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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How high protein or carb diets affect healthy dogs' poop and gut

By Hang, Ingrid et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2013·Department of Equine and Small Animal Medicine·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Impact of diets with a high content of greaves-meal protein or carbohydrates on faecal characteristics, volatile fatty acids and faecal calprotectin concentrations in healthy dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Five healthy Beagle dogs were fed different diets to see how it affected their poop and gut health. The dogs on a high-protein greaves-meal diet developed diarrhea, while those on a high-carbohydrate diet had better stool consistency. The study found that the high-protein diet not only caused diarrhea but also changed the levels of certain fatty acids in their feces. Overall, the high-protein diet was not well tolerated, leading to digestive issues in all the dogs.

People also search for: dog diarrhea causes · Beagle diet for healthy stool · high-protein dog food effects

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Research suggests that dietary composition influences gastrointestinal function and bacteria-derived metabolic products in the dog colon. We previously reported that dietary composition impacts upon the faecal microbiota of healthy dogs. This study aims at evaluating the dietary influences on bacteria-derived metabolic products associated with the changes in faecal microbiota that we had previously reported. We fed high-carbohydrate starch based (HCS), [crude protein: 194 g/kg, starch: 438 g/kg], high-protein greaves-meal (HPGM), [crude protein: 609 g/kg, starch: 54 g/kg] and dry commercial (DC), [crude protein: 264 g/kg, starch: 277 g/kg] diets, and studied their effects on the metabolism of the colonic microbiota and faecal calprotectin concentrations in five Beagle dogs, allocated according to the Graeco-Latin square design. Each dietary period lasted for three weeks and was crossed-over with washout periods. Food intake, body weight, and faecal consistency scores, dry matter, pH, ammonia, volatile fatty acids (VFAs), and faecal canine calprotectin concentrations were determined. RESULTS: Faecal ammonia concentrations decreased with the HCS diet. All dogs fed the HPGM diet developed diarrhoea, which led to differences in faecal consistency scores between the diets. Faecal pH was higher with the HPGM diet. Moreover, decreases in propionic and acetic acids coupled with increases in branched-chain fatty acids and valeric acid caused changes in faecal total VFAs in dogs on the HPGM diet. Faecal canine calprotectin concentration was higher with the HPGM diet and correlated positively with valeric acid concentration. CONCLUSIONS: The HPGM diet led to diarrhoea in all dogs, and there were differences in faecal VFA profiles and faecal canine calprotectin concentrations.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24107268/