Estimating short and longer-term exposure of domestic cats to dietary iodine fluctuation.

Sci Rep

School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, University of Nottingham, Sutton Bonington Campus, Nottingham, LE12 5RD, UK.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Feline hyperthyroidism is a common condition, and the lack of stable dietary iodine intake may contribute to its development, similar to toxic nodular goitre in humans.
  • A study analyzed the iodine intake of domestic cats through surveys of owners, nutritional content of various cat feeds, and urine and hair samples, revealing that most commercial cat foods meet iodine guidelines.
  • Despite this, many dry kibble options fell short of minimum iodine requirements, and significant variation in iodine content was observed across different batches of the same feed, indicating potential inadequacies in daily iodine intake for cats.

Article Abstract

Hyperthyroidism is a common endocrinopathy of domestic felines. In humans, toxic nodular goitre is pathophysiologically similar to feline hyperthyroidism and can be caused by chronically low or fluctuating dietary iodine intake. The aetiopathogenesis of feline hyperthyroidism is not known, but chronically low or fluctuating dietary iodine intake is likely common. This study assessed habitual iodine intake in domestic cats by: (1) conducting a dietary survey involving 361 owners of 549 cats, (2) analysing iodine content of 119 cat feeds, 38 urine and 64 hair samples and (3) assessing variation in iodine content of eight cat feeds over 4-6 different batches. Owners varied their cats feed regularly, usually on a day-to-day basis and often between wet and dry feeds with differing flavours. The majority (78%; 93 of 119) feeds for cats were within the guideline range for iodine. Of the 22% (n = 26 feeds) that were not compliant, the majority (n = 23) were below the nutritional minimum value with most (n = 16) being dry kibble. Iodine content of feeds did not vary considerably between types of feed or feed packaging, but variation between different batches of the same feed was 14-31%. Hence, urine iodine in cats also varied markedly. Cats being treated for hyperthyroidism had lower hair iodine. In conclusion, a survey assessing how domestic cats are fed, together with an analysis of commercial cat feeds suggests that domestic cats are likely to experience chronically low or fluctuating dietary iodine intake. The latter is supported by wide variation in urine iodine content.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9148307PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-13139-8DOI Listing

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