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A high quality nutritional program for your pet keeps it happy, healthy, and in peak condition throughout its life. Proper nutrition is essential for its long-term health and happiness. Other than proper veterinary care, it is the single most important consideration you can give to your pet.
It is important to regularly review your pet’s current nutritional requirements. Your pet’s nutritional needs change with each life stage. The nutritional requirements for a growing puppy or kitten are very different from those of a normal, active adult pet. The same holds true for major differences in mid-life adult pets and senior pets. Also the lifestyle of your pet will dictate its needs. A working dog, pregnant pet, and less active pet all have very different nutritional requirements.
Pet foods vary in their quality and ability to meet the needs of your pet. There are three classes of food from a quality perspective, generic brands, standard formulations, and premium formulations. Premium diets use the highest quality ingredients, are the most digestible, have greater nutritional utilization, and are the most costly. Standard formulations would include the better brands of food available at the grocery store. Generic foods are sold on a basis of cheap price only. In pet foods, you really do usually get what you pay for!
With premium diets, most of the food eaten is digested with less excreted from the body as waste. Because of this increased digestibility, if you feed according to the label, the premium diet can actually cost less than the lesser expensive pet foods. Pets fed a premium diet typically have a more shiny hair coat, more sparkle in their eyes, a moist nose, smaller & firmer stools, and overall better health.
Quality nutrition also maintains a stronger, immune system more capable of resisting disease. It also allows the pet to make quicker recoveries from illness, accidents, and surgical procedures. A proper balance of vitamins and minerals enhances tissue repair and organ maintenance.
There are major differences in pet foods. Unfortunately, the label can’t really provide you with important information about the quality of the food you are buying. For proper nutrition, the diet must provide the proper balance of the five basic nutrient categories: protein, fat, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals.
The label will list all ingredients in descending order by weight. If whole chicken is listed as the first ingredient you have to remember that 70% of that chicken is water – so water is actually the first ingredient because it is the heaviest.
Quality protein includes both animal and plant based sources. Another misconception is that corn is bad. Corn is actually an excellent source of complex carbohydrates which is important for providing energy to your pet.
Evaluation of the pet’s stools is another indication of pet food quality. Stool quality is an indication of how well your pet is digesting the diet you are feeding. When all the right factors are present, your pet should have a low stool volume, be firm and dark, and have a reduced odor. If stools are soft, loose, watery, light-colored, or smelly, this can be an indication that you are feeding a lower quality diet that is not meeting your pet’s nutritional needs.
A good thing to look for on the bag is a seal from either the CVMA or AAFCO. These governing bodies test foods to ensure that they meet nutritional requirements and even do feeding trails to determine if animals can maintain good health on the diets.
Water is also an essential nutrient that must be available to the pet:
Fresh, clean water should always be available. Canned foods contain about 80% water whereas dry foods contain about 10% moisture. Pets eating canned food therefore get more of their water requirements from the food than those fed dry foods.
Some less nutritious diets are very bland tasting…much like chewing on cardboard. To increase the palatability and entice your pet to eat these less nutritious diets, some manufacturers add flavor enhancers. Better quality diets using high-quality protein sources in combination with high-quality fats, provide a diet formulation that have a very appetizing taste and smell for your pet.
Switching brands of pet foods frequently will make your pet a much more finicky eater as well as lead to many more digestive upsets. Vomiting and/or diarrhea are common consequences of abrupt changes in the pet’s diet. If you do change diets, it is important to do it SLOWLY over a 5-10 day period. Begin by adding a small amount of the new food and gradually increasing its proportion in the total diet while decreasing the proportion of the diet being replaced.