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Anatomy and Physiology Digestion and Absorption Mastication • Mechanical reduction of the ingested food particles • Food is mixed with saliva forming a bolus • Tongue (muscular organ) moves food around mouth to form and push bolus down esophagus Tongue • Taste buds – more discriminatory when food is in a native or unprocessed state (able to distinguish between harmful and proper foods) Taste Buds • Humans: – 5-6 types of taste buds: sour, bitter, salty, umami (meatiness) and sweet (possibly fat) – sweet receptor made up of two coupled proteins generated by two separate genes • Tas1r2 and Tas1r3 Cats Can’t Taste Sweet • Cats have about 470 taste buds • lack 247 base pairs of the amino acids that make up the DNA of the Tas1r2 gene – does not code for the proper protein Why do you think it is a good thing that cats can’t taste sweet things? Cats Can’t Taste Sweet • cats can taste things humans cannot – ATP – signal for meat • most major pet food manufacturers use corn or other grains in their meals – Cat food = ~20% carbohydrates – Is this causing diabetes in cats? Cats Can’t Taste Sweet • The suggestion that cats may have difficulty adapting to high-carbohydrate meals appears to be based on two observations: – (1) cats lack glucokinase, an enzyme used to phosphorylate glucose inside cells – (2) cats lack salivary amylase and, compared with dogs, may have lower activities of the enzymes involved in carbohydrate digestion Cats Can’t Taste Sweet • For glucose to be used by a cell, it must enter the cell and be phosphorylated by glucokinase • Lacking glucokinase activity, cats rely on other enzymes, including hexokinase – less efficient than glucokinase when glucose concentrations are high, cats have considerably more hexokinase, phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase enzyme activities than dogs Dogs Can’t Taste Salt • Dogs have only about 1,700 taste buds that people (~10,000) do, and their distinct sense of taste is actually quite poor Diseases of the Oral Cavity • Oral Tumor: can arise from the bone, teeth or soft tissue structures of the lower (mandible) or upper (maxilla) jaw, or the tongue or pharynx Oral Tumors • most are malignant • malignant melanoma and squamous cell carcinoma are the most common oral tumors in dogs • squamous cell carcinoma is the most common oral tumor in cats Oral Tumors • Diagnosis – – – – – Physical exam Blood tests Aspiration MRI Chest X-rays • Treatment – Surgery – Radiation – Chemotherapy Periodontal Disease • Preventable • Shows up at 3-4 years of age • Clinical Signs – – – – – Inflamed gums Tartar build up Loose teeth Difficulty eating Halitosis Periodontal Disease • Mainly caused by bacteria: Peptostreptococcus, Actinomyces, and Porphyromonas • Treatment: – – – – Dental cleaning (vet) Brush teeth daily (home) Diet (tartar contro, i.e. T/D) Tooth extraction Stomatitis • Painful, inflammation of the mouth • Potential to be fatal Periodontal Disease • Periodontal disease can lead to heart disease and kidney disease if left untreated