Lecture 15- Dog nutrition Flashcards

1
Q

What is canine digestive physiology?

A
  • Cats & dogs have relatively similar digestive tracts • Dogs have a larger small intestine length
  • Dogs are carnivores but cats are obligate carnivores
  • “obligate” = by necessity
  • Also true for mink, tarsiers, dolphins, seals, sea lions, walruses etc.
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2
Q

What is dog’s feeding behaviour?

A
  • Wild dogs hunt in packs • Cooperative hunting
  • Dogs will eat intermittently
  • Gorge after a hunt and not eat for an extended period after
  • Competition between pack members causes rapid consumption • Food hoarding / burying
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3
Q

What is dog’s mouth like?

A
  • Dogs (& cats) do not masticate food as much as other species • Often swallow large boluses whole
  • Although dogs & cats have the same number of incisor (6) & canine (2) teeth on each jaw dogs have more premolars & molars
  • Chewing/crushing plant materials (omnivore?)
  • Dogs lack the α-amylase enzyme in saliva that initiates starch digestion • Saliva is very important for evaporative cooling
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4
Q

What happens in the esophagus in dogs?

A
  • Cells secrete mucus to lubricate food
  • Stimulated by the presence of food in the mouth
  • Striated muscle
  • Rapid passage of peristaltic waves • Takes only a few seconds
  • Cardiac sphincter
  • Junction between esophagus & stomach • Relaxes to allow food into the stomach
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5
Q

What is stomach like in the dog?

A

• Storage of food
• Important as dogs are ‘meal feeders’ & eat large amounts at one feeding event • Proximal stomach expands to store food
• Initiates protein digestion
• Major enzymes pepsin & lipase
• Mixes food with gastric secretions
• Volume of gastric secretion controlled by the volume of the meal, its protein content &
hormones
• Entry into small intestine • Controls rate of entry
• Gastric emptying is controlled by:
• Volume, energy content, viscosity, density, particle size, temperature, body
weight, amount of acid in duodenum, water intake, meal size & diet type • Higher density particles move slower
• Ave time (half empty) 72-240 mins

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6
Q

What happens in the small intestine?

A
  • Chyme mixed with intestinal secretions
  • Enzymatic digestion of protein, carbs & fats
  • Dog SI has a simple microbial population
  • Important for preventing colonisation of pathogenic microorganisms
  • SI transit time influenced by diet type / size • Difficult to quantify
  • 30-300 mins
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7
Q

What happens in the large intestine/colon?

A
  • Dog’s cecum cat
  • However bacterial digestion of fibre is minimal • ~8% total digestion
  • Water absorption from the LI is important • Also electrolytes
  • Fecal characteristics influenced by diet type & quantity of indigestible matter • Bacterial digestion → gases (amines indole & skatole, H2S)
  • H2,CO2&CH4
  • ~12 hr retention time
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8
Q

What are dog’s nutrient requirements?

A
  • Deficiencies are rare in companion animals
  • BUT overfeeding & excessive supplementation is common
  • NRC published tables for dogs & cats • Same as other species
  • Generally balanced by pet food companies
  • Most companion animals are fed commercial diets
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9
Q

What is feeding behaviour like in dogs?

A
  • Domestication has made dogs & cats dependent on humans for food • Although there are feral species
  • Dogs hunt in packs & have broad feeding habits
  • Dogs can rapidly consume their daily energy requirements in one meal
  • A Labrador reportedly ate 10% of its bodyweight of a canned food in one sitting
  • If allowed dogs eat fewer & larger (& more variable in size) meals than cats • Dogs drink more water than cats
  • If fed one kind of food for 1st 6months of life puppies will not try novel foods when offered
  • Not seen in pups fed a mixed diet
  • Dogs are neophilic
  • Flavour fatigue / monotonous
  • Will select new flavour when fed one repeatedly
  • When given a choice dogs will select 25-30% of their calories as protein
  • Dogs will eat rancid foods
  • Dogs respond well to umami flavours
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10
Q

What is the dry diet type of dogs?

A

• Dry (10-12% moisture):
• Dry-expanded: mainly extrusion processed which gelatinizes starch making it
more digestible. Fat generally added post-processing (sprayed on) • Meal: round or reduced in particle size
• Pelleted: grain normally heat treated to improve starch availabilty • Kibbled: similar to baking.
• All can provide entire ration if designed well

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11
Q

What is the semi-moist diet type for dogs?

A
  • Semi-moist (25-35% moisture): • Cooked via extrusion
  • Shelf life stability controlled by water activity • Similar basic ingredients to dry feeds
  • Addition of meat or meat slurries
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12
Q

What is the soft-expanded diet type for dogs?

A
  • Soft-expanded (27-32% moisture):
  • High level of meat & fats
  • Take on expanded appearance after extrusion
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13
Q

What snacks and treats for dogs?

A
  • Snacks & treats
  • Not regulated as tightly as complete diets
  • Do not need to provide feeding directions
  • Do not need to be complete & balanced
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14
Q

What is the situation with canned food?

A
  • Canned (74-78% moisture) • Shrinking market?
  • High % meat or meat by-products
  • Textured protein = meat analogue (soy/wheat etc)
  • High energy density
  • Complete meal but often fed with dry foods
  • Processing is complex
  • Thiamine often lost (heat treatments)
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15
Q

What about table scraps?

A
  • Ok to feed but should not be the whole diet • Difficult to quantify/qualify
  • Are you meeting nutritional requirements?
  • Can be dangerous
  • Toxic foods for dogs
  • High sugar / salt etc
  • High fat can → pancreatitis
  • Balance & moderation are key
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16
Q

What about vegetarian diet for dogs?

A
  • “tragic trade off” – individuals are forced to choose between 2 sacred values
  • Feeding meat/fish is required for good health BUT supporting the meat industry is unethical • anthropomorphism
  • Technically possible BUT protein requirements are high
  • Needs to be tightly managed
  • Currently no commercial vegetarian diets meet all requirements (AAFCO) • Need to balance AA’s and not just meet protein requirements.
17
Q

What about vegan diet for dogs?

A
  • Main motive is ‘cruelty free’
  • Human perception NOT animal choice
  • Biologically possible • Hard to manage
  • Dog food choices • Not important?
  • Dogs have a higher protein requirement than humans
18
Q

What about Great Dane diet?

A
  • Large & giant breed dogs continue to grow for longer than smaller breeds • Wean early (4-5 weeks)
  • Extremely rapid growth from 3-5 months • First 18 months important
  • Metabolic disorders more common
  • Nutrient requirement of giant breeds differ to that of smaller dogs
  • Particularly Great Danes & Newfoundlands
  • Excess protein & energy can cause weight gain and metabolic problems
19
Q

What about Ca:P ratio in giant breed dogs?

A
  • Recommended for growth (other breeds): • Ca1.0-2.5%
  • P 0.8-1.6%
  • 1.2 (or 1.4) : 1.0 ratio Ca:P
  • Recommended for growth Great Dane • Caatorbelow1.2%
  • P at or below 0.9%
  • 1.2:1 ratio
  • Commercially these do not exist (that also meet protein & fat requirements)
  • 1.3:1 often fed
  • Dogs fed high Ca without proportional P develop rickets
20
Q

What are dangerous foods for dogs?

A
  1. Chocolate
    • Throbromine – cardiac stimulant & diuretic • Dark choc more dangerous than milk
  2. Onion & garlic
    • Thiosulphate – hemolytic anemia
    • Onions are more dangerous, garlic is generally OK and very large doses are required for toxicity
  3. Avocado
    - Persin – may also be required in large volumes to be toxic
  4. Xylitol (artificial sweetener e.g. natvia)
    • Toxicity can occur within 30 mins
    • Rapid release of insulin & ↓ glucose
  5. Macadamia nuts
    • Mechanism unknown
    • Weakness, CNS depression, vomiting, hyperthermia
  6. Caffeine
    • >150mg/kgfatal
    • Increased heart & respiration rate • Tremors, seizures
  7. Grapes
    • Mechanismunknown
    • Mycotoxin?
    • Estimated 32 g/kg toxic grapes & 11-30 g/kg raisins
    • Renal failure (occurs after ingesting 3 g/kg)
21
Q

What are the general rules for dog nutrition?

A
  • Meet protein requirements
  • Match nutrition to BREED specifics
  • Important for giant breeds • Check quality
  • You want the main ingredients to be meat products where possible
  • Feed what the dog likes!
  • Palatability is important and individual
22
Q

Why do dogs eat grass?

A
  • Influenced by satiety and time of day • Thought of as a food source?
  • Fibre deficiency? • Self-medication
  • Does not make them vomit! • Boredom
  • Parasites?