Nutritional Counselling

Madison Veterinary Hospital is an independently owned and operated practice that has been part of this community since 1970. Every recommendation we make comes from experience and genuine care, not a corporate protocol.

a cat lying on the ground

The Pet Food Aisle Is Overwhelming. We Can Help You Sort It Out

Walk down the pet food aisle at any store and the options are overwhelming. Grain-free, raw, limited ingredient, breed-specific, life stage formulas, and prescription diets, all with confident marketing claims and conflicting advice online to match. It is genuinely difficult to know what to feed your pet, and the consequences of getting it wrong can be significant.

At Madison Veterinary Hospital, nutritional counseling is a natural extension of the whole-pet care we have provided to families throughout Madison Heights and the surrounding area for more than 50 years. Our veterinarians bring evidence-based guidance to nutrition conversations, helping you cut through the noise and make informed decisions that support your individual pet’s health, life stage, and medical needs.

Why Veterinary Nutritional Guidance Matters

Not all pet nutrition advice is created equal. Breeders, pet store employees, online forums, and social media influencers offer opinions on pet food constantly, but very few of them have the medical training to account for your individual pet’s health history, breed predispositions, body condition, or concurrent medical conditions.

Your veterinarian does. A nutrition conversation with our team considers your pet as a whole patient, not just a species or a size category. And because we see your pet regularly over time, we can monitor how their diet is affecting their health and adjust recommendations as they age or as their needs change.

Life Stage Nutrition

Nutritional needs change significantly across your pet’s life, and a diet appropriate for one stage can be inadequate or even harmful at another.

Puppies and Kittens

Growing animals have dramatically higher caloric and nutrient needs than adults. Puppies, especially large and giant breeds, require precise calcium and phosphorus ratios to support healthy skeletal development without promoting the excessively rapid growth that can lead to developmental orthopedic disease. Kitten diets are formulated to support rapid growth and development through the first year of life. We provide specific guidance on appropriate foods and feeding amounts for your growing pet.

Adult Pets

Adult maintenance diets are formulated to support a stable, healthy body weight and provide appropriate nutrient levels for daily activity. The right food for your adult dog or cat depends on their size, activity level, breed, and any existing health concerns. We evaluate body condition score at every wellness exam and discuss dietary adjustments as needed.

Senior Pets

Older pets have unique nutritional needs that standard adult foods may not fully address. Senior pets are at increased risk for kidney disease, cognitive decline, joint disease, and muscle mass loss, all of which have nutritional management components. We discuss dietary strategies that support healthy aging and, where appropriate, transition to therapeutic diets that directly address age-related conditions.

Weight Management

Obesity in pets is widespread and is one of the most significant, preventable health problems we see. Overweight dogs and cats are at higher risk for diabetes, orthopedic disease, cardiovascular disease, certain cancers, reduced immune function, and shortened lifespan. Extra weight also worsens existing conditions like arthritis, making an already painful problem worse.

We approach weight management conversations with honesty and without judgment. Our team assesses your pet’s body condition score, calculates an appropriate target weight, and works with you to develop a realistic, sustainable plan. This typically involves a specific caloric target, a feeding schedule, guidance on treats and table food, and regular recheck weigh-ins to track progress and adjust the plan as needed. In some cases, a prescription weight management diet provides the best framework for achieving a healthy weight safely.

Prescription and Therapeutic Diets

For pets with certain medical conditions, diet is not just a lifestyle consideration. It is a treatment. Therapeutic veterinary diets are formulated by veterinary nutritionists to manage specific conditions and are available only through veterinary practices.

Conditions commonly managed with prescription nutrition include:

  • Chronic kidney disease (renal diets to reduce phosphorus load)
  • Diabetes mellitus (high-protein, low-carbohydrate formulations)
  • Urinary tract disease and bladder stones (dissolution and prevention diets)
  • Food allergies and inflammatory bowel disease (hydrolyzed or novel protein diets)
  • Liver disease (hepatic support diets)
  • Heart disease (cardiac diets)
  • Gastrointestinal disorders (highly digestible, low-fat, or fiber-specific formulas)
  • Obesity (calorie-restricted, satiety-focused formulations)
  • Dental disease (tartar-reducing dental diets)

If your pet has been diagnosed with a condition through our diagnostic workup that may benefit from nutritional management, our team will discuss the available therapeutic options and help you select the most appropriate diet for their specific situation.

A Note on Trending Diets

We receive many questions about grain-free diets, raw food diets, and homemade diets. Here is an honest overview:

Grain-Free Diets

The FDA investigated a potential link between grain-free diets and a serious heart condition called dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in dogs. While the investigation is ongoing and definitive causation has not been established, many veterinary cardiologists and nutritionists advise caution with grain-free diets, particularly for breeds already predisposed to DCM. We encourage a conversation before choosing a grain-free diet for your dog.

Raw Food Diets

Raw food diets carry documented risks of bacterial contamination, including Salmonella and Listeria, which pose health risks to both pets and the people who handle their food. They can also be nutritionally unbalanced when not carefully formulated. We are happy to discuss raw feeding openly and honestly if it is something you are considering.

Homemade Diets

Home-prepared diets can provide excellent nutrition if they are formulated by a board-certified veterinary nutritionist. Recipes found online are frequently nutritionally incomplete. If you are committed to feeding a home-prepared diet, we can discuss how to get a recipe properly formulated.

Nutrition as Part of Whole-Pet Care

At Madison Veterinary Hospital, nutritional counseling is woven into every wellness visit and every chronic disease management conversation. It is not a separate service so much as a fundamental part of how we care for the whole patient. Whether you have a puppy who needs a strong nutritional start or a senior cat managing kidney disease, our team is here to give you honest, evidence-based guidance.

Families from throughout Madison Heights, Royal Oak, Warren, Troy, and the surrounding communities have trusted our team with these conversations for generations. As an AAHA-accredited practice and a Newsweek Best Veterinary Hospital in America for both 2025 and 2026, that trust is something we work to earn at every visit. We take it seriously.

Frequently Asked Questions

Weight alone does not tell the whole story. We assess body condition score, a standardized evaluation of fat coverage over the ribs, spine, and hips, at every wellness visit. A score of four or five on a nine-point scale is considered ideal. We will show you how to assess body condition at home between visits.

Not necessarily. If your pet is maintaining a healthy weight, has good energy, a shiny coat, and no digestive issues, their current diet may be working well. We will let you know if we have any concerns during wellness exams.

Treats should make up no more than ten percent of your pet’s daily caloric intake. Safe options include commercially prepared pet treats without excessive additives, small pieces of lean meat, and certain fruits and vegetables, like carrots and blueberries for dogs. Some common human foods, including grapes, raisins, onions, garlic, and xylitol, are toxic to pets and should never be given.

Not necessarily. Price is not a reliable indicator of nutritional quality. We recommend diets from manufacturers who employ board-certified veterinary nutritionists, conduct feeding trials, and have a strong track record of quality control. We are happy to recommend specific brands that meet these standards, and many therapeutic diets are available directly through our in-house pharmacy.