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Dog Breeds Most Prone to Obesity: Breeds at Risk and Proper Weight Management
Obesity in dogs has become one of the most common health problems today. Although it may seem cute, excess weight carries many serious risks, from joint diseases to heart problems. Moreover, some dog breeds are much more prone to gaining weight than others due to their genetic makeup.
Your Cat Vacation Guide: Tips for Safe and Stress-Free Travel
Traveling with your cat can be a delightful experience for both of you, with the right preparation and a mindful approach. The key is to always prioritize their comfort and safety. Remember, your cat's health and happiness come first. If you have any hesitation before or during your trip, consulting a veterinarian is the safest course of action.
The Science of Adding Freshness to Your Dog’s and Cat’s Bowl: Vegetables, Meat, and the Truth About Kito Fresh
Wanting the best for our pets is only natural. However, when it comes to defining what “the best” truly is, we now have far more scientific data and far more options than ever before—especially when it comes to fresh, whole-food nutrition.
Today, I want to talk to you about a striking study conducted by Purdue University and why its findings make fresh-food options like Kito Fresh even more valuable today.
What Does Science Say? The Purdue University Study
A study conducted in 2005 at Purdue University on Scottish Terriers revealed that adding fresh vegetables to commercial dry food significantly slowed down or prevented the development of bladder cancer (transitional cell carcinoma). [Raghavan, Knapp, Bonney, 2005]
In the study, all dogs were fed dry kibble, but one group had a variety of fresh vegetables added to their meals at least three times per week.
The results were not surprising but incredibly impressive:
Dogs consuming green leafy vegetables had a 90% lower risk of developing bladder cancer.
Dogs consuming yellow orange vegetables had a 70% lower risk.
The most critical takeaway from this study was that it scientifically demonstrated the protective effects of fresh, natural foods at the metabolic and cellular level.
Cats and Dogs: Meat-Based, Yet in Need of Plant Support
Yes, cats are obligate carnivores; they must consume meat-based protein to survive. Dogs, on the other hand, are facultative carnivores; they obtain most of their energy from meat but can also metabolize plant-based sources when needed.
However, under today’s conditions, the situation has changed somewhat:
Industrial livestock farming → GMO-based feeds
Agricultural land → pesticide, fungicide, and herbicide exposure
Water and soil → heavy metal residues
All of these factors increase the toxic load coming from animal-based products. Therefore, fresh, organic plant-based foods and clean meat sources are now more critical than ever.
Why Do Fresh Foods Make Such a Big Difference?
Fresh vegetables and fruits are extremely rich in:
antioxidants
phytochemicals
vitamins
fiber
These components do more than just provide vitamins. They also:
support cellular repair
accelerate detoxification
reduce inflammation
and make the body more resilient against cancer
This Is Exactly Why Kito Fresh Exists: Real Meat + Real Vegetables + Real Freshness
Today, many pet parents guided by both scientific findings and intuition have begun to recognize the importance of fresh ingredients in nutrition.
Kito Fresh offers an approach that directly responds to this need:
Human-grade, high-quality meat
Carefully selected fresh vegetables
Gentle cooking methods that preserve nutritional value
Absolutely no artificial additives or preservatives
All of these features, as supported by the Purdue study, translate the health benefits of fresh ingredients into everyday nutrition.
Freshness Is Not a Luxury It’s a Necessity
Science now clearly tells us this:
Adding fresh ingredients directly impacts long-term health.
To help our pets live longer, healthier, and happier lives, adding a bit of freshness to their bowls makes a profound difference.
And options like Kito Fresh make this transformation both easy and sustainable.
Source:
Deborah W. Knapp, José A. Ramos-Vara, George E. Moore, Deepika Dhawan, Patty L. Bonney, Kirsten E. Young Urinary Bladder Cancer in Dogs, a Naturally Occurring Model for Cancer Biology and Drug Development ILAR Journal, Volume 55, Issue 1, 2014, Pages 100–118, https://doi.org/10.1093/ilar/ilu018
www.kito.pet
Lower Urinary Tract Diseases in Cats and Dogs, presented by Dr. Erman Koral
In this blog post, we have compiled the key highlights from the session titled “Lower Urinary Tract Diseases in Cats and Dogs”, presented by Dr. Erman Koral, held as part of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. We would like to thank our speaker for the presentation.
Lower Urinary Tract Diseases: Accurate Diagnosis, Proper Interpretation, and Targeted Treatment
Lower urinary tract diseases are extremely common in clinical practice—so common that they can appear in one out of every five patients—yet they also represent a world where conditions easily overlap and get confused. In Transcript 11, Dr. Erman Koral presents a clear, practical roadmap that makes real-life work easier: look closely at the urine, collect it correctly, interpret the pH–sediment–ultrasound trio accurately, and then place the disease into the correct category.
1) Why Are Lower Urinary Tract Diseases Such a “Clinical Headache”?
Cystitis, crystal/stone problems, feline idiopathic cystitis (FIC) / FLUTD, and urinary incontinence in geriatric patients all originate in the same anatomical region and often arrive with very similar clinical signs.
That is why:
they are seen very frequently,
they are easily confused with one another,
and they are often overlooked.
The lifetime prevalence rates shared by the speaker are striking: 14–20%. In practical terms, this means one out of every five patients visiting a clinic.
2) “Urine Is Gold”—But Only If You Collect It Correctly
Urine provides extremely valuable information. However, if the sample is collected incorrectly, we may misinterpret contamination as disease.
Two main collection methods:
Spontaneous urination / sample obtained by compression
high risk of contamination from the urethra or vagina
seeing bacteria does not automatically mean infection
Cystocentesis (preferably ultrasound-guided)
minimal contamination
the only correct method for culture and susceptibility testing
A clear statement from the speaker:
If you plan to send a culture, the sample must be collected via cystocentesis.
A crucial additional detail:
bacteria in urine left at room temperature begin to die within one hour
sediment begins to settle within 30 minutes
If you are not evaluating the sample immediately, send it to the lab right away.
3) The First Thing to Check on a Dipstick: pH
Normal canine and feline urine should be mildly acidic: pH 5.5–6.5 (maximum around 7).
If pH is elevated (7.5–9):
The first suspicion should be urinary tract infection, because many causative agents are urease-positive gram-negative bacteria
(E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus, Pseudomonas, etc.)
→ they shift urine toward alkaline pH.
If pH is decreased (4.5–5.5):
Possible causes include:
diabetes mellitus
renal failure (loss of concentrating ability)
very high-protein diets
fever, prolonged fasting, intense exercise
In short: pH is the first directional signpost.
4) Protein, Glucose, Ketones: The “Three Siblings”
Protein (+)
Can originate from three sources:
renal: glomerulonephritis, renal failure
pre-renal: hypertension, fever, intense exercise
post-renal: cystitis, bleeding, urine retention
Because blood and leukocytes also count as protein, false protein elevation is common in hematuria.
Glucose (+)
It is tempting to say “glucose always means diabetes,” but this is incomplete:
diabetes is the most common cause
leptospirosis (rarely)
stress-induced glucosuria in cats is important
If you see glucose in a cat’s urine, never ignore stress as a possibility.
Acute pancreatitis may also increase glucose.
Ketones (+)
This is often the “next step after glucose.”
diabetic ketoacidosis is the primary concern
prolonged fasting
low-carbohydrate diets
pregnancy
If ketones are present, the case is no longer mild.
5) Knowing How to Read Sediment Is a Clinical Turbo Boost
A simple but effective protocol:
centrifuge urine at 5000 rpm for 5 minutes
place sediment on a slide and examine microscopically
Findings:
RBCs: bleeding, stones, infection, trauma, neoplasia
WBCs: suggests infection, but not proof alone
bacteria: meaningful only if seen in cystocentesis samples
epithelial cells:
transitional: bladder/ureter inflammation, stones, infection
squamous: distal urethral or vaginal contamination (increases with catheterization)
renal epithelial: kidney-origin damage (AKI, tubular necrosis, etc.
casts: if you see them, recognizing them is enough; the exact type often does not significantly change clinical decisions
6) Clinical Signs: Translate the Owner’s Words Correctly
Dysuria: difficult urination
Stranguria: painful urination (crying/meowing)
Pollakiuria: frequent but small urinations
Hematuria: blood in urine
Periuria: urinating outside the litter box (very typical in cats)
Nocturia: nighttime urination
Pyuria: pus/inflammatory cells in urine
A key distinction:
in diabetes, frequent urination = large volume
in lower urinary tract disease, frequent urination = small volume repeatedly
7) Bacterial Cystitis: Common in Dogs, Less Common in Cats
Risk profile:
more common in female dogs
recurrent cases are more likely with diabetes, Cushing’s disease, or thyroid disorders
Key clinical tip:
If urolithiasis is present, bacteria are often present as well.
Stopping antibiotics too early while dissolving stones means giving underlying bacteria a chance to recur.
Diagnostic support:
sediment: WBCs + bacteria + RBCs
ultrasound:
thickened and irregular bladder wall
clots/sediment (“snow globe” or “rice grain” appearance)
Treatment logic:
Target gram-negative bacteria first:
fluoroquinolones (enrofloxacin, marbofloxacin, ciprofloxacin)
Alternatives:
amoxicillin–clavulanate
trimethoprim–sulfonamide
first-generation cephalosporins (cefadroxil, cefpodoxime)
nitrofurantoin (concentrates in the bladder; an effective urinary antiseptic)
Important:
Do not combine fluoroquinolones with nitrofurantoin due to antagonism.
If recurrence occurs:
fewer than 3 episodes/year → sporadic
3 or more episodes/year → recurrent/chronic
→ culture and susceptibility testing are mandatory.
8) Feline Idiopathic Cystitis / FLUTD: More Stress Than Bacteria
Feline idiopathic cystitis is:
sterile (no bacteria)
stress-related
highly recurrent (~58%)
Typical clinical package:
pollakiuria + periuria + hematuria + stranguria/dysuria
Most important task: identify the stressor.
This is not “exam stress,” but micro-change stress:
changes in feeding time, brand, bowl type
changes in bowl location
changes in litter box location or litter brand
increased household traffic/noise
a family member leaving or arriving
renovations, new furniture, new electronics
multi-cat households → resource competition
→ number of litter boxes and food stations should be at least the number of cats + 1
Diagnostic clue:
In FLUTD:
urine is usually bacteria-free
bladder wall thickening may be absent
urine can appear completely clear
Treatment foundation:
Environmental modification (MEMO):
quiet, safe resting areas
feeding through puzzles/hunting-style enrichment
scratching posts (horizontal and vertical)
elevated observation spots
water fountains / running water
pheromone diffusers
If needed, medical support:
analgesics
anxiolytics/antidepressants (amitriptyline, fluoxetine, clomipramine)
phenoxybenzamine if urethral spasm is present
9) Stones and Crystals: Match the Shape With pH
Struvite
alkaline urine (pH 7.5–9)
“coffin lid” crystals
dissolves with urine acidification diets
if resistant: acetohydroxamic acid
Calcium Oxalate
acidic urine (pH 5–6)
“envelope” or square-shaped crystals
does not dissolve → prevention is key
potassium citrate is very effective
thiazides (hydrochlorothiazide) rarely used
Cystine
hexagonal
low-protein diet + potassium citrate
Urate / Ammonium Biurate
yellow, “sea urchin-like” appearance
associated with liver disease
allopurinol + low-purine diet
Breed notes:
Dalmatian / English Bulldog → urate and ammonium biurate may be considered “normal tendencies”
Newfoundland / Terrier breeds / English Bulldog / Mastiff breeds → cystine more common
10) Prostate Problems: Present as Constipation, Detected Through Urinary Signs
When the prostate enlarges:
compresses the colon → thin ribbon-like stool
compresses the urethra → dysuria
stiffness in hindlimb movement
chronic cases may show preputial discharge (toothpaste-like)
On ultrasound:
normally homogeneous and bright
gray-black areas raise suspicion of prostatitis, cysts, or abscesses
Treatment:
Antibiotics that penetrate the prostate barrier
(clindamycin, trimethoprim–sulfonamide, chloramphenicol, third-generation cephalosporins)
For symptomatic benign prostatic hyperplasia: finasteride
11) Urinary Incontinence: Storage or Emptying Problem?
Storage disorder:
leaking occurs while sleeping or lying down
common in early-spayed females
urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence (USMI) / lower motor neuron bladder
Emptying disorder:
the patient urinates but cannot fully empty
repeated attempts at short intervals
Quick treatment guide:
USMI → phenylpropanolamine, estrogen
emptying disorder → bethanechol, diazepam (sometimes acepromazine or cisapride)
if there is a lower motor neuron hernia → surgery is necessary
12) Obstruction Is an Emergency: “Acute Kidney Injury Is Coming”
When obstruction occurs:
the bladder fills
back pressure travels to the kidneys
risk of acute kidney injury and hyperkalemia rises
Practical tips:
If the catheter does not pass, attempt high-pressure flushing (20–50 ml syringe) using saline and appropriate solutions.
If unsuccessful, proceed with sedation and smooth muscle relaxation.
In hyperkalemia, glucose + insulin can rapidly reduce potassium levels.
Do not force aggressively before relieving pressure by emptying the bladder.
Final Message: Success in Lower Urinary Disease = Correct Classification
The essence of this session was clear:
collect urine correctly
interpret the pH–dipstick–sediment trio accurately
complete the picture with ultrasound
determine whether it is cystitis, FLUTD, stones, prostate disease, or incontinence
select treatment accordingly
Lower urinary tract disease is not something solved by “just giving an antibiotic.”
If you correctly name what you are treating, half of the clinical work is already done.
We will continue sharing key takeaways from the sessions of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. See you in our upcoming content that will support your clinical practice.
For more information about Kito, you can visit www.kito.pet, follow our social media accounts, or contact us at info@kito.pet.
Dilated Cardiomyopathy, presented by Dr. Onur İskefli
In this blog post, we have compiled the key highlights from the session titled “Dilated Cardiomyopathy”, presented by Dr. Onur İskefli, held as part of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. We would like to thank our speaker for the presentation.
Dilated Cardiomyopathy in Dogs: It Starts Quietly, Then One Day It Knocks With Syncope
Some diseases appear to happen “suddenly” in the clinic, but in reality they have been building for years. Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in dogs is exactly that kind of process. It is typically associated with medium-to-large breeds as a “genetic fate,” but we now know the issue is not purely genetic. Diet, medications, endocrine diseases—many different pathways can open the door to the same clinical picture.
In the 7th session of New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Dr. Onur İskefli explained DCM in a practical, field-oriented way. Two key messages stood out:
“The most critical thing in DCM is early detection. Once clinical signs appear, you are already in a completely different phase.”
“If you see syncope in a patient, you cannot move forward without an ECG.”
1) What Is DCM? A Disease of “Loss of Contractile Power”
Dilated cardiomyopathy is a disease of the heart muscle. The basic problem is:
The heart chambers enlarge (especially the left ventricle and left atrium).
The walls become thinner.
Contraction (systolic function) decreases significantly.
In other words, the heart becomes larger but not stronger; it becomes weaker as it dilates.
2) The Cause Is Not One: Genetics + Nutrition + Secondary Factors
The speaker challenged the classic “purely genetic disease” assumption. Genetics still play a major role:
Breeds such as Dobermans and Boxers have clear predispositions.
Several genetic variants have been identified.
However, other important contributors exist in real-life practice:
Nutritional causes
Taurine deficiency is one of the most critical factors.
Well known in cats since the 1990s, which is why taurine is routinely added to cat foods.
In dogs, the risk also increases with certain diets.
Carnitine deficiency (especially in Spaniel-type breeds) may trigger DCM.
Drug-related and toxic causes
Cardiotoxic chemotherapy agents such as doxorubicin can directly cause DCM.
These patients must be monitored cardiologically before and after treatment.
Secondary / endocrine-related pathways
Conditions such as hyperadrenocorticism and pheochromocytoma can create chronic catecholamine overload, gradually damaging the myocardium and leading to DCM.
In summary:
“Sometimes DCM is fate, sometimes it is an incorrect diet, and sometimes it is the final stage of another disease.”
3) Phases: The Gap Between the Occult Stage and the Clinical Stage
Clinical management of DCM is impossible without understanding its phases. The speaker explained this clearly by comparing it to the ACVIM mitral valve staging system:
Occult phase (asymptomatic)
The breed is at risk but shows no clinical signs.
Or arrhythmias are present on ECG/Holter without systolic dysfunction.
At this stage:
monitoring is the priority, not medication.
annual echocardiography and, ideally, Holter screening are recommended.
Overt phase (symptomatic)
Clinical signs are now present:
heart failure, arrhythmias, syncope, etc.
At this stage, treatment becomes more aggressive and quality of life becomes the main goal.
4) Clinical Signs: How Does DCM Reveal Itself?
DCM typically presents in two ways:
Signs of left-sided heart failure
cough
exercise intolerance
tachypnea
If both left and right sides are affected
ascites (abdominal fluid accumulation), in addition to the above signs
Arrhythmias (the most critical alarm signal)
ventricular premature complexes (VPCs)
atrial fibrillation
ventricular tachycardia → may progress to fibrillation
The speaker emphasized an important clinical reflex:
“If you see syncope, do an ECG first.”
Many fainting episodes have a potentially fatal arrhythmia in the background.
5) The Cough Issue: “Heart Patients Cough” Is Not Always True
This was one of the most educational parts of the talk.
The main mechanism of cardiac cough:
the left atrium enlarges
it compresses the left main bronchus
coughing begins
However, pulmonary edema does not always cause cough, because:
cough receptors are concentrated in the upper airways
there are very few in the alveoli
If edema is mainly alveolar, the patient may have severe dyspnea without coughing.
Cough becomes more likely once fluid reaches the bronchi, sometimes accompanied by pink frothy discharge.
Clinical takeaway:
Do not rule out heart disease because there is no cough, and do not assume edema simply because cough is present.
6) Diagnosis: Suspect With Radiographs, Confirm With Echocardiography
Physical examination is the foundation
The speaker strongly emphasized full-body clinical examination before advanced testing:
inspection
palpation
auscultation
respiratory rate, pulse quality, temperature
Without this, further testing becomes “imaging without knowing what you are looking for.”
ECG
Common findings:
sinus tachycardia
atrial fibrillation
ventricular premature complexes
In syncope cases, ECG is a life-saving first step.
Radiography
Generalized cardiomegaly can be seen, but this alone does not confirm DCM because:
pericardial effusion may create a similar appearance.
Echocardiography (the diagnostic key)
Echocardiographic criteria supporting DCM include:
normalized LVIDd > 1.7
sphericity index > 1.65
fractional shortening (FS) < 25%
ejection fraction (EF) < 45%
LA/Ao ≥ 1.6
EPSS > 7.7
With echo images, the speaker clearly demonstrated:
the ventricle is enlarged, walls are thin, and contraction is weak—like “an incomplete closure performed by hand.”
7) Nutritional DCM: The Grain-Free Diet Paradox
A growing issue in real-world practice:
a small-breed dog (for example, a Yorkshire Terrier) developing DCM after 10 years on a grain-free diet.
The mechanism:
grain-free diets often rely heavily on plant-based proteins (lentils, peas).
The methionine–taurine synthesis cycle may not be adequately supported.
Over time, nutritional DCM may develop.
Key warning:
“Even if the breed is not predisposed, diet history can still lead to DCM.”
8) Treatment: Management Based on Phase
Occult phase
do not start medication in asymptomatic at-risk patients
regular monitoring + avoid intense exercise
omega-3 may be recommended (evidence is limited but benefits are possible)
Arrhythmia present without systolic dysfunction
Holter monitoring is ideal; if not available, serial ECGs
antiarrhythmic therapy if needed
taurine/carnitine supplementation + dietary correction
Systolic dysfunction begins (preclinical stage similar to B2)
pimobendan becomes essential
based on the PROTECT study, it is emphasized to delay clinical signs
Clinical heart failure (Stage C)
Four core drugs form the backbone:
loop diuretic (furosemide)
ACE inhibitor
pimobendan
spironolactone
Arrhythmia-specific therapy:
atrial fibrillation: diltiazem / digoxin
VPCs: sotalol / mexiletine / amiodarone when necessary
Monitoring becomes essential:
electrolytes (K, Na, Mg)
renal function
Refractory advanced stage (Stage D)
torsemide (approximately 10 times stronger than furosemide)
hospital-based dobutamine / IV inotropes
close monitoring
9) Home Monitoring: Sleeping Respiratory Rate Saves Lives
The most valuable homework for owners:
sleeping respiratory rate.
over 30 breaths per minute = early edema alarm
If owners detect this early, the patient can often be stabilized as an outpatient before severe edema develops.
If not detected, the patient may arrive in emergency with 50–60 breaths per minute, requiring hospitalization.
10) Anxiety Management in Acute Cases: The Butorphanol Note
In acute pulmonary edema, the animal feels like it is suffocating and panics.
A practical point highlighted by the speaker:
Butorphanol is a good anxiolytic.
It has minimal cardiac effects and makes treatment much easier to manage.
Closing: The Most Important Thing in DCM Is Catching It Before Symptoms Appear
This session left three clear clinical messages:
1. DCM is not caused by a single factor. Diet history is extremely valuable for diagnosis.
2. A patient diagnosed in the occult phase will have a completely different life compared to one diagnosed in the symptomatic phase.
3. Syncope + arrhythmia risk = never skip ECG.
Heart disease can progress silently for years…
But one day, that silence turns into a patient that suddenly collapses in the clinic.
In that moment, your strongest tool is knowledge and clinical reflex.
“The heart may become enlarged, but if you are late, the game becomes much bigger.”
We will continue sharing key highlights from VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. See you in our upcoming content that will support your clinical practice.
For more information about Kito, you can visit www.kito.pet, follow our social media accounts, or contact us at info@kito.pet.
The World Within Us: Gut Health and Nutrition”, presented by Prof. Dr. Pınar Saçaklı
In this blog post, we have compiled the key highlights from the session titled “The World Within Us: Gut Health and Nutrition”, presented by Prof. Dr. Pınar Saçaklı, held as part of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. We would like to thank our speaker for the presentation.
Why Is Gut Health So Important?
How the Microbiome Is Changing the Veterinary Perspective
In veterinary medicine, there are topics we learn in lectures, touch in clinical practice, and only fully appreciate once we face their real impact in the field. Gut health is one of the most important of these. Because the issue is not simply “diarrhea happened, change the diet.” The gut is a major control center that quietly influences dozens of systems—from immunity and behavior to skin and coat health, and even aging.
Prof. Dr. Pınar Saçaklı’s talk, “The World Within Us: Gut Health and Nutrition,” reminded us of this truth. The main message was clear:
“The gut is a dynamic ecosystem inside the body. The clinician who understands this changes the entire game.”
A 2,500-Year-Old Statement Still Holds True: “Disease Begins in the Gut”
Hippocrates’ statement from 460 BC—“All disease begins in the gut”—is now being confirmed again through modern scientific evidence. Thanks to new molecular techniques, we can now see more clearly that:
The gut is not only an organ of digestion and absorption.
It is also:
the first defense line against incoming pathogens,
the largest immune organ in the body, containing approximately 70% of immune cells,
the home of the vast ecosystem we call the microbiome.
When gut health is disrupted, the result is not just “diarrhea”—a systemic domino effect begins.
Gut Health Stands on Three Pillars
The speaker described intestinal integrity as a balance supported by three key components:
1. Histomorphology (the structure of the intestinal wall)
2. Microbiota / microbiome (the microbial ecosystem)
3. Immune system cells
If one pillar weakens, the others are affected as well.
A healthy gut means all three pillars remain strong at the same time.
Histomorphology: A Tissue That Renews Quickly and Damages Quickly
The renewal cycle of intestinal epithelium is remarkably fast:
villi are shed and regenerated every 3–5 days.
This speed has two meanings:
the gut can repair itself very quickly,
but if energy and nutritional support are insufficient, it can deteriorate just as quickly.
The mucous layer secreted by goblet cells forms the first barrier.
The tight junction proteins beneath it form the second barrier.
If these proteins weaken and spaces open between cells, pathogens can “leak” through the wall, and the process becomes infection. This is why the intestinal barrier is far more clinically important than we often assume.
Microbiota vs. Microbiome: The Difference Matters
The talk clarified an important distinction:
Microbiota: the community of microorganisms living in the gut (who is there and how many).
Microbiome: the genes of that community + its interactions with each other and the environment + its functions.
So the microbiome is not only about bacterial counts—it includes biological outcomes such as:
metabolite production,
immune regulation,
digestive support,
behavioral effects.
Where Does the Microbiome Come From? It Starts at Birth and Is Shaped by Nutrition
The gut microbiome begins colonizing at birth.
In natural birth: maternal flora is transferred to the newborn—almost like a natural vaccination.
In cesarean birth: environmental and skin flora dominate, and antibiotic/antiseptic exposure becomes more influential.
Factors that shape the microbiome afterward include:
environment
antibiotic and medication use
stress
age
breed/species
and most importantly: nutrition
Nutrition is the fastest and most powerful tool for microbiome modulation.
What the Microbiome Produces: The Balance of “Good Metabolites vs. Bad Metabolites”
Gut bacteria ferment nutrients and produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs):
acetate
propionate
butyrate
Butyrate is especially important: it is a primary energy source for intestinal cells and strengthens tight junctions.
But the story does not end there:
Some bacteria also produce harmful metabolites from protein fermentation, such as ammonia.
So the gut has a constant “good production vs. bad production” balance.
In dysbiosis, the issue is not simply a single pathogen—it is the disruption of this production balance.
Dysbiosis Is Not Infection (And Antibiotics Are Often the Wrong Answer)
This was one of the most important clinical messages of the talk:
Dysbiosis is not the overgrowth of one pathogen—it is the disruption of the ecosystem’s balance.
Therefore:
Antibiotics are often not the solution in dysbiosis—they can actually worsen the problem, because antibiotics “kill the good microbes while killing the bad ones.”
Typical dysbiosis signs include:
chronic or acute diarrhea
vomiting
gas and foul odor
loss of appetite
behavioral changes and anxiety
joint pain and skin problems
Gut imbalance can affect the body from end to end.
Probiotics, Prebiotics, Synbiotics: Which One, and When?
Probiotics
Live beneficial microorganisms.
Effects:
reduce pH
competitively inhibit pathogens
produce antimicrobial peptides
strengthen intestinal integrity
Prebiotics
Fibers that the host cannot digest; they reach the colon and feed probiotics.
Effects:
increase beneficial microbes
increase SCFA production
Synbiotics
A combination of probiotics + prebiotics given together.
A key point:
Prebiotics mainly act in the large intestine, so the type of diarrhea must be distinguished first.
Small Intestinal vs. Large Intestinal Diarrhea
The speaker placed this distinction clearly into clinical practice:
Small intestinal diarrhea:
increased stool volume
greasy or very bulky stool may be present
weight loss is more prominent
blood may be digested (dark/tarry stool)
Large intestinal diarrhea:
normal or reduced stool volume
very frequent defecation
prominent mucus
fresh red blood may be present
Dysbiosis mainly occurs in the large intestine.
Therefore, fiber-based prebiotic support is far more meaningful in large intestinal diarrhea cases.
Where Is the Future Going? The Era of “Personalized Nutrition”
The goal of microbiome research is now becoming clear:
identifying each individual’s core microbiome
creating individualized diet and supplement strategies accordingly
In other words, the one-size-fits-all prescription era is fading.
The era of microbiome-based personalized nutrition is coming.
In parallel, we will likely see growing visibility in:
new probiotic and prebiotic species
behavior–microbiome research
microbiome-based strategies for aging and longevity
Closing: The Clinician Who Understands the Gut Ecosystem Can Manage the Clinic
This talk reminded us once again:
Gut health is not a “side topic.”
Nutrition, clinical medicine, behavior, immunity, aging—everything connects here.
A fitting sentence for the new era of veterinary medicine might be:
“If you cannot manage the gut ecosystem, you cannot manage disease.”
And perhaps the best summary remains the speaker’s own message:
“The world within us is very intelligent and very dynamic. We must become clinicians who are equally intelligent and equally dynamic.”
We will continue sharing key highlights from the sessions of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. See you in our upcoming content that will support your clinical practice.
For more information about Kito, you can visit www.kito.pet, follow our social media accounts, or contact us at info@kito.pet.
Prof. Dr. Yücel Meral My Dog Suddenly Fainted While Walking in the Park! Cardiology Emergencies
In this blog post, we have compiled the key highlights from the session titled “My Dog Suddenly Fainted While Walking in the Park! Cardiology Emergencies”, presented by Prof. Dr. Yücel Meral, held as part of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. We would like to thank our speaker for the presentation.
The Fear of ECG in Veterinary Cardiology: Life-Saving Knowledge in 30 Seconds in the Field
In veterinary medicine, there are topics that feel “difficult and distant” in school but become immediate reality once you enter clinical practice. Cardiology is exactly one of those fields. Heart disease does not always progress as a “slow process.” Sometimes a patient arrives and you truly have only 30–40 seconds. Is the heart beating? Is the rhythm lethal? Where should intervention begin? All of that must be determined within that time frame.
Prof. Dr. Yücel Meral’s talk in Session 6 of New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences focused precisely on this reality. Rather than presenting cardiology as a pile of theory, he explained it as a clinical discipline that must become an instinctive reflex.
The main message was clear:
“You cannot say you examined the heart without an ECG. Some nights, your only chance is the ECG.”
1) The Heart Is Not Just a “Pump”—It Is a Self-Operating Muscular System
The first misconception that must be corrected is this:
The heart is not a simple pump. It is a miraculous muscle system that operates on its own, controlled by the autonomic nervous system. It beats 60–100 times per minute (or even more in some species), carrying the entire body’s oxygen, nutrient, and waste circulation.
That is why even a small electrical disturbance can rapidly turn into collapse affecting breathing, circulation, and the brain within minutes. Once you recognize this in real cases, cardiology stops being “a difficult subject” and becomes “the foundation that holds life.”
2) Cardiology Is Not a One-Device Job: The Logic of “Holistic Cardiology”
Prof. Meral presented an excellent framework: cardiac evaluation cannot be completed with a single method:
ECG: electrical conduction and rhythm
Echocardiography: structure, valves, chambers, flow
Radiography: cardiac size and pulmonary impact
Angiography / CT: vessels and advanced imaging
He describes combining these as holistic cardiology, because in real clinical cases, you often need to press more than one button at the same time.
3) The First Question in Emergency Medicine: “Is the Heart Beating?”
When a patient arrives after fainting, the reflex in many clinics is:
“Let’s take an X-ray, let’s do an echo.”
But the speaker’s warning is clear:
Every step that wastes time can cost a life.
That is why the fastest and most practical tool in the field is the ECG.
Within seconds, an ECG tells you:
Is the heart beating?
Is the rhythm regular or irregular?
Is this rhythm potentially fatal?
Even this information alone can guide you toward the correct intervention.
4) A Fearless ECG Reading Sequence (Because Without a Sequence, There Is Chaos)
ECG lines are not difficult—the difficult part is not having a structured approach.
Instead of a list of rigid rules, the speaker described a fixed sequence that works in real-life emergency settings:
1. Is the rhythm regular?
If RR intervals are equal, it is regular.
2. What is the heart rate?
For regular rhythms, use the large-box method:
RR interval = 3 large boxes → 300/3 = 100 bpm
2 large boxes → 150 bpm
1 large box → 300 bpm
3. Is there a P wave, and does every P lead to a QRS?
This helps evaluate atrial–ventricular conduction.
4. Is the QRS complex wide or narrow?
A wide QRS is an alarm sign for ventricular origin.
5. What does the ST–T segment show?
ST elevation or depression → consider ischemia/infarction
T wave changes → electrolyte, oxygenation, or conduction abnormality warning
With this sequence, ECG interpretation becomes a clinical language rather than a confusing image.
5) “Killer Patterns”: ECG Findings That Require Immediate Action
This was the most critical part of the seminar. The speaker emphasized clearly that these are lethal ECG patterns.
If you see anything other than normal sinus rhythm—such as:
ventricular tachycardia
ventricular fibrillation
atrial flutter / atrial fibrillation
supraventricular tachycardias
torsades de pointes
asystole (a flatline)
then the ECG is no longer a diagnostic step—it becomes the button to start intervention.
Because death may follow.
6) The First Move: Vagal Maneuvers—Simple but Sometimes Shockingly Effective
A step often overlooked in veterinary practice but reflexive in human medicine: vagal maneuvers.
The speaker demonstrated this with a live example:
In an SVT patient, a correct vagal maneuver can reduce the rhythm from 180–200 bpm down to 90–100 bpm.
The most practical method in veterinary practice:
Carotid artery massage / gentle stroking
Can be used in many species and may lower rhythm within seconds.
Oculocardiac reflex (gentle pressure on the eyes)
Applying pressure for 15–20 seconds can cause a dramatic reduction in heart rate.
Even if the success rate is only 30–40%, in critical moments this is the cheapest and fastest chance available.
7) If Vagal Maneuvers Fail: The “Lidocaine Reflex” in the Field
Here, the speaker spoke directly from real practice:
“Lidocaine is my favorite—I apply it immediately.”
The logic is practical:
inexpensive
available in most clinics
quick response in acute tachycardia
Administration:
bolus or infusion
ECG monitoring
you can literally watch the rhythm drop in real time
After stabilization, options like diltiazem or beta-blockers can be considered.
However, a critical warning was emphasized:
Because of hypotension risk, medications should never be given blindly without blood pressure monitoring.
8) Adenosine = “Resetting the Heart”
The speaker described adenosine as a “turn-off and restart” mechanism because it:
blocks the SA–AV node for 8–10 seconds
the heart briefly stops
then the system restarts
the goal is a return to sinus rhythm
If there is no response, the dose is increased stepwise.
Although the effect may not be as predictable in animals as it is in humans, it can be life-saving in appropriate cases.
9) The Defibrillator Myth: It Is Not Only for Asystole
A defibrillator is not used only to “restart a stopped heart.”
Its primary role is in:
ventricular fibrillation
severe tachyarrhythmias
A correct shock can restore life within seconds.
And if the clinic does not have the device, the missing element is not only technology—it is preparedness culture.
Closing: Knowing ECG Means You Are Not Alone in the Field
The key reality this session left behind is this:
Cardiology is a vast world, but the ECG is the fastest survival language in that world.
Even if you know that language only at a basic level:
panic decreases when a patient collapses
you start intervention on time
you reduce the risk of losing the patient in front of your eyes
And the simplest yet most life-saving question in the clinic is:
“What is the heart doing right now?”
A clinician who can read the answer through ECG moves cardiology out of the realm of fear and into the realm of reflex.
We will continue sharing key highlights from the sessions of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. See you in our upcoming content that will support your clinical practice.
For more information about Kito, you can visit www.kito.pet, follow our social media accounts, or contact us at info@kito.pet.
Ozone Therapy in Companion Animals with Veterinarian Batuhan Natur
As part of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, held with the sponsorship of Kito Healthy Pet Food Ecosystem, we have compiled the key takeaways from the session titled “Ozone Therapy in Companion Animals with Veterinarian Batuhan Natur.” We sincerely thank Dr. Natur for his valuable presentation.
During the seminar, Dr. Batuhan Natur covered both the scientific foundations of ozone and how it should be applied in clinical settings in a correct and safe manner. The core message of the session was clearly summarized in two essential statements:
Ozone therapy is not the same as “room ozonation” or “air disinfection.” Medical application is fundamentally different.
Dosage is everything. When the dose is correct, it is therapeutic; when incorrect, it can be toxic.
What Is Ozone? Why Is the Term “Medical Ozone” Emphasized?
Ozone (O₃) is a gas composed of three oxygen atoms and has strong oxidative properties. Due to its unstable structure, it rapidly decomposes into O₂ and releases a free oxygen atom. This free oxygen atom is the primary source of ozone’s biological effects.
Key characteristics include:
A distinct sharp odor (often described as the “earthy smell” after a thunderstorm).
Approximately 10 times higher solubility in water compared to oxygen.
A short half-life; at room temperature, it loses activity within 20–30 minutes.
📌 For this reason, ozone is not prepared in advance and stored; it must be generated immediately before administration, next to the patient.
Critical safety note:
The only area where ozone must not be applied is the respiratory system and lungs. Inhalation is toxic.
Brief Historical Overview
1839: Discovery of ozone
1840s: Use in operating room disinfection
World War I: Significant role in the management of gangrene
One of the key pioneers of modern medical ozone therapy: Bocci
A Medical Ozone Generator Is Essential (Industrial Devices Are High-Risk)
One of Dr. Natur’s strongest warnings concerned device safety:
✅ Medical ozone must be generated using certified medical-grade equipment.
❌ Industrial ozone generators or concentrator/air-based devices are not appropriate for medical use.
Why?
When ozone is produced from ambient air, nitrogen oxide derivatives may form, which can cause both respiratory and systemic toxicity.
A proper medical ozone device should:
Operate using a medical oxygen cylinder.
Deliver a controlled and measurable concentration range.
Safe concentration range:
✅ 1–80 gamma (µg/mL)
Key risk point:
Industrial devices often produce ozone in grams, which may reach lethal levels.
📌 Device calibration is also critical:
A deviation of ±1 gamma may be acceptable; anything beyond that is considered unsafe. Therefore, annual servicing and calibration are mandatory.
How Does Ozone Act in the Body?
When ozone is introduced into the bloodstream, two key “messenger” groups are generated:
ROS (Reactive Oxygen Species)
LOP (Lipid Oxidation Products)
These substances activate the NRF2 pathway within cells and stimulate antioxidant defense gene expression.
✅ Primary Clinical Effects of Ozone
Induces controlled oxidative stress
→ Activates and strengthens endogenous antioxidant defense mechanisms.
Enhances circulation and oxygenation
Facilitates oxygen release from hemoglobin → improved tissue oxygenation.
Increases nitric oxide release from the endothelium → supports microcirculation.
Modulates immunity (dose-dependent)
Low dose → immune activation and antioxidant reinforcement
High dose → cytokine suppression and immunosuppressive effect
Supports tissue repair
Enhances collagen synthesis → accelerates wound healing
May increase mitochondrial ATP production → supports general recovery and well-being
Dosage Principles (The Most Critical Segment of the Seminar)
Dr. Natur categorized clinical dosing as follows:
10–20 gamma: Oxygenation, tissue repair, support in gangrene/ischemia
20–30 gamma: General recovery dose, organ damage support, systemic rehabilitation
40–50 gamma: Antiviral/antimicrobial effects; autoimmune and allergic conditions
60–70 gamma: Severe viral burden + acute rectal bleeding control
>80 gamma: Cytotoxic → not used therapeutically
📌 Cancer cases:
In his clinical practice, Dr. Natur typically stays at 10 gamma and does not exceed 20 gamma.
Routes of Administration
Ozone can be administered through multiple routes except via the lungs.
Major Autohemotherapy (Ozonation of Blood)
50–250 mL of blood is drawn
Mixed with an equal volume of ozone gas
Immediately reinfused intravenously
Requires 8–15 sessions (2–3 times per week)
Clinical applications: infections, circulatory disorders, oncology support, autoimmune diseases, organ insufficiencies, diabetes.
Important materials note:
Ozone-resistant tubing and syringes must be used (glass/teflon/siliconized).
Standard plastic syringes and infusion sets may pose a microplastic release risk.
Rectal Insufflation (Systemic and Practical)
One of the most practical systemic approaches in small animals. More sessions may be required compared to major autohemotherapy.
Recommended volumes:
Cats: 20–30 mL
Small dogs: 30–60 mL
Medium–large dogs: 60–150 mL
📌 Rapid administration or excessive volume may increase the risk of colon distension or rupture.
Minor Autohemotherapy (“Ozone Vaccine”)
2–10 mL of blood is drawn
Mixed with an equal volume of ozone
Administered SC/IM
This may be considered a nonspecific immune-supportive approach and may be preferred for allergic, viral, and dermatologic autoimmune conditions.
Bag/Cup Ozonation (Local Application)
Commonly used for chronic or infected wounds.
The wound and the interior of the bag are moistened (ozone is ineffective on dry surfaces).
The bag is vacuum-sealed.
Ozone is introduced for 15–20 minutes.
Dosage strategy:
Infected phase: 70–80 gamma
Healing phase: 20–30 gamma
Local Injections
May be administered intramuscularly, perilesionally, paravertebrally, or at acupuncture points. Typically 10–20 gamma in small volumes (0.1–0.3 mL).
Intra-articular applications:
Used for OA, arthritis, meniscal conditions, etc. For acute cases, ozone is recommended first, followed by PRP.
Dr. Natur noted that combining PRP with ozone may enhance PRP efficacy.
Intradiscal / Foraminal Ozone (Notable in Neurology)
This was one of the most striking sections of the seminar.
Within the intervertebral disc, ozone may:
reduce inflammation
decrease disc volume by facilitating dehydration
reduce pain
Dr. Natur shared cases where paraplegic dogs regained the ability to walk within weeks, including a chronic paraplegic case of six months’ duration that stood again within 45 days.
Protocol approach:
First-line: paravertebral/foraminal ozone (less invasive)
If no response within 3–5 days → intradiscal ozone (general anesthesia + fluoroscopic guidance)
Where Can Ozone Therapy Be Effective?
Ozone therapy has a wide range of clinical applications in veterinary practice, including:
Viral diseases (e.g., parvovirus, distemper)
Dermatology (atopic dermatitis, chronic otitis, wound management)
Orthopedics (OA, tendon and meniscal disorders)
Neurology (disc herniation, epilepsy support)
Diabetic wounds and gangrene
Supportive care in kidney/liver insufficiency
Autoimmune and rheumatic diseases
Gynecological infections such as mastitis and endometritis (supported in the literature)
Critical Warning Regarding “Ozonated Serum”
At the end of the session, Dr. Natur emphasized an important caution:
❌ Ozonating isotonic solutions/serum is not true ozone therapy.
When ozone reacts with isotonic fluids, sodium hypochlorite may form, shifting the procedure toward a chemical effect (similar to bleach-like reactions) rather than biological ozone therapy.
Conclusion: Ozone Is Not “Alternative”—It Is a Powerful Clinical Tool When Used Correctly
The clinical impact of ozone therapy can be substantial when applied under appropriate conditions:
✅ With the right device, correct dose, and proper materials, ozone may:
help control infections
support circulation
accelerate regeneration
reduce pain
modulate immune function
❌ With an incorrect device or uncontrolled dosing, it may:
become toxic
cause more harm than benefit
The clinical summary of the seminar was captured in the following statement:
“Ozone is not a cure-all, but with the right protocol it can provide significant support in many conditions.”
We will continue sharing key takeaways from VetSummit 2025 sessions under the sponsorship of Kito Healthy Pet Food Ecosystem. We look forward to meeting you again in upcoming content designed to support your clinical practice.
For more information about Kito, please visit www.kito.pet, follow us on social media, or contact us at info@kito.pet.
Introduction to Oral and Dental Health in Cats and Dogs: Anatomy, Dental Charting, and COHAT with Veterinarian Batuhan Elifoğlu
As part of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, held within the scope of the Healthy Pet Food Ecosystem and sponsored by Kito, we have compiled the key takeaways from the session titled “Veterinarian Batuhan Elifoğlu / Introduction to Oral and Dental Health in Cats and Dogs: Anatomy, Dental Charting and COHAT” in this blog post for you. We would like to thank our lecturer for his presentation.
Two Things Happened at Once: Nutrition for Longevity and a Clinical Guide to Dental Medicine
For veterinary students and clinicians, the 8th session of the October 2025 VetSummit delivered two experiences at the same time. On one hand, we listened to Kito’s story—an effort to reshape the answer to the question “What are we feeding our pets?” On the other hand, we explored an introductory veterinary dentistry session that provided a clinical answer to the question “How do we interpret the oral cavity?”
In this article, we present both the big picture from the sponsor presentation and the practical clinical knowledge shared by Batuhan Elifoğlu on oral and dental health in cats and dogs—all in one smooth, blog-style flow.
More Than a Pet Food Brand: Kito’s “Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem”
The session opened with Kito’s co-founder, Alper, being invited to the stage. From the very first minutes, the framework was clear: Kito positions itself not only as a pet food brand, but as a nutrition ecosystem designed to help pets live longer and healthier lives.
Key strengths:
Full control of meat sourcing
Lamb and beef are produced antibiotic-free and GMO-free at the founders’ own farm, Karkas Farm. Other ingredients such as chicken, turkey, and salmon are sourced according to standards set by Kito. In other words: “Kito knows exactly what goes into the product.”
Large-scale production through strong partners
Dardanel is both an investor and a production partner. The sterilization and shelf-life technology (autoclave processing) comes from Dardanel’s experience in ready-to-eat foods and seafood.
Kito’s growth story was explained chronologically. Initially, they wanted to launch fresh food products, but licensing processes took longer than expected. So they entered the market first with dry food and treats. Later, the fresh food line was launched—initially produced in their own kitchen, using frozen-shipping logistics with a capacity of 5 tons per month. As scaling became necessary, they moved into industrial production through the Dardanel partnership. This was followed by vitamins, international export operations (a distributor in Russia and a company in Dubai), and today’s point: a portfolio of 52 products.
Kito Fresh: How Can “Human-Standard Fresh Food” Last Two Years at Room Temperature?
The clear star of the presentation was the Kito Fresh series. Alper described it as “fresh, natural, human-grade ingredients.” The ingredient list resembles everyday grocery shopping: pumpkin, carrot, apple, peas, broccoli combined with protein options such as lamb, beef, chicken, and fish.
This naturally leads to an important question:
“How can fresh food remain stable for 24 months at room temperature?”
The answer is simple but critical: the products are sterilized using Dardanel’s autoclave technology, eliminating microorganisms that would cause spoilage. Since the product is not exposed to air until the package is opened, spoilage risk is prevented. This creates a model that is both practical and long shelf-life, while still being fresh-food based.
Another important point highlighted was the pricing segment. KitoFresh is a complete diet suitable for feeding alone, but it is a premium product. Under local economic conditions, Kito recommends a hybrid feeding model mixing it with dry food to adapt to different budgets. Their website includes a portion calculator algorithm where owners enter the pet’s age, weight, and breed to receive a daily feeding recommendation.
Global trends were also emphasized: major corporations such as Nestlé and Mars are investing heavily in fresh pet food brands in the United States and Europe. Behind this trend are studies suggesting that fresh diets may reduce cancer risk and support cellular regeneration in pets.
A Clinic-Exclusive Series: “Not Available Online Only Through Veterinarians”
At a summit heavily attended by veterinary students, the clinic-focused question naturally came up:
“If I have my own clinic tomorrow, why should I carry Kito?”
Alper answered clearly:
The Veterinary Series of Kito Fresh will be available only in clinics and will not be sold online. This provides two advantages for clinics:
Commercial protection (no online price competition)
A strong trust perception (transparent sourcing and a story that clients can connect with)
One of the most memorable statements of the day was:
“We are not Nestlé or Mars, but in a trust-based and emotionally driven space, we can deliver real value to clinics.”
The Second Half of the Day: Facing Veterinary Dentistry
After the sponsor segment, the stage shifted to Batuhan Elifoğlu. Although the title included the word “introduction,” the content was essentially a complete clinical guide:
Oral and dental health in cats and dogs, anatomy, dental charting, and the QUAT/COHAT protocol.
Elifoğlu’s approach was clear from the start:
“You cannot interpret abnormal tissue unless you understand normal tissue.”
That is why he began with skull types.
Why Are Skull Types So Important?
Clinically, we encounter three basic skull types:
Mesocephalic: Labrador, Golden Retriever, domestic shorthair cats—standard reference type
Brachycephalic: Pug, French Bulldog, Boxer highest risk group for oral disease
Dolichocephalic: Collie-type long-nosed breeds
In brachycephalic breeds, the number of teeth is the same, but the jaw is shorter. This causes crowding, rotation, and increased plaque/tartar accumulation in tight spaces.
The result: even an oral cavity that looks “normal” externally may hide severe periodontal destruction deeper inside.
A Critical Warning About Spring-Loaded Mouth Gags
One of the strongest warnings from Elifoğlu was this:
Spring-loaded mouth gags in cats can cause serious temporomandibular joint damage and even blindness.
When the jaw is held open for long periods, the maxillary artery can become compressed, disrupting blood supply to the retina and brain. Therefore, passive devices that do not apply external force are recommended.
The Triadan System: A Shared Language for Talking About Teeth
Before moving into dental charting, Elifoğlu explained positional terminology and the Triadan numbering system.
In summary:
The mouth has four quadrants: 100–200–300–400
Deciduous teeth: 500–600–700–800
Dogs: 42 permanent teeth, 28 deciduous teeth
Cats: 30 permanent teeth, 26 deciduous teeth
This system allows clinicians to describe any tooth precisely, without relying on relative terms such as “upper right canine.”
Dental Charting Cannot Be Done on an Awake Patient
Charting is the documentation of a full-mouth examination. But one condition is essential:
Dental charting must be performed under general anesthesia with endotracheal intubation.
Accurate probing, measurement, and recording are not possible in an awake animal. Elifoğlu reminded attendees of the “four-handed rule”: one clinician calls out the measurements while an assistant records them. This reduces both time and error risk.
The standard charting process includes:
malocclusion check before intubation
missing teeth or mass evaluation
periodontal probing (at least 4 sites per tooth)
treatment plan and procedure notes
postoperative recording and photography
Periodontal Indices: “Extraction or Treatment?”
This section was one of the most clinically relevant.
Periodontal disease is staged as follows:
Stage 0: normal
Stage 1: gingivitis, no attachment loss
Stage 2: < 25% attachment loss
Stage 3: 25–50% loss, root exposure possible
Stage 4: > 50% loss, advanced mobility → extraction is often indicated
Additional indices included in charting forms:
calculus index (CL1–3)
furcation stages (1–3)
mobility grading (0–3)
feline tooth resorption index (TR1–5)
fracture classifications
QUAT / COHAT: The Gold Standard Protocol
Elifoğlu emphasized that this is how dental procedures should be performed. In summary, the QUAT/COHAT protocol includes:
preoperative evaluation (ASA classification, testing, consent)
endotracheal intubation
pharyngeal packing (to reduce aspiration risk)
antiseptic preparation
local nerve blocks
supragingival and subgingival scaling
dental charting + treatment execution
polishing (≤3000 RPM with appropriate paste)
postoperative radiography
safe extubation
at-home care education and 6-month follow-ups
The simplest takeaway was:
“If you skip the standard, you skip the chance of successful treatment.”
Closing: Same Day, Same Goal
The most valuable part of this session was the dual perspective:
On one side, a brand investing in the question “How can nutrition extend health and longevity?”
On the other side, the gold standards for managing oral and dental health correctly in clinical practice.
Both aim at the same goal:
extending quality of life in companion animals.
We will continue sharing key highlights from the sessions of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Pet Nutrition Ecosystem. See you in our upcoming content that will support your clinical practice.
For more information about Kito, you can visit www.kito.pet, follow our social media accounts, or contact us at info@kito.pet.
Diagnosis and Treatment of Gastrointestinal Stasis/Obstruction in Rabbits – with Research Assistant Dr. Ebuderda Günay
In this blog post, we have compiled the key takeaways from the session titled “Diagnosis and Treatment of Gastrointestinal Stasis/Obstruction in Rabbits – with Research Assistant Dr. Ebuderda Günay”, held as part of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, sponsored by the Kito Healthy Nutrition Ecosystem. We would like to thank our professor for the presentation.
Gastrointestinal Syndrome in Rabbits: A Silent Start, a Rapidly Growing Clinical Challenge
In exotic animal medicine, there are some diseases that are “very common, yet still not taken seriously enough.” Rabbit gastrointestinal syndrome (GI stasis/obstruction) is exactly such a condition. A quarter of the rabbits brought to clinics arrive with this complaint. Moreover, the problem usually doesn’t begin “all at once”; small factors such as improper feeding, dental problems, stress, and dehydration accumulate—and within 2–3 years, they can turn into a major clinical crisis.
Our speaker explained this syndrome clearly, starting from rabbit anatomy and moving through current treatment approaches. The main message of the talk was: “If a rabbit’s gut stops, everything stops. If you catch it early you can save it; if you are late, the race becomes much harder.”
A Rabbit Is Not a Rodent, but a Lagomorph: Everything Starts Here
To understand GI syndrome in rabbits, the first correct fact is:
A rabbit is not a rodent.
Rabbits belong to the lagomorph group, and their digestion differs significantly from rodents. This is why “rabbit feeds” sold on the same shelves as rodent feeds in pet shops can cause chronic problems. Rabbit digestion is built on: high fiber + intense fermentation.
When this system breaks down, the first thing to collapse rapidly is intestinal motility.
The Cecum Is the Heart of the Digestive System
When you look at a rabbit’s digestive system, the most striking feature is the enormous cecum:
It makes up 40% of the total digestive system volume
Fermentation happens here
Energy comes largely from volatile fatty acids (acetate, butyrate, propionate)
Vitamin K, B vitamins, and microbial protein synthesis occur here
If the cecal flora becomes disrupted (dysbiosis):
gas forms,
toxins increase,
energy production decreases,
intestinal sluggishness begins.
In other words, the main groundwork for GI syndrome is established in the cecum.
Rabbits Cannot Vomit: A Small Detail With Huge Clinical Consequences
Because of the strong cardiac sphincter at the stomach entrance, rabbits cannot vomit.
What does this mean?
Preoperative fasting is often unnecessary.
But if the stomach–intestinal tract becomes obstructed even once, the contents cannot move back out.
A bloated stomach rapidly worsens the animal’s condition.
Also, because the stomach pH is very low (1–2):
most standard probiotics die in the stomach,
which is why probiotic use in rabbits is controversial.
Cecotrophs: “Normal Mistaken for Diarrhea” and Owner Misinterpretation
Rabbits produce two types of stool:
Normal pellet feces (hard, like olive pits)
Cecotrophs (soft, smelly, mucous; stick near the anus and are re-ingested)
Owners often mistake cecotrophs for diarrhea and panic, bringing the rabbit to the clinic. The veterinarian should ask: “Have you seen the hard pellet feces?”
If pellet feces are being produced, the rabbit does not have diarrhea. Most often the issue is diet + obesity + inability to eat cecotrophs.
Explaining this correctly prevents unnecessary antibiotics and stops the cycle of improper feeding.
Diet = The Number One Cause of This Syndrome
Perhaps the clearest message of the seminar was this: 85–90% of a rabbit’s diet must be hay.
The ideal ratio:
85% hay (alfalfa / grass hay, etc.)
10% leafy greens
5% pellet feed
Hay is essential not only for nutrition, but also for:
wearing down teeth,
intestinal motility,
balancing cecal flora.
In diets high in carbohydrates and low in fiber:
Clostridium species increase,
toxins and gas are produced,
digestive pain + appetite loss begin,
the gut slows and eventually stops.
In practice, GI syndrome is often “the explosion of an animal that has been fed incorrectly for years.”
Risk Factors: Why the Syndrome Has No Single Cause
Rabbit GI syndrome is multifactorial:
Fiber deficiency / improper diet
Dental disease
Stress and environmental changes
Pain and other systemic diseases
Dehydration
Trichobezoar (hairball) accumulation
A critical point: Trichobezoars are not the cause—they are the result.
When gut motility slows, hair clumps together, forms a mass, and causes blockage. Saying “I saw a hairball, so that must be the problem” is incomplete — the true issue is the loss of motility.
GI Stasis or Obstruction? Making the Distinction Saves Lives
There are two main conditions:
GI Stasis: motility slows/stops but there is no full blockage
Obstruction: mechanical blockage exists (hairball, foreign body, etc.)
How to distinguish: Palpation + radiography.
On X-ray:
In stasis, the stomach is dough-like, full, but gas–fluid levels are not clearly defined.
In obstruction, the stomach becomes extremely enlarged, with clear gas + fluid levels. (The speaker describes this as a “boiled egg appearance.”)
Obstruction location is also classified:
proximal (stomach exit)
distal (end of small intestine)
colon (very rare)
This classification guides treatment decisions.
Clinical Alarm Findings: When Does Prognosis Worsen?
If body temperature drops below 36.6°C, mortality risk increases.
Blood glucose above 300–360 mg/dl strongly indicates obstruction.
Above 444 mg/dl is a critical threshold: prognosis becomes seriously worse.
Important note: High glucose in rabbits does not mean diabetes. Glucose rises sharply during stress and obstruction — it’s a metabolic alarm signal.
Updated Treatment Paradigm: Medical First, Surgery Second
Old approach: “Operate immediately.” New approach (2024–2025 literature): Start with aggressive medical therapy, and only proceed to surgery if there is no response.
Backbone of medical treatment:
Rehydration: 100 ml/kg/day fluids (SC if needed, mostly IV)
Pain control: meloxicam, butorphanol
Gas relief: simethicone
Force-feeding (to prevent hepatic lipidosis): Critical Care / Oxbow-type formulas
Prokinetic support: metoclopramide (effect debated but can be used)
Lidocaine / FLK protocol: lidocaine shown to greatly increase motility
FLK (fentanyl-lidocaine-ketamine) is strong, but fentanyl access is difficult
in practice, lidocaine + ketamine + opioid combinations are effective
Medical treatment success rates in many studies: 80–90%.
When Is Surgery Needed? And Why Is It Always Risky?
If after 24–48 hours of medical therapy:
glucose does not decrease,
X-rays show no progress,
clinical improvement does not begin,
then surgery is considered.
But the reality of surgery is clear:
average survival rate is around 47%
if postoperative care is poor, this drops even further
That’s why the speaker emphasized this principle: “Advancing the blockage is better than cutting the intestines.” Whenever possible, pushing the mass into the stomach/cecum and emptying it from there is preferred.
Conclusion: Rabbit GI Syndrome Is a Battle of “Feeding + Motility”
This seminar reminded us of the most critical lesson in rabbit medicine: A rabbit’s intestines do not tolerate stopping.
No fiber → flora imbalance → increased gas → pain → motility stops → hairball forms → obstruction occurs.
If caught early, it can largely be resolved with medical treatment. If caught late, even surgery cannot guarantee success.
That’s why the simplest but most life-saving question in a rabbit patient is: “What does it eat, how much water does it drink, and what is its stool like?”
A veterinarian who interprets these answers correctly can stop this syndrome before it even begins.
We will continue sharing key insights from the sessions of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, held under the sponsorship of the Kito Healthy Nutrition Ecosystem. See you in our next content that will contribute to your clinical practice.
For more information about Kito, you can visit www.kito.pet and follow our social media accounts. To contact us, you can email info@kito.pet.
Key Highlights from the Session “Veterinarian Yusuf Sefa Dedeoğlu / Sonographic Interpretation of Kidney Diseases”
Held within the scope of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, organized under the sponsorship of Kito as part of the Healthy Pet Food Ecosystem, we have compiled the key takeaways from this session for you in this blog post. We would like to thank our esteemed speaker for his valuable presentation.
Sonographic Interpretation of Kidney Diseases: A Roadmap for Clinical Practice
In veterinary medicine, kidney diseases are among the most frequently encountered internal medicine problems, especially in cats and dogs. Ultrasonography is both a practical and a highly powerful tool in the diagnosis and follow-up of these conditions. However, the true value of ultrasound emerges not as a standalone diagnostic tool, but when it is interpreted together with the clinical picture and laboratory data.
Why Is Ultrasonography So Important in Kidney Diseases?
The prevalence of kidney diseases in cats and dogs is approximately 10–15%. The sensitivity of ultrasonography is particularly high in chronic kidney disease, with up to 86% of morphological changes detectable via ultrasound. In acute kidney injury, this rate ranges between 70–75%, and when Doppler imaging and the resistive index are included, the evaluation becomes much clearer and more accurate.
The advantages of ultrasonography are quite distinct:
Non-invasive and painless
Repeatable
Easy to perform
Provides guidance prior to biopsy
A method that delivers rapid and reliable information throughout the clinical process
The Right Device – The Right Probe – The Right Settings
The success of ultrasonographic evaluation does not depend solely on the operator; device and probe selection are also of critical importance.
Probe selection:
Microconvex/convex probe in dogs (generally 5–8 MHz)
Linear probe (the probe that provides the best renal detail; 7–12 MHz)
Technical settings:
The focal zone should be positioned over the renal cortex
Gain (contrast) settings should be balanced according to liver echogenicity
Depth should be adjusted so that the entire kidney fits within the imaging frame
Normal Sonographic Anatomy of the Kidney
The first step in recognizing a pathological image is having a solid understanding of normal anatomy.
In a normal renal ultrasound:
The cortex has medium echogenicity
(more hyperechoic than the liver, more hypoechoic than the spleen)
The medulla appears more hypoechoic (darker than the cortex)
The cortex-to-medulla ratio is approximately 1.5
The renal pelvis is mostly anechoic
Right and left kidney sizes should be symmetrical
(the difference should not exceed 0.3 cm)
It is very important to remember the echogenicity hierarchy:
Liver < Renal cortex < Spleen
Do Not Mistake Artifacts for Pathology
Many artifacts observed in urinary system ultrasonography can actually assist in diagnosis. However, some may be physiological.
Commonly encountered artifacts include:
Acoustic shadowing: a very valuable finding for stones/mineralization
Posterior acoustic enhancement: interpreted in favor of fluid or cysts
Twinkle artifact (color twinkling): when Doppler is activated, color noise over a stone; pathognomonic for urolithiasis with approximately 90% diagnostic accuracy
Ultrasonographic Findings in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
The most important sonographic changes associated with CKD include:
Decreased kidney size
in cats usually <3 cm
in small dogs <5.5 cm
Irregular contours (due to fibrosis)
Hyperechoic cortex (increased fibrotic tissue)
Loss of corticomedullary differentiation
Small anechoic cysts (<5 mm) may be present
Increased resistive index
Marked cortical thinning
Ultrasonographic Findings in Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)
In acute processes, renal morphology behaves completely differently from chronic disease:
Increased kidney size (approximately 0.35 cm enlargement)
Hypoechoic cortex
(darker appearance due to edema)
Corticomedullary differentiation is preserved
Perirenal fluid may sometimes accompany
Hyperperfusion may be observed on Doppler imaging
Resistive index is normal or low
If the acute process becomes chronic (progressing to fibrosis), the imaging findings may reverse.
Acute vs Chronic Differentiation Table (Practical Summary)
Findings
Acute Kidney Injury
Chronic Kidney Disease
Size
Increased
Decreased
Cortical echogenicity
Hypoechoic
Hyperechoic
Cortex/medulla differentiation
Preserved
Lost
Resistive index
Normal or low
High
Clinical presentation
Acute azotemia, vomiting
PU/PD, weight loss, chronic symptoms
Urine specific gravity
Normal or mildly decreased
Persistently low
Findings in Urolithiasis and Obstruction Cases
Key points to consider in stone and obstruction cases:
Renal pelvis width >3 mm → mild dilation
5–10 mm or greater → evaluated as hydronephrosis
Stones appear hyperechoic with acoustic shadowing and twinkle artifact
Ureteral dilation >2.5 mm supports obstruction
Prolonged obstruction leads to decreased cortical thickness
Resistive Index (RI): Why Is It Important?
RI is a measurement of vascular resistance against the main blood flow supplying the kidney.
The basic formula is:
RI = (PSV – EDV) / PSV
Normal values:
Cat: 0.55–0.70
Dog: 0.56–0.75
Conditions associated with increased RI:
Obstruction
Fibrosis
Hypertension
Chronic kidney disease
Conditions associated with decreased RI:
Inflammation
Vasodilation
Acute processes
Important note:
An increase of 0.05 in RI correlates with approximately a 15% decrease in GFR.
Most Common Mistakes in Clinical Practice
Common errors that complicate diagnosis in renal ultrasonography include:
Not using a reference organ
(interpreting echogenicity without comparison to liver/spleen)
Evaluating only one kidney
(right and left must always be compared)
Ignoring bladder filling
(can mislead pelvis measurements)
Mistaking artifacts for stones or vice versa
Not using Doppler imaging
Final Note: Ultrasound Alone Is Not Enough
Ultrasound is a true compass in kidney diseases—but it is not the destination on its own.
The most accurate approach includes:
Clinical examination
Laboratory data
Urinalysis / UPC / SDMA
Integrated interpretation of ultrasound findings
With this approach, diagnostic accuracy can exceed 90%.
We will continue to share key highlights from the sessions of VetSummit 2025: New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences, held under the sponsorship of Kito as part of the Healthy Pet Food Ecosystem.
We look forward to meeting you in future content that will contribute to your clinical practice.
For more detailed information about Kito, you can visit www.kito.pet and follow our social media accounts. To contact us, you may email info@kito.pet.
How Right Is It to Make Dog Food at Home?
In recent years, many dog owners have been turning to natural, additive-free options in feeding their pets. New-generation fresh dog foods have become increasingly popular due to ingredient control, freshness, and the idea of “human-grade nutrition.” Many people are also adapting to this shift by cooking or preparing food for their dogs at home. However, a comprehensive scientific study conducted recently suggests that the trend of home-cooked dog food may not be as safe as we think.
How Balanced Is Homemade Food?
1,726 Homemade Diets Were Examined; Researchers (a joint study by the Dog Aging Project / Texas A&M University and Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine) analyzed the nutritional value of 1,726 homemade dog food recipes prepared by owners.
Although the ingredients varied, the study’s critical finding was striking: Only 6% of the recipes had the potential to meet dogs’ complete and balanced nutritional needs.
In other words:
94% of homemade dog foods are nutritionally inadequate or unbalanced.
These imbalances were especially concentrated in the following areas:
Disrupted calcium–phosphorus ratios
Vitamin deficiencies (A, D, E, etc.)
Essential fatty acid insufficiency
Trace mineral deficiencies
Improper energy distribution
Over the long term, these deficiencies may negatively affect vital systems such as bone health, immunity, metabolism, and skin/coat condition.
Why Is Homemade Food Deficient?
The main reason homemade recipes become problematic is that nutritional balance cannot be achieved through simple or intuitive methods. Ingredients being natural or seeming high quality is not sufficient on its own. Dogs’ biological needs differ from humans’, and these needs must be calculated according to professional nutrition standards.
In addition, dog owners often make frequent changes to recipes reducing ingredient amounts, removing certain items thinking “it’s optional,” or using different oils. Even small changes like these can make a recipe deficient.
What Should Those Who Want to Prepare Homemade Food Do?
Researchers emphasize the following recommendations for people who prefer homemade diets:
Recipes formulated by professional nutrition experts must be used.
Altering recipes can disrupt nutritional balance.
Vitamin-mineral supplementation should be planned if necessary.
Homemade food can be much riskier for dogs with chronic illnesses or special needs.
So What’s the Solution?
The idea of homemade dog food often starts with love and good intentions. But good intentions alone are not enough to meet a dog’s biological needs. For a balanced and safe nutrition plan, scientific recipes, correct formulation, and professional oversight are essential.
At this point, fresh foods prepared with special formulations stand out as a strong alternative that can eliminate the risks of homemade diets.
How Does Kito Fresh Fit Into This Picture?
Kito Fresh fresh foods take the positive aspects of the homemade trend (freshness, naturalness, no additives) while professionally completing the critical parts that require scientific formulation.
Recipes are developed by veterinarian nutrition experts.
The ingredient standard aims for human food quality.
Vitamin-mineral balance and the calcium–phosphorus ratio are planned scientifically.
No preservatives or artificial additives are used.
For this reason, Kito Fresh offers dog owners who want natural nutrition and also want to meet all their dog’s nutritional needs completely a safe and balanced option that fills the gaps left by homemade food.
Source:
O'Brien JS, Lawson E; Dog Aging Project Consortium; Tolbert MK, Ruple A. Findings from the Dog Aging Project: home-prepared diets for companion dogs feature diverse ingredients, and few are nutritionally complete. Am J Vet Res. 2025 Aug 27;86(11):ajvr.25.06.0216. doi: 10.2460/ajvr.25.06.0216. PMID: 40865554.
Kito × VetSummit 2025: A Journey Into New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences Has Concluded
As a brand dedicated to the health and happiness of our beloved pets, we were delighted to sponsor VetSummit 2025 – New Horizons in Veterinary Clinical Sciences.
A Platform Where Science and Experience Met
Held online between October 13–24, 2025, VetSummit 2025 addressed current developments and practices in veterinary clinical sciences. During the event, participants attended evening sessions featuring experts in their fields, covering topics such as:
Prof. Dr. Dr. Hakan Salcı – Thoracic, Cardiac, and Vascular Surgery in Cats and Dogs
Prof. Dr. Duygu Dalgın – Looking Toward the Future in Veterinary Field Practice: Potentials, Opportunities, Making a Difference
Prof. Dr. Pınar Saçaklı – The World Within Us: Gut Health and Nutrition
Arş. Gör. Dr. Ebuderda Günay – Diagnosis and Treatment of Gastrointestinal Stasis/Obstruction in Rabbits
Veterinarian Batuhan Nathur – Ozone Therapy in Companion Animals
Prof. Dr. Yücel Meral – My Dog Suddenly Fainted While Walking in the Park! Cardiology Emergencies
Dr. Veterinarian Onur İskefli – Dilated Cardiomyopathy
Veterinarian Batuhan Elifoğlu – Introduction to Oral and Dental Health in Cats and Dogs: Anatomy, Dental Charting, and COHAT
Dr. Öğr. Üyesi Pınar Can – Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation in Small Animals
Dr. Veterinarian Başar Ulaş Sayılkan – Pulmonary Hypertension
Dr. Veterinarian Erman Koral – Lower Urinary Tract Diseases in Cats and Dogs
Veterinarian Yusuf Sefa Dedeoğlu – Sonographic Interpretation of Kidney Diseases
Participants had the opportunity to ask questions during the live sessions, and all recordings will remain available for replay for 60 days.
Why Was Kito at This Event?
At Kito, our mission is not only to offer high-quality, natural products, but also to actively support scientific advancements in pet health. In line with this mission, we:
Contributed to the exchange of knowledge and experience among veterinarians,
Shared our vision on nutrition and welfare grounded in scientific approaches with the veterinary community,
Had the opportunity to present our “human-grade pet food” philosophy to a broader professional audience.
What Remains From the Event
Throughout VetSummit 2025, hundreds of veterinary clinicians, academics, and industry professionals came together on the same digital platform. As Kito, we were proud to be part of a valuable community that integrates scientific perspectives with our brand.
This sponsorship was not merely a promotional step, but an initiative that contributed to sustainable knowledge sharing in pet health.
Thank You
As the Kito family, we extend our gratitude to all instructors, participants, and partners who contributed to this organization. Guided by science, we will continue working to enhance the quality of life of our beloved animal companions.
See you at future events!
Feeding with Meals Prepared Using Human-Grade Ingredients: Effects on Dog Health and a Scientific Review
"Homemade diets are a significant nutritional strategy that enhances overall health and quality of life in both healthy and sick dogs. The study demonstrates that homemade diets serve as an effective tool in veterinary practices, yielding successful results in symptom management."
As awareness among pet owners about their dogs' nutrition grows rapidly, homemade diets are becoming increasingly popular. A recent study highlights the positive effects of homemade diets on dogs' overall health. In this article, we explore the importance, outcomes, and implementation details of homemade diets based on the findings of the study titled "Homemade Diet as a Paramount for Dogs’ Health."
Objective and Scope of the Study
This study was conducted on 167 dogs of various ages, genders, and health conditions. The participants included both healthy dogs and those with various pathological (diseased) conditions. The primary objective of the research was to evaluate the long-term effects of homemade diets and to assess the adherence rates of dog owners to these diets.
The study particularly focused on the following health conditions:
Gastrointestinal diseases (chronic diarrhea, vomiting, reflux)
Dermatological issues (dermatitis, otitis, tear staining)
Dogs experiencing both conditions simultaneously
Data and Findings
Participant Profile
Total of 167 dogs:
30% mixed-breed, 70% purebred.
Age range: 7 months – 14 years.
75% spayed females, 57% neutered males.
Diet Types and Preferences
Diet Type
Initial (n)
Final (n)
Change (%)
Homemade diet
55 (26 mixed)
104 (24 mixed)
+62%
Commercial food
112
63
-38%
A significant increase was observed in the number of dogs using homemade diets (p < 0.0001). The main reasons for discontinuing the diet were owner compliance issues (27%) and dogs not adapting to the new diet (15%).
Observations in Healthy Dogs
Coat Quality: 70% improvement in shine and softness.
Defecation Frequency: 47% decrease.
Overall Energy and Appetite: Stable.
Observations in Sick Dogs
Condition
Improvement Rate
Gastrointestinal diseases
95%
Dermatological diseases
83%
Dogs with both conditions
100%
Homemade diets were found to significantly alleviate symptoms, particularly in dogs suffering from chronic enteropathy (intestinal diseases) and dermatological issues.
Features of Homemade Diets
Homemade diets are tailored to meet the individual needs of each dog. The primary components include:
Protein Sources: Chicken, turkey breast, beef.
Carbohydrates: Rice, potatoes, couscous.
Fats: Salmon oil, sunflower oil.
Vegetables: Zucchini, carrots, peas.
The meals are typically prepared by steaming or boiling with minimal water and are recommended to be served in two daily portions.
Benefits of the Diet
Significant improvements were observed in coat quality, energy levels, and appetite among dogs that adhered to the homemade diet.
Parameter
Odds Ratio (OR)
p-Value
Appetite
4.07
0.003 **
Energy Level
3.47
0.017 *
Coat Quality
9.88
<0.001 ***
Defecation Frequency
0.01
0.93
Defecation Consistency
0.01
0.97
Features of Homemade Diets
Improved Digestive Health: A 95% improvement was observed in dogs with gastrointestinal issues.
Natural and Fresh Ingredients: Prepared using human-grade food, preserving nutritional value.
Reduction in Health Problems: 100% symptom improvement in dogs with both gastrointestinal and dermatological conditions.
Challenges and Kito Fresh’s Solutions
Owner Compliance: Preparing homemade diets can be time-consuming, requiring owner education and process simplification. / Kito Fresh can be stored at room temperature and served in its specially designed, easy-to-open packaging.
Supplement Usage: 21% of owners discontinued supplements due to flavor incompatibility (93%) and difficulty in accessibility (7%). / Kito Fresh provides all necessary vitamins and minerals from its ingredients, eliminating the need for supplements.
Conclusion
Homemade diets are a significant nutritional strategy that enhances overall health and quality of life in both healthy and sick dogs. The study demonstrates that homemade diets serve as an effective tool in veterinary practices, yielding successful results in symptom management. Balanced diets tailored to individual needs should be recommended by veterinarians and nutrition experts for optimal outcomes.
References
Pignataro, G., Crisi, P.E., Landolfi, E., et al. (2024). Homemade Diet as a Paramount for Dogs’ Health: A Descriptive Analysis. Vet. Sci. 11(438). DOI: 10.3390/vetsci11090438.
