Abstract

Grain-based carbohydrate sources such as rice comprise 30–50% of commercial pet foods. Some pet foods however have removed the use of grains and have instead incorporated pulses, such as peas and lentils, resulting in grain-free diets. The hypothesis was dog diets with higher levels of dietary fiber will produce a low glycemic response due to decreased rates of digestion and lowered bioavailability of all macronutrients and increased fecal bile salt excretion. This in turn was hypothesized to produce lower plasma concentrations of cysteine, methionine and taurine after 7 days of feeding each test diet in dogs. Six diets were formulated at an inclusion level of 20% available carbohydrate, using white rice flour (grain) or whole pulse flours from smooth pea, fava bean, red lentil or 2 different wrinkled pea varieties (CDC 4,140–4 or Amigold) and fed to beagles in a randomized, cross-over, blinded design. After 7 days feeding each diet, fasting blood glucose was the lowest in the lentil (3.5 ± 0.1 mmol/L) and wrinkled pea (4,140–4; 3.6 ± 0.1 mmol/L) diet periods, while peak glucose levels was lowest after feeding the lentil diet (4.4 ± 0.1 mmol/L) compared to the rice diet. Total tract apparent digestibility of all macronutrients as well as taurine differed among diets yet plasma taurine was not outside normal range. Decreased macronutrient and amino acid digestibility was associated with increasing amylose and dietary fiber content but the specific causative agent could not be determined from this study. Surprisingly, digestibility decreases were not due to increased bile salt loss in the feces since increasing dietary fiber content led to decreased fecal bile salt levels. In conclusion, although pulse-based canine diets have beneficial low glycemic properties, after only 7 days, these pulse-based diets decrease macronutrient and amino acid digestibility. This is likely related at least in part to the lower animal protein content, but on a long-term basis could put domestic dogs at risk for low taurine and dilated cardiomyopathy.

Highlights

  • The global pet food industry has been steadily growing and is projected to reach a value of $91 billion USD by 2022 [1]

  • To begin to address some of these questions, this study aimed to explore whether grain-free diets lead to taurine deficiency and if this is associated with simultaneous low cysteine and methionine levels

  • Dietary methionine was highest in the rice diet at 0.84% on a dry matter basis, with all pulse-based diets containing lower methionine to a low of 0.38% for the high fiber CDC 4,140–4 wrinkled pea diet (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The global pet food industry has been steadily growing and is projected to reach a value of $91 billion USD by 2022 [1]. Pet owners have an active role in choosing diets to feed their pets and generally make their decisions based on: (i) true knowledge of what comprises a healthy diet, (ii) perception of nutritional requirements, (iii) human diet trends and (iv) overall opinions of the pet food industry. Pulse crops are slowly digested due to relatively high amylose, resistant starch and dietary fiber content [7, 8]. This characteristic of pulses can be utilized to optimize satiety through a lowered glycemic response and glycemic index [6], a feature that is in dogs [(9, 10), Briens et al, unpublished]

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