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Cat Health - A Good Cat Nutrition
NUTRITION
A BALANCED DIET
Like all animals,
the domestic cat needs a diet that is properly balanced and contains
all the essential nutrients in the correct quantities. These nutrients
are water, protein, fat, carbohydrate, minerals and vitamins.
The wild members of the cat family, such as the lion, tiger, cheetah
and European wild cats, are carnivores. Between them they hunt and kill
a wide variety of other animals, ranging in size from small lizards and
birds to large antelopes. They don’t just eat the meat or muscle, but
consume all, or almost all, of their prey, including the skin, hair or
feathers, and the internal organs such as liver kidneys and intestines.
Their diet therefore contains a substantial amount of animal protein,
and supplies them with all the other essential nutrients that they
require.
To remain healthy, domestic cats also require a diet
containing animal protein. This is because they need a particular amino
acid (one of the blocks of protein) called taurine, which helps to
prevent heart and eye diseases. Taurine is plentiful in animal protein,
but only present in small amounts in plant protein.
While dogs
are able to manufacture the amino acid taurine within their body, cats
can only manufacture a little, and it is not enough to meet their
needs, and plant protein cannot supply them with enough to make up the
shortfall. Therefore, although a pet dog could remain healthy if fed
properly balanced vegetarian diet, a cat could not. For this reason
cats are known as obligatory carnivores; they must eat some animal
protein on a daily basis in order to survive
WATER
Water
is the most important element in a cat’s diet. Whereas most animals can
survive after losing up to half of their protein and stored fat, in a
cat, even a 10 per cent loss of total body water will cause serious
illness, and a 15 percent loss will result in death. Animals can ingest
water in 3 ways. They drink it, eat food that contains it, and their
body manufactures some water as a by product during the chemical
processes involved when converting proteins, fats and carbohydrates
into energy.
The daily amount of water required by a cat is
roughly the same amount (in mililitres) as its energy requirement (in
kilocalories). A sedentary cat needs a daily intake of about 65-70ml
(roughly four tablespoons) water for each kilogram of body weight,
while an active cat needs about 85ml (roughly six tablespoons).
PROTEIN
Protein occurs in animals (animal protein) and in plants (plant
protein). There are many different types of protein, each of which
contains a particular combination of amino acids, the substances that
provide the materials needed for the growth and repair of all body
tissues.
Proteins vary in their digestibility. The most
digestible are those contained in foods derived from animal sources,
such as meat, eggs and cheese. The least digestible are those contained
in foods derived from plants, such as grains and vegetables. Most
domestic cats consume a diet containing a significant amount of animal
protein. They do eat some plant material, either in the stomach and
intestines of prey that they catch, or by voluntarily eating specific
plants such as grass, but plant protein is a comparatively unimportant
part of the domestic cat’s diet.
When a cat eats grass it is
probably doing so to consume fibre and as an aid to digestion. Quite
often a cat will vomit soon afterwards, bringing up a bolus of grass
mixed with mucus, so eating grass may be a useful method of getting rid
of excess mucus from the cat’s stomach.
FATS
Fats and
oils contain substances called fatty acids, some of which play an
important role in helping to maintain internal body functions and a
healthy skin. They also act as carriers for the fat-soluble vitamins
(A, D, E and K).
Fats are concentrated form of energy (for a
given weight, fat provides more than twice as many kilocalories
(kilojoules) as carbohydrates or protein).
If the diet that a
cat consumes contains more energy than the cat needs, the excess is
converted into fat that is stored in various parts of the body, such as
under the skin and around the intestines. This stored fat acts as a
fuel store that can be drawn upon in times of need.
CARBOHYDRATES
Carbohydrates
occur in plants and include sugars, starch and cellulose. There are
various types of sugars, among which are sucrose and glucose. These are
two of the simplest sugars and therefore more easily digested. Cow’s
milk contain the milk’s sugar lactose, but many adult cats are unable
to digest lactose properly – for this reason specially formulated
lactose reduced or lactose-free milk is available for cats from pet
food stores and supermarkets. For cats, one of the most useful sources
of dietary carbohydrate is rice.
MINERALS
Like other
animals, the cat needs to consume many different minerals to ensure
that its body process function normally. Some are required in
comparatively large amounts, while others, known as trace elements, are
only required in very small quantities. Two of the most important
minerals for felines are calcium and phosphorous, which are involves in
the formation and growth of bones and teeth. Minerals also play an
important role in the growth and repair, skin and hair. They are also
required in the formation of red and white blood cells, and in various
digestive processes.
VITAMINS
Certain vitamins are
essential for the proper working of body processes. Four of them,
vitamins A, D, E and K, are soluble in fat, so fats and oils provide a
good dietary source. Vitamin E plays an important role in normal muscle
function, vision and reproductive processes. Vitamins of the B-group,
and vitamins C, are soluble in water. The B-group vitamins have a
variety of functions associated with the metabolism of amino acids,
fats or carbohydrates. Vitamin C I involved in wound healing,
preventing haemorrhages from small blood vessels (capillaries) and
maintaining healthy skin. As in humans, vitamin C is important in the
prevention of scurvy. Cats, like dogs, have the ability to manufacture
this vitamin within their bodies and, unlike humans, they don’t need a
source of vitamin C in their diet.
FIBRE
Derived from
plant materials (often ingested along with prey), fibre does not
provide a cat with any nutrients but it does play a very important role
in digestion. It acts as a bulking agent, absorbs any toxic by products
of the digestive processes, and increases the rate of passage of food
through the gut
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