SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA)

Cobalamin and folate are water-soluble vitamins that are useful indicators of chronic gastrointestinal (GI) function in humans and some animal species. Serum cobalamin and folate concentrations in an ex situ population of killer whales (Orcinus orca) were measured and factors that may affect their s...

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Published in:Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine
Main Authors: Karisa N. Tang, Hendrik H. Nollens, Todd R. Robeck, Todd L. Schmitt
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: American Association of Zoo Veterinarians 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1638/2017-0102.1
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spelling ftbioone:10.1638/2017-0102.1 2023-07-30T04:06:10+02:00 SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA) Karisa N. Tang Hendrik H. Nollens Todd R. Robeck Todd L. Schmitt Karisa N. Tang Hendrik H. Nollens Todd R. Robeck Todd L. Schmitt world 2018-09-01 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1638/2017-0102.1 en eng American Association of Zoo Veterinarians doi:10.1638/2017-0102.1 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1638/2017-0102.1 Text 2018 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1638/2017-0102.1 2023-07-09T10:52:18Z Cobalamin and folate are water-soluble vitamins that are useful indicators of chronic gastrointestinal (GI) function in humans and some animal species. Serum cobalamin and folate concentrations in an ex situ population of killer whales (Orcinus orca) were measured and factors that may affect their serum concentrations were identified. Serum samples (n = 104) were analyzed from killer whales (n = 10) both while clinically healthy and during periods of clinical GI disease as defined by clinical signs and fecal cytology. To characterize serum cobalamin and folate concentrations in clinically healthy animals, a mixed-model regression was used, with cobalamin and folate both significantly affected by weight (cobalamin: P < 0.0001, folate: P = 0.006) and season (cobalamin: P < 0.0001, folate: P < 0.0001). The marginal mean concentrations for cobalamin and folate across weight and season were 742 ± 53.6 ng/L and 30.2 ± 2.6 μg/L, respectively. The predicted 95% confidence intervals (CI) for these analytes were then compared with samples collected during periods of GI disease. Across individuals, 22% (2/9) of the folate and 80% (8/10) of the cobalamin samples from the animals with GI disease fell outside the 95% CI for the population. When comparing samples within an individual, a similar pattern presented, with 100% of cobalamin of the observed abnormal samples reduced compared to healthy animal concentration variability. The same was not true for folate. These results suggest that serum concentrations of cobalamin and folate may be useful minimally invasive markers to identify GI disease in killer whales, especially when values are compared within an individual. Text Orca Orcinus orca BioOne Online Journals Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 49 3 564 572
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description Cobalamin and folate are water-soluble vitamins that are useful indicators of chronic gastrointestinal (GI) function in humans and some animal species. Serum cobalamin and folate concentrations in an ex situ population of killer whales (Orcinus orca) were measured and factors that may affect their serum concentrations were identified. Serum samples (n = 104) were analyzed from killer whales (n = 10) both while clinically healthy and during periods of clinical GI disease as defined by clinical signs and fecal cytology. To characterize serum cobalamin and folate concentrations in clinically healthy animals, a mixed-model regression was used, with cobalamin and folate both significantly affected by weight (cobalamin: P < 0.0001, folate: P = 0.006) and season (cobalamin: P < 0.0001, folate: P < 0.0001). The marginal mean concentrations for cobalamin and folate across weight and season were 742 ± 53.6 ng/L and 30.2 ± 2.6 μg/L, respectively. The predicted 95% confidence intervals (CI) for these analytes were then compared with samples collected during periods of GI disease. Across individuals, 22% (2/9) of the folate and 80% (8/10) of the cobalamin samples from the animals with GI disease fell outside the 95% CI for the population. When comparing samples within an individual, a similar pattern presented, with 100% of cobalamin of the observed abnormal samples reduced compared to healthy animal concentration variability. The same was not true for folate. These results suggest that serum concentrations of cobalamin and folate may be useful minimally invasive markers to identify GI disease in killer whales, especially when values are compared within an individual.
author2 Karisa N. Tang
Hendrik H. Nollens
Todd R. Robeck
Todd L. Schmitt
format Text
author Karisa N. Tang
Hendrik H. Nollens
Todd R. Robeck
Todd L. Schmitt
spellingShingle Karisa N. Tang
Hendrik H. Nollens
Todd R. Robeck
Todd L. Schmitt
SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA)
author_facet Karisa N. Tang
Hendrik H. Nollens
Todd R. Robeck
Todd L. Schmitt
author_sort Karisa N. Tang
title SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA)
title_short SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA)
title_full SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA)
title_fullStr SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA)
title_full_unstemmed SERUM COBALAMIN AND FOLATE CONCENTRATIONS AS INDICATORS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE IN KILLER WHALES (ORCINUS ORCA)
title_sort serum cobalamin and folate concentrations as indicators of gastrointestinal disease in killer whales (orcinus orca)
publisher American Association of Zoo Veterinarians
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.1638/2017-0102.1
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genre Orca
Orcinus orca
genre_facet Orca
Orcinus orca
op_source https://doi.org/10.1638/2017-0102.1
op_relation doi:10.1638/2017-0102.1
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1638/2017-0102.1
container_title Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine
container_volume 49
container_issue 3
container_start_page 564
op_container_end_page 572
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