Recommendations for canned food

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Ann Shevin

Member Since 2015
Hi!
I am new. Can anyone recommend the best canned cat food. Very underweight 18 year old, hyperthyroid cat that was newly diagnosed with feline diabetes.
 
Welcome to FDMB.

If you are already using insulin, changing the food to a significantly lower carb one can drop the dose needed by 1-2 units. For safety, we suggest you be home monitoring the blood glucose before switching or reduce the dose and monitor vigilantly for signs of hypoglycemia, which can kill.

If you are not already using insulin, this is the time to make the change most safely. There is a terrific list over at Cat Info with the % calories from carbohydrates given and anything under 10% works for daily feeding. I feed Friskies Pates except mixed grill which is around 11%.
 
Thanks for your replay BJM. Yes, starting Snickers on insulin this evening after his meal. Pulled all the dry food and will only feed canned under 10% carbs.
I found Binkyslist and see that there are brands not listed. Now I know how to determine the percentage of carbs by simply starting at 100 and subtracting protein, fat, moisture and ash.
A few of my existing pet store brands such as Canidae Life Stages passed the carbs test. I like to feed sourced and made in USA canned food. I have 5 cats.
 
You're not done there.
You have to calculate the percentage of calories from carbohydrate.
So:
3.5 calories per gram * grams protein = calories from protein
8.5 calories per gram * grams fat * = calories from fat
3.5 calories per gram * grams carbohydrate = calories from carbohydrate
Sum for total calories, then get percent of calories from each source.
You want it to be less than 10 % calories from carbohydrates.
 
I'm glad you brought up making your own food. I am very interested in this and would like to know if anyone else has done this.
 
Oh yes! There are several members here that make their own food. If you would like some feedback on that, I'd suggest you start your own post.

Robincot was the only member that I can think of right now that did make her own raw diet food. I know there are other people that make their own food but can't think of who they are.
 
Oh yes! There are several members here that make their own food. If you would like some feedback on that, I'd suggest you start your own post.

Robincot was the only member that I can think of right now that did make her own raw diet food. I know there are other people that make their own food but can't think of who they are.
 
Ok thank you! Question though, I've heard people on here feeding their cats Fancy Feast and Friskies. Why not the more expensive Hills Science Diet, Isms etc?
 
Because cost does not equal quality.

Friskies pates are low carb, come in a 13 ounce can (I'm feeding 16!!!), and have several flavors my cats enjoy.
 
Ok thank you! Question though, I've heard people on here feeding their cats Fancy Feast and Friskies. Why not the more expensive Hills Science Diet, Isms etc?
Well, there are a couple of reasons why we don't recommend or have many members here that feed the Hills Science Diet or Prescription Diet foods.
1. The dry varieties are too high in carbs for our diabetic kitties. We like to see 10% or less from carbs, which mimics a cats diet in the wild. For example, the Hill's W/D dry is around 37% carbs, the wet is 25% carbs. Way too high for our diabetic kitties. Lots of the canned varieties of those foods like the Iams are also high in carbs (14-19%). Ok for your hypo toolkit but too high for daily feeding to your diabetic cat.

2. The quality of the ingredients are no better than a lot of commercial cat foods. For example, the Hill's M/D has liver as the first ingredient. Not something you want to be feeding to your cat all the time, since the liver is one of the bodies organs that cleanses out the junk and bad stuff in the food we eat.

3. Availability. The foods we mention here most often, Fancy Feast, Friskies, Wellness grain free, are all readily available in most areas of the US and Canada.

4. Variety of flavors available. There are very limited choices in flavors in the Hills, Purina, Iams, etc foods. With the canned food options, you get a wider variety of flavors to choose from to tempt the most picky of kitties. It took me some time to discover that my Wink loved the Turkey & Giblets flavor best.

5. Cost. The Fancy Feast pate style, Friskies pate, are some of the least inexpensive canned foods available. Feeding your kitty any of the canned foods that contain meat by-products is closer to what they would eat in the wild then the cereals, grains and veggies found in most of those Hill's prescription foods.

Here is a link to an article on one vets take on those prescription diets.

Expensive does not equal quality or better for your cat.

We also follow the AAHA Diabetes Management Guidelines for Dogs and Cats, a 2010 vet journal published article that talks about the benefits of wet food over dry.
• Canned foods are preferred over dry foods. Canned foods
provide:
° Lower carbohydrate levels.
° Ease of portion control.
° Lower caloric density; cat can eat a higher volume of
canned food for the same caloric intake.
° Additional water intake.
25-28
 
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