Evaluation of serum vitamin D metabolites, phagocytosis, and biomarkers of inflammation in dogs with naturally occurring diabetes mellitus
Jared A. Jaffey, Robert C. Backus, Rachael Kreisler, Thomas K. Graves, Layla Al-Nakkash, Lauren Allison

TL;DR
This study found that diabetic dogs have higher inflammation and altered immune function compared to healthy dogs, similar to people with type 1 diabetes.
Contribution
The study is the first to evaluate phagocytosis and inflammatory biomarkers in diabetic dogs and their relation to clinical control.
Findings
Diabetic dogs had higher serum CRP concentrations than healthy controls.
Uncontrolled diabetic dogs had higher IL-8 levels compared to controls.
Diabetic dogs showed reduced phagocytosis but increased bacteria uptake per cell.
Abstract
Naturally occurring diabetes mellitus (NODM) is one of the most common endocrine disorders in dogs and its etiology closely resembles type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) in people. Human patients with T1DM commonly have cellular derangements consistent with inflammation, impaired immune function, and hypovitaminosis D. There is little information available regarding inflammatory biomarkers, immune function, and vitamin D status in diabetic dogs. Therefore, our objectives were to assess inflammatory biomarkers, vitamin D metabolites, and phagocytic capacity in diabetic dogs and determine whether associations exist with these variables and the level of clinical control or vitamin D metabolites. This was a prospective case–control study that included 20 otherwise healthy diabetic dogs (clinically controlled, n = 10; uncontrolled, n = 10) and 20 non-diabetic, healthy, age (± 2 years), breed,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVitamin D Research Studies · Diabetes and associated disorders · Adrenal Hormones and Disorders
