Influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats

Abstract Background Protein concentration and quality in cat food can vary considerably, and the impact on feline urine composition and nutrient supply is of high practical relevance. In the present study, 6 canned diets with varying protein concentrations and qualities were fed to 10 healthy adult...

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Main Authors: Nadine Paßlack, Barbara Kohn, Marcus G. Doherr, Jürgen Zentek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:BMC Veterinary Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-018-1517-x
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spelling doaj-9c2ad8e9db58414a9760a94e0232d9ab2020-11-25T00:19:15ZengBMCBMC Veterinary Research1746-61482018-07-0114111210.1186/s12917-018-1517-xInfluence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult catsNadine Paßlack0Barbara Kohn1Marcus G. Doherr2Jürgen Zentek3Institute of Animal Nutrition, Department of Veterinary Medicine, Freie Universität BerlinClinic of Small Animals, Department of Veterinary Medicine, Freie Universität BerlinInstitute of Veterinary Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Department of Veterinary Medicine, Freie Universität BerlinInstitute of Animal Nutrition, Department of Veterinary Medicine, Freie Universität BerlinAbstract Background Protein concentration and quality in cat food can vary considerably, and the impact on feline urine composition and nutrient supply is of high practical relevance. In the present study, 6 canned diets with varying protein concentrations and qualities were fed to 10 healthy adult cats. Protein quality in the diet differed depending on the amount of collagen-rich ingredients. Hydroxyproline concentrations were 2.56–4.45 g/kg dry matter in the high quality and 3.76–9.44 g/kg dry matter in the low quality diets. Protein levels were 36.2, 43.3 and 54.9% in the high quality and 36.7, 45.0 and 56.1% in the low quality groups. Each diet was fed for 6 weeks, using a randomized cross-over design. In the last 2 weeks of each feeding period, urine and faeces of the cats were collected. Results Renal calcium (Ca), oxalate (Ox) and citrate excretion were unaffected by the dietary protein concentration, possibly mediated by a high urine volume (24.2–34.2 ml/kg bodyweight (BW)/day) in all groups. However, renal Ox excretion was lower when the high quality diets were fed (P = 0.013). Urinary relative supersaturation (RSS) with calcium oxalate (CaOx) was low in general, but reduced in the high quality groups (P = 0.031). Urinary RSS values for magnesium ammonium phosphate (MAP) were high (2.64–5.00) among all groups. Apparent digestibility of crude protein and most minerals was unaffected by the different diets. Feed intake was higher in the low quality groups (P = 0.026), but BW of the cats did not differ depending on dietary protein quality. BW of the cats increased with increasing dietary protein concentrations (P = 0.003). Conclusion In conclusion, a high protein canned diet might not be a specific risk factor for CaOx urolith formation in cats. In contrast, all diets resulted in high RSS MAP values, which might be critical concerning MAP crystallization. Protein quality had a minor, but significant impact on urine composition, necessitating further research on this subject. A lower energy supply when feeding a low protein quality can be assumed. Changes in BW were only small and require a careful interpretation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-018-1517-xCatsDietary protein concentrationDietary protein qualityUrineApparent digestibility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nadine Paßlack
Barbara Kohn
Marcus G. Doherr
Jürgen Zentek
spellingShingle Nadine Paßlack
Barbara Kohn
Marcus G. Doherr
Jürgen Zentek
Influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats
BMC Veterinary Research
Cats
Dietary protein concentration
Dietary protein quality
Urine
Apparent digestibility
author_facet Nadine Paßlack
Barbara Kohn
Marcus G. Doherr
Jürgen Zentek
author_sort Nadine Paßlack
title Influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats
title_short Influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats
title_full Influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats
title_fullStr Influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats
title_full_unstemmed Influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats
title_sort influence of protein concentration and quality in a canned diet on urine composition, apparent nutrient digestibility and energy supply in adult cats
publisher BMC
series BMC Veterinary Research
issn 1746-6148
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Background Protein concentration and quality in cat food can vary considerably, and the impact on feline urine composition and nutrient supply is of high practical relevance. In the present study, 6 canned diets with varying protein concentrations and qualities were fed to 10 healthy adult cats. Protein quality in the diet differed depending on the amount of collagen-rich ingredients. Hydroxyproline concentrations were 2.56–4.45 g/kg dry matter in the high quality and 3.76–9.44 g/kg dry matter in the low quality diets. Protein levels were 36.2, 43.3 and 54.9% in the high quality and 36.7, 45.0 and 56.1% in the low quality groups. Each diet was fed for 6 weeks, using a randomized cross-over design. In the last 2 weeks of each feeding period, urine and faeces of the cats were collected. Results Renal calcium (Ca), oxalate (Ox) and citrate excretion were unaffected by the dietary protein concentration, possibly mediated by a high urine volume (24.2–34.2 ml/kg bodyweight (BW)/day) in all groups. However, renal Ox excretion was lower when the high quality diets were fed (P = 0.013). Urinary relative supersaturation (RSS) with calcium oxalate (CaOx) was low in general, but reduced in the high quality groups (P = 0.031). Urinary RSS values for magnesium ammonium phosphate (MAP) were high (2.64–5.00) among all groups. Apparent digestibility of crude protein and most minerals was unaffected by the different diets. Feed intake was higher in the low quality groups (P = 0.026), but BW of the cats did not differ depending on dietary protein quality. BW of the cats increased with increasing dietary protein concentrations (P = 0.003). Conclusion In conclusion, a high protein canned diet might not be a specific risk factor for CaOx urolith formation in cats. In contrast, all diets resulted in high RSS MAP values, which might be critical concerning MAP crystallization. Protein quality had a minor, but significant impact on urine composition, necessitating further research on this subject. A lower energy supply when feeding a low protein quality can be assumed. Changes in BW were only small and require a careful interpretation.
topic Cats
Dietary protein concentration
Dietary protein quality
Urine
Apparent digestibility
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-018-1517-x
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AT marcusgdoherr influenceofproteinconcentrationandqualityinacanneddietonurinecompositionapparentnutrientdigestibilityandenergysupplyinadultcats
AT jurgenzentek influenceofproteinconcentrationandqualityinacanneddietonurinecompositionapparentnutrientdigestibilityandenergysupplyinadultcats
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