Cardiac disease isn’t just about leaky valves or enlarged chambers – it’s a full-body metabolic upheaval. Chronic RAAS activation, inflammatory cytokines and wobbly energy metabolism crank up resting energy needs while suppressing appetite. The result is the dreaded cardiac cachexia, and once that starts survival time plummets (Ineson et al., 2019).
So, what do you as a general practitioner need to know? Whether you’re an aspiring veterinary cardiologist, looking for cardiology CPD, or a nurse with an interest in nutrition – dig in and we’ll explain all! We've split the guide into two parts - an overview of the macro- and micro-nutrient requirements, and then details of stage-specific nutrition, so you can make confident recommendations.
Medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) skip the usual carnitine shuttle and drop straight into mitochondria for a quick energy fix - diets higher in MCTs may be easier for tired hearts to deal with. Overall calorie density should support resting energy needs plus a bit extra for recovery days when a cough limits walks.
Dogs lose muscle faster than fat in heart failure. Anything under 6 g/100 kcal puts them on a slippery slope; 8–10 g is safer once Stage C arrives. Senior diets labelled “protein-restricted” are seldom helpful unless kidneys demand it.
Sodium is a key nutrient to consider in the dietary management of heart disease, due to its role in fluid balance and its interaction with the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system (RAAS), which becomes dysregulated in affected dogs. Sodium restriction is regularly recommended in cardiac disease, but is still potentially controversial, especially as a blanket requirement. While mild sodium restriction lowers left-atrial pressure and keeps pulmonary oedema at bay, reducing salt too far may flick RAAS into high gear, undoing your good work (Suematsu et al, 2010). In dogs with chronic heart failure resulting from conditions like MMVD or DCM, limiting sodium intake has demonstrated beneficial outcomes, including a reduction in cardiac size measurements when compared with more moderate sodium consumption (Rush et al., 2000).
Once you've staged the patient's heart disease, their diet can be adjusted to suit:
Stage A – At-risk but normal heart
Stick with everyday good nutrition. Sodium in the 100–140 mg/100 kcal range is perfectly reasonable, and 5–8 g protein/100 kcal maintains lean tissue. Use this calm period to get owners weighing food and practising low-salt treats.
Stage B1 – Soft murmur, no structural change
Nudge sodium down to roughly 80–100 mg/100 kcal and raise protein to at least 6 g/100 kcal (up to 10 g is fine). Start talking about label-reading and the hidden salt bomb that is processed cheese.
Stage B2 – Echo shows enlargement
Time to tighten the belt: 50–80 mg sodium/100 kcal is the sweet spot, still with 6–10 g protein. This is also the moment to add EPA/DHA and to check electrolytes twice a year.
Stage C – First episode of congestive heart failure
Hold sodium at 50–80 mg/100 kcal (occasionally even less), but do not skimp on protein; cachexia risk is now real. Calorie density may need a boost if furosemide blunts appetite.
Stage D – Refractory CHF
Diet becomes bespoke. Some dogs require < 50 mg sodium/100 kcal while others tolerate a little more. Protein often needs a bump to 7–12 g/100 kcal, and highly palatable, MCT-rich foods can help tired hearts use energy efficiently.
Cachexia rarely announces itself on the scales; a 5 kg Cavalier can drop a third of its epaxial muscle before weight budges. Add a muscle condition score (MCS) line to every heart-check form and flag any downgrade for immediate dietary review. Evidence suggests even a modest uptick in EPA/DHA and protein can slow the slide (Ineson et al., 2019). And forget crash diets: the so-called ‘obesity paradox’ hints that a smidge of padding confers survival benefits once CHF sets in.
We all know that commercial cardiac 'prescription' diets are convenient – they have predictable sodium, beefed-up B-vitamins and usually added taurine/carnitine. Just watch out for their protein - a few brands still hover around 4 g/100 kcal which is too low and risks cachexia.
Home-cooked food is an option, but it only works if a suitably qualified canine nutritionist writes the recipe and the owner sticks to it reliably – even small substitutions can have big impacts.
Don’t forget the treats! Train your owners to provide low-sodium treats, like apple and carrot, plain boiled chicken breast, or cooked sweet potato, rather than ham, cheese, and tinned tuna.
Metabolomics is making some big strides in research, and there’s even some evidence that dogs with MMVD and CHF have dysbiosis, which could become important in treatment. We still need big, prospective outcome studies, but the trajectory is clear – the microbiome has far-reaching effects, and nutrition for clinical disease is about to get far more complex!
Food is medicine. From the first innocent murmur to the toughest Stage D case, a carefully tuned diet can delay progression, defend muscle mass and keep canine hearts – and their owners – happier for longer.
P.S Don’t forget to log reading this article on 1CPD – it counts towards vet CPD requirements and vet nurse CPD requirements.