| Literature DB >> 28132441 |
M J Reimann1, J Häggström2, J E Møller3, J Lykkesfeldt1, T Falk4, L H Olsen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease has been associated with oxidative stress, which has been suggested to contribute to myocardial remodeling in human patients. Little is known about the relationship between myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) and oxidative stress in dogs.Entities:
Keywords: Malondialdehyde; Oxidized low-density lipoprotein; Valvular disease; Vitamin E
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28132441 PMCID: PMC5354038 DOI: 10.1111/jvim.14647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vet Intern Med ISSN: 0891-6640 Impact factor: 3.333
Dog characteristics, echocardiographic variables, cardiac troponin‐I, and concentrations of plasma oxidative stress markers in 75 dogs with no or different severities of myxomatous mitral valve disease
| Disease group | N | A | B1 | B2 | C |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total number | 75 | 14 | 27 | 18 | 16 |
| Sex (female/male) | 75 | 7/7 | 18/9 | 9/9 | 2/14 |
| Age (years) | 75 | 4.8 [4.2;5.9]B1,C | 6.5 [6.0;7.8]A,C | 7.5 [5.3;8.4]C | 11.0 [9.6;12.9]A,B1,B2 |
| BCS (3 + 4/5/6 + 7) | 72 | 4/7/3 | 5/10/11 | 4/8/6 | 2/4/8 |
| BW | 74 | 8.3 [7.6;8.8]C | 9.4 [7.9;10.5] | 9.1 [8.4;10.4] | 11.0 [9.9;13.1]A |
| Passive smoking (y/n) | 75 | 6/8 | 6/21 | 4/14 | 3/13 |
| Neutered (y/n) | 75 | 2/12 | 4/23 | 3/15 | 3/13 |
| SBP (mmHg) | 61 | 151 [140;164] | 154 [143;162] | 147 [138;155] | 150 [143;162] |
| DBP (mmHg) | 61 | 81 [69;87] | 79 [74;88] | 76 [74;79] | 86 [79;92] |
| MBP (mmHg) | 61 | 102 [100;109] | 105 [99;112] | 100 [98;107] | 108 [102;116] |
| MR severity (mini/mi/mo or se) | 75 | 14/0/0 | 2/19/6 | 0/7/11 | 0/0/16 |
| LA/Ao | 75 | 1.3 [1.2;1.4] | 1.4 [1.4;1.5] | 1.6 [1.6;1.8] | 2.2 [2.0;2.5] |
| LVIDDN | 74 | 1.5 [1.4;1.5]B2,C | 1.6 [1.4;1.6]C | 1.6 [1.5;1.8]A,C | 2.1 [1.9;2.3]A,B1,B2 |
| LVIDSN | 74 | 1.0 [1.0;1.1] | 1.0 [1.0;1.1] | 1.1 [1.0;1.2] | 1.2 [1.1;1.4] |
| FS (%) | 75 | 26 [24;32]C | 29 [23;33]C | 31 [24;38] | 41 [32;45]A, B1 |
| LVPWDN | 74 | 0.5 [0.4;0.5] | 0.5 [0.4;0.5] | 0.5 [0.4;0.5] | 0.5 [0.4;0.5] |
| LVPWSN | 74 | 0.6 [0.5;0.6] | 0.6 [0.5;0.6] | 0.6 [0.6;0.7] | 0.6 [0.5;0.6] |
| IVSDN | 74 | 0.4 [0.3;0.4] | 0.4 [0.4;0.5] | 0.4 [0.4;0.5] | 0.4 [0.4;0.4] |
| IVSSN | 74 | 0.5 [0.4;0.5]C | 0.5 [0.5;0.6]C | 0.5 [0.4;0.6] | 0.6 [0.6;0.6]A,B1 |
| Plasma cTnI (μg/L) | 75 | 0.01 [0.01;0.02]C | 0.03 [0.01;0.03]C | 0.03 [0.01;0.04] | 0.04 [0.03;0.08]A,B1 |
| Serum cholesterol (mmol/L) | 75 | 5.3 [5.0;7.4] | 6.4 [5.3;8.0] | 6.2 [4.7;6.8]C | 7.4 [6.4;8.8]B2 |
| Plasma MDA (μmol/L) | 74 | 1.10 [0.83;1.29] | 1.05 [0.84;1.30] | 0.92 [0.72;1.24] | 1.04 [0.86;1.12] |
| Plasma OxLDL (U/L) | 74 | 5.65 [4.92;6.45] | 5.73 [5.10;6.82] | 6.27 [5.50;6.55] | 6.07 [5.43;7.16] |
| Plasma α‐tocopherol (μmol/L) | 75 | 45.36 [38.22;52.83] | 58.48 [46.69;76.30] | 54.92 [47.34;61.13] | 59.63 [45.27;73.18] |
| Plasma γ‐tocopherol (μmol/L) | 75 | 0.98 [0.72;1.16] | 0.94 [0.69;1.03] | 0.81 [0.61;0.95] | 0.94 [0.74;1.32] |
BCS, body condition score; BW, body weight; cTnI, cardiac troponin‐I; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; FS, fractional shortening; IVSDN, interventricular septal thickness in diastole normalized for BW; IVSSN, interventricular septal thickness in systole normalized for BW; LA/Ao, ratio of left atrium to aortic root; LVIDDN, left ventricular end‐diastolic diameter normalized for BW; LVIDSN, left ventricular end‐systolic diameter normalized for BW; LVPWDN, left ventricular free wall thickness in diastole normalized for BW; LVPWSN, left ventricular free wall thickness in systole normalized for BW; MBP, mean blood pressure; MR, mitral regurgitation by jet area method where mini=minimal, mi=mild, mo=moderate, se=severe (mini: <20%, mi:20–50%, mo or se: >50%); SBP, systolic blood pressure. Values reported are median and interquartiles. Within each row, superscripts A,B1,B2,Crepresent the group from which there is statistically significant difference.
Sex (P = .008) differed significantly among disease groups.
P values of the univariable analyses in 75 dogs with no or different severities of myxomatous mitral valve disease
| Response Variables | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDA | OxLDL | α‐tocopherol | γ‐tocopherol | |
| Explanatory variables | ||||
| Disease group | 0.73 | 0.56 | 0.51 | 0.42 |
| Sex |
|
| 0.92 | 0.52 |
| Age | 0.88 | 0.53 | 0.20 | 0.52 |
| BCS |
| 0.31 |
|
|
| Passive smoking (y/n) | 0.85 | 0.25 | 0.28 | 0.27 |
| Neutered (y/n) | 0.52 | 0.28 | 0.24 |
|
| cTnI | 0.75 | 0.90 |
| 0.90 |
| Cholesterol |
|
|
|
|
BCS, body condition score; cTnI, cardiac troponin‐I; MDA=malondialdehyde; oxLDL=oxidized low‐density lipoprotein; bold values represent variables with P < .2 that are included in multivariable regression analysis.
The statistical analysis of MDA and oxLDL included 74 dogs as 1 dog was excluded (outlier).
Figure 1Raw data plot of plasma oxidized low‐density lipoprotein (oxLDL) concentrations in males and females. Medians are indicated with horizontal lines. Horizontal bars indicate statistically significant comparisons and their P values from multivariable regression analysis. n = 74.
Figure 2Raw data plot of plasma α‐tocopherol concentrations in the different body condition score (BCS) groups. Medians are indicated with horizontal lines. Horizontal bars indicate statistically significant comparisons and their P values from multivariable regression analysis. n = 72.
Figure 3Raw data plot of plasma γ‐tocopherol concentrations and neuter status. Medians are indicated with horizontal lines. Horizontal bars indicate statistically significant comparisons and their P values from multivariable regression analysis. n = 75.
Figure 4Raw data plot of plasma γ‐tocopherol concentrations in the different body condition score (BCS) groups. Red symbols indicate dogs that are neutered. Medians are indicated with horizontal lines. Horizontal bars indicate statistically significant comparisons and their P values from multivariable regression analysis. n = 72.