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Feeding Diabetic Cats
The aim of dietary change is to improve blood glucose control.
Post prandial hyperglycaemia is far less marked in cats than in
dogs. The need to time meals around insulin treatment and for
high fibre diets to delay post prandial peaks is far less.
Type of Diet
Commercial, ‘prescription’
diets designed for diabetic cats are available. Diabetic cats can
also be stabilised on their usual diet (preferably exactly the same
type and amount of food every day) if need be.
Number of meals
Many cats prefer to browse,
eating many small “snacks” (somewhere in the range of
5-11) every day rather than being fed distinct meals. In cats, there
also appears to be far less of a connection between feeding and
hyperglycaemia, possibly due to the frequent, small ”meals”.
Thus, Ideally, the usual feeding routine (e.g. food always available
(ad libitum), meals/fresh food given twice or three times daily)
should be kept when starting to stabilise a diabetic cat.
The exception is cats that are obese.
These cats should be given a diet designed for weight management
and fed according to a strict regime until they reach their ideal/target
body weight. In some cats, weight loss may dramatically reduce or
even eliminate the need for insulin treatment.(“clinical diabetic
remission”).