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Coenzyme Q10 content in food [17, 18].

Coenzyme Q10 content in food [17, 18].

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For now many years, dietary requirements for human patients suffering from heart failure have been known. Besides the importance of a diet low in salt, it appears that intake of essential fatty acids and antioxidants are an asset to improve the well being and life expectancy of these patients. Indeed, the essential fatty acids regulate the inflamma...

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... Coenzyme Q10 can be synthesized from phenylalanine, acetyl Coenzyme A, tyrosine and by seven vitamins (B 2 , B 3 , B 5 , B 6 , B 9 , B 12 , and C). However, food can also supply coenzyme Q10: meat is particularly rich in coenzyme Q10 (Table 2) [17,18]. An intake from 30 to 90 mg by oral route, twice a day, is the dose most frequently recommended [1]. ...

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... In the present case of a military dog, the presence of cardiac hypertrophy was asymptomatic, demonstrated no clinical symptoms, and returned rapidly to normal after a rest period. Current observations indicate that cardiac hypertrophy can develop in trained or exercised dogs; therefore, these dogs should be regularly watched for potential cardiac problems and some preventive measures such as an adapted diet regimen including essential fatty acids [27] or inclusion of some agility exercises in the training program [26] have been already proposed in highly trained dogs. ...
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Cardiac hypertrophy is a physiologic adaptive situation associated with intense sports training. In this case report, cardiac hypertrophy was detected in a military narcotic detector female American Cocker, 3 years old, by echocardiography and was associated with no clinical or functional signs of cardiac disease. Heart morphological changes associated dilatation of the left ventricular (increased diastolic and systolic left ventricle diameter) and increased thickness of the myocardial wall (increased diastolic and systolic interventricular septum and post wall). One month after exercise discontinuation, the echocardiographic parameters tended to return to normal values. These observations confirm that regular intense exercise may induce cardiac asymptomatic hypertrophy in dogs.
Data
Cardiac hypertrophy is a physiologic adaptive situation associated with intense sports training. In this case report, cardiac hypertrophy was detected in a military narcotic detector female American Cocker, 3 years old, by echocardiography and was associated with no clinical or functional signs of cardiac disease. Heart morphological changes associated dilatation of the left ventricular (increased diastolic and systolic left ventricle diameter) and increased thickness of the myocardial wall (increased diastolic and systolic interventricular septum and post wall). One month after exercise discontinuation, the echocardiographic parameters tended to return to normal values. These observations confirm that regular intense exercise may induce cardiac asymptomatic hypertrophy in dogs.