2014
DOI: 10.1017/jns.2014.26
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Practical approach to determine apparent digestibility of canine diets

Abstract: A practical approach to determine apparent faecal digestibility using privately owned dogs may be a useful tool in evaluating differences in nutrient digestibility between dogs with various life stages. The aim was to develop a simple method that would suit such studies using the whitening agent titanium oxide (TiO2) as an indigestible marker. Forty privately owned, healthy male and female dogs of various breeds were included. Selection was based on an owner questionnaire. Means with their standard errors age … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(12 citation statements)
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(16 reference statements)
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“…The present variation in digestibility values could be partly explained by individual dog characteristics [4][5][6][7]9 , including sex, neuter status and age, but not body size. Male dogs tended to have higher digestibility values for OM, Cfat and GE, which might need further validation as this is contradictory to an earlier finding by Hagen-Plantinga et al 12 who reported no differences in GE digestibility between male and female dogs (overall n=39). Compared to intact dogs in the present study, neutered dogs showed higher digestibility values for N and lower values for crude ash, with no differences observed for DM, OM, Cfat, starch, and GE.…”
Section: Study Populationcontrasting
confidence: 92%
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“…The present variation in digestibility values could be partly explained by individual dog characteristics [4][5][6][7]9 , including sex, neuter status and age, but not body size. Male dogs tended to have higher digestibility values for OM, Cfat and GE, which might need further validation as this is contradictory to an earlier finding by Hagen-Plantinga et al 12 who reported no differences in GE digestibility between male and female dogs (overall n=39). Compared to intact dogs in the present study, neutered dogs showed higher digestibility values for N and lower values for crude ash, with no differences observed for DM, OM, Cfat, starch, and GE.…”
Section: Study Populationcontrasting
confidence: 92%
“…The digestibility values obtained in the present study could have been compared to values obtained using a digestibility study with kennelled dogs in a laboratory setting, as suggested by Plantinga et al 12 . In case such comparison would be made, one would then attribute potential significant differences in digestibility values between the two approaches to differences in factors such as the dog population (e.g.…”
Section: Application For Future In-home Testingmentioning
confidence: 85%
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