Nutrition is one of the most direct ways to influence your pet’s health over their entire lifetime. At Midtown Veterinary Hospital in Victoria, our nutrition counseling service helps you choose the right food for your dog or cat at every life stage, address weight concerns, and navigate the confusing landscape of pet food marketing with veterinary guidance. What your pet eats affects their energy, coat condition, joint health, organ function, and longevity. We offer nutrition consultations as part of wellness visits and as standalone appointments for clients with specific dietary questions.
Excess body weight is one of the most common preventable health problems in dogs and cats, contributing to joint disease, diabetes, reduced mobility, and a shorter lifespan. Our veterinarians assess your pet's body condition score at every visit and will be direct with you if weight is a concern. Weight management plans are tailored to your pet's current weight, target weight, current food, feeding habits, and household dynamics. We recommend specific feeding amounts, meal timing, and appropriate food choices. Regular recheck appointments track progress and allow adjustments. Many pets lose weight successfully with structured guidance and owner commitment.
Puppies and kittens have nutritional requirements that differ significantly from adult pets. Growth requires higher protein, energy density, and specific mineral ratios to support healthy bone, muscle, and organ development. Feeding an adult food to a growing pet can result in nutritional deficiencies or imbalances that affect long-term health. We recommend AAFCO-approved foods labeled for growth or all life stages. Large-breed puppies have specific needs for controlled calcium and phosphorus to support healthy skeletal development and reduce the risk of developmental orthopedic disease. Our team will advise on appropriate portion sizes and meal frequency for your young pet's stage of growth.
Once your pet reaches adulthood, their nutritional needs shift toward maintenance, and overfeeding becomes one of the most common concerns we address. Adult dogs and cats do best on a consistent, high-quality diet appropriate for their size and activity level. Free-feeding, high-calorie snacks, and inconsistent meal portions are the most common contributors to gradual weight gain in adult pets. We will review your pet's current diet, assess their body condition, and recommend specific adjustments if needed. Feeding scheduled meals rather than leaving food available at all times makes it far easier to monitor your pet's intake and notice changes in appetite that may signal a health concern.
Senior dogs and cats, generally those over 7 years of age for dogs and 10 years for cats, have changing nutritional needs that reflect the health changes of aging. Many senior pets benefit from diets higher in protein to maintain muscle mass, lower in calories to account for reduced activity, and enriched with antioxidants and joint-supportive nutrients. Kidney function commonly declines with age in cats, and certain dietary adjustments can meaningfully slow the progression of kidney disease. We assess body condition, muscle mass, and organ function at senior wellness visits and make dietary recommendations based on your individual pet's health status rather than age alone.
Some health conditions are meaningfully managed through specific dietary approaches. Kidney disease, diabetes, urinary crystal formation, gastrointestinal inflammatory conditions, food allergies, and severe obesity are conditions where a therapeutic diet prescribed by a veterinarian can make a significant difference in outcomes. We will discuss whether a therapeutic diet is appropriate for your pet's specific condition and what the expected benefit is. Note that therapeutic diets are available through veterinary recommendation and are designed to address a specific medical need. They are not interchangeable with standard commercial foods and should not be started without veterinary input.
Giant breed dogs including Great Danes, Saint Bernards, Bernese Mountain Dogs, and Mastiffs have specific nutritional requirements during growth that differ from other large breeds. The critical concern is controlling the rate of bone growth to reduce the risk of developmental orthopedic diseases including osteochondrosis and hypertrophic osteodystrophy. Giant breed puppies should be fed foods specifically formulated for giant breed growth with controlled calcium and energy content. Giant breeds also have different adult maintenance needs and are prone to specific conditions that can be addressed in part through appropriate nutrition. Our team is experienced with giant breed nutrition and happy to advise.
A healthy-weight dog has ribs you can feel easily but not see, a visible waist when viewed from above, and an abdominal tuck when viewed from the side. If you cannot feel the ribs without pressing firmly, or if there is no visible waist, your dog is likely carrying excess weight. We assess body condition score at every visit using a standardized scale and will give you a clear, honest assessment.
Both wet and dry food can meet nutritional needs when chosen carefully. Wet food provides significantly more moisture, which is beneficial for urinary tract health, particularly in cats prone to urinary crystals or kidney disease. Many cats do well on a combination of both. The most important factors are the quality of the food, appropriate portion control, and your cat’s individual health needs. We will discuss what works best for your cat at their next visit.
There is no strong veterinary evidence that grain-free diets are healthier for dogs in general. In fact, there has been an ongoing investigation into a potential association between grain-free diets and a form of heart disease in dogs. Unless your dog has a confirmed grain intolerance or allergy based on an elimination diet trial, a high-quality diet with grains is appropriate. We recommend discussing food choices with your veterinarian rather than relying on marketing claims.
Kidney disease in cats is one of the most important nutritional conditions to manage carefully. Moderately reduced phosphorus and high-quality protein are key considerations. Several veterinary therapeutic diets are formulated specifically for feline kidney support and have evidence behind them. These are available through veterinary recommendation. We will discuss your cat’s specific bloodwork, stage of kidney disease, and feeding habits to recommend the most appropriate dietary approach.
Book a nutrition consultation for your dog or cat at Midtown Veterinary Hospital in Victoria. Call (778) 775-8387 or book your appointment online at https://petportal.vet/midtown-veterinary-hospital/appointment/request. Our team will review your pet’s current diet, assess their body condition, and help you make the best nutritional choices for every stage of their life.