Author:
Houston Doreen M.,Weese Heather E.,Evason Michelle D.,Biourge Vincent,van Hoek Ingrid
Abstract
Magnesium ammonium phosphate (struvite) is one of the most common minerals found in feline uroliths. Previous studies have shown the efficacy of acidifying calculolytic diets (inducing urine pH < 6·5), in dissolving struvite stones in cats. Recent work in our laboratory found that wet and dry test diets induce a struvite urinary relative supersaturation (RSS) < 1 and that the urine of healthy cats fed the dry test diet dissolved feline struvite stones in vitro. The objective of the present study was to demonstrate the efficacy of those test diets on naturally occurring struvite urocystoliths in cats. A total of twenty-one cats were used, of which seventeen completed the study. Of the seventeen cats, eight were fed the wet test diet and nine the dry test diet. Uroliths dissolved in a median of 18 (10–55) d. In the remaining four cats, uroliths failed to dissolve and were removed surgically. Quantitative analysis showed that these uroliths contained either calcium oxalate or calcium phosphate. The present study demonstrates that diets that induce a struvite RSS < 1 result in struvite stone dissolution in vivo.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Reference17 articles.
1. Evaluation of clinical signs and causes of lower urinary tract disease in European cats
2. Feline urethral plugs and bladder uroliths: a review of 5484 submissions 1998–2003;Houston;Can Vet J,2003
3. Canine and feline urolithiasis: a look at over 50,000 urolith submissions to the Canadian Veterinary Urolith Centre from February 1998 to August 2008;Houston;Can Vet J,2009
4. Epidemiologic study of risk factors for lower urinary tract diseases in cats
Cited by
18 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献