Diet and Nutritional Management of Hyperthyroid Cats
Proper nutrition plays an extremely important role in the treatment of a cat with hyperthyroidism. Hyperthyroid cats develop muscle wasting as well as many metabolic complications because of their disease. Therefore, they have special dietary needs and require sufficient amounts of all essential nutrients in their daily diets. This includes adequate amounts of high-quality proteins, fat, minerals, vitamins, and water.
The question, “What’s the best diet to feed my hyperthyroid cat?” is an extremely common one that I get from concerned cat owners. In this post, I will discuss the ideal food composition and nutrients that I believe hyperthyroid cats should be fed.
The Many Metabolic Problems Facing the Hyperthyroid Cat
When secreted in excess, thyroid hormones have profound metabolic effects on the whole body, and dysfunction of multiple organ systems is common in hyperthyroid cats (1-3).
Weight Loss and Muscle Wasting
Weight loss, despite a normal to increased appetite, is the classic and most common sign seen in cats with hyperthyroidism (1-3). These cats lose weight because their hyperthyroidism accelerates their metabolic rate and body’s energy expenditure. In other words, they are burning up their food calories faster than they can consume their daily meals.
It’s important to realize that hyperthyroidism is a catabolic wasting state, in which a "breaking down" of the body occurs no matter how much nutritional intake occurs. The progressive weight loss and muscle wasting that is so characteristic of feline disease is caused by an increased rate of fat and muscle protein breakdown (4,5).
When hyperthyroid cats initially lose weight, this can be first noticed as a loss of muscle mass over the cat’s lower back. Despite this loss of muscle mass, most mildly hyperthyroid cats retain their “belly” during the initial stages of their thyroid disease and may even have a higher than ideal body condition score.
With time, severe muscle wasting, emaciation, cachexia, and death from starvation can occur if the cat’s hyperthyroidism is left untreated (1-3). In hyperthyroidism, the cat’s body consumes its own muscle tissue to get the protein it needs to sustain its carnivorous life.
Even with treatment of hyperthyroidism, recovery of muscle mass and function may be prolonged, lasting several weeks to months. This is especially true if these cats are not provided with enough protein in their diet to rebuild and maintain their lost muscle mass.
High Blood Glucose, Insulin Resistance, and Diabetes Mellitus
Hyperthyroid cats can also develop profound changes in carbohydrate metabolism (glucose and insulin metabolism). Slightly high resting blood glucose (sugar) concentrations are common in hyperthyroid cats, which is generally attributed to a “stress” reaction.
However, the actual metabolic changes are actually much more complicated. Hyperthyroidism frequently causes moderate to severe insulin resistance (6,7), which is a physiological condition where the natural hormone insulin becomes less effective at lowering blood glucose levels. This insulin resistance is associated with a decreased glucose clearance, which is indicative of a prediabetic state. Occasionally, an untreated hyperthyroid cat will even go on to develop full-blown diabetes mellitus. Many of these diabetic cats are difficult to regulate with insulin therapy but treatment of their concurrent hyperthyroid state generally improves diabetic control.
Unfortunately, the insulin resistance and associated prediabetic state — so common in hyperthyroid cats —do not always improve despite successful treatment of hyperthyroidism (7). This indicates that hyperthyroid cats may have long-lasting alterations of carbohydrate metabolism that cannot always be reversed by treatment. In accord with that, some of these hyperthyroid cats (not diabetic at time of diagnosis) will go on to develop overt diabetes mellitus in the months to years after treatment of hyperthyroidism.
Sarcopenia of Aging
In addition to loss of muscle mass from the catabolic effects of thyroid hormone excess, cats also tend to lose muscle mass as they age, independent of their thyroid status. This phenomenon, referred to as sarcopenia of aging, is also common in elderly human beings (8-10). The term age-related sarcopenia is derived from Greek (meaning "poverty of flesh") and is characterized by a degenerative loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength, as well as increased muscle fatigability.
In adult cats, maintenance energy requirements decrease by about 3% per year until the age of 11 years, and then actually start to increase again (11). This contributes to a tendency of senior cats to lose muscle mass if their energy needs are not met. Lean body mass of aging cats drops dramatically after 12 years of age, and by age 15, cats may have a mean lean tissue mass that is a third less than cats aged 7 years or less (11, 12). Body fat also tends to progressively decrease in cats after the age of 12 years; this combination of reduced lean mass and body fat contributes to weight loss experienced by many elderly cats.
The ability to digest protein is also compromised in many geriatric cats. After the age of 14 years, one-fifth of geriatric cats have reduced ability to digest protein (11-13). Reduced protein digestibility in geriatric cats seems to occur in parallel with reduction of lean tissue and it might predispose them to negative nitrogen balance. (14).
Although moderation of calorie intake might be suitable for some mature cats, it does not appear to match the needs of most geriatric cats. In contrast, it seems more logical to use highly digestible, energy-dense food for geriatric cats in order to prevent or slow their decline in body weight and lean body tissue (11,14,15). Reducing protein intake in geriatric cats, at a time when lean tissue has been lost, is contraindicated. Geriatric cats seem to have nutritional requirements closer to kittens than to mature adult cat.
Diet Recommendations for Hyperthyroid Cats
Cats are true obligate carnivores (16-20). This means they must eat meat to survive; cats cannot be vegetarians. To me, it makes a great deal of sense to feed hyperthyroid cats, a diet with a composition close to what they would be getting in the wild. That would be a diet composed of approximately 50-60% protein, 5-10% carbohydrates, and 30-50% fat (21-23).
High Dietary Protein
As obligate carnivores, cats are unique in their need for large amounts of dietary protein (specifically, dispensable nitrogen) that separates them from omnivores and herbivore species (16-20). This absolute requirement for dietary protein intake in cats is critically important when formulating a diet for hyperthyroid cats, in which protein catabolism and muscle wasting is universally present.
Protein is the primary macronutrient responsible for maintenance of muscle mass. Restoring and preserving any remaining muscle tissue in cats treated for hyperthyroidism depends upon the cat consuming a diet with sufficient amounts of high-quality protein. In addition, this recommendation for higher amounts of dietary protein does not change once euthyroidism has been restored. The dogma that all older cats should be fed reduced energy “senior” diets must be questioned based on what is now known about the increasing energy requirements and nutritional needs of older cats (10,11).
In most geriatric cats, logic dictates the use of highly digestible, energy-dense foods to mitigate the decline in body weight and lean body tissue and help avoid protein:calorie malnutrition (10,14,15). Protein reduction for this geriatric life stage, at a time when lean tissue is being lost, is contraindicated. Geriatric cats seem to have nutritional requirements closer to kittens than to mature adult cats.
Low Dietary Carbohydrates
Since most of these cats also have subclinical diabetes —as evidenced by their mild hyperglycemia, glucose intolerance, and insulin resistance — feeding a low carbohydrate diet (<10% of total calories) also is strongly recommended. This is what most endocrinologists (myself included) also recommend in cats with diabetes mellitus (24-26).
Feeding a low carbohydrate diet will improve insulin sensitivity, reduce the need for exogenous insulin, and help stabilize glucose metabolism in these cats (24-26). This may prevent the development of overt diabetes and control long-term obesity in these cats after successful control of the hyperthyroidism.
Concurrent Kidney Disease in the Hyperthyroid Cat
Concurrent chronic kidney disease (CKD) is common in hyperthyroid cats, occurring in up to 30% of cases. Cats with advanced CKD — IRIS Stage 3 or 4 — may need lower amounts of dietary protein to lessen uremic episodes (27). However, at least in early to mid-stage renal disease, lowering of the serum phosphate concentration is much more important in management than dietary protein restriction, and this can be easily accomplished with phosphate binders without lowering the protein content of the diet (28,29). For an explanation of the IRIS system used by veterinarians to stage CKD in cats, see this link: http://www.iris-kidney.com.
It may seem impossible, but no studies have conclusively demonstrated that severe restriction of protein alone will prevent further deterioration of kidney function in cats (30). The major problem that I have with some of the prescription kidney diets is that they restrict protein to the point that some cats — especially those with concurrent hyperthyroidism —will continue to catabolize their own muscle mass despite adequate control of the thyroid condition.
Selecting a Commercially Prepared Diet for Your Hyperthyroid Cat
To me, it makes a great deal of sense to feed hyperthyroid cats a diet with a composition close to what they would be getting in the wild. To that end, I'm looking for a diet that is composed of approximately 50% protein and <10% carbohydrates (21-23). Because older cats also loss lean muscle mass in association with the “sarcopenia of aging,” this diet composition needs to be continued even after one treats the cat’s hyperthyroidism and restores euthyroidism.
Determine the Composition of the Diet
Check out this website (http://binkyspage.tripod.com/foodfaq.html), which gives you a breakdown of the composition of the various prescription and over-the-counter diets. This website uses metabolizable energy (ME) values to evaluate food composition— in other words, it gives you the percent calories that comes from the protein, fat, and carbohydrate fractions of the diet, and allows us to compare various diets without worrying about their different water levels (31).
It turns out that many of the over-the-counter diets have a better composition of protein and carbohydrates than you might have thought — even better than many of the more expensive prescription diets. Very few of my hyperthyroid cat patients require a prescription diet to fulfill their nutritional needs.
The composition of almost all dry food cat diets are much too high in carbohydrates and most are too low in protein content. That is why I believe it's best to limit the amount of dry food that is fed to cats, or even better, not feed dry food at all.
Examine the Ingredients of the Diet
Once we have selected a few diets with the required composition breakdown of carbohydrates, protein, and fat, we next have to look at the ingredient list (32). Not all of the proteins in cat foods are equal in quality. Remember that quality meat is the best ingredient in a food and that meat by-products are a close second. Some vegetable and grains are fine, but they may supply a less bioavailable form of protein for cats and should not be the primary source of dietary protein.
When deprived of protein, carnivores will continue to break down muscle tissue to create the energy they need. By feeding only high-quality protein diets, we will help restore the cat’s muscle mass and improve strength and agility.
Choosing A Pet Food Company
In addition to looking at the composition and ingredients, we have to ensure that all of the essential nutrients are present in the diet. Some of the cat foods marketed as "holistic or natural" may not actual be totally balanced or contain all of the essential amino acids that a cat needs. The best way to determine if diet is totally nutritious is to examine the diet's nutritional profile, which shows the levels or concentrations of all essential nutrients (amino acids, fat, mineral, and vitamin) in the pet food (33).
For cat owners, I recommend that they choose two or more pet food companies known to have a good track record and feed those foods. I also choose foods that carry an AAFCO feeding claim to be complete and balanced for an adult or senior cat. I would be very careful in choosing a smaller company as the primary supplier for your cat's food. Small pet food companies are less likely to have veterinary nutrition specialists on their staff, and therefore, their diets may not always balanced and could result in nutritional deficiencies.
In addition to rotating brands, I also like to feed a variety of different flavors. Why? I believe it's safer to rotate between brands because companies formulate their diets differently. It also helps to determine which brands and flavors and foods the cat prefers; since diet preferences may change over time, varying the food helps maintain a good appetite, especially as the cat ages.
Homemade Diets for Your Hyperthyroid Cat
Homemade diets can certainly be as good as any commercial diet if properly formulated and contain all of the essential nutrients needed for the older cat. The advantage of these diets is that you know exactly what ingredients they contain (34, 35). These homemade diets also allow for people to choose exactly what type of ingredient to include in the food (e.g., organic, kosher, or biodynamic ingredients).
The risk of homemade diets being improperly formulated, however, is very high unless the cat owner seeks out a veterinary nutritionist to help formulate a properly balanced diet (34, 35). I've included the links for some of the available nutritional consultation services below:
The use of uncooked meat, organs, and eggs in homemade cat food recipes can be a reason for particular concern, especially if essential safe-handling practices are not followed. Raw meat can be contaminated with microorganisms that have the potential to cause infection or food poisoning, thus posing a public health risk (34-36). Although feeding a raw diet may be the most "natural" way to provide feline nutrition and many strong arguments have been made about why raw is better (37-39), there is no clear scientific evidence that feeding raw meat has a nutritional advantage over feeding cooked meat. Given the potential health risks, the FDA does not advocate feeding raw meat, poultry, or seafood to pets (36).
If you do decide to feed a raw diet to your cat, whole raw diets for cats are available for purchase online (e.g., felinespride.com). These diets are handled and prepared carefully by the processor, frozen immediately to help prevent bacterial contamination, and kept frozen until they are delivered to your door.
If a diet is unsafe to eat or fails to provide all of the essential nutrients, a homemade cooked or raw diet provides the worst kind of nutrition. Unless one is highly dedicated and becomes knowledgeable to ensure that the homemade diet is both safe and balanced, it's generally best to stick with the commercial, canned diets, selecting them based on the criteria listed above.
The Bottom Line
Proper nutrition plays an extremely important supportive role in the management of a cat with hyperthyroidism, which needs to be maintained even after successful treatment of the cat's hyperthyroid state. These cats should be fed a balanced and complete diet, ideally containing relatively low amounts of carbohydrates and higher amounts of protein. This diet composition will help restore and preserve the muscle mass that has been lost as a result of increased muscle protein breakdown characteristic of hyperthyroidism.
If commercial canned food is fed, feed balanced food with healthy ingredients from more than one good company. If you decide to go with a homemade diet, get the recipe balanced and formulated by a veterinary nutritionist. And of course, continue to check in with your veterinarian for regular physical and biochemical examinations to help pick up any emerging problems that may develop as time goes on.
References
The question, “What’s the best diet to feed my hyperthyroid cat?” is an extremely common one that I get from concerned cat owners. In this post, I will discuss the ideal food composition and nutrients that I believe hyperthyroid cats should be fed.
The Many Metabolic Problems Facing the Hyperthyroid Cat
When secreted in excess, thyroid hormones have profound metabolic effects on the whole body, and dysfunction of multiple organ systems is common in hyperthyroid cats (1-3).
Weight Loss and Muscle Wasting
Weight loss, despite a normal to increased appetite, is the classic and most common sign seen in cats with hyperthyroidism (1-3). These cats lose weight because their hyperthyroidism accelerates their metabolic rate and body’s energy expenditure. In other words, they are burning up their food calories faster than they can consume their daily meals.
It’s important to realize that hyperthyroidism is a catabolic wasting state, in which a "breaking down" of the body occurs no matter how much nutritional intake occurs. The progressive weight loss and muscle wasting that is so characteristic of feline disease is caused by an increased rate of fat and muscle protein breakdown (4,5).
When hyperthyroid cats initially lose weight, this can be first noticed as a loss of muscle mass over the cat’s lower back. Despite this loss of muscle mass, most mildly hyperthyroid cats retain their “belly” during the initial stages of their thyroid disease and may even have a higher than ideal body condition score.
With time, severe muscle wasting, emaciation, cachexia, and death from starvation can occur if the cat’s hyperthyroidism is left untreated (1-3). In hyperthyroidism, the cat’s body consumes its own muscle tissue to get the protein it needs to sustain its carnivorous life.
Even with treatment of hyperthyroidism, recovery of muscle mass and function may be prolonged, lasting several weeks to months. This is especially true if these cats are not provided with enough protein in their diet to rebuild and maintain their lost muscle mass.
High Blood Glucose, Insulin Resistance, and Diabetes Mellitus
Hyperthyroid cats can also develop profound changes in carbohydrate metabolism (glucose and insulin metabolism). Slightly high resting blood glucose (sugar) concentrations are common in hyperthyroid cats, which is generally attributed to a “stress” reaction.
However, the actual metabolic changes are actually much more complicated. Hyperthyroidism frequently causes moderate to severe insulin resistance (6,7), which is a physiological condition where the natural hormone insulin becomes less effective at lowering blood glucose levels. This insulin resistance is associated with a decreased glucose clearance, which is indicative of a prediabetic state. Occasionally, an untreated hyperthyroid cat will even go on to develop full-blown diabetes mellitus. Many of these diabetic cats are difficult to regulate with insulin therapy but treatment of their concurrent hyperthyroid state generally improves diabetic control.
Unfortunately, the insulin resistance and associated prediabetic state — so common in hyperthyroid cats —do not always improve despite successful treatment of hyperthyroidism (7). This indicates that hyperthyroid cats may have long-lasting alterations of carbohydrate metabolism that cannot always be reversed by treatment. In accord with that, some of these hyperthyroid cats (not diabetic at time of diagnosis) will go on to develop overt diabetes mellitus in the months to years after treatment of hyperthyroidism.
Sarcopenia of Aging
In addition to loss of muscle mass from the catabolic effects of thyroid hormone excess, cats also tend to lose muscle mass as they age, independent of their thyroid status. This phenomenon, referred to as sarcopenia of aging, is also common in elderly human beings (8-10). The term age-related sarcopenia is derived from Greek (meaning "poverty of flesh") and is characterized by a degenerative loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength, as well as increased muscle fatigability.
In adult cats, maintenance energy requirements decrease by about 3% per year until the age of 11 years, and then actually start to increase again (11). This contributes to a tendency of senior cats to lose muscle mass if their energy needs are not met. Lean body mass of aging cats drops dramatically after 12 years of age, and by age 15, cats may have a mean lean tissue mass that is a third less than cats aged 7 years or less (11, 12). Body fat also tends to progressively decrease in cats after the age of 12 years; this combination of reduced lean mass and body fat contributes to weight loss experienced by many elderly cats.
The ability to digest protein is also compromised in many geriatric cats. After the age of 14 years, one-fifth of geriatric cats have reduced ability to digest protein (11-13). Reduced protein digestibility in geriatric cats seems to occur in parallel with reduction of lean tissue and it might predispose them to negative nitrogen balance. (14).
Although moderation of calorie intake might be suitable for some mature cats, it does not appear to match the needs of most geriatric cats. In contrast, it seems more logical to use highly digestible, energy-dense food for geriatric cats in order to prevent or slow their decline in body weight and lean body tissue (11,14,15). Reducing protein intake in geriatric cats, at a time when lean tissue has been lost, is contraindicated. Geriatric cats seem to have nutritional requirements closer to kittens than to mature adult cat.
Diet Recommendations for Hyperthyroid Cats
Cats are true obligate carnivores (16-20). This means they must eat meat to survive; cats cannot be vegetarians. To me, it makes a great deal of sense to feed hyperthyroid cats, a diet with a composition close to what they would be getting in the wild. That would be a diet composed of approximately 50-60% protein, 5-10% carbohydrates, and 30-50% fat (21-23).
High Dietary Protein
As obligate carnivores, cats are unique in their need for large amounts of dietary protein (specifically, dispensable nitrogen) that separates them from omnivores and herbivore species (16-20). This absolute requirement for dietary protein intake in cats is critically important when formulating a diet for hyperthyroid cats, in which protein catabolism and muscle wasting is universally present.
Protein is the primary macronutrient responsible for maintenance of muscle mass. Restoring and preserving any remaining muscle tissue in cats treated for hyperthyroidism depends upon the cat consuming a diet with sufficient amounts of high-quality protein. In addition, this recommendation for higher amounts of dietary protein does not change once euthyroidism has been restored. The dogma that all older cats should be fed reduced energy “senior” diets must be questioned based on what is now known about the increasing energy requirements and nutritional needs of older cats (10,11).
In most geriatric cats, logic dictates the use of highly digestible, energy-dense foods to mitigate the decline in body weight and lean body tissue and help avoid protein:calorie malnutrition (10,14,15). Protein reduction for this geriatric life stage, at a time when lean tissue is being lost, is contraindicated. Geriatric cats seem to have nutritional requirements closer to kittens than to mature adult cats.
Low Dietary Carbohydrates
Since most of these cats also have subclinical diabetes —as evidenced by their mild hyperglycemia, glucose intolerance, and insulin resistance — feeding a low carbohydrate diet (<10% of total calories) also is strongly recommended. This is what most endocrinologists (myself included) also recommend in cats with diabetes mellitus (24-26).
Feeding a low carbohydrate diet will improve insulin sensitivity, reduce the need for exogenous insulin, and help stabilize glucose metabolism in these cats (24-26). This may prevent the development of overt diabetes and control long-term obesity in these cats after successful control of the hyperthyroidism.
Concurrent Kidney Disease in the Hyperthyroid Cat
Concurrent chronic kidney disease (CKD) is common in hyperthyroid cats, occurring in up to 30% of cases. Cats with advanced CKD — IRIS Stage 3 or 4 — may need lower amounts of dietary protein to lessen uremic episodes (27). However, at least in early to mid-stage renal disease, lowering of the serum phosphate concentration is much more important in management than dietary protein restriction, and this can be easily accomplished with phosphate binders without lowering the protein content of the diet (28,29). For an explanation of the IRIS system used by veterinarians to stage CKD in cats, see this link: http://www.iris-kidney.com.
It may seem impossible, but no studies have conclusively demonstrated that severe restriction of protein alone will prevent further deterioration of kidney function in cats (30). The major problem that I have with some of the prescription kidney diets is that they restrict protein to the point that some cats — especially those with concurrent hyperthyroidism —will continue to catabolize their own muscle mass despite adequate control of the thyroid condition.
Selecting a Commercially Prepared Diet for Your Hyperthyroid Cat
To me, it makes a great deal of sense to feed hyperthyroid cats a diet with a composition close to what they would be getting in the wild. To that end, I'm looking for a diet that is composed of approximately 50% protein and <10% carbohydrates (21-23). Because older cats also loss lean muscle mass in association with the “sarcopenia of aging,” this diet composition needs to be continued even after one treats the cat’s hyperthyroidism and restores euthyroidism.
Determine the Composition of the Diet
Check out this website (http://binkyspage.tripod.com/foodfaq.html), which gives you a breakdown of the composition of the various prescription and over-the-counter diets. This website uses metabolizable energy (ME) values to evaluate food composition— in other words, it gives you the percent calories that comes from the protein, fat, and carbohydrate fractions of the diet, and allows us to compare various diets without worrying about their different water levels (31).
It turns out that many of the over-the-counter diets have a better composition of protein and carbohydrates than you might have thought — even better than many of the more expensive prescription diets. Very few of my hyperthyroid cat patients require a prescription diet to fulfill their nutritional needs.
The composition of almost all dry food cat diets are much too high in carbohydrates and most are too low in protein content. That is why I believe it's best to limit the amount of dry food that is fed to cats, or even better, not feed dry food at all.
Examine the Ingredients of the Diet
Once we have selected a few diets with the required composition breakdown of carbohydrates, protein, and fat, we next have to look at the ingredient list (32). Not all of the proteins in cat foods are equal in quality. Remember that quality meat is the best ingredient in a food and that meat by-products are a close second. Some vegetable and grains are fine, but they may supply a less bioavailable form of protein for cats and should not be the primary source of dietary protein.
When deprived of protein, carnivores will continue to break down muscle tissue to create the energy they need. By feeding only high-quality protein diets, we will help restore the cat’s muscle mass and improve strength and agility.
Choosing A Pet Food Company
In addition to looking at the composition and ingredients, we have to ensure that all of the essential nutrients are present in the diet. Some of the cat foods marketed as "holistic or natural" may not actual be totally balanced or contain all of the essential amino acids that a cat needs. The best way to determine if diet is totally nutritious is to examine the diet's nutritional profile, which shows the levels or concentrations of all essential nutrients (amino acids, fat, mineral, and vitamin) in the pet food (33).
For cat owners, I recommend that they choose two or more pet food companies known to have a good track record and feed those foods. I also choose foods that carry an AAFCO feeding claim to be complete and balanced for an adult or senior cat. I would be very careful in choosing a smaller company as the primary supplier for your cat's food. Small pet food companies are less likely to have veterinary nutrition specialists on their staff, and therefore, their diets may not always balanced and could result in nutritional deficiencies.
In addition to rotating brands, I also like to feed a variety of different flavors. Why? I believe it's safer to rotate between brands because companies formulate their diets differently. It also helps to determine which brands and flavors and foods the cat prefers; since diet preferences may change over time, varying the food helps maintain a good appetite, especially as the cat ages.
Homemade Diets for Your Hyperthyroid Cat
Homemade diets can certainly be as good as any commercial diet if properly formulated and contain all of the essential nutrients needed for the older cat. The advantage of these diets is that you know exactly what ingredients they contain (34, 35). These homemade diets also allow for people to choose exactly what type of ingredient to include in the food (e.g., organic, kosher, or biodynamic ingredients).
The risk of homemade diets being improperly formulated, however, is very high unless the cat owner seeks out a veterinary nutritionist to help formulate a properly balanced diet (34, 35). I've included the links for some of the available nutritional consultation services below:
- Veterinary Nutritional Consultations — PetDiets.com
- DVM Consulting — BalanceIT.com
- Dr. Susan Wynn, Georgia Veterinary Specialists — SusanWynn.com
- Clinical Nutrition Program, University of Missouri
- Veterinary Nutrition Service, University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine
The use of uncooked meat, organs, and eggs in homemade cat food recipes can be a reason for particular concern, especially if essential safe-handling practices are not followed. Raw meat can be contaminated with microorganisms that have the potential to cause infection or food poisoning, thus posing a public health risk (34-36). Although feeding a raw diet may be the most "natural" way to provide feline nutrition and many strong arguments have been made about why raw is better (37-39), there is no clear scientific evidence that feeding raw meat has a nutritional advantage over feeding cooked meat. Given the potential health risks, the FDA does not advocate feeding raw meat, poultry, or seafood to pets (36).
If you do decide to feed a raw diet to your cat, whole raw diets for cats are available for purchase online (e.g., felinespride.com). These diets are handled and prepared carefully by the processor, frozen immediately to help prevent bacterial contamination, and kept frozen until they are delivered to your door.
If a diet is unsafe to eat or fails to provide all of the essential nutrients, a homemade cooked or raw diet provides the worst kind of nutrition. Unless one is highly dedicated and becomes knowledgeable to ensure that the homemade diet is both safe and balanced, it's generally best to stick with the commercial, canned diets, selecting them based on the criteria listed above.
The Bottom Line
Proper nutrition plays an extremely important supportive role in the management of a cat with hyperthyroidism, which needs to be maintained even after successful treatment of the cat's hyperthyroid state. These cats should be fed a balanced and complete diet, ideally containing relatively low amounts of carbohydrates and higher amounts of protein. This diet composition will help restore and preserve the muscle mass that has been lost as a result of increased muscle protein breakdown characteristic of hyperthyroidism.
If commercial canned food is fed, feed balanced food with healthy ingredients from more than one good company. If you decide to go with a homemade diet, get the recipe balanced and formulated by a veterinary nutritionist. And of course, continue to check in with your veterinarian for regular physical and biochemical examinations to help pick up any emerging problems that may develop as time goes on.
References
- Peterson ME, Kintzer PP, Cavanagh PG, et al. Feline hyperthyroidism: pretreatment clinical and laboratory evaluation of 131 cases. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 1981;183:103-110.
- Joseph RJ, Peterson ME. Review and comparison of neuromuscular and central nervous system manifestations of hyperthyroidism in cats and humans. Progress in Veterinary Neurology 1992;3:114-119.
- Baral R, Peterson ME: Thyroid Diseases, In: Little, S. (ed), The Cat: Clinical Medicine and Management. Philadelphia, Elsevier Saunders, 2012;571-692
- Morrison WL, Gibson JN, Jung RT, Rennie MJ. Skeletal muscle and whole body protein turnover in thyroid disease. European Journal of Clinical Investigation 1988;18:62–68.
- Riis AL, Jørgensen JO, Gjedde S, et al. Whole body and forearm substrate metabolism in hyperthyroidism: evidence of increased basal muscle protein breakdown. American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology and Metabolism 2005; 288:E1067-1073.
- Hoenig M, Ferguson DC. Impairment of glucose tolerance in hyperthyroid cats. Journal of Endocrinology 1989;121:249-251.
- Hoenig M, Peterson ME, Ferguson DC. Glucose tolerance and insulin secretion in spontaneously hyperthyroid cats. Research in Veterinary Science 1992;53:338-341.
- Short KR, Nair KS. Mechanisms of sarcopenia of aging. Journal of Endocrinological Investigation 1999;22(5 Suppl):95-105.
- Fujita S, Volpi E. Nutrition and sarcopenia of ageing. Nutrition Research Reviews 2004;17:69-76.
- Wolfe RR. Sarcopenia of aging: Implications of the age-related loss of lean body mass. Proceedings of the Nestlé Purina Companion Animal Nutrition Summit: Focus on Gerontology. St. Louis, MO. 2010, pp. 12-17.
- Little S: Evaluation of the senior cat with weight loss, In: Little, S. (ed), The Cat: Clinical Medicine and Management. Philadelphia, Elsevier Saunders, in press.
- Perez-Camargo G: Cat nutrition: What is new in the old? Compendium for Continuing Education for the Practicing Veterinarian 2004;26 (Suppl 2A):5-10.
- Patil AR, Cupp C, Pérez-Camargo G. Incidence of impaired nutrient digestibility in aging cats. Nestlé Purina Nutrition Forum Proceedings. 2003;26,2(A):72.
- Wakshlag JJ. Dietary protein consumption in the healthy aging companion animal. Proceedings of the Nestlé Purina Companion Animal Nutrition Summit: Focus on Gerontology. St. Louis, MO. 2010, pp. 32-39.
- Sparkes AH. Feeding old cats— An update on new nutritional therapies. Topics in Companion Animal Medicine 2011;26:37-42.
- MacDonald ML, Rogers QR, Morris JG. Nutrition of the domestic cat, a mammalian carnivore. Annual Review of Nutrition 1984;4:521-562.
- Morris JG. Idiosyncratic nutrient requirements of cats appear to be diet-induced evolutionary adaptations. Nutrition Research Reviews 2002;15:153-168.
- Zaghini G, Biagi G. Nutritional peculiarities and diet palatability in the cat. Veterinary Research Communications 2005;29, Suppl 2:39-44
- Zoran DL. The carnivore connection to nutrition in cats. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 2002;221:1559-1567.
- Zoran DL, Buffington CA. Effects of nutrition choices and lifestyle changes on the well-being of cats, a carnivore that has moved indoors. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 2011;239:596-606.
- Myrcha A, Pinowski J. Weights, body composition and caloric value of post-juvenile molting European tree sparrows. Condor 1970;72:175–178.
- Vondruska JF. The effect of a rat carcass diet on the urinary pH of the cat. Companion Animal Practice 1987;1:5-9.
- Crissey SD, Slifka KA, Lintzenich BA. Whole body cholesterol, fat, and fatty acid concentrations of mice (Mus domesticus) used as a food source. Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 1999;30:222-227.
- Rucinsky R, Cook A, Haley S, et al. AAHA diabetes management guidelines for dogs and cats. Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association 2010;46:215-224.
- Frank G, Anderson W, Pazak H, et al. Use of a high-protein diet in the management of feline diabetes mellitus. Veterinary Therapeutics 2001;2:238-246.
- Rand JS, Fleeman LM, Farrow HA, et al. Canine and feline diabetes mellitus: nature or nurture? The Journal of 2004;134(8 Suppl):2072S-2080S.
- Plotnick A. Feline chronic renal failure: Long-term medical management. Compendium for Continuing Education for the Practicing Veterinarian 2007;29:342-324, 346-350.
- Kidder AC, Chew D. Treatment options for hyperphosphatemia in feline CKD: what's out there? Journal of Feline Medicine and 2009;11:913-924.
- Schmidt B, Spiecker-Hauser U, Murphy M. Efficacy and safety of Lantharenol on phosphorus metabolism in cats with chronic kidney disease. American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine Forum, 2008.
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