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Food Pets Die From
From the book, "Food Pets Die For: Shocking
Facts About Pet Food." By Ann N. Martin. NewSage
Press (1997). This book is on sale at Dr. Jeff's Homevet/Amazon.Com
bookstore .
Television commercials
and magazine advertisements for pet food would have
us believe that the meats, grains, and fats used in
these foods could grace our dining tables. Chicken,
beef, lamb, whole grains, and quality fats are supposedly
the composition of dog and cat food.
In my opinion, when
we purchase these bags and cans of commercial food,
we are in most cases purchasing garbage. Unequivocally,
I cannot state that all pet food falls into this category,
but I have yet to find one that I could, in all good
conscience, feed my dog or cats.
Pet food labels
can be deceiving. They only provide half the story.
The other half of the story is hidden behind obscure
ingredients listed on the labels. Bit by bit, over seven
years, I have been able to unearth information about
what is contained in most commercial pet food. At first
I was shocked, but my shock turned to anger when I realized
how little the consumer is told about the actual contents
of the pet food.
As discussed in Chapter
Two, companion animals from clinics, pounds, and shelters
can and are being rendered and used as sources of protein
in pet food. Dead-stock removal operations play a major
role in the pet food industry. Dead animals, road kill
that cannot be buried at roadside, and in some cases,
zoo animals, are picked up by these dead stock operations.
When an animal dies in the field or is killed due to
illness or disability, the dead stock operators pick
them up and truck them to the receiving plant. There
the dead animal is salvaged for meat or, depending on
the state of decomposition, delivered to a rendering
plant. At the receiving plants, the animals of value
are skinned and viscera removed. Hides of cattle and
calves are sold for tanning. The usable meat is removed
from the carcass, and covered in charcoal to prevent
it from being used for human consumption. Then the meat
is frozen, and sold as animal food, which includes pet
food.
The packages of this
frozen meat must be clearly marked as "unfit for human
consumption." The rest of the carcass and poorer quality
products including viscera, fat, etcetera, are sent
to the rendering facilities. Rendering plants are melting
pots for all types of refuse. Restaurant grease and
garbage; meats and baked goods long past the expiration
dates from supermarkets (Styrofoam trays and shrink-wrap
included); the entrails from dead stock removal operations,
and the condemned and contaminated material from slaughterhouses.
All of these are rendered.
The slaughterhouses
where cattle, pigs, goats, calves, sheep, poultry, and
rabbits meet their fate, provide more fuel for rendering.
After slaughter, heads, feet, skin, toenails, hair,
feathers, carpal and tarsal joints, and mammary glands
are removed. This material is sent to rendering. Animals
who have died on their way to slaughter are rendered.
Cancerous tissue or tumors and worm-infested organs
are rendered. Injection sites, blood clots, bone splinters,
or extraneous matter are rendered. Contaminated blood
is rendered. Stomach and bowels are rendered. Contaminated
material containing or having been treated with a substance
not permitted by, or in any amount in excess of limits
prescribed under the Food and Drug Act or the Environmental
Protection Act. In other words, if a carcass contains
high levels of drugs or pesticides this material is
rendered.
Before rendering, this
material from the slaughterhouse is "denatured," which
means that the material from the slaughterhouse is covered
with a particular substance to prevent it from getting
back into the human food chain. In the United States
the substances used for denaturing include: crude carbolic
acid, fuel oil, or citronella. In Canada the denaturing
agent is Birkolene B. When I asked, the Ministry of
Agriculture would not divulge the composition of Birkolene
B, stating its ingredients are a trade secret.
At the rendering plant,
slaughterhouse material, restaurant and supermarket
refuse, dead stock, road kill, and euthanized companion
animals are dumped into huge containers. A machine slowly
grinds the entire mess. After it is chipped or shredded,
it is cooked at temperatures of between 220 degrees
F. and 270 degrees F. (104.4 to 132.2 degrees C.) for
twenty minutes to one hour. The grease or tallow rises
to the top, where it is removed from the mixture. This
is the source of animal fat in most pet foods. The remaining
material, the raw, is then put into a press where the
moisture is squeezed out. We now have meat and bone
meal.
The Association of
American Feed Control Officials in its "Ingredient Definitions,"
describe meat meal as the rendered product from mammal
tissue exclusive of blood, hair, hoof, hide, trimmings,
manure, stomach, and rumen (the first stomach or the
cud of a cud chewing animal) contents except in such
amounts as may occur unavoidably in good processing
practices. In an article written by David C. Cooke,
"Animal Disposal: Fact and Fiction," Cooke noted, "Can
you imagine trying to remove the hair and stomach contents
from 600,000 tons of dog and cats prior to cooking them?"
It would seem that either the Association of American
Feed Control Officials definition of meat meal or meat
and bone meal should be redefined or it needs to include
a better description of "good factory practices."
When 4-D animals are
picked up and sent to these rendering facilities, you
can be assured that the stomach contents are not removed.
The blood is not drained nor are the horns and hooves
removed. The only portion of the animal that might be
removed is the hide and any meat that may be salvageable
and not too diseased to be sold as raw pet food or livestock
feed. The Minister of Agriculture in Quebec made it
clear that companion animals are rendered completely.
Pet Food Industry magazine
states that a pet food manufacturer might reject rendered
material for various reasons, including the presence
of foreign material (metals, hair, plastic, rubber,
glass), off odor, excessive feathers, hair or hog bristles,
bone chunks, mold, chemical analysis out of specification,
added blood, leather, or calcium carbonate, heavy metals,
pesticide contamination, improper grind or bulk density,
and insect infestation.
Please note that this
article states that the manufacturer might reject this
material, not that it does reject this material.
If the label on the
pet food you purchase states that the product contains
meat meal, or meat and bone meal, it is possible that
it is comprised of all the materials listed above.
Meat, as defined by
the Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO),
is the clean flesh derived from slaughtered mammals
and is limited to that part of the striate muscle that
is skeletal or that which is found in the tongue, diaphragm,
heart, or esophagus; with or without the accompanying
and overlying fat and the portions of the skin, sinew,
nerve, and blood vessels that normally accompany the
flesh. When you read on a pet food label that the product
contains "real meat," you are getting blood vessels,
sinew and so on-hardly the tasty meat that the industry
would have us believe it is putting in the food.
Meat by-products are
the non rendered, clean parts other than meat derived
from slaughtered mammals. It includes, but is not limited
to, lungs, spleen, kidneys, brain, livers, blood, bone,
partially defatted low temperature fatty tissue, and
stomachs and intestines freed of their contents. Again,
be assured that if it could be used for human consumption,
such as kidneys and livers, it would not be going into
pet food. If a liver is found to be infested with worms
(liver flukes), if lungs are filled with pneumonia,
these can become pet food. However, in Canada, disease-free
intestines can still be used for sausage casing for
humans instead of pet food.
What about other sources
of protein that can be used in pet food? Poultry-by-product
meal consists of ground, rendered, clean parts of the
carcasses of slaughtered poultry, such as necks, feet,
undeveloped eggs, and intestines, exclusive of feathers,
except in such amounts as might occur unavoidably in
good processing practice.
Poultry-hatchery by-products
are a mixture of egg shells, infertile and unhatched
eggs and culled chicks that have been cooked, dried
and ground, with or without removal of part of the fat.
Poultry by-products
include non rendered clean parts of carcasses of slaughtered
poultry such as heads, feet, and viscera, free of fecal
content and foreign matter except in such trace amounts
as might occur unavoidably in good factory practice.
These are all definitions as listed in the AAFCO "Ingredient
Definitions."
Hydrolyzed poultry
feather is another source of protein - not digestible
protein, but protein nonetheless. This product results
from the treatment under pressure of clean, intact feathers
from slaughtered poultry free of additives, and/or accelerators.
We have covered the
meat and poultry that can be used in commercial pet
foods but according to the AAFCO there are a number
of other sources that can make up the protein in these
foods. As we venture down the road of these other sources,
please be advised to proceed at your own risk if you
have a weak stomach.
Hydrolysed hair is
a product prepared from clean hair treated by heat and
pressure to produce a product suitable for animal feeding.
Spray-dried animal
blood is produced from clean, fresh animal blood, exclusive
of all extraneous material such as hair, stomach belching
(contents of stomach), and urine, except in such traces
as might occur unavoidably in good factory practices.
Dehydrated food-waste
is any and all animal and vegetable produce picked up
from basic food processing sources or institutions where
food is processed. The produce shall be picked up daily
or sufficiently often so that no decomposition is evident.
With this ingredient, it seems that what you don't see
won't hurt you.
Dehydrated garbage
is composed of artificially dried animal and vegetable
waste collected sufficiently often that harmful decomposition
has not set in and from which have been separated crockery,
glass, metal, string, and similar materials.
Dehydrated paunch products
are composed of the contents of the rumen of slaughtered
cattle, dehydrated at temperatures over 212 degrees
F. (100 degrees C.) to a moisture content of 12 percent
or less, such dehydration is designed to destroy any
pathogenic bacteria.
Dried poultry waste
is a processed animal waste product composed primarily
of processed ruminant excreta that has been artificially
dehydrated to a moisture content not in excess of 15
percent. It shall contain not less than 12 percent crude
protein, not more than 40 percent crude fiber, including
straw, wood shavings and so on, and not more than 30
percent ash.
Dried swine waste is
a processed animal-waste product composed primarily
of swine excreta that has been artificially dehydrated
to a moisture content not in excess of 15 percent. It
shall contain not less than 20 percent crude protein,
not more than 35 percent crude fiber, including other
material such as straw, woodshavings, or acceptable
bedding materials, and not more than 20 percent ash.
Undried processed animal
waste product is composed of excreta, with or without
the litter, from poultry, ruminants, or any other animal
except humans, which may or may not include other feed
ingredients, and which contains in excess of 15 percent
feed ingredients, and which contains in excess of 15
percent moisture. It shall contain no more than 30 percent
combined wood, woodshavings, litter, dirt, sand, rocks,
and similar extraneous materials.
After reading this
list of ingredients for the first time and not really
believing that such ingredients could be used in pet
food, I sent a fax to the chair of the AAFCO to inquire.
"Would the 'Feed Ingredient Definitions' apply to pet
food as well as livestock feed?" The reply was as follows,
"The feed ingredient definitions approved by the AAFCO
apply to all animal feeds, including pet foods, unless
specific animal species restrictions are noted."
If a pet food lists
"meat by-products" on the label, remember that this
is the material that usually comes from the slaughterhouse
industry or dead stock removal operations, classified
as condemned or contaminated, unfit for human consumption.
Meat meal, meat and bone meal, digests, and tankage
(specifically animal tissue including bones and exclusive
of hair, hoofs, horns, and contents of digestive tract)
are composed of rendered material. The label need not
state what the composition of this material is, as each
batch rendered would consist of a different material.
These are the sources of protein that we are feeding
our companion animals.
In 1996 I decided to
find out the cost of this "quality" material that the
pet food companies purchase from the rendering facilities.
Aware that a phone call from an ordinary citizen would
not elicit the information I required, I set about forming
my own independent pet food company. Stating that my
company was about to begin producing quality pet food,
I asked for a price quote on meat by-products and meat
meal from a Canadian rendering company and from a U.S.
rendering company. Both facilities I contacted were
more than pleased to provide this information. As I
was just a small company and did not require that much
material to begin production, the cost was higher than
it would have been for one of the large multinationals.
Meat and bone meal, with a content of a minimum of 50
percent protein, 12 percent fat, 8 percent moisture,
8 percent calcium, 4 percent phosphorus, and 30 percent
ash, could be purchased by me, a small independent company
for less than 12¢ (Canadian) a pound. As for the
meat by-products the prices varied:. liver sold at 21¢
per pound, veal at 22¢ per pound, and lungs for
only 12¢ per pound.
The main ingredient
in dry food for dogs and cats is corn. However, on further
investigation, I found that according to the AAFCO,
the list is lengthy as to the corn products that can
be used in pet food. These include, but are not limited
to the following ingredients.
Corn four is the fine-size
hard flinty portions of ground corn containing little
or none of the bran or germ.
Corn bran is
the outer coating of the corn kernel, with little or
none of the starchy part of the germ.
Corn gluten meal
is the dried residue from corn after the removal of
the larger part of the starch and germ, and the separation
of the bran by the process employed in the wet milling
manufacture of corn starch or syrup, or by enzymatic
treatment of the endosperm.
Wheat is a constituent
found in many pet foods. Again the AAFCO gives descriptive
terms for wheat products.
Wheat flour consists
principally of wheat flour together with fine particles
of wheat bran, wheat germ, and the offal from the "tail
of the mill." Tail of the mill is nothing more then
the sweepings of leftovers after everything has been
processed from the week.
Wheat germ meal consists
chiefly of wheat germ together with some bran and middlings
or shorts.
Wheat middlings and
shorts are also categorized as the fine particles of
wheat germ, bran, flour and offal from the "tail of
the mill."
Both corn and wheat
are usually the first ingredients listed on both dry
dog and cat food labels. If they are not the first ingredients,
they are the second and third that together make up
most of the sources of protein in that particular product.
Perhaps the pet food industry is not aware that cats
are carnivores and therefore should derive their protein
from meat, not grains?
In 1995 one large pet
food company, located in California, recalled $20 million
worth of its dog food. This food was found to contain
vomitoxin. Vomitoxin is formed when grains become wet
and moldy. This toxin was found in "wheat screenings"
used in the pet food. The FDA did investigate but not
out of concern for the more than 250 dogs that became
ill after ingesting this food. It investigated because
of concerns for human health. The contaminated wheat
screenings were the end product of wheat flour that
would be used in the making of pasta. Wheat for baking
flour requires a higher quality of wheat. Wheat screenings,
which are not used for human consumption, can include
broken grains, crop and weed seeds, hulls, chaff, joints,
straw, elevator or mill dust, sand, and dirt.
Fat is usually the
second ingredient listed on the pet food labels. Fats
can be sprayed directly on the food or mixed with the
other ingredients. Fats give off a pungent odor that
entices your pet to eat the garbage. These fats are
sourced from restaurant grease. This oil is rancid and
unfit for human consumption. One of the main sources
of fat comes from the rendering plant. This is obtained
from the tissues of mammals and/or poultry in the commercial
process of rendering or extracting.
An article in Petted
Industry magazine does not indicate concern about the
impurities in this rendered material as it relates to
pet food. Dr. Tim Phillips writes, "Impurities could
be small particles of fiber, hair, hide, bone, soil
or polyethylene. Or they could be dirt or metal particles
picked up after processing (during storage and/or transport).
Impurities can cause clogging problems in fat handling
screens, nozzles, etc. and contribute to the build-up
of sludge in storage tanks."
Other tasty ingredients
that can be added to commercial pet food include:
Beet pulp is the dried
residue from sugar beet, added for fiber, but primarily
sugar.
Soybean meal is the
product obtained by grinding the flakes that remain
after the removal of most of the oil from soybeans by
a solvent extraction process.
Powdered cellulose
is purified, mechanically disintegrated cellulose prepared
by processing alpha cellulose obtained as a pulp from
fibrous plant material. In other words, sawdust.
Sugar foods by-products
result from the grinding and mixing of inedible portions
derived from the preparation and packaging of sugar-based
food products such as candy, dry packaged drinks, dried
gelatin mixes, and similar food products that are largely
composed of sugar.
Ground almond and peanut
shells are used as another source of fiber.
Fish is a source of
protein. If you own a cat, just open a can of food that
contains fish and watch kitty come running. The parts
used are fish heads, tails, fins, bones, and viscera.
R.L. Wysong, DVM, states that because the entire fish
is not used it does not contain many of the fat soluble
vitamins, minerals, and omega-3 fatty acids. If, however,
the entire fish is used for pet food, oftentimes it
is because the fish contains a high level of mercury
or other toxin making it unfit for human consumption.
Even fish that was canned for human consumption and
that has sat on the shelf past the expiration date will
be included. Tuna is used in many cat foods because
of its strong odor, which cats find irresistible.
In her book The Natural
Cat, Anitra Frazier describes the "tuna junkie" as an
expression used by veterinarians to describe a cat hooked
on tuna. According to Frazier, "The vegetable oil which
it is packed in robs the cat's body of vitamin E which
can result in a condition called steatitis.''
Symptoms of steatitis include extreme nervousness and
severe pain when touched. The lack of vitamin E in the
diet causes the nerve endings to become sensitive, and
can also induce anemia and heart disease. However, excess
levels of vitamin E can be toxic. A veterinarian with
an understanding of nutrition should be consulted.
One commercial food
that most cats and dogs seem to love are the semi-moist
foods. These kibble and burger-shaped concoctions are
made to resemble real hamburger. However, according
to Wendell O. Belfield and Martin Zucker in their book,
How to Have a Healthier Dog, these are one of the most
dangerous of all commercial pet foods. They are
high in sugar, laced with dyes, additives, and preservatives,
and have a shelf life that spans eternity. One pet owner
wrote to me explaining that she had fed her cat some
of these semi-moist tidbits. The cat became ill shortly
after eating them, and even professional carpet cleaners
could not remove the red dye from the carpet where her
cat had been ill. In his book, Pet Allergies: Remedies
for an Epidemic, Alfred Plechner, DVM., writes, "In
my opinion, semi-moist foods should be placed in a time
capsule to serve as a record of modern technology gone
mad."
The pet food industry
corrals this material, then mixes, cooks, dries and
extrudes the stuff. (Extruding simply means it is pushed
through a mold to form the different shapes and to make
us think that these so called "chunks" are actually
pieces of meat.) Dyes, additives, preservatives are
routinely added and they can accumulate in the pet's
body. According to the Animal Protection Institute of
America newsletter, "Investigative Report on Pet Food,
"Ethoxyquin (an antioxidant preservative), was found
in dogs' livers and tissue months after it had been
removed from their diet."
After processing, the
food is practically devoid of any nutritional value.
To make up for what is lacking, vitamins, minerals,
amino acids, and supplements are dumped into the mix.
If the minerals added are unchelated (chelated means
minerals will more readily combine with proteins for
better absorption), they will pass through the body
virtually unused. Most are added as a premix, and if
there is a mistake made in the premix, it can throw
off the entire balance. Veterinarians Marty Goldstein
and Robert Goldstein have stated that the wrong calcium/magnesium
ratio can cause neuromuscular problems. As an
example, when I had the commercial pet food tested by
Mann Laboratories for my court case, most of the minerals
showed excess levels.
Please note:
The information provided here is meant to supplement
that provided by your veterinarian. Nothing can replace
a complete history and physical examination performed
by your veterinarian. - Dr. Jeff
I
greatly value your feedback. Please let me know what
you think of this site and what you would like to see
on it. drjeff@homevet.com
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