Key Things To Know About Feline Diabetes

Diabetes in cats has increased by 18% over the past 10-years, and 1 out of every 230 cats is affected by feline diabetes.

What is feline diabetes?

Diabetes is a condition in which the feline body cannot properly produce or respond to insulin. This results in elevated levels of the sugar glucose, which is the body’s main source of energy.  Therefore, it is a condition where your cat has difficulty using sugar as an energy source.

There are 2 types of diabetes in cats: Type I and Type II.

  • In Type I diabetes, glucose levels are high due to a decrease in insulin production.
  • In Type II diabetes, glucose levels are high because the cells in the body do not respond appropriately to insulin. Feline diabetes is most often classified as Type II diabetes.

Image source: Rapid Labs

What causes diabetes in cats?

The exact cause of feline diabetes is unknown, however, it’s more likely to affect overweight cats, because obesity makes the cat’s body less sensitive to the effects of insulin.

Other risk factors for feline diabetes include increasing age, male gender, genetic predisposition, environmental factors, physical inactivity, certain drugs and poor quality diet.

Cats are obligate carnivores, meaning their bodies evolved to eat a high-protein, low carbohydrate diet. Cats are exceptionally good at making glucose from proteins no matter how many carbohydrates they are taking in.  The fact that cats evolved consuming low-carbohydrate prey has led to speculations that high-carbohydrate diets could be detrimental for a cat’s health. More specifically, it has been suggested that excess carbohydrates could lead to feline obesity and diabetes mellitus.


What are the early signs of feline diabetes?

1. Increased Appetite and Weight Loss

This happens because the cells can no longer absorb the glucose from the blood appropriately. As a result, starved cells will trigger the breakdown of the fats and proteins available in the body as an alternative source of energy.)

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