darcylynn said:
Hello!
I am new to this and just learning! wonderful to find this!
I was wondering what the best food to use is? I have a diabetic that has been regulated on hard science diet for about 5/6 years, now his brother is diabetic and harder to regulate! I have limited the hard for both and they are getting soft food, science diet kitten twice a day! Also, do most people only feed their cats 2xs a day, or do you leave food out throughout the day?
Thank you!
The best food for diabetics in the opinion of many members of this board is low carb canned or raw food. There is no particular brand that is "best". Members here use the following food lists:
Binky's canned food charts
Pet Food Nutritional Values list
Dr. Lynne's Wet Food list
List of low carb gluten free Fancy Feast
On Binky's charts, stick with foods that have a number 10 or less in the carbs colum. On the Pet Food Nutritional Values Chart, look at the %kcal from carbs column and choose foods that have a number 10 or less.
Popular brands of low carb canned foods are Fancy Feast, Wellness, Merrick, Nature's Variety Instinct, Special Kitty, Friskies. Feed your cat whatever brand of food he like to eats and you can afford.
None of the Science Diet dry food are good for diabetics. They are very high in carbs (over 30%!) and full of poor quality ingredients. Other brands of dry foods are just as bad in terms of carbs. Dry food in general is not good for any cat.
http://www.catinfo.org has more info about why.
Dry food is like potato chips and candy to diabetic cats. It keeps blood gluocse levels too high. The right diet is important for a diabetic cat, just like it is for Human diabetics.
I don't see the Science Diet kitten listed on either Binky chart. A quick look at the Science Diet product pages shows a lof of wheat flour and starches which means that the carb content is likely over the ideal amount a diabetic cat should have.
Most people free feed canned food. Diabetic cats, like Human diabetics, do best with small meals throughout the day. A timed feeder works great for this. Just fill the compartments with canned food and set the timer for when you want the cats to have access to food.
For your older diabetic, how do you know that the diabetes is regulated? Do you test blood glucose levels at home or do you rely on the vet to do occasional curves?
What insulin is both the cats getting and how much is the dose for both cats?
Removing all the dry food from the diet and feeding the cats a low carb canned food will greatly help with managing the diabetes. BUT changing the food from high carb to low carb has a big impact on blood glucose levels and insulin need. It is important to be testing your cat's blood glucose levels at home so you can catch any drops in blood glucose levels from the diet change and reduce the insulin dose to prevent a hypo.