Worldwide medical and scientific journal for animal health professionals
Veterinary Focus

Issue number 28.1 Other Scientific

How to do an elimination diet for pets

Published 17/09/2020

Written by Vandre Clear

Also available in Français , Deutsch , Italiano , Polski , Português , Română , Español and ภาษาไทย

For many vets, common challenges when conducting elimination diet trials include client compliance, practicality and interpretive value, but Vandre Clear offers some pointers to help make the trial meaningful, user-friendly and successful.

Elimination diet trials: setting up for success

 Client communication

A variety of nutritious foods including raw meats, eggs, lentils, peas, beans, and various grains arranged in bowls, highlighting diverse diet options for pets.
Figure 1. © Shutterstock

Explain that animals can develop an allergy to any proteins they have ever eaten, whether animal-based or plant-based. Many pet owners believe that their pet cannot be allergic to their food “because they have eaten it their whole life“. When conducting an elimination diet trial, you must eliminate everything the pet has previously been exposed to (Figure 1). Exposure to even small amounts of an antigenic substance can cause a flare or persistence of symptoms.

Address the misconceptions that grains cause allergies. They have no increased likelihood of causing symptoms over any animal-based protein.

Explain that grains and other plant-based proteins are in pet food to provide highly digestible sources of protein, not as fillers. While many pet food manufacturers now use peas or potatoes as plant-based proteins, animals can develop adverse reactions to these proteins as well.

Prepare your clients for the rigors, expense, pitfalls and benefits of a proper elimination diet trial.

Avoiding pitfalls

Whenever possible, have all pets of the same species in the household on the food chosen for the elimination trial. This will reduce cross contamination and accidental or unseen exposure via shared food and water bowls. Additionally, access to other animals’ foods, licking dishes left out on tables or counters, etc. can all confound a diet trial.

A Siberian Husky chewing on a treat, showcasing a healthy, happy pet engaged with a chew toy.
Figure 2. © Shutterstock

Most pet owners are disheartened by the need to eliminate all treats and flavored chew toys. Make sure that you provide treats and/or canned food that are appropriate to the diet you choose. Provide options of chew toys that are not flavored and that do not contain animal or plant proteins (Figure 2).

Ensure you have a strong base knowledge about pet nutrition and ingredients. The more you can explain to your client about pet nutrition, the more success with compliance you will have. It is imperative to success that owners understand why you are conducting the elimination diet trial and why you are setting certain specific rules and guidelines.

Duration of a diet trial

The duration of a diet trial is 8 weeks and ideally up to 12 weeks 1. In most cases, improvement (i.e., a reduction in pruritus and the ability to decrease or eliminate adjunct medications) occurs within 6-8 weeks, while maximum improvement and resolution of clinical signs may take 10-12 weeks.

 
A Pomeranian dog with a focus on a pile of yellow tablets in the foreground.
Figure 3. © Shutterstock

Adjunctive symptomatic medications are often needed at the start of the diet trial (Figure 3). Throughout the trial, try to periodically reduce or eliminate these medications and assess results with the diet alone. If there is no or minimal improvement with diet alone, and/or additional symptomatic medications are still needed after 8 weeks, pursue other causes of pruritus. If there is more than one allergic disease present that has not been diagnosed or controlled, symptoms can persist, making it appear the diet trial has been unsuccessful.

In pets with a concurrent true food allergy as well, there may be resolution of GI signs as early as 4-6 weeks.

Do’s and don’ts

DO switch to topical or non-flavored preventives during the diet trial. The proteins in flavorings are enough to cause some dogs to flare up.

 
A variety of pet foods including dry kibble in a green bowl, canned food, and brown biscuits.
Figure 4. © Shutterstock

DON’T use over-the-counter diets for an elimination diet trial! (Figure 4)

If you know or suspect the pet also has environmental allergies, DON’T start a diet trial during the season(s) in which their symptoms are exacerbated.

DO make sure that prior to the diet trial, the owner has fully disclosed the pet’s dietary history; include treats, medications, preventives and any table food their pet eats/has eaten. If it is a multiple-species household, inquire about the pet’s access to the other animals’ foods. Not all pets will respond to the same type of prescription diet. In today’s world of specialty pet foods, it is becoming increasingly difficult to find a “novel” protein, i.e., one that the pet has never been exposed to.

While hydrolyzed, novel protein and home cooked diets with novel proteins are, in most cases, successful, an allergic animal can still flare/react to even these diets on occasion. If one type of diet does not seem to be successful, try a different type and also question the client again about previous exposures and any possible transgressions.

References

  1. Olivry T, Mueller R, Prélaud P. Critically appraised topic on adverse food reactions of companion animals (1): duration of elimination diets. BMC Vet Res 2015;11:225.
Vandre Clear

Vandre Clear

Dr. Clear received her DVM from The Ohio State University in 2009. She completed a specialized private practice internship in Internal Medicine and Critical Read more

Other articles in this issue

Issue number 28.1 Published 01/10/2020

Cutaneous vasculitis in dogs

The vasculature of the skin plays a vital role in…

By Elizabeth Goodale

Issue number 28.1 Published 03/09/2020

Cutaneous manifestations of systemic disease

Common diseases are seen commonly – but we must not forget that rare diseases can occur too...

By Patricia D. White

Issue number 28.1 Published 27/08/2020

Dermatological signs of canine leishmaniasis

Both cutaneous and visceral forms of leishmaniasis can occur in regions of the world where the insect vector is endemic...

By Xavier Roura and Laura Ordeix