Influence of hospital-induced stress on blood glucose concentrations, serum concentrations of cortisol, thyroxine and bile acids, and behaviour in cats.
{"title":"Influence of hospital-induced stress on blood glucose concentrations, serum concentrations of cortisol, thyroxine and bile acids, and behaviour in cats.","authors":"Kanoklada Koomgun, Naris Thengchaisri, Win Surachetpong, Sathidpak Nantasanti Assawarachan, Kreevith Prompinichpong, Amonrat Thongbai, Jörg M Steiner, Panpicha Sattasathuchana","doi":"10.1177/1098612X251320254","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>ObjectivesStress-induced transient hyperglycaemia may complicate the diagnosis of disease-related hyperglycaemia in cats during hospital visits. This study aimed to define the optimal acclimatisation period for reliable blood glucose measurements and determine the effect of hospital stress on physiological (heart rate [HR] and respiratory rate [RR]), behavioural (Cat Stress Score [CSS]) and metabolic (glucose, cortisol, total thyroxine [TT4] and bile acids [BA]) variables in cats.MethodsA total of 10 healthy cats were evaluated at home and during hospitalisation. Blood glucose was measured hourly for 10 h after withholding food. HR, RR and CSS were determined at T01, T04 and T10. Serum cortisol, TT4 and BA were evaluated at T01 and T10.ResultsStress-induced hyperglycaemia was observed in the hospital. The acclimatisation cut-off time for the cats' return to euglycaemia was 6 h. Cats with hyperglycaemia had a higher CSS than cats with euglycaemia (<i>P</i> <0.001). Elevated HR, RR, CSS, glucose and cortisol concentrations were observed in cats at the hospital compared with those at home (<i>P</i> <0.001), while BA concentrations were significantly lower at the hospital (<i>P</i> <0.001). Significant interactions between time and place were identified for CSS, cortisol, BA concentrations (<i>P</i> <0.001) and glucose (<i>P</i> <i>=</i> 0.009). Notably, CSS and concentrations of cortisol remained stable when the cats were at home but decreased over time in the hospital. Conversely, BA concentrations were stable during the period in the hospital but decreased over time at home. There was a moderate positive correlation for serum cortisol and CSS (ρ = 0.6621; <i>P</i> <0.001) and for blood glucose (ρ = 0.4999, <i>P</i> <0.001).Conclusions and relevanceStress from hospital visits impacts clinical and laboratory results in cats. Our study would suggest that healthy cats that experience stress-induced hyperglycaemia should be acclimatised for at least 6 h before re-evaluation. Similar studies in sick cats should be conducted.</p>","PeriodicalId":15851,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery","volume":"27 4","pages":"1098612X251320254"},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2025-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12035129/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/1098612X251320254","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2025/4/14 0:00:00","PubModel":"Epub","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"VETERINARY SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ObjectivesStress-induced transient hyperglycaemia may complicate the diagnosis of disease-related hyperglycaemia in cats during hospital visits. This study aimed to define the optimal acclimatisation period for reliable blood glucose measurements and determine the effect of hospital stress on physiological (heart rate [HR] and respiratory rate [RR]), behavioural (Cat Stress Score [CSS]) and metabolic (glucose, cortisol, total thyroxine [TT4] and bile acids [BA]) variables in cats.MethodsA total of 10 healthy cats were evaluated at home and during hospitalisation. Blood glucose was measured hourly for 10 h after withholding food. HR, RR and CSS were determined at T01, T04 and T10. Serum cortisol, TT4 and BA were evaluated at T01 and T10.ResultsStress-induced hyperglycaemia was observed in the hospital. The acclimatisation cut-off time for the cats' return to euglycaemia was 6 h. Cats with hyperglycaemia had a higher CSS than cats with euglycaemia (P <0.001). Elevated HR, RR, CSS, glucose and cortisol concentrations were observed in cats at the hospital compared with those at home (P <0.001), while BA concentrations were significantly lower at the hospital (P <0.001). Significant interactions between time and place were identified for CSS, cortisol, BA concentrations (P <0.001) and glucose (P= 0.009). Notably, CSS and concentrations of cortisol remained stable when the cats were at home but decreased over time in the hospital. Conversely, BA concentrations were stable during the period in the hospital but decreased over time at home. There was a moderate positive correlation for serum cortisol and CSS (ρ = 0.6621; P <0.001) and for blood glucose (ρ = 0.4999, P <0.001).Conclusions and relevanceStress from hospital visits impacts clinical and laboratory results in cats. Our study would suggest that healthy cats that experience stress-induced hyperglycaemia should be acclimatised for at least 6 h before re-evaluation. Similar studies in sick cats should be conducted.
目的:应激诱导的短暂性高血糖可能使猫在医院就诊时疾病相关高血糖的诊断复杂化。本研究旨在确定可靠血糖测量的最佳适应期,并确定医院应激对猫的生理(心率[HR]和呼吸频率[RR])、行为(猫应激评分[CSS])和代谢(葡萄糖、皮质醇、总甲状腺素[TT4]和胆胆酸[BA])变量的影响。方法对10只健康猫在家中和住院期间进行评估。停止进食10小时后,每小时测量一次血糖。在T01、T04和T10测定HR、RR和CSS。在T01和T10时测定血清皮质醇、TT4和BA。结果在医院观察到应激性高血糖。猫恢复血糖的适应截止时间为6小时。高血糖猫的CSS高于低血糖猫(P P P P = 0.009)。值得注意的是,当猫在家时,CSS和皮质醇浓度保持稳定,但随着住院时间的推移而下降。相反,BA浓度在住院期间是稳定的,但随着在家时间的推移而下降。血清皮质醇与CSS呈正相关(ρ = 0.6621;P P
期刊介绍:
JFMS is an international, peer-reviewed journal aimed at both practitioners and researchers with an interest in the clinical veterinary healthcare of domestic cats. The journal is published monthly in two formats: ‘Classic’ editions containing high-quality original papers on all aspects of feline medicine and surgery, including basic research relevant to clinical practice; and dedicated ‘Clinical Practice’ editions primarily containing opinionated review articles providing state-of-the-art information for feline clinicians, along with other relevant articles such as consensus guidelines.