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Domestic dogs maintain clinical, nutritional, and hematological health outcomes when fed a commercial plant-based diet for a year

Title: Domestic dogs maintain clinical, nutritional, and hematological health outcomes when fed a commercial plant-based diet for a year
Authors: Linde, Annika; Lahiff, Maureen; Krantz, Adam; Sharp, Nathan; Ng, Theros T.; Melgarejo, Tonatiuh
Contributors: Loor, Juan J.
Source: PLOS ONE ; volume 19, issue 4, page e0298942 ; ISSN 1932-6203
Publisher Information: Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: PLOS Publications (via CrossRef)
Description: Domestic dogs can maintain health on complete and well-balanced canine plant-based nutrition (K9PBN). Novel insight on health outcomes in dogs consuming K9PBN is of relevance to veterinary professionals and consumers given a growing interest in non-traditional dog foods with perceived health benefits, while considering potential safety concerns. We aimed to investigate nutritional equivalence by measuring clinical health outcomes in adult dogs fed K9PBN over twelve months compared to a meat-based diet at baseline. We enrolled fifteen clinically healthy adult dogs living in households in Los Angeles County, California in a prospective cohort study and evaluated clinical, hematological, and nutritional parameters in dogs at 0, 6, and 12 months, including complete blood count (CBC), blood chemistry, cardiac biomarkers, plasma amino acids, and serum vitamin concentrations. The study found that clinically healthy, client-owned, adult dogs maintain health, based on physical exams, complete blood count, serum chemistry, plasma amino acids, serum vitamins, and cardiac biomarkers combined with client-reported observations, when fed commercial K9PBN over a twelve-month period. This study is the most comprehensive and longest known K9PBN investigation to date and provides clinically relevant evidence-based nutrition data and new knowledge on outcomes in clinically healthy dogs who thrive without consumption of animal-derived ingredients. These results also provide a valuable foundation for the future study of K9PBN as a potential nutritional intervention for clinically relevant pathologies in canine medicine. Lastly, it is of major relevance to One Health paradigms since ingredients produced independent of industrial food animal production are both more sustainable and help to circumvent ethical dilemmas for maintenance of health in domestic dogs.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0298942
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298942; https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298942
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.42C76316
Database: BASE