Lipids and lipoproteins in normal dogs and in dogs with secondary hyperlipoproteinemia.

Concentrations of serum cholesterol, triglyceride, and free glycerol were neasured, and serum lipoprotein electrophoresis was performed in normal dogs and in dogs with hypothyroidism, diabetes mellitus, and acute pancreatitis. Twelve privately owned dogs and 20 Basset Hounds from a research colony served as normal subjects. Privately owned had higher serum lipid concentrations than did research dogs. On electrophorisis of normal dog serum, lipoprotein bands were detected at the beta, pre-beta, alpha-2, and alpha-1 positions. Hypercholesterolemia was associated with increased intensity of the alpha-2-lipoprotein band, and hypertriglyceridemia occurred with increased lipoprotein at the origin, or the beta or pre-beta positions. Hypothyroid dogs had normal lipid values and lipoprotein electrophoretic patterns, hypercholesterolemia with increased intensity of the alpha-2-lipoprotein band, or hypercholesterolemia and hypertiglyceridemia with prominent beta-, pre-beta, and alpha-2-lipoprotein electrophoretic patterns were changed to near-normal values after levothyroxine administration. Diabetic dogs had increased serum cholesterol and triglyceride content and a predominance of lower density lipoproteins, as detected by electrophoresis. Insulin therapy caused the lipid concentrations to decrease and the electrophoretic pattern to revert to near normal. Dogs with acute pancreatitis had moderately increased serum lipid content and electrophoretic patterns characterized by increased intensity of the beta-lipoprotein band and by altered migration of alpha-1-lipoproteins.