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OBESITY IN CATS... and What To Do About An Overweight Cat
Ever wonder what
to do about your overweight cat? Obesity in cats is very common and can
predispose the cat to diabetes, Hepatic Lipidosis and arthritis. Overweight and
actually obese cats outnumber cats of normal weigh and
are being seen more and more commonly by veterinarians for various disorders.
Weight loss plans in
cats needs to be approached very carefully. This page will help you
determine what to do about overweight cats so that your kitty won't have to be
encumbered by obesity.
There are more cats than dogs
in the USA at this time. And 40
percent of those cats are considered to be obese! Only 5 to 10 percent of all cats can be classified as only
slightly overweight. In recent
years Feline Diabetes Mellitus (diabetes) has become almost a daily diagnosis in
animal hospitals all across America. Our
cats are at risk for a number of obesity related disorders.
Documented research indicates obese cats are far more prone than cats of
normal body weight to Diabetes, arthritis and a
very serious disorder called
Hepatic Lipidosis. And the 40 percent obesity figure seems to be growing.
So what is happening that
predisposes our domestic felines to a life of sedentary obesity?
The answer is multifactorial but to simplify, just remember this… any
individual mammal (dog, cat, horse, human, etc.) will gain body weight if it
consumes more calories than it burns as fuel for energy.
That’s pretty simple, but true. In
Nature, food acquisition has never been a sure thing for any creature… not for
canines, felines or humans. So food
acquisition has always been accompanied by physical exertion to capture (or
cultivate) and consume the food. It is only in recent times that the unnatural
situation of food excess, readily acquired and consumed with little accompanying
physical exertion, has become a way of life.
We humans have figured how not to have to do all that work of capturing
and cultivating to build up stores of food.
Through agricultural expertise we have learned how to grow food and raise
livestock and to have those food sources readily available and in abundance…
just in case we get hungry! We
learned how to refrigerate, dry, preserve and store foods in large quantities
that assured us we would not have to endure long and unsuccessful hunting forays
nor suffer through famines. We have
created the very same food acquisition assurances for our domestic dogs and
cats. They, as we, no longer have
to hunt to survive. Indeed, we no
longer even have to live outdoors.
It’s interesting that our
pets have mirrored our own tendency to have trouble with weight control.
The major difference, though, is that we humans have complete control
over what our pets eat and how much they eat.
Unless your dog or cat is sneaking into the fridge and making ham and
cheese sandwiches late at night when no one is around, the only way they get to
eat is when YOU place the food in front of them.
Every veterinarian has
repeatedly heard a serious minded dog or cat owner state “I know you think
she’s overweight, Doctor, but it isn’t from the food! She hardly eats a thing.”
Well… is the pet overweight from high calorie air?
Maybe it’s the water… or from laying on that couch all the time.
That’s it! The couch is
making the kitty fat, not the food.
Any cat that is overweight
should have a physical exam performed, exact weight measured and blood and urine
tests run. It is vital that normal
thyroid hormone levels are present and that the cat has no physical or metabolic
dysfunction. If the cat is
physically normal, other than the abnormal body weight from fat deposition, then
a gradual and careful weight loss program can be instituted. First, let’s look at what the causes of obesity are and
what we can do to correct OUR mistakes:
FREE CHOICE FEEDING
THE main reason for feline obesity
(as well as obesity in other mammals) is the consumption of too much food.
Deny it all you want but it is a fact.
What we do…
Many cats are fed “free choice”, which means there is food available all the
time and the cat eats whenever it wants. (Pretty
unnatural for a true carnivore that evolved as a hunting machine!)
Free choice feeding has probably been the biggest single factor
contributing to feline obesity.
What we should do…
Feed two to four small portions daily and control the amounts fed so that over a
period of time the cat does not gain weight.
Many pet owners must downsize what they
think is a “normal” portion.
A meal for a 175-pound human might weigh 16 to 24 ounces. A
seven-pound cat weighs 1/25 of the 175-pound human.
So a cat’s meal should proportionally be about 1/25 of a human meal.
That comes out to between 0.6 and 1.0 ounce of food per meal for a
seven-pound cat… about the same weight as a mouse.
Cat owners must stop thinking in terms of “cups of food” and start
thinking in terms of ounces of food.
CARBOHYDRATE
Cats, unlike most mammals, have no
carbohydrate-digesting enzyme called Amylase in their saliva.
Humans and dogs do and actually begin the digestion of
carbohydrate in the mouth. In the
intestine, amylase secreted from the pancreas breaks down large carbohydrate
molecules into absorbable smaller units of glucose.
Cats have measurably less amylase activity than humans or dogs.
Nature did not intend the kitty to be a carbohydrate consumer.
What we do…
We purchase convenient, attractively packaged and preserved dry foods mainly
because we can pour it in the bowl and forget it.
Dry pet food must have higher levels of flour and sugar than canned foods
so that the kibble will stay uniform and not fall apart.
Spoiling doesn’t readily occur because of the preservatives so the
kitty can eat whenever it wants and we don’t have to prepare cat meals very
often. Unfortunately, especially
with dry diets, because of the metabolic biochemistry that converts the high
carbohydrate content in almost all of today’s commercial cat foods into stored
fat, the cat is really at risk for weight gain.
What we should do…
Feed a diet consistent with the nature of a true carnivore… a meat based
diet. An ideal feline diet will have a high protein level in the 35
to 45 percent range on a dry matter basis (meaning the percent in the diet when
the water has been removed) and moderate fat content with a low percentage of
carbohydrate (grains). A multitude
of research reports have proven that diets high in protein and fat are most
beneficial for carnivores. Cats
cannot handle large carbohydrate loads efficiently.
After a meal rich in carbohydrate the feline’s blood level of glucose
tends to stay higher than normal for long periods of time.
They become persistently hyperglycemic and this long term stimulus on the
beta cells in the pancreas… the cells that produce insulin… renders those
cells less sensitive to the blood glucose.
As a result less insulin is secreted to bring down the blood sugar level.
Nutritionists call this “down regulating’ of the beta cells; the
insensitivity of the insulin secreting beta cells leads to what is termed
“insulin resistance”. This
scenario is a prelude to diabetes.
PROTEIN
We all know how cats crave mice and birds as a food source.
A natural source of nutrition for
carnivores, mice and birds are a perfect diet for a cat. Did you
know that a mouse or a bird is composed of only 3 to 8 percent carbohydrate?
And
most of that is actually from what the prey was eating and is in the
prey's digestive tract. The
rest is water, a few minerals, and mostly protein and fat.
What we do...
Many of us purchase dry cat foods, some with food coloring to make it look
like meat and with flour and sugars and preservatives.
We buy these dry foods partly because they state that it is COMPLETE and
BALANCED for cats and because it is convenient for us to pour a few days' worth
of food into a bowl for the kitty to eat whenever it wants. Unfortunately,
most dry cat food brands are relatively low in protein... especially the less
expensive brands that state a grain such as corn as the first (major)
ingredient. Another associated problem is the myth that we often feed our
cats (and dogs) too much protein. This indefensible myth... that protein
causes kidney problems... is totally unfounded and has caused more dogs
and cats to suffer from poor diets than just about any other cause.
Go here to see reasons why this myth is just that... a myth with no scientific
affirmation.)
What we should do...
We must feed cats a diet with high percentages of protein and fat and low
percentages of carbohydrate (grains) if we expect them to maintain optimum body
weights and a proper state of nutrition. Protein is THE key nutrient in a
carnivore diet. On a dry weight basis... where the percent of ingredients
is determined without any water in the ration... a feline's diet should contain
35 to 45 percent protein, 40 percent fat, and possibly just a small percentage
of carbohydrate. (Remember... a true carnivore needs NO carbohydrate in
the diet.)
Some nutritionists suggest 25% carbohydrate---50% protein---25% fat. Click
the link to see a window that shows how to calculate the dry weight percentages in
dry and canned food because if you look at the label of any canned food you will
never find a food with high percentages of protein or fat because of the high
moisture content
of canned food. These low percentages DO NOT indicate a lack of high
nutritional content. To see why... CLICK!
CAT TREATS
We seem to think we need to reward our cats
with food... and that's why cat treats are so popular. Nearly very
cat caretaker has relented, too, when our cat has begun to vocalize, roam
restlessly and seem to "need something". This is normal
interactive behavior for a cat and has no relationship to the cat being
hungry! But we perceive the kitty to be hungry so we give it a treat as a
snack. And most cat treats are specially flavored to be irresistible to
cats, otherwise they wouldn't sell well and there'd be no profit for the
manufacturer. Give your cat a treat for vocalizing and you have rewarded
it for vocalizing... and you have just taught the cat to vocalize even
more. If you MUST give cat treats to your cat, read below how to do
it logically and nutritionally.
What we do…
As sensitive and caring humans, we always want to reward our kitty by providing
extra special treats. Most treats for
cats have high levels of carbohydrate (flower and sugars) and lots of flavor
enhancers to entice the cat to eat even when it is not hungry. Cats that annoy us with vocalizing and pretending that they
are starving to death sometimes are rewarded for that annoying vocalizing by
being given a treat to “keep ‘em quiet”.
When we provide the treat we reinforce the vocalizing, effectively
rewarding the cat for making all that racket, and essentially training the cat
to make even more noise!
What we should do…
Stop feeding treats to the overweight cat.
IF you think your cat NEEDS a treat, cut up little bits of cooked chicken
or fish and feed as a natural protein treat… not a treat made from grains,
food coloring, propylene glycol, and flavor enhancers.
And NEVER feed a treat as a means of stopping a cat from vocalizing
because it has the exact opposite effect and actually reinforces the cat’s
vocalizing/begging behavior.
LABEL RECOMMENDATIONS
All pet foods come with Recommended Feeding
instructions. The problem is that these recommendations are NOT absolute
requirements even though most pet caretakers think they have to feed their pet
the recommended amounts. Most house kept dogs and cats, if fed at the
amounts stated in the label recommendations, will eventually become
overweight. Pay attention to your pet's body weight (size) and just by
simple observation decide if it is overweight. If so, don't feed so
much.
What we do…
Feeding the “Recommended ” daily portions indicated on pet food labels
will nearly always result in feeding more calories than the animal needs for an
average day’s energy requirements. The
carbohydrate excess, unneeded as fuel for metabolism or physical activity, gets
converted to fat and stored in the cat’s fat reserves.
The odds are very high that if you feed the size and numbers of meals
suggested on the pet food label’s feeding recommendations, the cat (or dog)
will end up overweight.
What we should do…
Adjust the amount fed to the cat’s body character and physical activity.
If the cat looks and feels overweight… it is! You are feeding too much for that cat’s daily needs for
energy for exercise or physical activity; and regardless of what the pet food
label’s suggested amounts to feed are, you must feed less than that if the cat
is to have a normal (healthy) body weigh.
EXERCISE
What we do…
We fill the bowls with food and water, clean the litter box, and say “See
you later, Kitty, I’m off to work”.
What we should do…
To assist in improving the kitty’s physical activity, you can add some
interactive play toys to the cat’s environment.
Consider adopting a friendly and playful cat from the local shelter so
the solitary cat has “someone” to interact and play with.
Many people believe two cats are more fun to have and more entertaining
and no more trouble than a single cat. You
can also buy toys that simulate an escaping prey and that really interest the
cat in play behaviors. Cats can be
exercised but you may need some imaginative toys and ideas to get the job done.
WHAT SHOULD YOU FEED A
CAT?
Cats, unlike us humans, obtain food
satisfaction less from carbohydrate than they do from protein intake.
Give them a high protein mouse and they are as happy as can be. One
mouse would make a good meal for an average sized cat. A typical mouse is made of 20% Protein and 9% Fat and
lots of moisture. And now
that you know that the cat is a true carnivore, that its metabolic pathways have
been set by natural evolutionary processes to efficiently utilize meat protein
as a major component of the diet, you understand why a carbohydrate rich diet
simply does not make sense for felines. Cats
are not plant-based grazers; they are hunters of other animals and to reach an
optimum state of health they must comply with what nature programmed them to
be. There are no vegetarian diets
for cats. No matter what your own
personal preference is regarding the ingestion of meat, by Nature’s own rules
the cat requires meat in its diet. One
small aspect of this need for meat is the cat's requirement for ingesting
preformed Vitamin B12 (Cyanocobalamin)... preformed in another non-feline
mammal.
|
Click the link to see a window that shows how to calculate the dry weight percentages in dry and canned food because if you look at the label of any canned food you will never find a food with high percentages of protein or fat. That's because of the water content of canned food. These low percentages DO NOT indicate a lack of high nutritional content. To see why... CLICK! |
As the cat’s caretaker, you
have complete control over what your cat eats, how much it eats and how often it
eats. Do not worry about the teeth and gums “not having some abrasion to
clean off the tartar”. Cats and
dogs being fed soft meat-based diets have far fewer oral health problems
than
those consuming dry, grain-based diets. Other good dry food products will demonstrate protein levels
above 30 percent and fat levels above 18 percent in the Guaranteed Analysis
table on the pet food label. Usually
these diets are the “Growth” or “Puppy” or “Kitten” diets… and
these formulations can be fed for life in a healthy individual that does not
require a therapeutic
diet.
If you still fear the erroneous myth about “too much protein” being
“bad” for dogs and cats or that protein “causes” kidney damage, you
really need some facts. There are
numerous documented reports that will allay your fears and will update you on
correct research.
The myth about
protein causing kidney trouble was extrapolated from research done on rodents
many decades ago; the myth developed a life of its own in spite of being refuted
by proper research on dogs and cats.
WEIGHT LOSS DIETS
Getting an obese cat to lose weight needs to be done gradually… no crash diets
allowed! Cats have a unique
metabolic response to fasting and whenever a feline’s food intake is rapidly
and markedly depressed, a serious and potentially fatal disorder can occur
called Hepatic Lipidosis.
One of the reasons for the
success of a high protein diet for feline weight reduction is the importance of
an amino acid called Carnitine. Carnitine
is present in good quantities in muscle tissues, but found in miniscule amounts
in vegetable matter. This amino
acid plays an essential role in the uptake of stored fat reserves and conversion
of fat by the liver back to into glucose.
The ability to mobilize fat tissue to be used as glucose for energy (and for
subsequent weight loss to be accomplished) requires Carnitine in the process.
Supplementing a cat’s diet with L-Carnitine in amounts approximating 250 to 500
mg per cat per day will aid in mobilizing fat into glucose and will improve the
health of a cat that is on a weight loss program.
The Plan
First, your veterinarian needs to do a
thorough physical exam, blood chemistry profile including Thyroid hormone
evaluation, and record an accurate weight for the cat. Then you should
gradually… over a period of
three to four weeks… add greater and greater
proportions of the suggested feline weight-loss diet.
Mix the new diet with the
old, slowly decreasing the percentage of the old diet and increasing the
percentage of the
new one. Pay
close attention to how much the cat is eating every day.
When the cat acclimates to the improved, high protein diet (fed in small
amounts frequently during the day), reweigh the cat at four-week intervals.
If there is no weight loss at all, or even some weight gain, the amount
of food you are allowing is simply too much.
You may be thinking in human-sized portions, not feline.
Remember the mouse. Every three to four weeks reweigh your cat on the same scale
each time so that accurate weight measurements are done. A fifteen-pound cat should not lose more than half a pound in
four weeks. (Remember the Hepatic
Lipidosis problem!)
Always be observant and report
to your veterinarian any time a cat stops eating for two or more days.
(That’s one of the subtle problems with the “free choice” method of
feeding. We often do not notice that the cat’s food dish is still
full until the cat is well into a fasting mode.
When cats are sick the first clinical sign is often a loss of appetite;
so a non-interactive, free choice feeding protocol provides less information to
us than an interactive portion controlled feeding method.)
Any cat that hasn’t eaten in three days is in trouble!
Seven days of fasting actually impacts the cat’s immune system.
Once you have established a
feeding plan that induces gradual weight loss over a period of months the cat
will reach a point where weight maintenance occurs. At this optimal weight the cat should not “look fat” nor
“look skinny”. You’d be
surprised how much more active and alert the cat will be at an optimum weight.
You have successfully avoided the probability of Diabetes, arthritis and
Hepatic Lipidosis. Your
cat will probably live a few extra years and have a much better quality of
life… and that will make you happy, too!
SUMMARY
To get a cat to lose weight, do
the following after consulting with your veterinarian:
1.)
Have a thorough physical exam, lab tests, and accurate weigh recorded.
Be sure to rule out hypothyroidism or other metabolic disorders.
2.)
Feed less food than you have been
3.)
Feed foods high in protein and fat and low in carbohydrate
4.)
Feed small portions at intervals (2x to 4x per day) rather than continuous free access/ free
choice
5.)
Increase the cat’s activity/exercise by enriching the cat’s
environment
6.)
Reweigh the cat at three to four week intervals to assess your weight
loss diet’s progress
7.)
Reconsider the total daily amount fed if weight gain or no weight loss is
noted
8.)
Once the cat is at an idea weight, adjust the total amount fed so that
the cat’s body weight remains stable.
NOTE: ABOUT RAISING
KITTENS
Veterinary nutritionists
suggest that we expose very young cats to a variety of food types and textures.
Cats are staunch creatures of habit and if a kitten is raised on a
dry food kibble diet only, the odds are high that it will reject any non-kibble
diet later in life. (It might not
even know what to do with a captured mouse!)
Food preference can be set on canned
food, too. As kittens are
developing, be sure to provide a wide variety of food types, textures, and
tastes so that later in life, if weight loss diets are required, you will be
able to select a type and texture that will be in the cat’s best interest.
Remember...high quality, meat-based food, control the amount fed, provide more exercise, and be persistent. Help your pet live a longer, leaner and more enjoyable life. Many types of dermatological problems are avoided if the dog or cat is consuming an optimum diet. In some cases, adding a supplement such as DermCaps, a popular Omega Fatty Acid supplement with a number of beneficial ingredients, is the key factor in avoiding repeated episodes of Hot Spots and other skin afflictions. If your dog or cat seems to lack good coat and skin health, consider upgrading the diet to a meat-based ingredient formula and adding a supplement such as DermCaps.
More topics on Nutrition:
Cats Are Different!
Nutrition Comments
Fatty Acids
The Overweight DogContrasting Grain-based and Meat-based Pet Foods
"Natural Pet Foods"
X-rays of bone splinter cases
Wolf Managers Comments On Feeding Bones
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