | 0·98 | 88·1 | 1·4 | 0·067 |
| CP | 89·8 | 0·37 | 86·3 | 1·4 | 86·8 | 1·9 | 0·311 |
| Fat (acid hydrolysis) | 92·9 | 0·71 | 83·9* | 3·1 | 89·0 | 2·1 | 0·024 |
| NFE | 94·7 | 0·31 | 93·2 | 0·74 | 92·2 | 1·2 | 0·279 |
| Metabolisable energy (kJ/kg DM) | 19 961 | 58 | 18 825* | 267 | 19 258 | 293 | 0·029 |
BW, body weight; mBW, metabolic body weight; OM, organic matter; CP, crude protein; NFE, N-free extracts.
* Mean value was significantly different from that of the control group (P < 0·05; Mann–Whitney U test with Bonferroni correction).
† Significance of the Kruskall–Wallis one-way ANOVA.