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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Food allergy and intolerance in dogs and cats diagnosis and care

By Wills, J & Harvey, R·Published in Australian veterinary journal·1994·Waltham Centre for Pet Nutrition, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Diagnosis and management of food allergy and intolerance in dogs and cats.

Plain-English summary

A dog or cat showing signs of itching, gastrointestinal upset, or other unusual symptoms may be suffering from a food allergy or intolerance. Common triggers include proteins from cow's milk, beef, fish, or certain grains. To diagnose this condition, veterinarians often recommend an elimination diet, which involves feeding your pet a special diet with limited ingredients, such as lamb or chicken with rice or potatoes. If symptoms improve on the elimination diet, it suggests a food allergy. The diagnosis can be confirmed by reintroducing the original diet and observing if symptoms return within a couple of weeks.

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Abstract

This paper reviews food allergy and intolerance in dogs and cats. Adverse reactions to ingested food components can affect many systems and can produce signs involving the skin, gastrointestinal tract, respiratory tract and central nervous system, and these clinical signs are reviewed. Most basic food ingredients have the potential to induce an allergic response, although most reactions are caused by proteins. In particular, dogs and cats can become sensitive to cow's milk, beef, fish or cereal. Food allergy and intolerance is rare in dogs and cats, although the incidence in practice is difficult to establish. Clinical signs are quite variable, depending on the individual response, although the major clinical sign is pruritus. Diagnosis can be difficult, as there is no single test available to help the clinician to confirm or refute the presence of food sensitivity. Diagnosis is based on dietary investigation in the form of elimination diets and test meals. Elimination diets for dogs include lamb, chicken, rabbit, horse meat and fish as sources of protein, with rice or potatoes. Successful elimination diets for cats include lamb, chicken, rabbit or venison, with rice. Improvement in clinical signs while on the elimination diet is suggestive of food allergy. The diagnosis should be confirmed by feeding the original diet, with the development of clinical signs within 7 to 14 days of feeding.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7848179/