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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Diabetes in Swedish cats - how common and what risks

By M. Sallander et al.·Published in Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica·2012·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Prevalence and risk factors for the development of diabetes mellitus in Swedish cats

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A study found that about 21 out of every 10,000 cats in Sweden develop diabetes, with most diagnosed around 9 years old. Male cats were more likely to be affected, and half of the diabetic cats were reported as obese at diagnosis, compared to only a quarter of healthy cats. The research suggested that diets high in commercial foods, low activity levels, and obesity could increase the risk of diabetes in cats. Keeping your cat active and monitoring their weight may help prevent this condition.

People also search for: cat diabetes symptoms · why is my cat overweight · best diet for diabetic cats

Abstract

BackgroundThe prevalence and risk factors for the development of feline diabetes mellitus (FDM) in Swedish cats have not previously been reported. The objective of the present pilot study was to indicate prevalence and possible risk factors for FDM in Swedish cats. Twenty diabetic cats from the database at the University Animal Hospital in Uppsala participated in the study, and these were matched with 20 healthy controls on sex and age. A mail-and-telephone questionnaire focusing on diet, activity and obesity was used.ResultsThe prevalence of FDM during the years 2000–2004 based on the results of the hospital records in the present study was 21 per 10,000 cats. The diabetic cats were on average 9 years old when the disease signs were discovered (median, min-max 2–15). Among FDM cases, it was more common to be male (n=17 males vs n=3 females; P≤ 0.05). Ten out of twenty owners to cases (50%) reported their cats to be obese at the time of the diagnosis (median 9 years, min-max 2–15), as compared to five out of twenty (25%) controls at the same age. The median BW at the time for diagnosis was 5.5 kg (min-max 2.0-9.0) for cases, and 5.0 kg (min-max 3.0-8.0 kg) for controls, respectively. Despite that both cases and controls had the same median age at the time of the study (13 years, min-max 3–18), a significantly higher number of controls were alive at that age (n=16 controls vs 8 cases; P≤ 0.05). A significantly higher proportion of cases that were obese at the time of the FDM diagnosis were dead at the time of the study compared to the proportion of controls that were obese at a similar age (P≤ 0.05).The diets given at the time for diagnosis for cases compared to diet of the controls at a similar time were mainly commercial foods, and controls consumed a higher proportion of dry foods compared to cases (medians 79 vs 44% of DM intake/d, respectively; P≤ 0.05). Cases were less active compared to the controls (2.3 and 3.2 h/d, respectively; P≤ 0.05).ConclusionsThe results indicate that the proportions of dry foods in the diet, to perform low activity and to be obese could be identified as preliminary risk factors for FDM in Swedish cats, and should be taken into account in preventive measures as well as in the design of future epidemiological studies in this population.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/23114390