OBJECTIVE--To evaluate dietary and environmental factors as potential risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in cats. DESIGN--Case-control study. ANIMALS--84 cats with uroliths composed of at least 90% calcium oxalate and 258 age- and gender-matched control cats. PROCEDURE--Owners of cats with calcium oxalate urolithiasis and control cats were surveyed between November 1990 and August 1992. Owners completed a standard questionnaire administered during a single telephone interview. Data collected included information regarding signalment, environment, urination and defecation, diet, and medical history. RESULTS--Calcium oxalate uroliths tended to develop in middle- to older-aged, domestic shorthair cats of typical weight. A gender predilection was not detected. Factors associated with an increase in the risk of calcium oxalate urolithiasis in cats were feeding urine-acidifying diets, feeding a single brand of cat food without providing additional foods or table scraps, maintaining cats in an indoor-only environment, and being of the Persian breed. CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS--Control of diet and environment may help prevent calcium oxalate urolithiasis.
CITATION STYLE
Kirk, C. A., Ling, G. V., Franti, C. E., & Scarlett, J. M. (1995). Evaluation of factors associated with development of calcium oxalate urolithiasis in cats. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 207(11), 1429–1434. https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.1995.207.11.1429
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