Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Effects of fermented pea starch on dog and cat health
By Curso-Almeida, Priscilla et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2025·Western College of Veterinary Medicine, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effects of feeding-fermented pea starch on overall, metabolic and intestinal health of dogs and cats.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of beagle dogs was fed a diet containing either fermented pea starch, unfermented pea starch, or a corn-based control diet for 20 days to see how it affected their health. The results showed that both pea diets led to better metabolic health, with lower levels of triglycerides and cholesterol compared to the corn diet. Dogs on the fermented pea starch diet also had a healthier gut microbiome, meaning more diverse and balanced gut bacteria. Overall, feeding dogs pea starch can improve their health, and fermentation may offer even more benefits.
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Abstract
Pulse-based pet foods often contain peas or pea starch, which tend to impart a bitter taste. Fermentation increases feed palatability, but also has the potential to improve overall health. Therefore, the current study used the yeast,to ferment pea starch for use in pet food and assessed health effects, focusing on metabolic and intestinal health in dogs and cats. Whole diets had ~30% starch inclusion of either-fermented pea starch, unfermented pea starch, or a control corn diet fed over a 20-day period to beagle dogs and domestic cats. Complete blood count, biochemistry, adipokines, and triglyceride levels were assessed, along with fecal short chain fatty acids, microbial diversity and abundance to measure intestinal health. It was found that pea-based diets (regardless of fermentation) generally resulted in improved metabolic health by both species, indicated by lower plasma triglycerides, cholesterol, and leptin levels compared to the control corn diet. Additionally, the-fermented pea starch diet improved dog fecal microbial diversity, while both pea diets increased richness and evenness in the microbial population and a largerpopulation compared to dogs fed the corn-based diet. In contrast, cat microbiome could not be quantitatively evaluated due to poor fecal quality. Taken together, inclusion of pea starch improves metabolic and intestinal health after 20 days consumption in dogs, while fermentation of pea starch withmay provide additional benefit.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40552080/