Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.

Obesity is a global concern in dogs with an increasing prevalence, and effective weight loss solutions are required that work in different geographical regions. The main objective was to conduct an international, multi-centre, weight loss trial to determine the efficacy of a dietary weight loss inte...

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Main Authors: John Flanagan, Thomas Bissot, Marie-Anne Hours, Bernabe Moreno, Alexandre Feugier, Alexander J German
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5590893?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-635fea230734453eb0c2eaf0caad98912020-11-25T01:20:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01129e018419910.1371/journal.pone.0184199Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.John FlanaganThomas BissotMarie-Anne HoursBernabe MorenoAlexandre FeugierAlexander J GermanObesity is a global concern in dogs with an increasing prevalence, and effective weight loss solutions are required that work in different geographical regions. The main objective was to conduct an international, multi-centre, weight loss trial to determine the efficacy of a dietary weight loss intervention in obese pet dogs.A 3-month prospective observational cohort study of weight loss in 926 overweight dogs was conducted at 340 veterinary practices in 27 countries. Commercially available dry or wet weight loss diets were used, with the initial energy allocation being 250-335 kJ/kg target body weight0.75/day (60-80 kcal/kg target body weight0.75/day) depending on sex and neuter status. The primary outcome measure was percentage weight loss; the main secondary outcomes were changes in activity, quality of life, and food-seeking behaviour, which were subjectively determined from owner descriptions.At baseline, median (range) age was 74 (12 to 193) months and median body condition score was 8 (range 7-9). 896 of the 926 dogs (97%) lost weight, with mean weight loss being 11.4 ±5.84%. Sexually intact dogs lost more weight than neutered dogs (P = 0.001), whilst female dogs lost more weight than male dogs (P = 0.007), with the difference being more pronounced in North and South American dogs (median [Q1, Q3]: female: 11.5% [8.5%, 14.5%]; male: 9.1% [6.3%, 12.1%], P = 0.053) compared with those from Europe (female: 12.3% [8.9%, 14.9%]; male: 10.9% [8.6%, 15.4%]). Finally, subjective scores for activity (P<0.001) and quality of life (P<0.001) increased sequentially, whilst scores for food-seeking behaviour decreased sequentially (P<0.001) during the study.This is the largest international multi-centre weight loss study conducted to date in obese dogs. Most dogs lost a clinically significant amount of weight, although there were notable differences between dogs of different sex, neuter status and in different geographical locations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5590893?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Flanagan
Thomas Bissot
Marie-Anne Hours
Bernabe Moreno
Alexandre Feugier
Alexander J German
spellingShingle John Flanagan
Thomas Bissot
Marie-Anne Hours
Bernabe Moreno
Alexandre Feugier
Alexander J German
Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.
PLoS ONE
author_facet John Flanagan
Thomas Bissot
Marie-Anne Hours
Bernabe Moreno
Alexandre Feugier
Alexander J German
author_sort John Flanagan
title Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.
title_short Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.
title_full Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.
title_fullStr Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.
title_full_unstemmed Success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: The results of an international weight loss study.
title_sort success of a weight loss plan for overweight dogs: the results of an international weight loss study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Obesity is a global concern in dogs with an increasing prevalence, and effective weight loss solutions are required that work in different geographical regions. The main objective was to conduct an international, multi-centre, weight loss trial to determine the efficacy of a dietary weight loss intervention in obese pet dogs.A 3-month prospective observational cohort study of weight loss in 926 overweight dogs was conducted at 340 veterinary practices in 27 countries. Commercially available dry or wet weight loss diets were used, with the initial energy allocation being 250-335 kJ/kg target body weight0.75/day (60-80 kcal/kg target body weight0.75/day) depending on sex and neuter status. The primary outcome measure was percentage weight loss; the main secondary outcomes were changes in activity, quality of life, and food-seeking behaviour, which were subjectively determined from owner descriptions.At baseline, median (range) age was 74 (12 to 193) months and median body condition score was 8 (range 7-9). 896 of the 926 dogs (97%) lost weight, with mean weight loss being 11.4 ±5.84%. Sexually intact dogs lost more weight than neutered dogs (P = 0.001), whilst female dogs lost more weight than male dogs (P = 0.007), with the difference being more pronounced in North and South American dogs (median [Q1, Q3]: female: 11.5% [8.5%, 14.5%]; male: 9.1% [6.3%, 12.1%], P = 0.053) compared with those from Europe (female: 12.3% [8.9%, 14.9%]; male: 10.9% [8.6%, 15.4%]). Finally, subjective scores for activity (P<0.001) and quality of life (P<0.001) increased sequentially, whilst scores for food-seeking behaviour decreased sequentially (P<0.001) during the study.This is the largest international multi-centre weight loss study conducted to date in obese dogs. Most dogs lost a clinically significant amount of weight, although there were notable differences between dogs of different sex, neuter status and in different geographical locations.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5590893?pdf=render
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