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Manejo nutricional
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La forma más sencilla de producir orina insaturada es favorecer la diuresis. El aumento del flujo urinario reduce la concentración de sustancias litogénicas, lo cual compensa el inconveniente de la dilución de los inhibidores de la cristalización. Volúmenes elevados de orina también incrementan la frecuencia de la micción, lo que ayuda a eliminar todos los cristales libres que se formen en las vías urinarias (Borghi et al., 1999). Para estimular la diuresis es necesario potenciar el consumo de agua. Esto puede hacerse administrando alimentos enlatados que contienen de un 70 a un 80 % de agua, añadiendo agua a la alimentación o incrementando ligera- mente el contenido de cloruro sódico de los alimentos secos. Se ha demostrado que este aumento del cloruro sódico alimentario incrementa tanto la ingesta de agua como la producción de orina y disminuye la sobresaturación de ésta en perros y gatos (Stevenson et al., 2003b, Lulich et al., 2005) (Figura 16). […]
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Affiliation of the authors at the time of publication
1Waltham Centre for Pet Nutrition, USA.2Dept Veterinary Clinical Sciences, The Royal Veterinary College, United Kingdom
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