Can anyone tell me the carb content of Purina DM dry food and Royan Canin Diabetic pouches please?
I'll try to find that out, Sue. Back soon...
From the data on the RC website, the feline diabetic pouches come out at
14.7% calories from carbs.
And the ingredients are:
"meat and animal derivatives, cereals (maize), derivatives of vegetable origin, minerals, oils and fats."
Couldn't do a proper calculation for dry DM because the data on the Purina website doesn't contain a percentage for 'ash', and the standard carb calculation requires that; but my
guesstimate (allowing 2% for ash) would be around
13.9% calories from carbs. I have seen people on this forum quote both '13%' and '14%'. There is also a figure given on the 'Janet & Binky' food data page which gives it as 13%: This figure would have been an accurate one, but it is old info (2008). Here's the link for that:
http://binkyspage.tripod.com/dryfood.html
As dry food goes, the Purina DM is
relatively low carb (some are over 30% calories from carbs!), but it is still considered too high for a diabetic.
The ingredients are:
"Poultry by-product meal, soy protein isolate, corn gluten meal, soy flour, animal fat preserved with mixed-tocopherols (form of Vitamin E), corn starch, animal liver flavor, calcium carbonate, phosphoric acid, fish oil, potassium chloride, L-Lysine monohydrochloride, DL-Methionine, choline chloride, taurine, powdered cellulose, salt, Vitamin E supplement, zinc sulfate, ferrous sulfate, niacin, manganese sulfate, Vitamin A supplement, calcium pantothenate, thiamine mononitrate, copper sulfate, riboflavin supplement, Vitamin B-12 supplement, pyridoxine hydrochloride, folic acid, Vitamin D-3 supplement, calcium iodate, biotin, menadione sodium bisulfite complex (source of Vitamin K activity), sodium selenite. L-4574"
And it is not only a matter of
what the carb content is, but also how 'carb sensitive' the particular cat is, and this can vary
a lot. Although the general recommendation is 'less than 10% calories from carbs', that may still be too high for some cats (who may do better with foods no higher than, say, 5% calories from carbs.)
Also, some cats are intolerant to certain carb sources (grains particularly), or to soya, and this can also elevate the blood glucose.
.