Animals (Aug 2021)

Owning a Pet Is Associated with Changes in the Composition of Gut Microbiota and Could Influence the Risk of Metabolic Disorders in Humans

  • Javier Arenas-Montes,
  • Pablo Perez-Martinez,
  • Cristina Vals-Delgado,
  • Juan Luis Romero-Cabrera,
  • Magdalena P. Cardelo,
  • Ana Leon-Acuña,
  • Gracia M. Quintana-Navarro,
  • Juan F. Alcala-Diaz,
  • Jose Lopez-Miranda,
  • Antonio Camargo,
  • Francisco Perez-Jimenez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11082347
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. 2347

Abstract

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Pet ownership positively influences clinical outcomes in cardiovascular prevention. Additionally, cardiovascular disease (CVD) has been previously linked to microbiota dysbiosis. We evaluated the influence of owning a pet and its relationship with the intestinal microbiota. We analyzed the gut microbiota from 162 coronary patients from the CORDIOPREV study (NCT00924937) according to whether they owned pets (n = 83) or not (n = 79). The pet-owner group was further divided according to whether they owned dogs only (n = 28) or not (n = 55). A 7-item pet-owners test score was used. Patients who owned pets had less risk of metabolic syndrome (MetS) (OR = 0.462) and obesity (OR = 0.519) and were younger (p p Serratia and Coprococcus was found in the group of owners, while the genera Ruminococcus, an unknown genus of Enterobacteriaceae and Anaerotruncus were preponderant in the group of non-owners. In patients who owned dogs, Methanobrevibacter and two more genera, Coprococcus and Oscillospira, were more common. Our study suggests that the prevalence of MetS and obesity in CVD patients is lower in pet owners, and that pet ownership could be a protective factor against MetS through the shaping of the gut microbiota. Thus, owning a pet could be considered as a protective factor against cardiometabolic diseases.

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