1. The Use of Saliva Cortisol, Urinary Cortisol, and Catecholamine Measurements for a Noninvasive Assessment of Stress Responses in Dogs
- Author
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Matthijs B.H. Schilder, Nicole Janssen, Jan A. Mol, and Bonne Beerda
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Saliva ,Hydrocortisone ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urinary system ,Urine ,Hypoglycemia ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Catecholamines ,Dogs ,Endocrinology ,Stress, Physiological ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Creatinine ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,business.industry ,Insulin ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Female ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Glucocorticoid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A problem in assessing animal welfare is that collecting data in itself may be stressful to the animals. Therefore, noninvasive methods for collecting data have to be devised and tested. A first step in investigating saliva cortisol, urinary cortisol, and urinary catecholamine as noninvasive indicators of canine well-being is the validation of these hormonal measures as alternatives for those in plasma. Using a model of insulin (0.2 U/kg)-induced hypoglycemia, we report on stress-induced responses in saliva cortisol, urinary cortisol, and urinary catacholamines relative to cortisol and catecholamine responses in plasma. Hypoglycemia in six dogs induced significant (P0.05) increases in plasma cortisol and adrenaline but not noradrenaline. Saliva cortisol responses expressed as net area under the response curve correlated significantly with plasma cortisol responses (r0.92). Saliva cortisol levels measured 7 to 12% of plasma cortisol concentrations. Cortisol/creatinine rations in urine were significantly higher when voided after insulin administeration, compared to when voided after saline treatment. Insulin-induced increments in cortisol/ creatinine ratios were nonsignificant when urine samples were assayed after dichloromethane extraction. Although urinary adrenaline/creatinine (A/C) ratios were significantly correlated with maximum plasma adrenaline values after insulin administration, A/C ratios did not differ significantly between insulin and saline treatment. The present experiment provides strong support for using saliva sampling and urine collection as noninvasive methods to establish stress-induced cortisol responses. For measuring acute plasma adrenaline responses, measuring A/C ratios may not be a valid alternative.
- Published
- 1996
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