Please see copy and pasted email forwarded to my laperm group mails.
This is a message from Andrea Harvey (FAB lecturer at Bristol) and I would
be very grateful if you could pass it on to other breeder colleagues of yours
to ensure that this does not happen again. A really sad story.
Best wishes,
Sarah
Sarah M. A. Caney BVSc PhD DSAM(Feline) MRCVS
RCVS Specialist in Feline Medicine
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Dear all
I wanted to raise your awareness about a really sad case that I saw
recently and couldn't believe that this could happen. Essentially it was a
4 month old Birman kitten belonging to a reputable Birman breeder, that
ended up being euthanased as a result of severe nutritional secondary
hyperparathyroidism. The kitten was being fed a commercial diet. On
researching the diet it is essentially an all meat diet and contains
extremely low calcium: phosphorus ratio and yet is marketed as a complete
kitten diet.
It appears that more diets like this are arising and owners are loving the
look of them because they contain quality cuts of meat and are marketed as
being 'natural', 'holistic' and made of 'high-grade ingredients' with no
artificial flavorings or preservatives, but clearly are not balanced
complete diets!! These diets are apparently becoming popular with breeders
and are sold at lots of cat shows. This particular breeder had checked out
this diet before using it but had not checked the calcium/phos ratios and
assumed that was fine because it was a complete diet, but obviously it
seems we can not rely on what is written on the packet.
I have contacted the pet food manufacturers association about this and in
the first instance they are going to provide the company with the
regulations for them joining the PFMA and suggest they change the packaging
and marketing to say it is only a complimentary diet. If this is not
changed we can approach the food standards agency.
We are going to try and work with the PFMA to raise awareness of this and
see what else we can do, but also will put something on the FAB website and
journal. At the moment I just wanted to make sure that all the FEP were
aware of this and to spread this word around to breeders/clients/cat owners
The easiest thing to tell people is to check if a particular food
manufacturer is a member of the PFMA and if so then their food should be
OK, if not and it looks like a high meat diet the Ca:PO4 should be checked
I have now become obsessed with looking at cat food packets in supermarkets
and another thing that concerns me is that there are more and more
complimentary foods available, and the complementary and complete foods
even if correctly labelled are often not separated and labelled on the
shelf, and some companies are packaging some types of complete and
complementary in exactly the same type of packaging the only thing
distinguishing between them being the very small writing on the side.
Another campaign needed........
In the meantime I think we need to be aware that we could potentially start
seeing more of this problem sadly, and look out for people not feeding
proper diets!
Thanks
Andrea
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Andrea Harvey BVSc DSAM(Feline) DipECVIM-CA MRCVS
RCVS Specialist in Feline Medicine
European Veterinary Specialist in Internal Medicine
FAB Clinical Fellow in Feline Medicine
Division of Companion Animals
University of Bristol
Langford
Bristol