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Evidence Based Vet Forum • View topic - Only diet proven to increase health and life- feed lean diet

Only diet proven to increase health and life- feed lean diet

Issues involving foods and supplements. Questions, answers, theories, and evidence.
Should pets be limited to one brand of food?

Only diet proven to increase health and life- feed lean diet

Postby guest » Fri Sep 26, 2003 5:30 pm

of the American Veterinary Medical Association
May 1, 2002 (Volume 220, No. 9)
Effects of diet restriction on life span and age-related changes in dogs
Richard D. Kealy, PhD; Dennis F. Lawler, DVM; Joan M. Ballam, MS; Sandra L. Mantz; Darryl N. Biery, DVM, DACVR; Elizabeth H. Greeley, PhD; George Lust, PhD; Mariangela Segre, DSc; Gail K. Smith, DVM, PhD, DACVS; Howard D. Stowe, DVM, PhD *
Abstract
Objective—To evaluate the effects of 25% diet restriction on life span of dogs and on markers of aging.

Design—Paired feeding study.

Animals—48 Labrador Retrievers.

Procedures—Dogs were paired, and 1 dog in each pair was fed 25% less food than its pair-mate from 8 weeks of age until death. Serum biochemical analyses were performed, body condition was scored, and body composition was measured annually until 12 years of age. Age at onset of chronic disease and median (age when 50% of the dogs were deceased) and maximum (age when 90% of the dogs were deceased) life spans were evaluated.

Results—Compared with control dogs, food-restricted dogs weighed less and had lower body fat content and lower serum triglycerides, triiodothyronine, insulin, and glucose concentrations. Median life span was significantly longer for dogs in which food was restricted. The onset of clinical signs of chronic disease generally was delayed for food-restricted dogs.

Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Results suggest that 25% restriction in food intake increased median life span and delayed the onset of signs of chronic disease in these dogs. (J Am Vet Med Assoc 2002;220:1315–1320)





Diet restriction has been documented to have a positive effect on the life span of rodents and various invertebrate species.1 In fact, research spanning more than 60 years has shown that diet restriction is the only nutritional intervention that consistently extends the life span of animals.1,2 In previous studies, diet restriction increased median and maximum life span (ie, survival time of the longest-lived decile) of rodents, despite differences in species, strains, experimental designs, nutritional variables, environmental conditions, and predispositions for naturally occurring causes of death.1 To our knowledge, the effect of diet restriction on life span of larger mammals has not been determined. Studies involving the effects of diet restriction on life span of primates are ongoing, but concluding data are not yet available because these species are so long-lived. Nonetheless, investigators have found that diet restriction does have a mitigating effect on a number of age-related diseases of primates.3

Studies of diet restriction and life span also have facilitated evaluation of aging markers that may have value as signals for preventive medical intervention or treatment earlier in life.4 Markers that have been evaluated in these types of studies include body fat content5 and serum or plasma concentration of glucose,6 insulin,6 triglycerides,1 cholesterol,1 and triiodothyronine (T3).7

In a previous 2-year study8 of the effect of restricted food intake on development of orthopedic disease in Labrador Retrievers, we found that limiting food intake had a beneficial effect on the development of hip joints. The study subsequently was extended and directed toward determining the effect of diet restriction on the life span of this group of dogs and evaluating potential markers of aging.

Materials and Methods

Forty-eight Labrador Retrievers from 7 litters were used in the study, which consisted of a paired feeding design. Dogs in each litter were paired at 6 weeks of age on the basis of sex and body weight and assigned at random to 1 of 2 feeding groups. Beginning at 8 weeks of age, 1 dog in each pair was fed ad libitum, and the other dog in each pair was fed 75% of the amount of food that its pair-mate had consumed the previous day. The same formula was fed to both groups of dogs; only the quantity provided was different.

When the dogs were 3.25 years old, 2 adjustments were made to the feeding protocol. All dogs were switched from a growth formula diet (27% protein content) to an adult formula diet (21% protein content). In addition, the amount of food that was fed was reduced and held constant to prevent insidious development of obesity in the dogs that were fed ad libitum. The amount offered to the 24 dogs that previously had been fed ad libitum was calculated by estimating the ideal body weight for each dog on the basis of skeletal size in reference to other dogs of the same breed. These dogs then were fed 62.1 Kcal of metabolizable energy (ME)/kg of estimated ideal body weight (ie, the estimated maintenance requirement for large breed dogsa). This group of dogs was designated as the controlled-feeding group. The remaining 24 dogs each continued to be given 25% less than the amount fed to their respective pair-mates. This group of dogs was designated as the restricted-feeding group. Details of the experimental design and procedures have been described.8-10

Dogs were weighed weekly as puppies, periodically as adolescents, and weekly as adults. Beginning at 6 years of age, body condition was evaluated annually to assess degree of leanness or obesity, and a body condition score ranging from 1 (emaciated) to 9 (severely obese) was assigned.a Also beginning at 6 years of age, amounts of lean body mass, body fat mass, and bone mass were estimated annually by use of dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA).b

Serum glucose, cholesterol, and triglycerides concentrations were measured annually.c Beginning at 4 years of age, serum T3 concentration was measured annually with a radioimmunoassay.d Samples were obtained by means of jugular venipuncture after food had been withheld overnight. Beginning at 9 years of age, IV glucose tolerance tests (IVGTT) were performed annually. For this test, a 50% solution of glucose (2 ml/kg [0.9 ml/lb]) was administered IV; venous blood samples were collected before and 5, 30, 45, 60, and 120 minutes after glucose administration. Plasma insulin concentration was estimated with a radioimmunoassay.d

The dogs were monitored daily throughout life for signs of illness and abnormalities. When necessary, appropriate therapeutic measures consistent with established colony protocols were taken under the supervision of the attending veterinarian. Health management and euthanasia protocols were preestablished for the entire facility. Similar conditions were managed as uniformly as possible among dogs. Dietary treatments were not adjusted because of illness, and the choice of therapeutic measures was not influenced by dietary treatment. Forty-six of the 48 dogs eventually were euthanatized for humane reasons. Euthanasia was carried out only after extensive diagnostic evaluation, careful monitoring and assessment of response to treatment, serial evaluation of clinical condition, and consideration of prognosis, according to practices established for the entire colony.

Response variables were examined with a mixed-effects ANOVA model for a repeated-measures design.11 Dietary treatment, age, and their interaction were considered to be the fixed effects of interest. Random effects accounted for variation among litters, pairs within litters, and their interaction with age. The repeated-measures aspect of the design was addressed by assigning blocks to individual dogs. The Wilcoxon signed rank test for paired data was used to evaluate differences in median life span.12 The paired Prentice-Wilcoxon test was used to evaluate differences in median time to treatment for osteoarthritis and other chronic conditions.13

Results

Median life span for each dietary treatment group was calculated as the age when 50% of the dogs were deceased. Median life span for controlled-feeding dogs (11.2 years) was significantly (P < 0.01) less than median life span for restricted-feeding dogs (13.0 years; Figure 1). Maximum life span (ie, the time when 90% of the dogs were deceased) for controlled-feeding dogs (12.9 years) was not significantly different from maximum life span for the restricted-feeding dogs (14.0 years), although precise estimates of extreme percentiles are difficult to establish when sample sizes for the last surviving deciles are small.

Nutrient analyses of the adult formula diet fed after dogs were 3.25 years old indicated that mean protein content was 21.6%, mean fat content was 11.1%, and mean calculated ME was 3,530 Kcal/kg of diet. Serial analyses of the diet indicated that the nutrient content exceeded National Research Council recommendations for those nutrients analyzed14 and did not deviate from expectations based on original formulation. No signs of nutritional deficiency (eg, progressive weight loss and general or specific clinical signs of a nutrient deficit) occurred during the study.

Until 12 years of age, mean (± SEM) daily caloric intake for controlled-feeding dogs (1,745 ± 46 Kcal of ME) was significantly (P < 0.01) higher than mean daily caloric intake for restricted-feeding dogs (1,352 ± 34 Kcal of ME). After 12 years of age, daily caloric intake was more variable because of the increased incidence of illnesses, primarily among dogs in the controlled-feeding group.

For both groups, mean body weight increased until 3.25 years of age (Figure 2). Mean body weight decreased initially in both groups after adjustments were made to the feeding regimen at 3.25 years of age, but then weights stabilized. Before and after implementation of these adjustments in the feeding regimen, the relationship between the 2 groups in regard to feed intake and body weight remained similar. Mean body weight of restricted-feeding dogs was, on average, 26% lower than mean body weight of pair-mates in the controlled-feeding group (P < 0.01). Mean (± SEM) body condition score during the period from 6 to 12 years of age was significantly (P < 0.01) higher for dogs in the controlled-feeding group (6.7 ± 0.19) than for dogs in the restricted-feeding group (4.6 ± 0.19; Figure 3).

Mean lean body mass remained constant from 6 through 9 years of age for controlled-feeding dogs and from 6 through 11 years of age for restricted-feeding dogs (Figure 4). From 6 through 9 years of age, mean lean body mass was significantly (P < 0.01) greater for dogs in the controlled-feeding group than for dogs in the restricted-feeding group. A progressive decrease in lean body mass was detected among dogs in the controlled-feeding group after 9 years of age, but a similar decrease was not detected among dogs in the restricted-feeding group until after 11 years of age. Mean percentage lean body mass decreased significantly (P < 0.05) in both groups from 6 through 12 years of age (Figure 5); however, dogs in the restricted-feeding group always had a significantly (P < 0.01) greater mean percentage lean body mass.

Mean absolute and percentage body fat mass increased significantly (P < 0.05) in both groups from 6 through 12 years of age (Figure 6 and Figure 7). Body fat mass, expressed as an absolute (ie, grams of fat tissue) or as a percentage of body mass, always was significantly (P < 0.01) higher among dogs in the controlled-feeding group than among dogs in the restricted-feeding group. Mean percentage body fat mass for the entire period from 6 through 12 years of age was significantly (P < 0.01) higher for the controlled-feeding dogs (29.9%) than for the restricted-feeding dogs (16.8%).

Results for bone mass were similar to results for lean body mass (Figure 8). Dogs in the controlled-feeding group had significantly (P < 0.05) higher bone mass than did dogs in the restricted-feeding group, from 6 through 9 years of age. After 9 years of age, bone mass among dogs in the controlled-feeding group decreased significantly (P < 0.05), whereas bone mass among dogs in the restricted-feeding group remained constant.

Mean serum triglycerides and glucose concentrations from 2 through 12 years of age, mean serum T3 concentration from 4 through 12 years of age, and mean fasted plasma insulin concentration from 9 through 12 years of age were significantly (P < 0.05) lower for dogs in the restricted-feeding group than for dogs in the controlled-feeding group (Table 1). Mean serum cholesterol concentration from 2 through 12 years of age was not significantly different between groups. Evaluation of results of IVGTT performed at 9, 10, 11, and 12 years of age revealed significantly (P < 0.01) higher mean peak glucose concentration and mean delta G values (difference between baseline and peak glucose concentration) for controlled-feeding dogs than for restricted-feeding dogs. Mean time for glucose concentration to return to baseline was significantly (P < 0.01) longer and rate of return to baseline was significantly (P < 0.01) lower in controlled-feeding dogs than in restricted-feeding dogs. Mean serum glucose, cholesterol, and T3 concentrations decreased during the evaluation period in both groups, whereas mean serum triglycerides concentration did not change over time. Mean values for these variables were within reference intervals.

A variety of chronic diseases developed as the dogs aged. The chronic diseases diagnosed most commonly were osteoarthritis (43 dogs; the diagnosis was made radiographically); malignant neoplasia, including malignant mammary gland neoplasia (21 tumors in 17 dogs); benign neoplasia of the mammary glands (35 tumors in 12 dogs); benign neoplasia other than benign mammary gland neoplasia (7 tumors in 6 dogs); recurring skin disease (19 dogs); hepatic disease (11 dogs); cystic endometrial hyperplasia, pyometra, or recurring severe pseudopregnancy (11 dogs); hypothyroidism (4 dogs); and seizures (4 dogs).

Thirty-five of the 43 dogs that developed osteoarthritis (19 in the controlled-feeding group and 16 in the restricted-feeding group) eventually required treatment. Age at the time of first treatment for osteoarthritis ranged from 6.8 to 12.9 years for dogs in the controlled-feeding group and from 7.9 to 14.1 years for dogs in the restricted-feeding group. Mean age to which 50% of the dogs in each group survived without requiring long-term treatment for osteoarthritis was significantly (P < 0.01) lower for the controlled-feeding group (10.3 years) than for the restricted-feeding group (13.3 years).

Thirty-nine dogs (20 in the controlled-feeding group and 19 in the restricted-feeding group) eventually were treated for 1 or more chronic conditions. Age at the time of first treatment for any chronic condition ranged from 4.6 to 12.9 years for dogs in the controlled-feeding group and from 4.0 to 14.1 years for dogs in the restricted-feeding group. Mean age to which 50% of the dogs in each group survived without requiring treatment for a chronic condition was significantly (P = 0.016) lower for the controlled-feeding group (9.9 years) than for the restricted-feeding group (12.0 years).

Discussion

Results of this study indicate that diet restriction significantly increased median life span in this group of dogs. To our knowledge, this is the first study to document that diet restriction increases survival time in mammals larger than rodents. In studies of rodents, diet restriction consistently increased median and maximum life span. In the present study, median life span was increased by diet restriction, but maximum life span was not significantly different between groups.1 The smaller number of subjects in the present study, compared with the numbers in previous rodent studies, may explain the lack of statistical significance between groups in regard to maximum life span, since the 90th percentile estimates from our study involve outcome of just 3 dogs/group. In the present study, diet restriction also was associated with a longer median time to first treatment of osteoarthritis (the most common chronic disease among dogs in this study) and a longer median time to first treatment of any chronic condition.

Lean body mass was significantly higher among dogs in the controlled-feeding group than among dogs in the restricted-feeding group. Reasons for this finding are not resolved by our data, but the difference might relate at least partly to metabolic needs of a greater body mass, as well as to the higher food intake. Decreases in lean body mass late in life (after 9 years of age among controlled-feeding dogs and after 11 years of age in restricted-feeding dogs) might have been a consequence of deteriorating physiologic function associated with aging or disease, with delayed expression among dogs in the restricted-feeding group. Similar findings with respect to changes in lean body mass have been found in studies of rodents.15

A consistent observation in diet restriction studies, including the present study, has been excessive fat deposition in animals in which diet was not restricted. Even though obesity typically occurs with overfeeding, investigators have demonstrated that longevity of rodents is more closely related to amount of food consumption than to degree of adiposity.16,17 Genetically obese and nonobese mice of the same strain were studied to separate the effects of food restriction from the effects of adiposity. Genetically obese food-restricted mice had a mean body weight similar to that of control mice but had 50% more adipose tissue, even though the obese mice were fed a third less. However, the obese food-restricted mice lived longer, indicating that longevity effects were related primarily to food consumption.16

In the present study, body fat content of dogs in the restricted-feeding group ranged from 12 to 20% of body mass. Mean body condition score for these dogs ranged from 4 to 5, and median time to onset of treatment for osteoarthritis or any chronic condition was significantly longer than for dogs in the controlled-feeding group. An association between high body fat content and increases in incidence and severity of chronic diseases has been reported in other studies.5,18,19 Lower morbidity rates also have been reported for food-restricted primates with body fat content ranging from 10 to 22%,20 which closely parallels our observations.

Mean serum triglycerides concentration among dogs in the restricted-feeding group was approximately 15% lower than mean concentration among dogs in the controlled-feeding group, which was similar to data reported for rodents and primates.1,3 However, mean serum cholesterol concentration was not significantly different between groups. A decrease in serum cholesterol concentration in response to diet restriction has been demonstrated in primates,3 but responses in rodents have been inconsistent.1 The lack of difference between groups in the present study might be explained by the amount of food restriction imposed by the design of our study or by the diet formulation, or it may represent a true species difference. Higher serum total T3 concentration, as found in controlled-feeding dogs in the present study, has been observed in rodents and humans in which food intake was not restricted.7 Overfeeding increases deiodination of thyroxine to T3, whereas carbohydrate restriction and weight reduction reduce serum T3 concentration.7 The observation that baseline serum glucose and insulin concentrations were significantly lower among dogs in the restricted-feeding group parallels findings of studies3,6 involving rodents and primates and suggests commonality in glucose metabolism among rodents, primates, and canines.

The actual caloric intake needed to achieve a desired extension of life span and improved health varies among individual dogs because of high intrinsic variation in caloric requirements both within breeds and within the species as a whole. Use of DEXA to estimate lean body mass and body fat mass is not practical in private veterinary practice, and as an alternative, we recommend that for purposes of health and longevity, dogs be fed to maintain a body condition score less than 5.



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aBody condition score chart, Ralston Purina Company, St Louis, Mo.
bModel DPX alpha dual energy x-ray absorptiometer, Lunar Corp, Madison, Wis.
cModel 550 express blood chemistry analyzer, Ciba-Corning Corp, Boston, Mass.
dMichigan State University, East Lansing, Mich.

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References



1. Weindruch R, Walford RL. The retardation of aging and disease by dietary restriction. Springfield, Ill: Charles C. Thomas, Publishers, 1988;3–229.

2. McCay CM, Crowell MF, Maynard LA. The effect of retarded growth upon the length of life span and upon the ultimate body size. J Nutr 1935;10:63–79.

3. Lane MA, Black A, Ingram DK, et al. Calorie restriction in nonhuman primates: implications for age-related disease risk. J Antiaging Med 1998;1:315–326.

4. Yu BP. Food restriction research: past and present status. Rev Biol Res Aging 1990;4:349–371.

5. Schwartz MW, Brunzell JD. Regulation of body adiposity and the problem of obesity. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 1997;17:233–238.

6. Masoro EJ. Diet restriction and aging. J Am Geriatr Soc 1993;41:994–999.

7. Imam K, Sowers JR. Obesity and hypertension: a review. Henry Ford Hosp Med J 1988;36:82–87.

8. Kealy RD, Olsson S-E, Monti KL, et al. Effects of limited food consumption on the incidence of hip dysplasia in growing dogs. J Am Vet Med Assoc 1992;201:857–863.

9. Kealy RD, Lawler DF, Ballam JM, et al. Five-year longitudinal study on limited food consumption and development of osteoarthritis in coxofemoral joints of dogs. J Am Vet Med Assoc 1997;210:222–225.

10. Kealy RD, Lawler DF, Ballam JM, et al. Evaluation of the effect of limited food consumption on radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis in dogs. J Am Vet Med Assoc 2000;217:1678–1680.

11. Littell RC, Milliken GA, Stroup WW, et al. SAS system for mixed models. Cary, NC: SAS Institute Inc, 1996.

12. Hollander M, Wolfe DA. Nonparametric statistical methods. 2nd ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1999.

13. O'Brien PC, Fleming TR. A paired Prentice-Wilcoxon test for censored paired data. Biometrics 1987;43:169–180.

14. National Research Council Committee on Animal Nutrition. Nutrient requirements of dogs. Washington, DC: National Academy of Science, 1985;2–5.

15. Yu BP, Masoro EJ, Murata I, et al. Life span study of SPF Fischer 344 male rats fed ad libitum or restricted diets: longevity, growth, lean body mass and disease. J Gerontol 1982;37:130–141.

16. Harrison DE, Archer JR, Astle CM. Effects of food restriction on aging: separation of food intake and adiposity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1984;81:1835–1838.

17. Masoro EJ. Antiaging action of caloric restriction: endocrine and metabolic aspects. Obes Res 1995;3:241s–247s.

18. Barzilai N, Gupta G. Revisiting the role of fat mass in the life extension induced by caloric restriction. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 1999;54:B89–B96.

19. Fisler JS. Cardiac effects of starvation and semi starvation diets: safety and mechanisms of action. Am J Clin Nutr 1992;56:230s–234s.

20. Hansen BC, Bodkin NL, Ortmeyer HK. Calorie restriction in nonhuman primates: mechanism of reduced morbidity and mortality. Toxicol Sci 1999;52(suppl):56–60.



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From the Pet Nutrition Research Department (Kealy, Lawler, Mantz) and the Statistical Services Department (Ballam), Nestle Purina Pet Care Co, Checkerboard Square, St Louis, MO 63164; the Department of Clinical Studies, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104 (Biery, Smith); the Department of Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801 (Greeley, Segre); the James A. Baker Institute for Animal Health, New York State College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853 (Lust); and the Department of Large Animal Clinical Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48823 (Stowe).
Address correspondence to Dr. Lawler.
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guest
 

Health claims in dog and cat feed

Postby guest » Wed Mar 17, 2004 9:45 am

[Health claims in dog and cat feed]
Tijdschr Diergeneeskd 128[24]:785-7 2003 Dec 15

Beynen AC
The number and diversity of health claims for dog and cat foods have increased markedly over the past few years. There is no explicit legislation as to these claims. Many claims are insufficiently supported by research and are vague and suggestive. In order to inform pet owners and veterinarians properly and to enhance honest competition among pet food producers, rules for the application of claims should be developed. For the time being, the veterinarian will have to take a stand by critical assessment.
guest
 

fat compromised glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity

Postby malernee » Fri Dec 10, 2004 3:01 pm

St. Louis-Results from a Nestlé Purina study confirm the link between body fat and certain health conditions in dogs.

The article, recently published in the Journal of Nutrition, also established a link between the length of time dogs were overweight, their longevity, and how early in life certain health conditions became clinically evident. The findings are additional results from the landmark Purina Life Span Study, the first completed lifelong canine diet restriction study.

Researchers discovered that excess body fat reduces insulin sensitivity, which inhibits the ability of cells to absorb glucose quickly and efficiently. Glucose and insulin left in the bloodstream can hinder the ability of organs, tissues and body systems to function properly, which can result in the development of some chronic health conditions.

"The significance of the latest published information is what we've learned about the lifetime effects of impaired glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity," says Brian T. Larson, Ph.D., Nestlé Purina nutrition research scientist and lead author of the article Improved Glucose Tolerance with Lifetime Diet Restriction Favorably Affects Disease and Survival in Dogs.

"Over time, the pathogenic effects of excess glucose and insulin in the bloodstream can alter glucose metabolism and cause cellular damage and metabolic changes.

"In overweight human beings," Larson explains, "we see a similar chain of events unfold. The result is that individuals with excess body fat and insulin resistance are more likely to develop Type II (adult-onset) diabetes. Dogs do not develop diabetes to the same degree as people; instead, they can develop other health conditions, including osteoarthritis (OA) and a number of metabolic conditions that can affect the function of various internal organs."

In the Life Span Study, control-fed dogs not only had a greater propensity to require treatment for chronic health conditions such as OA, but also needed that treatment earlier than their lean-fed littermates.

Further analysis indicated that the impact of compromised glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity on health occurred when the dogs were moderately overweight, not grossly obese.

The study showed that on average, insulin resistance began to appear in dogs that scored a 6 - 6.5 (overweight) on the 9-point Nestlé Purina Body Condition System (BCS), with 4.5 being ideal body condition and 8 to 9 being obese.

Larson stressed the significance of the long-term state of insulin resistance that occurs in dogs that are overweight throughout their lives.

"The longer dogs are overweight, the more physiological damage they can suffer."

According to Larson's co-author, Dennis Lawler, DVM, one of the principal investigators in the Purina Life Span Study, the clinical implications of this new information should be of interest to both veterinary professionals and dog owners.

Lawler emphasized the information about the correlation between body fat mass and insulin sensitivity (in the Life Span Study, lean-fed dogs were 58 percent more insulin-sensitive than controls) can be applied to the way veterinary medicine is practiced today.

"Any veterinarian who has advised a client to implement a weight-loss program for a patient knows how frustrating it can be. Many owners simply don't understand that having a 'pleasingly plump' puppy is not necessarily a good thing for his overall health-nor do they realize that the longer the dog is overweight, the harder it will be to restore normal glucose metabolism."

"Our hope at Nestlé Purina is that this new information will compel more veterinarians-and owners-to take action in helping keep dogs from becoming overweight or implementing a weight management program to restore animals to healthy, normal body condition," Lawler concluded.
malernee
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Mayo Clinic researchers NEAT report on weight loss

Postby guest » Sat Jan 29, 2005 9:27 am

Mayo Clinic researchers report in
today's issue of the journal Science
(http://www.sciencemag.org/content/current/ ) that NEAT -- more powerful
than formal exercise -- determines who is lean, and who is obese. Obese
persons sit, on average, 150 minutes more each day than their naturally lean
counterparts. This means obese people burn 350 fewer calories a day than do
lean people.

James Levine, M.D., is the Mayo Clinic endocrinologist who led the study.
His research team explored the specific links between inactivity, low energy
expenditure and obesity in an effort to devise new treatments for obesity, a
public health epidemic.

"Our patients have told us for years that they have low metabolism, and as
caregivers, we have never quite understood what that means -- until today,"
says Dr. Levine. "The answer is they have low NEAT, which means they have a
biological need to sit more. A person can expend calories either by going to
the gym, or through everyday activities. Our study shows that the calories
that people burn in their everyday activities -- their NEAT -- are far, far
more important in obesity than we previously imagined."

He adds that the NEAT defect in obese patients doesn't reflect a lack of
motivation. "It most likely reflects a brain chemical difference because our
study shows that even when obese people lose weight they remain seated the
same number of minutes per day," says Dr. Levine. "They don't stand or walk
more. And conversely, when lean people artificially gain weight, they don't
sit more. So the NEAT appears to be fixed. But as physicians, we can use
this data to help our obese patients overcome low NEAT by guiding the
treatment of obesity toward a focus on energy as well as food. We can
encourage NEAT-seeking behaviors."

About the Study: Special Underwear

More than 150 personnel were involved in the planning, design, invention,
food preparation and data analysis required over the course of about 10
years to produce this comprehensive study of the comparative energetics of
lean and obese adults. To detect even the smallest tap of the toe, Mayo
Clinic researchers invented a movement monitoring system that incorporates
technology used in fighter-jet control panels. They embedded sensors in
customized, data-logging undergarments that the researchers designed for
both men and women. This allowed monitoring of body postures and movements
of 10 obese people and 10 lean people every half second continuously, 24
hours a day for 10 days. The test subjects were healthy recruits who lived
and worked in Rochester, and went about their normal routines during the
study period. Only two things were forbidden: swimming and eating food the
research center did not prepare.

Researchers issued fresh undergarments each morning at the hospital where
the test subjects took all their meals. At this time the subjects were
weighed, and the data on body position and activity from their underwear
movement monitoring sensors was downloaded onto a computer.

"This instrumentation appears slightly bizarre as it gives us a covert
window into people's energetics and every activity in a completely
unthreatening way," says Dr. Levine. "But because of it, we have a window
into people's activity life that no one's ever had before."

Role Reversal: Lean Become Stout; Stout Become Lean

For the next phase of the study, the researchers overfed the lean people by
1,000 calories a day to make them gain weight, and underfed the obese people
by 1,000 calories a day to replicate an intense diet. Researchers then
monitored their movements every half second for 10 days and compared the
results. Even after losing weight, the naturally obese group sat more and
moved less. And even after gaining weight, the naturally lean group stood,
walked and even fidgeted more than the other group. The researchers'
conclusion: Obese people are NEAT-deficient, perhaps as a result of a
neurological defect in processing biological drives and environmental cues.

Implications

The Mayo Clinic researchers believe the discovery of the effects of NEAT on
obesity is so strong that it should be used to prompt a "NEAT revolution" to
reverse the epidemic trends of obesity. "This is entirely doable, because
the kind of activity we are talking about does not require special or large
spaces, unusual training regimens or gear. Unlike running a marathon, NEAT
is within the reach of everyone," Dr. Levine says.

So promising is the role of NEAT in explaining obesity that Dr. Levine
believes further studies are warranted to help expand scientists'
understanding of the biology of obesity.

Collaboration and Support

In addition to Dr. Levine, members of the Mayo Clinic research team include:
Matthew Clark, Ph.D.; Michael Jensen, M.D.; Paul Kane; Alisa Krizan;
Lorraine Lanningham-Foster, Ph.D.; Shelly McCrady and Leslie Olson. The
study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health; Mr.
and Mrs. T.S. Ward; the Minnesota Obesity Center and Mayo Foundation.

10 Neat Things to Know About NEAT:

The most detailed and data-rich study of obesity ever undertaken was
performed at the Mayo Clinic and published January 27, 2005 in the journal
Science. Results show that it's metabolically more effective to put more
NEAT -- "non-exercise activity thermogenesis" -- into your life to achieve a
healthy body weight, than to seek organized exercise.

To prepare, design and carry out this NEAT study over the past decade, Mayo
Clinic brought together:
. 20 study participants who were willing to forgo Christmas peanut brittle,
Halloween Milky Ways and all restaurant and home meals. Every meal had to be
taken at the hospital, without exception.
. A biomedical team at Mayo Clinic of approximately 150 people, ranging from
endocrinologists, dieticians to specialists to conduct analyses with a mass
spectrometer.
. The periodic $1,000/person glass of water. This was a special metabolic
test that required drinking treated water with tracers to monitor the person's
metabolism as a way of providing researchers a measure of compliance that
test subjects were eating only meals prepared for them by hospital staff.
. A dedicated kitchen staff to cook 20,000 meals over the test period,
starting at 5 a.m. each day --without skipping a beat, food group or strange
hankering.
. 150 million lines of data was downloaded from the data-loggers and
analyzed.
. Committed study participants to clean their plates -- and scrape them,
too, with a rubber scraper -- so every calibrated calorie that was served
was also consumed.
. Custom-made, data-logging undergarments that all participants wore 24
hours a day, exchanging a new pair every morning at the hospital at
breakfast. The bottoms look like bicycle shorts and the women's tops look
like sports bras. The men's tops look like undershirts.
. Jet fighter control panel motion sensing technology embedded in the
special underwear to monitor every tilt and wiggle of the participants.
. No swimming -- due to the potential water damage to the motion sensors.
. No particular activity regime was endorsed or prescribed. Participants
were told to go about their normal work, recreation, rest and romance
routines.

Says James Levine, M.D., the Mayo Clinic endocrinologist who led the study:
"This was a massive team effort. It should be said that this collection of
teams at this level of expertise don't appear anywhere else in the world."
guest
 

older dogs and cats have same nutrient requirements as adult

Postby guest » Tue Jan 10, 2006 1:25 pm

Age-Related Changes to Nutritional Requirements and Digestive Function in Adult Dogs and Cats
J Am Vet Med Assoc 215[5]:625-629 Sep 1'99 Timely Topics in Nutrition 29 Refs
William J. Burkholder, DVM, PhD, DACVN
Dept. of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery, College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-4474
The concept that older dogs and cats have nutrient requirements that differ from those of young to middle-aged animals was introduced when a commercially available diet formulated for older dogs was introduced in 1977. The idea has been promoted by an increasing number of diets on the market that are specifically formulated for the nutritional needs of older dogs and cats as well as through analysis of data on body condition and composition, energy expenditure, and digestive efficiency of aging dogs and cats. Underlying the formulation of so-called senior diets is the theory that proper nutrition can increase the length and quality of life and that some optimal nutrient formulation exists for accomplishing this goal. Recommendations have been made for restriction or supplementation of particular nutrients.
Unfortunately, there is little firm data to prove a specific nutrient formulation will definitely increase longevity or delay the onset of disease. It should be realized that some nutritional effects accrue over a long period before becoming clinically evident. Thus, the nutrient intake of the first three-fourths of an animal's life is likely to impact the nutritional consequences manifested in the last part of its life.

Because it is hard to define physiologic old age in terms of chronologic age or to determine it by other means, it also is difficult to know when to switch the diet to a senior nutrient product. Furthermore, because nutrient requirements and products for older dogs and cats are nearly identical to those for maintenance requirements and products for adult dogs and cats, it could be questioned whether there really is a need to switch to senior dog and cat foods. Decisions regarding the type and amount of product that should be fed to older dogs and cats should be guided by each animal's body condition and health status, rather than age alone. The ideal goal for feeding is maintenance of optimal weight. However, considerations for desired nutrient content in addition to calories will be applicable if the disease can be ameliorated by dietary modulation. Senior-type products may, or may not, be the best choice, depending on the disease and status of the animal.
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30 percent less over the long term extended their lifetimes

Postby guest » Mon Feb 20, 2006 8:25 am

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