Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Hisaeda Keiichi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code R000007730
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Differences in serum iron concentrations between the summer and winter in Noma horses

Bibliography Type

Joint Author

Author

Keiichi HISAEDA Tetsushi ONO Takako SHIMOKAWA-MIYAMA Akihisa HATA Eri IWATA Yasuharu HIASA Emi OHZAWA Teruaki TOZAKI Harutaka MURASE Masaki TAKASU Naohito NISHII Hitoshi KITAGAWA

Summary

We examined the differences in serum iron (Fe) concentrations and related variables between summer and winter in Noma horses. Blood samples were collected from 37 clinically normal horses seven consecutive times: September 2018, February 2019, October 2019, February 2020, September 2020, February 2021, and February 2022. Serum Fe concentrations ranged from 74 μg/dl to 316 μg/dl with a median of 176 μg/dl. The concentrations were lower in stallions compared with mares and geldings, tended to be low at 10-14 years of age, and then increased with age. Serum Fe concentrations were repeatedly low in summer and high in winter. Total iron-binding capacity (TIBC), Fe-saturation rate, hemoglobin (Hb), hematocrit (Ht), MCV, MCH, albumin, cholesterol, sodium (Na), potassium (K), chloride (Cl), and calcium (Ca) were lower in summer than in winter. However, creatinine, total protein, inorganic phosphorus, and Mg were higher in summer. The unsaturated iron-binding capacity, RBC count, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), glucose, and AST levels were not significantly different. Serum Fe concentrations were positively correlated with Hb, TIBC, Fe saturation rate, Ht, MCV, MCH, creatinine, albumin, glucose, cholesterol, AST, Na, Cl, and Ca, but negatively correlated with BUN and K. In Noma horses, serum Fe concentrations might be higher than the reference values for horses and consistently decrease in summer in parallel with Hb and MCV. The lowering of the serum Fe concentrations in summer may be due to a combination of the effects of Fe loss from sweating, dermatitis, insect bites, dietary composition, and/or unknown factors.

Magazine(name)

Journal of Equine Science

Publisher

Volume

36

Number Of Pages

1

StartingPage

1

EndingPage

9

Date of Issue

2025/03

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

DOI

10,1294/jes.36.1

NAID

PMID

URL

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID