Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How acid or alkaline diets affect bone and urine in healthy cats
By Bartges, Joseph W et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2013·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Influence of acidifying or alkalinizing diets on bone mineral density and urine relative supersaturation with calcium oxalate and struvite in healthy cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A study involving 12 healthy cats looked at how different diets—acidifying, neutral, and alkalinizing—affected their urine and bone health over a year. The cats on the acidifying diet had more acidic urine, which increased the risk of calcium oxalate crystals, while those on the alkalinizing diet had less risk. However, none of the diets negatively impacted the cats' bone density or calcium levels. This suggests that feeding an alkalinizing diet can help reduce the risk of certain urinary crystals without harming bone health.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the influence of acidifying or alkalinizing diets on bone mineral density and urine relative supersaturation (URSS) with calcium oxalate and struvite in healthy cats. ANIMALS: 6 castrated male and 6 spayed female cats. PROCEDURES: 3 groups of 4 cats each were fed diets for 12 months that differed only in acidifying or alkalinizing properties (alkalinizing, neutral, and acidifying). Body composition was estimated by use of dual energy x-ray absorptiometry, and 48-hour urine samples were collected for URSS determination. RESULTS: Urine pH differed significantly among diet groups, with the lowest urine pH values in the acidifying diet group and the highest values in the alkalinizing diet group. Differences were not observed in other variables except urinary ammonia excretion, which was significantly higher in the neutral diet group. Calcium oxalate URSS was highest in the acidifying diet group and lowest in the alkalinizing diet group; struvite URSS was not different among groups. Diet was not significantly associated with bone mineral content or density. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Urinary undersaturation with calcium oxalate was achieved by inducing alkaluria. Feeding an alkalinizing diet was not associated with URSS with struvite. Bone mineral density and calcium content were not adversely affected by diet; therefore, release of calcium from bone caused by feeding an acidifying diet may not occur in healthy cats.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24066920/