A high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet is the cornerstone of nutritional management for diabetic cats, with protein defined as ≥40% metabolizable energy (ME) and carbohydrates restricted to approximately 12% ME per the 2018 AAHA guidelines, or alternatively >45% protein on a dry-weight basis with <15% carbohydrate per the 2023 AAHA Senior Care Guidelines.AAHA Clinical G…+1

Remission rates of 15–100% are reported when a high-protein/low-carbohydrate diet is combined with insulin, with the highest remission rates occurring when insulin glargine or insulin detemir is used in cats newly diagnosed or within 6 months of diagnosis.AAHA Clinical G… Cats achieving diabetic remission display significantly lower glycemic variability than those without remission, suggesting that tight glycemic control through diet and insulin together predicts remission.Journal of Vete…

Canned food is preferred over dry food because it provides lower carbohydrate content, easier portion control, lower caloric density, and additional water intake.AAHA Clinical G… Portioned meals are recommended over free-choice feeding to facilitate monitoring of intake and appetite, though free-choice feeding with a divided daily ration using timed feeders is acceptable when eating habits cannot be changed.AAHA Clinical G…

High-fiber diets are not typically recommended for diabetic cats, in contrast to dogs, for whom diets with increased soluble and insoluble fiber are beneficial for glycemic management.AAHA Clinical G… For cats, the dietary priority is protein and carbohydrate composition rather than fiber content.AAHA Clinical G…+1

Weight management is an explicit dietary goal. Target weight loss in obese diabetic cats is 0.5–2% body weight reduction per week, monitored using the same scale at least once or twice monthly with body condition scoring.AAHA Clinical G… Treating obesity and inactivity is recognized as directly beneficial to managing feline diabetes mellitus.AAHA Clinical G…

Dietary recommendations must be adjusted when concurrent disease is present. Conditions such as chronic kidney disease, pancreatitis, and intestinal disease require modification of the standard high-protein/low-carbohydrate approach.AAHA Clinical G…

Dietary ParameterFeline RecommendationSource
Protein (% ME)≥40% MEAAHA Clinical G…
Protein (% dry weight)>45%AAHA Clinical G…
Carbohydrate (% ME)~12% MEAAHA Clinical G…
Carbohydrate (% dry weight)<15%AAHA Clinical G…
FiberNot typically recommendedAAHA Clinical G…
Food formCanned preferred over dryAAHA Clinical G…
Weight loss rate (obese cats)0.5–2% body weight/weekAAHA Clinical G…
Monitoring frequencyAt least once or twice monthlyAAHA Clinical G…

Would you like to discuss insulin selection — specifically glargine versus detemir — in the context of maximizing remission rates in newly diagnosed diabetic cats?

2.
AAHA Clinical Guidelines.
Top Journal
3.
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine.2020.L Krämer A, Riederer A, Fracassi F, et al.
Top Journal
4.
AAHA Clinical Guidelines.
Top Journal
what nutritional strategies help with glycemic control in… | VetChamp