Related Links

Featured Links




Recommended Products



 

 
Featured Articles

Helping your pets cope with the stress caused by loud noise.
Which is the noisiest species of all? Nope, not the lions, or the elephants, or the geese… it’s us, humans. Our voices were not enough, we started making music and creating musical instruments to help us being louder.This Holiday season will not only be ...

Love Is Not the End But Beginning
Scott had to turn his head away while the needle penetrated; with a sobering voice, he kept saying, "I am sorry; I am so sorry." As soon as he returned home from the vet, this six-foot-two-tall man collapsed into tears after putting Jackie, his kitty cat ...

What's The Best Dog Toy For Your Adult Dog?
As a professional dog trainer, people often ask me what dog toys I recommend they should buy and which ones I use for my own dogs. Here's the answer: Your dog doesn't need more than two toys. Rotate them, so he doesn't get bored. But remember: We're ...


Google
Dietary Intolerance in Pets
 
Dietary Intolerance

Adverse reactions to ingredients in the diet may well be one of the commonest yet least recognised causes of ill-health in pets and humans.

In theory, any dietary ingredient can cause an intolerance. In practice, protein (e.g. beef, milk) or carbohydrate (e.g. wheat, lactose) sources are the most likely causes although it is possible that chemical additives such as food colourings and preservatives could cause a reaction.

Understanding and recognising dietary intolerance is not helped by pet food legislation which allows pet food manufacturers to declare ingredients such as "animal derivatives and cereals" rather than naming the actual ingredients. This means that one cannot know precisely what one is feeding and the ingredients can be changed at will.

In general, adverse reactions to food can be divided into those which act through the immune system (allergy) and those which do not (intolerance). Although the mechanisms of the two are different, the symptoms are indistinguishable.

Signs of intolerance (symptoms) vary widely and are not well understood or documented.

A reaction can be instantaneous or delayed, even for several days. It can be mild and ill-defined causing non-specific signs of ill-health such as lethargy, loss of appetite, abdominal pain, stiffness, unthriftiness, unpleasant body odours, bad breath, discharge from orifices and so on.

At the other extreme an adverse reaction can be severe and unmistakeable. An anaphylactic reaction can cause shock and death. Some people with an allergy to nuts are affected in this way.

In theory, any organ or system can be affected and this can give rise to a wide range of symptoms.

In dogs dietary intolerance most commonly affects the skin or digestive system causing disease/disorders related to these organs. This might be eczema, itchy skin, dermatitis, otitis (ear inflammation), vomiting, diarrhoea, colitis, gastroenteritis, pancreatitis, hepatitis, abdominal discomfort etc.

Other organ systems can also be affected e.g. immune system, musculoskeletal system, nervous system, endocrine (hormonal) system. Any symptom or disease affecting any of these organ systems could be caused by a dietary intolerance. This would include arthritis, convulsions (epilepsy), abnormal


behaviour, allergic (pollen, house dust mite) and inflammatory reactions (pancreatitis, hepatitis), susceptibility to infection, Cushing's, Addison's, under- and over-active thyroid etc.

Long-term unrecognised dietary intolerance may be the underlying cause of degenerative diseases such as heart or kidney failure and cancer.

It is probably true that dietary intolerance is much more prevalent than pet owners and veterinary surgeons realise. There are diagnostic tests but these are only possible for the minority which involve the immune system. In any case they are inaccurate and even misleading in that they produce both false-positive and false-negative results. Any symptom of ill-health which persists despite treatment or which recurs after treatment should arouse suspicion of food intolerance.

A feeding (elimination) trial is the only reliable method of diagnosis. This is the rationale of the Burns Health Management Programme. This involves eliminating the existing food from the diet and replacing it with a food which is new to the animal. Home-made food allows more control over ingredients but a commercial food like Burns may be more suitable for long-term use. If symptoms improve when the suspect food is eliminated then it can be presumed that a dietary intolerance was responsible. Confirmation would require the re-introduction of the suspect food to see if the symptoms recur but, of course most pet-owners will be understandably reluctant to take that step.

Disorders of the digestive system which are due to dietary intolerance often disappear within a few days of eliminating the food which is responsible but most disorders will take 3-4 weeks to respond to removal of the offending food.

Most cases of dietary intolerance (those where the immune system is not involved) are dose-sensitive. This means that the amount of food can determine whether or not signs of intolerance will disappear. This is why it is important that whatever food is given, it should be fed sparingly.

It is likely that many people suffer from undiagnosed dietary intolerance with similar consequences except that the respiratory system is more commonly affected than the skin. see http://www.burns-pet-nutrition.co.uk

About the author:

Veterinary Surgeon and CEO of Burns Pet Nutrition. http://www.burns-pet-nutrition.co.uk

News



The Age

Govt's animal welfare checks lack teeth: activists
ABC Online
The Agriculture Department has tightened controls for two exporters as a result of video footage taken by Animals Australia revealing animal cruelty in four Indonesian abattoirs. The Government insists it all goes to show the regulatory system is ...
Exporters breach animal welfare rulesBrisbane Times
Two Australian cattle exporters guilty of animal welfare breachesRadio Australia
Welfare officers to watch cattle slaughter overseasHerald Sun

all 66 news articles »

CBS News

Report: Oklahoma animal park let kids play with tigers
USA TODAY
The society claims employees at GW Exotic Animal Park in Wynnewood were taught to hit and whip the animals. Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO of the Humane Society, tells the newspaper the 54-acre park has one of the largest populations of "dangerous ...
Humane Society accuses Wynnewood animal park of abuseKXII-TV
Exotic Animals Owned By Man Who Testified Against Ohio Bill Accused Of ...10TV
Alleged abuse at GW Exotic Animal Park seen on tapeCBS News
Care2.com (blog) -news9.com KWTV -KSAT San Antonio
all 38 news articles »

WNEP-TV

64 filthy cats and dogs seized from PA animal control officer
Philadelphia Inquirer (blog)
Putting an animal hoarder in charge of animal control is like hiring a crack addict to run police drug enforcement. Yet that's what appears to have happened in the borough of Berwick in Columbia County in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Dozens of Animals Seized from Animal Control OfficerWNEP-TV
Dozens of animals discovered at home of Pennsylvania animal control officerExaminer.com

all 3 news articles »

Pig-napper Tazed; stolen animals returned to owner
MiamiHerald.com
Two pot belly piglets were returned to their owner's care after Broward sheriff's deputies said they Tazed the pig-napper and truck thief. The ordeal started Wednesday when Charlie Borquin was working at a home in Hollywood.

and more »

Former champion of Door County's animals Rory Walter sentenced to prison in ...
Green Bay Press Gazette
Rory Walter, seen in a 2000 file photo, was sentenced to prison Thursday for repeated violations of agreements stemming from her 2008 arrest for animal mistreatment. Rory Walter, for more than two decades seen as one of Door County's champions for ...

and more »