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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Hydrolysed diets for vomiting or diarrhea in cats

By Kathrani, A et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2020·Royal Veterinary College, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The use of hydrolysed diets for vomiting and/or diarrhoea in cats in primary veterinary practice.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats with chronic vomiting and diarrhea were given a special hydrolyzed diet to see if it would help their symptoms. Out of nearly 1,000 cats, those who started the diet without antibiotics or steroids had a better chance of improvement compared to those who were already on these medications. However, older cats and those who had been treated with antibiotics or steroids before starting the diet were less likely to respond well. The findings suggest that trying a hydrolyzed diet first could be beneficial for cats with these gastrointestinal issues when no clear cause is found.

People also search for: cat vomiting treatment · hydrolyzed diet for cats diarrhea · chronic diarrhea in older cats

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe responses of cats prescribed a hydrolysed diet with or without concurrent medication for chronic vomiting and/or diarrhoea of undetermined aetiology. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Anonymised records of 512,213 cats under UK veterinary care in 2016 from the VetCompass database were searched using relevant terms for hydrolysed diets. The records of 5000 (90%) of 5569 cats with evidence of receiving a hydrolysed diet were randomly reviewed for gastrointestinal indication, prior and concurrent medication and response after hydrolysed dietary intervention. A poor response was defined as evidence of receiving antibiotic or glucocorticoid treatment for vomiting/diarrhoea at visits after the onset of the diet or death from gastrointestinal signs for at least 6 months follow-up. RESULTS: Of 977 cats prescribed a hydrolysed diet for chronic vomiting/diarrhoea, 697 (71%) were first prescribed the diet without concurrent antibiotics or glucocorticoids while 280 (29%) first received the diet with these medications. Thirty-four per cent of cats in the former group and 61% in the latter had a poor response. Cats older than 6 years and cats prescribed antibiotic and/or glucocorticoid for vomiting/diarrhoea before and concurrently with the diet had higher odds of poor response. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Although variations in our observations may reflect severity of signs or prescribing habits of primary-care veterinary surgeons, our study suggests there is merit in trialling a hydrolysed diet first as a sole therapy in cats with chronic vomiting/diarrhoea when diagnostic investigations do not reveal a cause, before resorting to antibiotic and/or glucocorticoid therapy for cases that respond poorly.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32895973/