Perea Sally C, Marks Stanley L, Daristotle Leighann, Koochaki Patricia E, Haydock Richard
P&G Pet Care, Mason, OH, USA.
Department of Medicine and Epidemiology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA, USA.
Front Vet Sci. 2017 May 10;4:69. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2017.00069. eCollection 2017.
Management of feline chronic gastroenteropathies has included intervention with both veterinary therapeutic formulas designed to manage non-specific gastrointestinal disorders and those designed with limited novel or hydrolyzed ingredients for management of food-responsive enteropathies and steroid-responsive enteropathies (inflammatory bowel disease). There have been few studies evaluating the use of dietary intervention for the management of feline chronic gastroenteropathy. This prospective, multi-center study evaluated the use of two commercially available feline veterinary therapeutic dry diets designed to manage non-specific gastrointestinal disorders in 28 cats with a history of chronic vomiting and/or diarrhea. The majority of cats enrolled in the study had a history of vomiting ( = 25), with a smaller number having a history of concurrent diarrhea ( = 2) or diarrhea alone ( = 3). Cats were excluded if diagnostic tests identified any systemic or infectious disease that could be associated with the clinical signs of vomiting or diarrhea, and if they were panhypoproteinemic, hypoalbuminemic, hypocobalaminemic, or had a Spec fPL ≥5.4 µg/L. Cats were randomized to one of two veterinary therapeutic diets for 4 weeks. Feeding of both therapeutic diets resulted in a numeric reduction in the number of vomiting episodes over the 4-week period, but no significant differences were seen between dietary interventions. When looking within dietary groups, significant differences were seen in cats fed Diet A with reductions of 69.1, 73.3, and 63.2% ( values of 0.008, 0.003, and 0.029) in weeks 2, 3, and 4, respectively, when compared to week 0. The probability of vomiting also showed significant reductions in cats fed Diet A between weeks 0 and 2, 3, and 4, with odds ratios of 0.008, 0.005, and 0.005, respectively ( values of 0.038, 0.23, and 0.23). Results of this study demonstrate that a veterinary therapeutic gastrointestinal formula can be effective in the management of feline chronic vomiting. Cats that fail to respond to this dietary approach after a 2- to 4-week trial may benefit from a limited novel or hydrolyzed ingredient formula and may require additional diagnostics to better characterize the underlying disease.
猫慢性胃肠病的管理方法包括使用兽医治疗配方进行干预,这些配方旨在管理非特异性胃肠道疾病,以及那些含有有限新型或水解成分的配方,用于管理食物反应性肠病和类固醇反应性肠病(炎症性肠病)。评估饮食干预对猫慢性胃肠病管理效果的研究很少。这项前瞻性、多中心研究评估了两种市售的猫用兽医治疗性干粮在28只患有慢性呕吐和/或腹泻病史的猫中的使用情况,这些干粮旨在管理非特异性胃肠道疾病。参与研究的大多数猫有呕吐病史(n = 25),少数有同时腹泻病史(n = 2)或仅有腹泻病史(n = 3)。如果诊断测试发现任何可能与呕吐或腹泻临床症状相关的全身性或感染性疾病,以及如果它们是全蛋白血症、低白蛋白血症、低钴胺素血症,或特异性猫胰脂肪酶(Spec fPL)≥5.4 μg/L,则将猫排除。猫被随机分配到两种兽医治疗性饮食中的一种,为期4周。两种治疗性饮食的喂养在4周内都使呕吐发作次数在数值上有所减少,但饮食干预之间没有显著差异。在饮食组内观察时,与第0周相比,喂食饮食A的猫在第2、3和4周分别有69.1%、73.3%和63.2%的显著减少(P值分别为0.008、0.003和0.029)。在第0周与第2、3和4周之间,喂食饮食A的猫呕吐的概率也显著降低,优势比分别为0.008、0.005和0.005(P值分别为0.038、0.23和0.23)。这项研究的结果表明,兽医治疗性胃肠配方在管理猫慢性呕吐方面可能是有效的。在进行2至4周的试验后对这种饮食方法无反应的猫可能会从有限的新型或水解成分配方中受益,并且可能需要额外的诊断来更好地确定潜在疾病的特征。