Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Pet Food Recall "cuts and gravy"

A major recall of dog and cat foods has begun in the middle of March 2007. Pay attention to this recall, and don't feed the named (see links, below) wet-style foods to your pet, as the reported problems include kidney failure and death of the pet. Symptoms can include excessive thirst, vomiting, diarrhea, and lethargy. If you feed the named foods, and your pet has any of these symptoms, contact your veterinarian right away!

Menu Foods is the manufacturer of at least 88 different brands of this wet-style cat and dog foods that are affected. The food may be in a pouch or a can, and is - according to reports - a gravy food such as "cuts and gravy." The pet food is manufactured for branded big-names such as Eukanuba, Iams, Special Kitty, OlRoy, and more. As of now, Menu Foods believes that tainted wheat gluten, used as a filler ingredient, is the cause of the problem. The manufacturer reported that reports of pet problems and deaths coincided with the use of a new item from a new supplier in their food (LA Times online).

Business Week (online) reports that the investigation on the federal level is centering around a wheat gluten ingredient. The wheat gluten is used as a protein source and a filler. Menu Foods says that they have changed suppliers for that item. According to the federal investigators, there must be some contaminant in the wheat gluten, such as a heavy metal or fungal toxin, to cause the extreme illnesses (sometimes leading to death) that have been reported by pet owners.

What bothers me the most is that it's reported that Menu Foods started hearing from pet owners as long ago as February 20 regarding cat and dog deaths. The company started their own testing a week later, using between 40 and 50 cats and dogs. Seven of those animals died, apparently from renal (kidney) failure (CBS News online). Reports were that cats are more likely to have trouble that dogs. Why did it take until now to hear about the high death rate and the recall of suspected foods?

According to this report (CBC.ca online news), a Menu Foods spokesperson is telling consumers to hang on to veterinarian bill receipts and packaging (from the offending foods) just in case a compensation offer is made in the future. Hopefully, none of us will be needing reimbursement for any pet illness!

For the full listing of recalled foods, see: http://www.menufoods.com/recall/.

The other trouble with commercially available dog foods that I've encountered involved dry dog kibble in 2005. Apparently, corn used in the food was tainted with aflatoxin - a chemical that is made by a fungus that grows on corn and some other crops (source: MSNBC.com). That recall involved Diamond, Country Value, and Professional brands of dog food. There were deaths of dogs involved with that recalled product as well.

No comments: