Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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A safe rate of weight loss for overweight dogs is 1 to 2% of their body weight per week.
The food you're feeding is indeed low in fat and calories, but it's also very, very low in protein. When a food is low in protein and fat, it's going to be very high in carbs. A high carb diet is not your best choice for weight loss, especially for a dog who doesn't get a lot of exercise.
I'd like to suggest that you consider switching Max to Acana's Light & Fit formula if you can. I think it would be a better choice for him.
Does he have any digestive issues with certain foods, or any other health issues besides needing to lose a few pounds? If the Acana formula won't work, I can look for another alternative.
Okay, that makes sense.
Tell me his ideal weight and how much kibble & green beans you're feeding him per day, we can check the calories.
And what's his goal weight?
Well, he should be getting only about 480 calories per day, and a cup and a half of the Solid Gold food contains 517.50 calories, and that's without the sweet potato chips or green beans. So that might be the reason he's not losing any weight.The green beans contain almost no calories, 30 per cup, but I think if you have to cut his kibble back even more, it should have a higher protein content. His diet shouldn't be made up primarily of veggies, lol. I'd definitely cut back on the chips. Maybe try Pure Bites chicken or fish treats, they're small and they're pure protein.
I also thought you might be interested in this info from Ron Hines, DVM:
Elevated amylase levels are of little significance in cats. In dogs, it is a bit more reliable indication of acute pancreatitis. Amylase blood levels can also increase in pancreatic cancer, sudden severe trauma such as car accidents and moderately when chronic kidney disease (especially in cats) is present.
Lipemic (fatty) blood samples or hemolized samples can result in a falsely elevated amylase reading.
Medications that can increase amylase levels include metronidazole (Flagyl) and the diuretic, furosemide (Lasix).
Amylase levels in your pet's blood can change rapidly (hour by hour) because the compound has as short life span. Because they vary so widely, the amylase value your veterinarian obtains can be quite hard to interpret. Values less than twice the reported normals may not be important (not significant of pancreatitis) .
I'm not a fan of the slow mixing method of transitioning. To me, the dog doesn't really get the benefits of either food when you do that, and you can't really tell how the new food agrees with him.
And basically the same thing is true of elevated lipase readings. Amylase and lipase are pancreatic enzymes. Unless a dog has pancreatitis or a serious disease, those readings aren't significant. Low protein wouldn;t be of any benefit.
Less than dramatic (1.5 - 3 times normal) increases in lipase are hard to interpret. Also, almost a third of dogs with confirmed pancreatitis have normal lipase levels. The test is even less accurate in cats. So your vet must send off other test before deciding what a change in your pet’s blood lipase level might really means. Luckily, those new tests are available; and some can be run right in the office. They are the cPL, fPL, cTLI, fTLI, TLI tests.
Acute Pancreatitis (sudden=acute), corticosteroid medications (prednisone, etc), liver disease in dogs, kidney failure (dog or cat), abdominal infections (peritonitis) digestive tract obstructions, surgery, pancreatic tumors or infection can all raise your pets serum lipase levels.
Lipemic blood samples (fatty sample), can falsely lower the lipase reading, resulting in a false-normal or subnormal blood lipase level. Hemolized blood samples can falsely raise your pet’s blood lipase readings.
Complementary Tests :
Blood amylase, pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity test (PLI, cPL, fPL), GLDH, repeat (serial) lipase tests to validate and judge progress, TLI (less valuable in cats), CBC/WBC and blood chemistry panel, urinalysis abdominal ultrasound
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