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TheDogPlace - Home >> Library >> DogCare Center
Caring for your dog means being informed about updates in viable treatments and how to avoid problems, including those caused by trying to feed the very best food! Know one thing, if YOU didn't prepare it, there is a risk as is all too clearly evident in the following information on Diamond Dog Food. It could have been any prepared food! Be sure to read other articles to learn the safest and best way to care for and FEED your best friend. |
dateline January 5,
2006
(be sure to scroll down for more links and what else
can happen when you open a bag or can of dog food)
Cornell's story follows but the Warning Notices have been on the Front Page of TheDogPress.com since December 26th. It has taken this long to get official recognition and comment from a leading veterinary University. Here's what our subscribers sent:
"It was on our news (WISTV, Columbia, SC) tonight that Diamond Dog food has been recalled. Something toxic causing liver failure, among other things, has contaminated the food. They have recalled all Diamond brand food. I think it is mostly in the South but if you know of anyone using it tell them to stop and return it to the store. 12/26 from Dotty MiloveMaltese@aol.com (Maltese Breed Representative)
More Details: Diamond Dog Food, distributed in 23 states from their manufacturing plant in Gaston, SC has been recalled. This is the kind of information that MUST be gotten out to dog people ASAP! I found out I have already fed 3 bags of the recalled food! Now, I’m worried sick about what can happen. In addition to the immediate symptoms of illness, aflatoxin can render adult livestock (such as pigs) sterile. One kernel of corn with aflatoxin WILL kill a horse! 12/26 from Beverly BEICHEL@stpaultravelers.com
Editor's comment: corn-based products are just one more reason to feed rice-based food if you use commercially prepared foods at all. More candid, truthful links following this informative article from Cornell -----------------
NEWS FROM CORNELL VETERINARY UNIVERSITY -
Even though
Diamond, Country Value and Professional brand dog foods have been recalled for
containing highly toxic aflatoxins, they have caused at least 100 dog deaths in
recent weeks, say Cornell University veterinarians, who are growing increasingly
alarmed. Some kennels and consumers around the nation and possibly in more than
two dozen other countries remain unaware of the tainted food, and as a result,
they continue to give dogs food containing a lethal toxin.
To better screen affected dogs so they can
be treated as soon as possible, Cornell veterinarians report that they now have
a new test, adapted from one used in humans, to accurately assess aflatoxin
poisoning in dogs (see companion story). Currently, about two-thirds of dogs
that show symptoms after eating the tainted food die.
"Entire kennels have been wiped out, and
because of the holiday these past few weeks, the dispersal of recall information
was disrupted," says Sharon Center, a professor of veterinary medicine who
specializes in liver function and disease at the College of Veterinary Medicine
at Cornell, which is emerging as a central clearinghouse for information about
the dog food poisoning.
The Cornell Vet College is continually
updating its Web site to keep the public and veterinarians informed as new
information on the poisonings emerge. Cornell's Animal Health Diagnostic Center
(AHDC) is analyzing blood and liver samples from sick dogs around the country,
testing suspected dog food, conducting autopsies and collecting as many livers
as possible from dead dogs to confirm cause of death, tracking dogs that have
died and following up on the health of dogs that survive the food poisoning. The
AHDC has information for veterinarians on its Web site
http://www.diaglab.vet.cornell.edu/news.asp
"We suspect that dogs have been dying since
November, perhaps even October, but it took the perfect storm of circumstances
to get the diagnosis," said Karyn Bischoff, the veterinary toxicologist at
Cornell who first identified aflatoxin as the culprit in the recent wave of
deaths.
Over the recent holiday weeks, Center and
her staff worked around-the-clock to try to save the 17 poisoned dogs admitted
to Cornell's Hospital for Animals. "I've been working with liver disease in dogs
for 30 years, and I've never seen such miserably ill dogs," said Center, noting
that severely affected dogs suffer from intractable vomiting and internal
bleeding. "Despite our understanding of this complex toxin, we have no direct
antidote for this poisoning. This has been an immensely sad holiday and one that
will leave an indelible mark on the owners that lost their cherished family
members."
Of those 17 dogs, Center euthanized 12 when
it became clear they could not survive; five are still being treated. Dogs that
have survived had consumed a smaller amount of the food than dogs that died,
Center said. "Some dogs were stealing food from the kitchen counter. Others just
stopped eating the food and begged for treats. Unfortunately, some owners used
gravy and other mixers to entice their dogs to consume what they thought was
safe, quality dog food."
"It's
devastating to dog owners who feel responsible for poisoning their beloved
dogs," said Bischoff...
Please see web site for full article text.
http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Jan06/dogs.dying.ssl.html
See Feb 2006 FDA Report on:
Diamond Dog Food
There is so much you DON'T KNOW about what you are feeding your dog. If you have the stomach for it...... Learn about what really goes in the food and why aflatoxin is only the tip of the iceberg. Diamond Dog Food served one good purpose - it brought media attention to still-unresolved problems.
Learn the truth
and why what's in the bag has little to do with what's on the label!
Quality Control &
Other Nutritional Lies
will open your
eyes and there are more links right there for those who can't get enough of this
timely but "sick subject."