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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Thiamine levels vary in commercial canned cat foods

By Markovich, Jessica E et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2014·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Analysis of thiamine concentrations in commercial canned foods formulated for cats.

Species:
cat
Brain & nervesCats

Plain-English summary

A study found that some commercial canned cat foods have low levels of thiamine, an important vitamin for cats. Out of 90 different canned foods tested, 12 had thiamine levels below the minimum recommended amount, which could lead to health issues. Foods that were pâté-style had lower thiamine levels compared to other textures, and smaller companies tended to produce foods with less thiamine than larger companies. If your cat shows signs of neurological problems, it might be worth discussing thiamine deficiency with your veterinarian, especially if they eat canned food regularly.

People also search for: cat canned food thiamine levels · signs of thiamine deficiency in cats · best canned food for cats · cat neurological problems causes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To measure thiamine concentrations in commercial canned foods formulated for cats as an initial assessment of the variation among canned foods and to determine the effects of flavor (fish vs nonfish) of the food, texture (paté vs nonpaté) of the food, country of manufacture, and size of the company on thiamine concentration. DESIGN: Prospective cross-sectional study. SAMPLE: 90 canned, nontherapeutic diets formulated for cats (1 fish and 1 nonfish flavor for each of 45 brands). PROCEDURES: Each canned food was homogenized, and thiamine concentration was analyzed with a fluorometric method. RESULTS: Thiamine concentration was below the minimums of the Association of American Feed Control Officials in 12 of 90 (13.3%) foods and below the recommended allowance of the National Research Council in 14 of 90 (15.6%) foods. Paté foods had significantly lower thiamine concentrations than did nonpaté foods, and foods from smaller companies had significantly lower thiamine concentrations, compared with concentrations in foods from larger companies. Flavor of food and country of manufacture were not significantly associated with thiamine concentration. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: A wide range of thiamine concentrations was found in the foods evaluated. Thiamine concentration in a substantial percentage of commercially available canned foods was below the amount recommended for adult cats. Additional research on interlot and intralot variation in thiamine concentrations of foods formulated for cats is warranted. Companies should implement strict quality control and analysis practices regarding food products. Clinicians should consider thiamine deficiency as a differential diagnosis in a cat with acute neurologic dysfunction.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24378026/