Age and body weight effects on glucose and insulin tolerance in colony cats maintained since weaning on high dietary carbohydrate
Authors: Backus R., Cave N., Ganjam V., Turner J., Biourge V.
Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition, December 2010; 94(6): e318-28.
doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0396.2010.01014.x.
Abstract
High dietary carbohydrate is suggested to promote development of diabetes mellitus in cats. Glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and insulin secretion were assessed in young [0.8–2.3 (median = 1.1) years, n = 13] and mature [4.0–7.0 (median 5.8) years, n = 12] sexually intact females of a large (n ≅ 700) feline colony in which only dry-type diets (35% metabolizable energy as carbohydrate) were fed from weaning. Insulin sensitivity was assessed from the ‘late-phase’ (60–120 min) plasma insulin response of intravenous glucose tolerance tests (IVGTTs) and from fractional change in glycaemia from baseline 15 min after an insulin bolus (0.1 U/kg, i.v.). Insulin secretion was assessed from the ‘early-phase’ (0 - 15 min) plasma insulin response of IVGTTs. Compared to the young cats, the mature cats had greater body weights [2.3–3.8 (median = 2.9) vs. 3.0–6.3 (median = 4.0) kg, p < 0.01], greater late-phase insulin responses (p < 0.05), lower insulin-induced glycaemic changes (p = 0.06), lower early-phase insulin responses (p < 0.05), and non-significantly different rates of glucose disposal. The late-phase insulin response was correlated with body weight and age (p < 0.05). When group assignments were balanced for body weight, the age-group differences and correlations became non-significant. The findings indicate that body weight gain is more likely than dry-type diets to induce the pre-diabetic conditions of insulin resistance and secretion dysfunction.
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