Pottenger's
Cats
A Study
in Nutrition
Francis M Pottenger,
Jr, MD
Francis Pottenger, Jr, MD, has given the cat
world one of the best books available in the study of carnivore's nutrition. Between the years of 1932 and 1942, he conducted
a feeding experiment to determine the effects of heat-processed food on 900 cats. I have to admit I don't like the reason
he was doing the study, because it involved adrenalectomies (surgical removal of the adrenal glands) for use in standardizing
the hormone content of the adrenal extract he was making. However, the study tells so much about carnivorous cats and their
need for raw food that as long as the study has already been done, let's now make this information useful for cats.
Most of what I have written in this article/review
is verbatim from his book. The complete 123 page book is available from the Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation for $9.95.
http://www.ppnf.org/catalog/ppnf/index.htm
The cats in the study were kept in large outdoor
pens overlooking the San Gabriel Valley in California, so the weather was moderate for the cats. Each pen had an open air
enclosure 12 feet long, 6 feet wide, and 7 feet high which was screened by chicken-wire so the cats had adequate exposure
to the sun. A trench 18 inches deep was dug in each enclosure and filled with freshly washed sand. A roofed area approximately
4 feet deep with a wooden floor and bedding extended from the back of each pen to provide shelter for the animals during inclement
weather.
All animals were subject to the same routine
procedures. Each cat had its own clinical chart and notes were kept through his/her life. At the end of ten years, 600 out
of 900 cats studied had complete, recorded health histories.
GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
RAW MEAT GROUP
The cats fed a diet of 2/3 raw meat,
1/3 raw milk, and cod liver oil show striking uniformity in their sizes and their skeletal developments. >From generation
to generation they maintain a regular, broad face with prominent malar (pertaining to the cheek or cheek bone) and orbital
arches, adequate nasal cavities, broad dental arches, and regular dentition. The configuration of the female skull is different
from the male skull, and each sex maintains his/her distinct anatomical features. The membranes are firm and of good, pink
color with no evidence of infection or degenerative change. Tissue tone is excellent, and the fur is of good quality with
very little shedding noted. In the older cats, particularly the males, engaging in fighting, the incisors are often missing,
but inflammation and disease of the gums is seldom seen.
The calcium and phosphorus content
of their femurs remains consistent, and their internal organs show full development and normal function. Over their life spans,
they prove resistant to infections, to fleas, and to various other parasites, and show no signs of allergies. In general,
they are gregarious, friendly, and predictable in their behavior patterns, and when thrown or dropped as much as six feet
to test their coordination, they always land on their feet and come back for more play. These cats reproduce one homogeneous
generation after another with the average weight of the kittens at birth being 119 grams. Miscarriages are rare, and the litters
average five kittens with the mother cat nursing her young without difficulty.
COOKED MEAT GROUP
The cats fed a diet of 2/3 cooked
meat, 1/3 raw milk, and cod liver oil reproduce a heterogeneous strain of kittens, each kitten in a litter being different
in size and skeletal pattern. When comparing the changes in configuration found in their x-rays, there are almost as many
variations in the facial and dental structures of the second and third generation cooked-meat fed animals as there are animals.
Evidence of deficiencies is written so plainly on their faces that with a little training, any observer can be almost certain
that a given cat has been subjected to a deficient diet or that it comes from a line of cats that has suffered from deficient
nutrition.
The long bones of cooked-meat cats
tend to increase in length and decrease in diameter with the hind legs commonly increasing in length over the forelegs. The
trabeculation (the internal structural mesh of the bones) becomes coarser and shows evidence of less calcium. In the third
generation, some of the bones become as soft as rubber, and a true condition of osteogenesis imperfecta (the inherited condition
in which bones are abnormally brittle and subject to fractures) is present.
Heart problems; nearsightedness and
farsightedness; under activity of the thyroid or inflammation of the thyroid gland; infections of the kidney, of the liver,
of the testes, of the ovaries, and of the bladder; arthritis and inflammation of the joints; inflammation of the nervous system
with paralysis and meningitis—all occur commonly in these cooked-meat-fed cats. A decrease in visceral volume is evidenced
by the diminishing size of their thoracic and abdominal cavities.
Frank infections of the bone appear
regularly and often appear to be the case of death. By the time the third deficient generation is born, the cats are so physiologically
bankrupt that none survive beyond the sixth month of life, thereby terminating the strain.
A study of the microscopic sections
of the lungs of second and third generation deficient cats show abnormal respiratory tissues. The lungs show hyperemia, some
edema and partial atelectasis (incomplete expansion of lungs at birth), while the most deficient show bronchitis and pneumonitis
(localized acute inflammation of the lungs without toxemia). In several cases, a hypothyroid condition exists with the thyroid
gland showing scanty colloid and small acini (plural of acinus—one of the small sacs in a gland lining with secreting
cells), again not observable in raw-meat-fed cats.
Cooked-meat-fed cats show much more
irritability. Some females are even dangerous to handle and three are named Tiger, Cobra, and Rattlesnake because of their
proclivity for biting and scratching. The males, on the other hand, are more docile, often to the point of being unaggressive,
and their sex interest is slack or perverted. In essence, there is evidence of a role reversal with the female cats becoming
the aggressors and the male cats becoming passive as well as evidence of increasing abnormal activities between the same sexes.
Such sexual deviations are not observed among the raw-food cats.
Vermin and intestinal parasites abound.
Skin lesions and allergies appear frequently and are progressively worse from one generation to the next. Pneumonia and empyema
(accumulation of pus in a cavity of the body, especially the chest) are among the principal causes of death in adult cats
while diarrhea followed by pneumonia takes a heavy toll on the kittens.
At autopsy, cooked-meat-fed females
frequently present ovarian atrophy and uterine congestion, and the males often show failure in the development of active spermatogenesis
(process of formation of spermatazoa). (Spermatazoa (plural of Spermatazoon--male germ cells.) Abortion in pregnant females
is common, running about 25 percent in the first deficient generation to about 70 percent in the second generation. Deliveries
are generally difficult with many females dying in labor. The mortality rate of the kittens also is high as the kittens are
either born dead or are born too frail to nurse. Following delivery, a few mother cats steadily decline in health only to
die from some obscure physiological exhaustion in about three months. Other cats show increasing difficulty with their pregnancies,
and in many instances, fail to become pregnant. The average weight of the kittens born of cooked-meat-fed mothers is 100 grams,
19 grams less than the raw meat nurtured kittens.
REGENERATING CATS
When cats of the first and second
generation cooked-meat-fed groups are returned to a raw meat diet, they are classified as regenerating animals of the first
and second orders. Their progeny are then maintained on an optimum diet to measure the time needed to rebuild their health
to that of the normal cats. It requires approximately four generations for either order to regenerate to a state of normal
health. However, because of the lack of reproductive efficiency, very few deficient animals regain the normal health noted
before deficiency was imposed on their line of cats.
Improvement in resistance to disease
is noted in the second generation regenerating cat, but allergic manifestations persist into the third generation. In the
third generation, skeletal and soft tissue changes are still noticeable, but to a lesser degree; and by the fourth, most of
the severe deficiency signs and symptoms disappear—but seldom completely.
One of the experiment's more startling
discoveries is that once a female cat is subjected to a deficient diet for a period of 12 to 18 months, her reproductive efficiency
is so reduced that she is never again able to give birth to normal kittens. Even after three or four years of eating an optimum
diet, her kittens still show signs of deficiency in skeletal and dental development. When her kittens are maintained on an
optimum diet, a gradual reversal and regeneration takes place.
The only other portion of this book
I want to bring forth just to show the difference in all the types of processed milk and that what we call “milk”
now is really no longer a food and can cause serious problems for cats, dogs, and/or people.
THE RAW MILK
VERSUS COOKED MILK FEEDING EXPERIMENT
This feeding experiment involves
four groups of cats. One group received a diet of 2/3 raw milk, 1/3 raw meat, and cod liver oil. The other groups receive
a diet of either 2/3 pasteurized milk, 2/3 evaporated milk, or 2/3 sweetened condensed milk, plus 1/3 raw meat, and cod liver
oil.
The results of this experiment correspond
to those of the raw meat versus cooked meat experiment. Animals on raw milk and raw meat reproduce homogeneous litters, and
the usual causes of death are old age and injuries suffered in fighting. They are generally healthy animals with normal anatomic
measurements and good resistance to disease. Their fur is of good quality with a notable sheen, and they show no signs of
allergy.
The cats fed pasteurized milk as
the principal item of their diet show skeletal changes, lessened reproductive efficiency, and their kittens present progressive
constitutional and respiratory problems as is evident in the first, second, and third generation deficient cats eating cooked
meat.
Cats fed evaporated milk show even
more damage than their pasteurized counterparts while the most marked deficiencies occur among those fed sweetened condensed
milk. The cats on sweetened condensed milk develop much heavier fat deposits and exhibit severe skeletal deformities. They
show extreme irritability and pace back and forth in their pens.
Francis M. Pottenger, Jr., M.D.
Pat
McKay:
With all the excellent information provided in Dr. Pottenger's ten years of study, it is eminently clear
that canned, dry, and cooked foods, including pasteurized and other processed milk, are not for cats. I would also extrapolate
this information to include all dogs and other true carnivores.