Episode 3: A Better Understanding of a “Complete” Diet – Part 2
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Episode 3: A Better Understanding of a “Complete” Diet – Part 2
- In Episode #2, we talked about the “complete and balanced diet” myth.
- Now in Episode 3 we will look more at the issue of whether veterinarians and nutritional scientists really understand nutrition thoroughly enough to make a claim of “complete”
- Are there examples of our continually improving understanding of nutrition that proves that the claim of “complete” at any point in time is always subject to revision – to be ‘more’ “complete”?
- Are there complexities in food which make the Nutritional Essentiality paradigm dangerous to our pets?
- Are there concrete examples of these “complete” diets causing problems in pets that were eating them?
“It is nothing short of a tragedy for a patient to be permitted to suffer from simple starvation while being given the so-called benefit of modern science in a modern hospital, and still gradually fade away by reason of some unrecognized form of malnutrition.”
{Lee R. October 23-24,1943. Malnutrition As A Primary Cause Of Disease, Lectures of Dr. Royal Lee p.32.}
- Look at the relatively recent example of Taurine
- Currently considered “non-essential” in dogs
- Able to synthesize taurine from sulfur amino acids cysteine and methionine
- Currently considered “non-essential” in dogs
- Recent published reports of dilated cardiomyopathy in dogs eating “complete and balanced” diets associated with low blood taurine levels
- Improved cardiac function with taurine supplementation
- Prolonged survival time and withdrawal of medications other than taurine supplementation
- DCM is typically progressive and fatal
{Backus, et. al. JAVMA Vol. 223, No 8, October 15,2003: Fascetti, et. al. JAVMA Vol. 223, No 8, October 15,2003}
- Reported cases of DCM in dogs
- Diets “met recommended nutrient profiles or passed minimum feeding protocol tests recommended by the Association of American Feed Control Officials.”
- Bioavailability of methionine and cysteine appeared to be adequate for the synthesis of taurine
- Diet change improved taurine status
- “…Other dietary factors precluded adequate synthesis of taurine”
- 2 dogs fed home-prepared low protein tofu-based diet that met National Research Council requirements for adult maintenance
{Backus, et. al. JAVMA Vol. 223, No 8, October 15,2003: Fascetti, et. al. JAVMA Vol. 223, No 8, October 15,2003}
- Mechanism of heart failure in taurine deficiency is poorly understood
- Heritable susceptibility – genetic component
- Individual biochemical variations in taurine absorption, metabolism, excretion
- Lacking a necessary contributing factor?
- “The variation in clinical manifestation of taurine deficiency is suggested to be a result of the variable presence of contributing factors.”
{Backus, et. al. JAVMA Vol. 223, No 8, October 15,2003}
- Taurine in cats
- Thought to be unimportant other than for bile conjugation until the 1960’s
- Research showed that retinal degeneration in cats improved with addition of meat to casein-based diet
- No change with added Vitamin A
- In 1987, a connection between taurine deficiency and feline dilated cardiomyopathy was discovered
- As in dogs, DCM was considered to be progressive, irreversible, fatal condition
- After more research, it was found that cats require dietary taurine
- What other the other signs that might be visible with taurine deficiency?
- Non-specific as with some nutrients (i.e. Scurvy with C)
- Poor reproductive performance – abortions, stillbirths, low birth weights
- Poor growth rates
- Skeletal deformities
- Neurological abnormalities – degenerative changes in retina, cerebellum, and visual cortex
- Compromised immune function
- Hearing loss
- (We will mention this same list again when we talk about Pottnger’s Cats and the benefits of raw food in Episode 4!)
- Non-specific as with some nutrients (i.e. Scurvy with C)
- What other the other signs that might be visible with taurine deficiency?
- BUT…Not all taurine depleted cats develop DCM
- “It is, therefore, apparent that taurine deficiency alone is not sufficient to cause myocardial failure or central retinal degeneration in all cats. Still unknown is why taurine-depleted cats may manifest myocardial failure and/or feline central retinal degeneration, or neither.”
{Pion PD, Kittleson MD, et. al. July 15, 1992. Response of cats with dilated cardiomyopathy to taurine supplementation. JAVMA vol. 201, No. 2 pp. 275-284}
- Why is that?
- “most likely in our opinion, these conditions may be caused by taurine deficiency and other, currently unidentified, cofactor or cofactors.”
{Pion PD, Kittleson MD, et. al. July 15, 1992. Response of cats with dilated cardiomyopathy to taurine supplementation JAVMA vol.201, No. 2 pp.275-284}
- Acknowledgement of our limitations in understanding the complexities of nutrition
- Food companies attempted to correct the previously unknown deficiency
- But, DCM still occurred in cats fed canned food even though taurine content had been increased significantly in both canned and dry foods
- Proposed mechanism for taurine deficiency
- Increased soluble fiber
- Bacterial overgrowth
- Increased deconjugation of bile acids
- Loss of greater amounts of taurine in the stool
- However…“We have found that these same canned diets when fed in an uncooked form, do not cause clinically significant taurine deficiency.”
- Proposed mechanism for taurine deficiency
- But, DCM still occurred in cats fed canned food even though taurine content had been increased significantly in both canned and dry foods
{ Pion PD. 1992. JAVMA 201(2):275-284}
- “When you look at the classic example of taurine, many [diets] were deficient. The cats that didn’t become ill were those that were going outside and catching mice.”
{Smith CA. November 15, 1993. Dr. Donna Dimski quoted in Changes and Challenges in Feline Nutrition, J Am Vet Med Assoc. Vol. 203, No. 10 pp.1395-1400}
- Taurine
- Just one example of our continually improving understanding of nutrition that proves that the claim of “complete” at any point in time is always subject to revision
- Provides insight into the complexities in food which make the Nutritional Essentiality paradigm dangerous to our pets – food is much more than protein, fat, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals
- Is a concrete example of the way that “complete” diets can cause health problems in pets
- Provides insight into the effect of heating on nutrient bioavailability.
- In episode 4, we will talk more about heating effects on nutrient availability and raw food feeding
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