The effect of reducing dietary energy density via the addition of water to a dry diet, on body weight, energy intake and physical activity in adult neutered cats*
Autor: | Alison Colyer, Janet Alexander, Penelope J. Morris |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Veterinary medicine
tmc total moisture content Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Physical activity Body weight Energy requirement Animal science Energy density Food intake WALTHAM International Nutritional Sciences Symposium Proceedings 2013 medicine Nutrition and Dietetics CATS business.industry WALTHAM Supplement sbw starting body weight medicine.disease Body Weight Maintenance Obesity Cats Composition (visual arts) IMER individual maintenance energy requirements business Food Science |
Zdroj: | Journal of Nutritional Science |
ISSN: | 2048-6790 |
Popis: | Increasingly domestic cats live in an overfeeding and underexercising environment where obesity is a major health concern. One strategy to aid healthy body weight maintenance is dietary energy dilution. Published data indicate that increasing dietary moisture content leads to a reduction in energy intake and increased activity. However, a number of different methodologies were employed in these studies and associated changes in physical activity have only been measured once. The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of diets of three different moisture contents offered in excess of energy requirements, on body weight, energy intake and physical activity in adult neutered cats. Sixty-nine adult cats randomised into three groups, received 100 % of their daily individual maintenance energy requirements (IMER) of dry diet or dry diet hydrated to 40 or 80 % total moisture content (tmc). Baseline activity, intake, body weight and body composition were measured. Following this baseline phase, the cats received the same diets at 200 % of daily IMER and the measurements repeated over the next 28 d. When offered the diets at 200 % IMER, cats fed the dry diet significantly increased body weight and percentage of body fat (P P > 0·01). The levels of physical activity in cats offered the hydrated 80 % tmc diet were significantly (P |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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