Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2398342 | Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Obesity is one of the most common medical diseases in cats, but there remains little information on success of weight loss regimes in obese client-owned cats. No information currently exists on body composition changes during weight loss in clinical cases. Twelve obese client-owned cats undertook a weight loss programme incorporating a high-protein low fat diet. Body composition was quantified by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, before and after weight loss. Mean (±standard deviation) weight loss was 27 ± 6.8% of starting weight, and mean rate of weight loss was 0.8 ± 0.32% per week. Mean energy allocation during weight loss was 32 ± 7.0 kcal/kg target weight. Mean composition of tissue lost was 86:13:1 (fat:lean:bone mineral). The proportion of lean tissue loss was positively associated with overall percentage of weight loss (simple linear regression, r2 = 44.2%, P = 0.026). Conventional weight loss programmes produce safe weight loss, but lean tissue loss is an inevitable consequence in cats that lose significant proportions of their starting body weight.