Effect of hospitalization on equine local intestinal immunoglobulin A (IgA) concentration measured in feces

•Fecal IgA can be measured in hospitalized horses.•Fecal IgA decreased significantly after general anaesthesia.•High serum cortisol correlated with low faecal IgA on the day after surgery.•Hospitalization stress may predispose horses for gastrointestinal diseases. During hospitalization horses may d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of equine veterinary science 2024-06, Vol.137, p.105078-105078, Article 105078
Hauptverfasser: May, A., Gerhards, H., Wollanke, B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Fecal IgA can be measured in hospitalized horses.•Fecal IgA decreased significantly after general anaesthesia.•High serum cortisol correlated with low faecal IgA on the day after surgery.•Hospitalization stress may predispose horses for gastrointestinal diseases. During hospitalization horses may develop gastrointestinal conditions triggered by a stress-associated weak local immune system. The prospective, clinical trial was conducted to find out whether fecal immunoglobulin A (IgA) concentrations could be determined in hospitalized horses and how they changed during hospitalization and in response to various stressors. Samples were obtained from 110 horses and a control group (n = 14). At arrival in the hospital, horses were categorized into pain grades (1-5), and elective versus strenuous surgery (> 2 hours, traumatic and emergency procedures). Feces were collected on day 1, day 2, day 3, and day 7 in all horses. Blood samples were obtained at the same intervals, but additionally after general anaesthesia in horses undergoing surgery (day 2). IgA concentration in feces was determined by ELISA and measured in optical density at 450nm. The control group showed constant IgA concentrations on all days (mean value 0.30 OD450 ±SD 0.11, 1.26 mg/g; n = 11). After general anaesthesia fecal IgA concentrations decreased considerably independent of duration and type of surgery (P < 0.001 for elective and P = 0.043 for traumatic surgeries). High plasma cortisol concentrations were weakly correlated with low fecal IgA on the day after surgery (P = 0.012, day 3, correlation coefficient r = 0.113). Equine fecal IgA concentrations showed a decline associated with transport, surgery, and hospitalization in general, indicating that stress has an impact on the local intestinal immune function and may predispose horses for developing gastrointestinal diseases such as enterocolitis.
ISSN:0737-0806
1542-7412
DOI:10.1016/j.jevs.2024.105078