Home-prepared diets can be very palatable depending on the ingredients used, but are usually not nutritionally complete, with the calcium/phosphorus balance, amino acid content and vitamin, mineral and fatty acid levels being particular problem areas. Dietary imbalances can result in serious health problems; for example,
- bone disease in kittens eating a fresh meat only diet.
- blindness, heart disease and infertility in cats fed diets deficient in certain amino
acids.
- deformity of the skeleton in cats fed too much liver.
- poor skin and coat condition in cats eating diets deficient in fatty acids.
Supermarket cat foods will usually meet your cat’s basic nutritional requirements but tend to
have a flexible ingredient formula, depending on what is most cheaply available. Ingredient lists often use general terms such as meat and meat by-products, cereals, cereal by-products and vegetable proteins without stating the actual source. One batch of food may be completely different from the next. This may explain some bouts of diarrhoea that cats get when their diets have apparently not been changed. Cheaper ingredients result in reduced palatability and digestibility and a larger volume of stools with more odour. Artificial colours and flavour enhancers are often used and the balance of fatty acids, vital for a healthy skin and coat, is not optimal.
Vet recommended premium cat foods are quality cat foods available from vet clinics and some pet food stores. They are available in formulations to suit cats of all ages and activity levels, such as kitten, adult, senior and low calorie, in both tinned and dried varieties.
These foods have the following advantages:
- Protein levels are elevated and proteins are of animal origin. All protein is of a high
biological value, which means that the balance of amino acids matches the needs of
your cat. Such quality proteins include chicken, egg and fish, but not dairy products
which cause diarrhoea in some cats, or soybean products which do not contain all the
amino acids your cat needs and can interfere with digestion of other nutrients.
- Chicken fat is added, a concentrated source of energy and a rich source of arachidonic
acid, a specific fatty acid requirement of cats which is not present in vegetable fats and
is also deficient in some animal fats.
- These diets are highly digestible, resulting in a smaller volume of stools with less smell,
especially important with recent concerns regarding environmental contamination with
cat faeces.
- These diets have a fixed, specific ingredient list. Each batch of food is the same as the
previous one.
- The quality meat protein in these diets allows cats to maintain an acidic urine and the
level of magnesium is optimal, both factors important in avoiding some forms of
cystitis and bladder stones.
- The fibre provides a blend of soluble and insoluble fibre which promotes the health of
the good bacteria in the bowel. These bacteria prevent invasion of the bowel by
harmful bacteria and produce acids which make the cells lining the bowel healthier.
- No artificial colours or flavour enhancers are added.
- They are highly palatable which means less waste through uneaten food.