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Choosing Dry or Wet Food for
Cats Makes Little Difference
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Although society
is accustomed to seeing Garfield-sized cats, obese, middle-aged
cats can have a variety of problems including diabetes mellitus,
which can be fatal. The causes of diabetes mellitus in cats
remain unknown although there has been a strong debate about
whether a dry food diet puts cats at greater risk for diabetes.
A new study from a University of Missouri-Columbia veterinarian
suggests that weight gain, not the type of diet, is more important
when trying to prevent diabetes in cats.
Because dry cat food contains more starch
and more carbohydrates than canned cat food, some have argued
that a diet containing large amounts of carbohydrates is unnatural
for a cat that is anatomically and physiologically designed
to be a carnivore. Carbohydrates constitute between 30 percent
and 40 percent of dry cat food. Some have been concerned that
this unnatural diet is harmful to cats and leads to increased
incidence of diabetes. Wet cat food, on the other hand, is
high in protein and more similar to a natural carnivore diet.
In the study, Robert Backus, assistant
professor and director of the Nestle Purina Endowed Small
Animal Nutrition Program at MU, and his team of researchers
compared a colony of cats in California raised on dry food
with a colony of cats in New Zealand raised on canned food.
After comparing glucose-tolerance tests, which measures blood
samples and indicates how fast glucose is being cleared from
the blood after eating, researchers found no significant difference
between a dry food diet and a wet food diet. They also compared
the results between cats less than three years of age and
cats older than three. The MU veterinarian indicated that
allowing cats to eat enough to become overweight is more detrimental
to their health than the type of food they eat.
“Little bits of too much energy lead
to weight gain overtime,” Backus said. “We did
find that cats on canned or wet food diets have less of a
tendency towards obesity than cats on dry food diets.”
Forty percent of all cats in middle age
are overweight or obese. According to Backus, male cats should
weigh between 10 and 11 pounds, and female cats should weigh
between 5.5 and 7.7 pounds. Besides diabetes, overweight cats
are prone to other conditions such as skin diseases, oral
diseases and certain cancers. When cats are spayed and neutered,
they have a tendency to eat more and gain weight. Backus suggests
monitoring the food even more closely at this time and not
allowing the cat to eat in excess.
“The most effective thing you can
do is be the one who determines how much your cat eats,”
Backus said. “We have been conditioned to fat cats,
but cats should have only between 18 percent to 20 percent
body fat.”
Backus’ research was presented recently
at the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine Conference
in Seattle.
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