Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Saeki Kaori
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code R000000677
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Effect of glimepiride and nateglinide on serum insulin and glucose concentration in healthy cats  

Bibliography Type

Author

A. Mori, P. Lee, T. Yamashita, Y. Nishimaki, H. Oda, K. Saeki, Y. Miki, H. Mizutani, K. Ishioka, T. Honjo, T. Arai, T. Sako

Summary

Glimepiride and nateglinide are two common oral hypoglycemic agents currently being used with humans suffering from Type 2 diabetes mellitus. Neither drug has been tested with cats thus far and it is currently unknown whether either of these drugs exert any effect in cats or not. The objective of this study was to determine the effect of glimepiride and nateglinide on glucose and insulin responses in healthy control cats, in order to determine their potential use in diabetic cats. The intravenous glucose tolerance tests was carried out since it is an excellent test for evaluating pancreatic beta-cell function for insulin secretion. Alterations in the insulin secretion pattern can be perceived as the earliest sign of beta-cell dysfunction in many species, including cats. Nateglinide demonstrated a quick action/short duration type effect with serum glucose nadiring and insulin response peaking at 60 and 20 minutes, respectively. Alternatively, glimepiride is medium-to-long acting with serum glucose nadiring and insulin response peaking at 180 minutes and 60 minutes, respectively. Nateglinide's potency was evident allowing it to induce a 1.5-2 higher preliminary insulin peak (3.7 +/- 1.1 pg/ml) than glimepiride's (2.5 +/- 0.1 pg/ml), albeit only for a short period of time. Because glimepiride and nateglinide have a shared mode of action, no significant differences in overall glucose AUC(0-360min) (24,435 +/- 2,940 versus 24,782 +/- 2,354 mg min/dl) and insulin AUC(0-360min) (410 +/- 192 versus 460 +/- 159) in healthy control cats were observed. These findings may provide useful information when choosing a hypoglycemic drug suited for the treatment of diabetic cats depending on the degree of diabetes mellitus the cat is suffering from.

Magazine(name)

VETERINARY RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS

Publisher

Volume

33

Number Of Pages

8

StartingPage

957

EndingPage

970

Date of Issue

2009/12

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

Thesis Type

ISSN

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1007/s11259-009-9314-4

NAID

PMID

URL

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID