http://www.news.cornell.edu/Chronicle/02/12.12.02/dog-diet.html
Eating less results in longer lives, a 14-year CU
dog-diet study confirms
By Lissa Harris
Seventy years after a classic Cornell nutritional study
showed that cutting rations dramatically prolongs rats' lives, nutrition
scientists have come up with even more evidence of the benefit of slender diets:
A recently completed 14-year study found that dogs forced to eat 25 percent less
than their littermates of the same balanced diet lived significantly longer and
suffered fewer canine diseases.
In an age of increasing incidence of obesity among
Americans, "maybe it's time we watched what the rats and the dogs are eating,"
advises George Lust, a Cornell professor of veterinary medicine and a
collaborator in the experiment with dogs, sponsored by the Nestlé Purina Pet
Care Co.
A specialist in bone and joint diseases in animals,
Lust saw the underfed dogs incurring much less canine hip dysplasia (CHD) and
subsequent osteoarthritis, compared with dogs that were fed the portions
indicated on the pet food packages. The dogs on reduced rations also lived
nearly two years longer.
In animal nutritionist Clive McCay's 1930s'
demonstration of the power of portion control on health, rats on an
experimentally reduced diet lived half again as long as rats on "normal" diets.
His findings with rats are well known to every nutritionist, but determining the
implications for human health has remained a challenge. The dog study comes
closer, providing the strongest evidence yet that diet restriction confers
benefits of health and longevity on larger mammals.
While the benefits of diet reduction have been
demonstrated in animals from chickens to single-celled organisms, dogs are our
closest evolutionary relatives in which a reduced diet definitively has been
shown to enhance health and lengthen life.
The ambitious dog study was led by researchers at
Nestlé Purina, and included scientists at Cornell, the University of Illinois,
Michigan State University and the University of Pennsylvania. Results of the
study were published in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical
Association in May. The study also was the focus of a September symposium in
St. Louis, sponsored by Nestlé Purina, called "Advancing Life Through Diet
Restriction."
In the study, 24 pairs of Labrador retriever siblings
between 6 and 8 weeks of age -- matched by sex and weight-- were selected, with
one of each pair assigned to eat 25 percent less food than its sibling. The dogs
were a part of the study from the time they were weaned until they died, and
their health was closely monitored throughout their lives.
The median age of dogs in the reduced-diet group, the
researchers found, was 13 years -- 1.8 years longer than the median age of dogs
fed a normal diet.
As a result of genetic factors, Labradors are
predisposed to develop CHD and osteoarthritis. Lust, a professor of
physiological chemistry at the James A. Baker Institute for Animal Health at
Cornell, followed the development of the disease in the 48 dogs in the study. He
found striking effects of diet on the progression of the disease, even in young
animals.
"It was dramatic. In the control group of 24 dogs --
the well-fed dogs -- 16 had CHD at 2 years of age, and eight were normal," Lust
said. "Of the 24 dogs in the restricted diet group, only eight had CHD and 16
were normal."
The reduced diet also was found to reduce the risk of
developing osteoarthritis, which generally results from CHD and is one of the
most common sources of chronic pain treated by veterinarians. It is also the
most common form of arthritis in humans, affecting over 20 million people in the
United States. Only six dogs on the reduced diet developed osteoarthritis of the
hip by age 10, while 19 of the dogs in the control group developed the
condition. And for dogs with CHD and on reduced rations, the diet decreased the
odds of developing osteoarthritis by 57 percent.
Similar studies involving primates are under way at the
University of Wisconsin. Because of the long life span of monkeys, however, it
will be years before the results of those studies are known.
