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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Kitten bone disease from unbalanced homemade diet and fix problems

By Freya Moscoso et al.·Published in Veterinary Record Case Reports·2025·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Nutritional approach to an unbalanced homemade diet and subsequent overcorrection in a female kitten (F. Catus)

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

An 8-month-old European short-hair kitten was brought in for weakness and skeletal deformities after being fed an unbalanced homemade diet. Initially, the kitten was misdiagnosed, which led to improper treatment and lasting bone issues. Once correctly diagnosed with nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism (a condition caused by nutrient imbalances), the veterinarian adjusted her diet to provide the right amounts of calcium, phosphorus, and protein. This dietary correction resulted in quick improvements in her health and bone structure.

People also search for: kitten nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism · homemade cat diet problems · kitten bone deformities treatment

Abstract

Growing cats require higher and adequate amounts of key nutrients such as calcium, phosphorus and protein, making them susceptible to nutrition‐related pathologies. This case report describes an 8‐month‐old European short‐hair kitten diagnosed with feline nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism following long‐term feeding of an unbalanced homemade diet. Initial misdiagnosis led to inadequate treatment and permanent skeletal malformations. Accurate diagnosis enabled nutritional management through correction of all imbalances and optimisation of nutrient intake, resulting in rapid clinical and radiographic improvements. The development of the kitten's blood parameters emphasises the necessity for age‐ and species‐specific reference ranges and methods of vitamin D and parathyroid hormone measurements in veterinary medicine. This case highlights the importance of early and accurate nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism diagnosis through comprehensive nutritional and clinical assessments, and suggests thorough nutritional management as the cornerstone treatment of affected kittens.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/52ac95e0d192b0985175bfc521af4d71fbf4d368