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Raw Meat Diet in Dogs - not
recommended
Any
benefit after mast cell tumor surgery
Bloodwork
differences in dogs that eat a raw meat diet
Raw Meat diet caution
Raw Meat Diet discussion
also see Dog Diet
Raw
meat diet - any benefit after mast cell tumor surgery
Question: How important is it to use uncooked, raw meat?
Dusky is a large Pom-pet store
type- just diagnosed and operated on mct on side- I believe
grade 2, it was
all in a mass-encapsulated? He has had his first
ultrasounds and they seem good
according to the vet. (I can't tell , myself). He
has supplements for food. I was
using Cesar- as it seemed to be of the type that
he liked. He will be getting ultrasounds
every 3 months. What should I avoid- in either food
or supplements?
Answer: D-
I am sorry for the delay in responding to your question. Unfortunately
the most accurate answer to
your question is that no one knows whether there is any benefit to
feeding a raw meat diet. At the
present time the one or two studies of any quality that have been done
to attempt to answer this
question have addressed whether the diets meet nutritional needs rather
than provide some sort of
additional benefit. The home made diets have not fared well when compared
with known nutritional
needs when studied but it is possible to design a home made diet that
does meet the pet's nutritional
needs. People just tend to make substitutions without thinking about
the consequences. You can't do
that and realistically hope to keep the diet well balanced.
I am not aware of any nutritional supplements that have been proven
to be helpful in preventin
occurrence, or reoccurrence, of mast cell tumors. That does not mean
that there may not be a
supplement that helps. It just means that no one has proven one works
as far as I can tell.
I am sorry that I can't provide more specific information.
Mike Richards, DVM
5/12/2001
Bloodwork
differences in dogs who eat a raw diet
Question: Hi Dr. Mike:
This current month's report was great and thanks for the bio.
Now I know
that your feet touch the ground when you walk just as those of the
rest of
us. :-))
I was particularly happy to read your position on dogs left unattended
in
vet hospitals overnight as compared to going "home". My wonderful
vet
here is adamant about keeping dogs overnight following just about anything
and when I try to advise people otherwise I get this - But, the doctor
said... Yes, I know they should respect the doctor but a dog left
unattended in a strange place, in a crate, blah, blah, blah just cannot
get the same attention that it will get in *most* homes. See
- I left
myself an out! :-))
Now - my question concerns bloodwork on dogs who eat a raw diet compared
to the standard kibble fare. It has been mentioned various times
on the
rawdiet list to which I belong that blood panels will be "different"
(sorry I can't be more specific on that except that some things will
be
higher) for dogs eating "raw". Do you have anything to offer
regarding
this statement?
Certainly I do not expect you to recall who I am so allow me to say
that I
have been feeding a raw diet to my dogs for about 4 years. Sad
to say -
not all the same dogs because I had to euthanize my 2 Giant Schnauzers
within weeks of one another late in '99. The older dog's hips gave
out and
the rescue dog 's body was suffering from too much pain as a result
of a
car accident he suffered long before I got him at the shelter when
he was
about 9. For the record, my almost 13 year old who had
eaten raw for
about 2 years at that time showed excellent health in all his organs
- in
spite of two and one half years on Rimadyl. (He also got megadoses
of
calcium ascorbate daily as well as twice daily glu/chon
) He had always
been given food in addition to kibble but was on raw for only about
the
same amount of time that he was on Rimadyl - for whatever that is worth.
My Bouvier who was 7 in October has a longer record on raw and the one
"panel" that was done showed that he was doing great. Now I have
a Bouv
pup on raw - he is 6 1/2 months and has been on raw since early November
when I got him home. I plan to have a blood panel run on him
in a couple
of months just for the record. Is there something I need to watch
for?
Thanks for this list! Are there other vet "lists" - such as universities,
for example, that offer advice and information that you can recommend?
Saludos de Mèxico, Charlotte
Answer: Charlotte-
If the raw food diet is well balanced and does not contain excessive
protein, excessive calcium and/or phosphorous, there should be no
differences in the blood chemistry values. Many people feeding raw
food
diets are feeding a higher protein concentration than is found in other
diets and this may cause increases in the blood urea nitrogen (BUN)
or
creatinine values. I would still worry about a BUN over 35 or a creatinine
over 1.8, though. Some of the diets in which bone is included
have pretty
high calcium and phosphorous compared to other diets and these may
cause
rises in either calcium or phosphorous, although the body usually regulates
these levels closely enough that this doesn't occur. I have seen
a report,
which I could not find when I looked just now, which stated that white
blood cell counts tend to be lower in dogs fed raw food diets but I
can't
remember any more details than that, nor do I remember how reliable
I
though the source was. I would worry about white blood cell counts
below
5000, regardless of the diet a dog is on.
I do not belong to any of the email lists for vets because I tend to
be
about ten days behind on email lately, so I feel bad doing anything
that
might make that situation worse. This web link seems good,
though: www.vetmedcenter.com
Mike Richards, DVM
2/27/2001
Raw Meat Diet
- caution
When making a diet at home it is important to remember to
include all of the food groups which it seems like you are doing.
I am not aware of any proven benefits of raw meat over cooked meat in
home-made diets. The safest course of action would probably be to cook
the
meat to eliminate toxoplasmosis, salmonellosis and E. coli infections.
These
are probably the most common food borne diseases that affect dogs when
they
are fed raw meat, although other problems are reported.
Toxoplasmosis is a parasite whose cysts live in the muscle of cattle,
pigs
and other creatures. If meat is not cooked enough the cysts live and
can
infected dogs or humans exposed to them. In an immune compromised patient
this is a much worse problem than in patients with normal immune systems.
E. coli and Salmonella are bacterial infections. In most cases they
are the
result of food contamination by infected workers who handle the meat
during
processing. I am not aware of any studies that really quantify the
risk to
dogs of these illnesses but they are frequently implicated in food
poisoning
deaths in humans, we know that dogs do get infections from these bacteria
and it is therefore reasonable to assume that there is a risk which
probably
approximates that of humans but may be smaller or even larger than
the risk
to people. These would also be more likely to cause serious illness
in an
immune compromised patient.
Mike Richards, DVM
Raw Meat diet discussion
Question: We all know that canids
have eaten raw meat for millions of years. I'm very interested in feeding
my dog a diet based on raw meat. Feeding raw chicken that's been
processed at a plant is not the same as the animal killing it fresh, of
course. Nevertheless, I know many people who have been using raw
diets for years, and I've seen great results in their dogs in terms of
skin, teeth, reduction of allergies, and overall vitality.
The main objection of most vets to raw feeding is the potential
danger for bacterial contamination. We know that bacteria like salmonella
and campylobacter are endemic, not only on meats but even in fruits and
vegetables. But the presence of bacteria doesn't necessarily correspond
to a high risk of infection. The raw feeders I know swear they've
never had a problem with these bacteria.
I've already read the usual arguments against owner-prepared diets,
and am making a separate study of the question of nutritional balance.
For the moment, I'm concerned solely with the question of whether there
is in fact a real risk of *significant* bacterial problems (higher than
the average dog eating kibble plus the usual "found" items like cat poop,
the occasional dead rodent, etc.).
Can you provide any hard evidence that feeding raw, human-grade
meat, properly handled, measurably increases the risk of salmonella/campylobacter
infection in dogs? All I've seen on both sides of this question is
opinion, generalization, and anecdote.
--Are there any veterinary studies about the effects of salmonella/campylobacter
in dogs? e.g. statistics about incidence of salmonella/campylobacter
overall?
--Are there any confirmed cases that animals fed raw diets suffered
from these bacteria? If so, how severe was the problem?
--Do animals ever get these bacteria from cooked sources (i.e. processed
foods)?
--Do animals in the wild suffer from bacteria like salmonella?
Your help in this area would be greatly appreciated!
Answer: I will try to answer some
of your questions and to point out the ones that probably do not have verifiable
answers. In addition, you may wish to search the PubMed database located
at the following address, as it contains a great number of references on
Salmonella, Campylobacter, toxoplasmosis and other food borne infections.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/medline.html
I see little to no value in an argument such as "we all know canids
have eaten raw meat for millions of years". If pet owners were willing
to accept mortality rates similar to wild canines for their pets there
would be a lot fewer long term disorders of any type, not just food related
ones. The average lifespan of a wild canid is very short compared to that
of a pet dog and the same is true of feral felines. We deal with many of
the problems of aging in pets because of the success of pet foods and improved
health care. They don't live in a natural situation and for the most part
they are probably better off because of that.
I am not sure that the main objection among veterinarians to raw meat
is simply bacterial infections. Toxoplasmosis occurs in approximately 1%
of the beef sold in the United States, making parasitic infections a significant
concern as well. Other parasitic infections are also possible.
In answer to the anecdotal evidence of no disease from owners feeding
their pets raw meat, I would like to offer one illustration of the problems
with this type of evidence based on practice experience. On at least a
hundred occasions I have used a flea comb to find live fleas on pets whose
owners swore they had no flea problem since starting "x" or "y" flea preventative
diet, such as garlic, brewer's yeast, Lyfe (TM), etc. Most of these people
left my office totally unconvinced of the failure of the product mentioned
because they wanted to believe in it. They weren't looking for a problem
and they didn't want to see a problem, so they just didn't acknowledge
it. Surely you encounter similar situations in researching historical events.
I think the major problem with owner prepared diets is an attempt to
satisfy the needs of pets by making one recipe and not varying it. I strongly
suspect that if pets were fed a variety of foods that approximates the
food triangle suggested for humans that an adequate diet would be obtained.
On the other hand, trying to formulate a single recipe that meets the needs
of pets long term is very very difficult to do. I do not know about other
vets but I think that the major reason to stick with pet foods is the incredible
ability of pets to train their owners to feed them unbalanced and/or unhealthy
diets. A great many of the pets I see who are fed primarily home-made diets
or table scraps eat only a few items consistently. Feeding pet foods helps
avoid this problem. I am not particularly uncomfortable with the notion
of people feeding a variety of foods in an attempt to meet dietary requirements
as long as they are aware of the pitfalls and avoid them.
Food poisoning cases are not identified in pets as often as they are
in humans, primarily because the labwork is expensive to pursue and epidemiological
resources similar to those in human medicine are not there for veterinarians.
There is a great deal of evidence to show that these infections do affect
dogs and cats. Please check the PubMed site and search under Salmonella
or Campylobacter or Toxoplasmosis or E. coli to find some of the references
to this. There are some studies outlining how Salmonella affects dogs in
these references but most are concerned with transmission methods. Any
good veterinary internal medicine textbook will provide details as to the
clinical signs of disease from organisms that can be transmitted through
raw meat. These are taken from The Handbook of Small Animal Practice by
Dr. Rhea Morgan:
campylobacteriosis : vomiting, hemorrhagic or watery diarrhea, fever,
clinical course of 5 to 15 days, may be a complicating factor in parvovirus
infections, asymptomatic carrier state is common
salmonellosis: vomiting and/or diarrhea, fever, lethargy, abdominal
pain. In some instances, abortion or central nervous system signs or death
E. coli: currently considered to be less of a problem in pets than in
humans. Similar signs to salmonellosis (from R. Remillard on the Veterinary
Information Network, 1-800-700-4636).
Cryptosporidiosis: (protozoan), primarily affects cats, causes diarrhea,
weight loss, loss of appetite, dehydration. May be a cause of inflammatory
bowel disease in dogs.
Toxoplasmosis: (protozoan), stillbirth, abortion, severe systemic illness
in newborns, fever, eye damage, muscle pain, depression, weight loss, poor
appetite, cough, respiratory distress, seizures or other CNS signs.
Evidence for the risk of feeding raw human-grade meat must be inferred
from studies in humans because of the inability to track animal cases.
There are numerous cases of well defined, well tracked food poisonings
from raw or undercooked meat in the U.S. Perhaps pets are less susceptible
to infection from these meat sources but that is not really very likely.
If several people die from undercooked hamburgers in Wisconsin, it is pretty
likely that a pet or two was affected as well.
There are no tracking agencies for diseases in pets. It is unlikely
that statistics exist for overall infection rates for campylobacter, salmonella
or almost any other disease. Without widespread pet insurance and in the
absence of a CDC or similar program in veterinary medicine it will be a
long time before valid statistics become available.
There are a number of confirmed cases of salmonella suspected to have
originated in raw meat in dogs. There have been studies done on greyhounds
due to the suspicion that a condition known as "Alabama rot" or cutaneous
and renal glomerular vasculopathy is caused by a strain of E. coli which
is suspected to be linked to the prevalence of raw meat diets among racing
greyhounds.
Yes, pets do get exposed to Salmonella and possibly other pathogens
when pet foods are contaminated by poor handling, rat or mouse feces or
addition of contaminated foods to the diet. There have been reported cases
of this happening in pets but I was unable to find specific references
-- although I am sure it can be done.
Wild animals do suffer from salmonellosis, toxoplasmosis, campylobacter
and other illnesses. There have been documented cases in a number of species
and there have been cases of human exposure after eating or contacting
many species, including at least one case of salmonella food poisoning
after eating a rattlesnake (it is in the list of references under Salmonella
in the PubMed database but I can't remember the exact reference). I have
treated wildlife for a number of years in association with WildCare, Inc.
and have seen food poisoning on a number of occasions, some of them confirmed
through lab testing or necropsy exam. People seem to believe that wild
animals live a long and carefree existence and nothing could be further
from the truth. They are heavily parasitized in many instances, suffer
from nutritional deficiencies on a regular basis and often die very young.
I do not know the specific reference but from memory I think the average
lifespan of foxes studied in one study was 9 months. This is a far cry
from the lifespan we expect from our pets.
When I started in practice 19 years ago it was unusual to treat a 20
year old cat. I have at least ten feline patients over the age of twenty
and at least two dogs in that age range in my practice. This is probably
due in no small part to nutritional improvements which came about primarily
through the feeding of well formulated and safely preserved pet foods.
While that does not directly address the feeding of raw meat diets it is
hard for me to understand why pet foods are knocked by some people who
favor the diets that were prevalent when dogs lived closer to ten or twelve
years and a fourteen year-old cat was thought to be ancient.
Please think this through very carefully. Ask your vet if you can read
through his or her textbooks and then look up the references cited in them
if you want to really research this subject.
There may be benefits from feeding raw meat. Like everything else, you
have to weigh the risks against the benefits. Like most issues in veterinary
medicine it isn't possible to find hard figures to base your assessment
on. There are definite risks. Are you sure of the benefits?
People ate raw meat for a long time (and still do, sometimes with no
problems) but I'm not going to take chances with this, personally.
Mike Richards, DVM
Response and Reply, Part II
Reply: Thanks indeed for your prompt and very detailed response.
Would you permit me to post my question and your reply, in their entirety,
to the NEWLEAF email discussion list? It's a small list that advocates
raw feeding.
I appreciate the time you took in replying. We disagree
not on the facts, such as they are, but on the significance of the information
that's available so far. For example, you wrote:
"I see little to no value in an argument such as "we all know canids
have
eaten raw meat for millions of years". If pet owners were willing to
accept
mortality rates similar to wild canines for their pets there would
be a lot
fewer long term disorders of any type, not just food related ones .
. . "
" People seem to believe that wild animals live a long and carefree
existence and nothing could be further from the truth. They are heavily
parasitized in many instances,
suffer from nutritional deficiencies on a regular basis and often die
very young. I do not know the specific reference but from memory I think
the average lifespan of foxes studied in one study was 9 months. This is
a far cry from the lifespan we expect from our pets. "
First, as a former Alaskan, I hardly view wild animals as immortal
and uniformly healthy. And I do not turn my dog loose to catch and
eat diseased animals or to scavenge, though that is the natural behavior
of canids in the wild. My point is simply that in terms of evolution,
a canid's digestive system is designed to eat raw foods, mostly meat.
It's certainly not optimized for a mostly-grain pelletized diet.
What interests
me is feeding a raw diet that is best suited to the animal, as safely
as possible.
Second, how much of the wild mortality rate is related to food contamination?
I would guess most foxes die young due to predation, starvation, and disease,
rather than from salmonella infection.
Why are so many zoo carnivores maintained on raw diets, if processed
foods are better? Haven't recent studies shown that zoo animals fed
a varied raw diet demonstrate improved health and behavior? What of the
Pottenger studies of raw versus cooked diets?
"When I started in practice 19 years ago it was unusual to treat a 20
year old cat. I have at least ten feline patients over the age of twenty
and at least two dogs in that age range in my practice. This is probably
due in no small part to nutritional improvements which came about primarily
through the feeding of well formulated and safely preserved pet foods.
While that does not directly address the feeding of raw meat diets it is
hard for me to understand why pet foods are knocked by some people who
favor the diets that were prevalent when dogs lived closer to ten or twelve
years and a fourteen year-old cat was thought to be ancient. "
I'm not persuaded this is a long-term trend. Or if it is,
it may only be because most cats now live indoors rather than outside,
where they risked early death from many causes.
As a historian, I find references to dogs (gravestones, estate
records) that routinely lived into their mid-to-late teens and even twenties,
prior to invention of processed dog foods. I read recently that AKC
records show a marked *reduction* in longevity in most breeds since feeding
processed dog foods became the norm. It's certainly been my personal
experience; the German Shepherds we raised on table scraps in my childhood
lived much longer than the ones I raised on kibble. My last dog died
of osteosarcoma; she was just over three years old. Maybe diet's
not the only factor, but it's one I can attempt to change.
"In answer to the anecdotal evidence of no disease from owners feeding
their pets raw meat, I would like to offer one illustration of the problems
with this type of evidence based on practice experience. On at least a
hundred occasions I have used a flea comb to find live fleas on pets whose
owners swore they had no flea problem since starting "x" or "y" flea preventative
diet, such as garlic, brewer's yeast, Lyfe (TM), etc. "
I'm sure you're correct -- but most natural methods don't aim
at complete elimination of fleas, just of the reaction to fleas.
For what it's worth, my GSD has been on Top Spot her whole life.
I've found both ticks and fleas on her, within days of applying the product.
Ticks were still there 24 hours after I first found them. By your
definition, I still have a problem. Does this prevent my vet from
recommending the product?
"They weren't looking for a problem and they didn't want to see a problem,
so they just didn't acknowledge it. "
That says to me that if there are routine problems in feeding
raw meat, either the dog's symptoms are mild, or else the owners are blithely
ignoring them. I'm sure there are such people. The people *I*
know who feed raw are minutely aware of most aspects of their dogs' health;
they spend an hour or more each day discussing nothing else. The
consistency, color, and frequency of the dogs' elimination is a common
topic. Surely they're not all delusional.
"I think the major problem with owner prepared diets is an attempt to
satisfy the needs of pets by making one recipe and not varying it. I strongly
suspect that if pets were fed a variety of foods that approximates the
food triangle suggested for humans that an adequate diet would be obtained.
"
I agree. I think variation in the diet within certain limits
is crucial; it's one reason I dislike feeding a commercial food.
Can you imagine being told that the only way to ensure the health of your
child is to feed it one single, complete, pre-processed food forever?
That you should never give it any fresh or raw ingredients?
The diet I'm planning to start contains a variety of meats and
meaty bones, which make up about 70% of the diet; organ meats are 10%;
the other 20% is a variety of raw pureed vegetables, nuts, seeds, and sprouts;
along with a short list of supplements.
"Food poisoning cases are not identified in pets as often as they are
in humans, primarily because the labwork is expensive to pursue and epidemiological
resources similar to those in human medicine are not there for veterinarians.
There is a great deal of evidence to show that these infections do affect
dogs and cats. Please check the PubMed site and search under Salmonella
or Campylobacter or Toxoplasmosis or E. coli to find some of the references
to this. "
Thanks for the reference. I did conduct a search and pulled
down related articles, which a friend of mine in vet school is going to
copy for me. As you said, few of them showed any relation of actual
illness in dogs to incidence of bacteria in either food or fecal matter.
"Evidence for the risk of feeding raw human-grade meat must be inferred
from
studies in humans because of the inability to track animal cases.
. . . Perhaps pets are less susceptible to infection from these
meat sources but that is not really very likely. "
Given the differences in our digestive tracts, it wouldn't surprise
me at all if dogs are much less susceptible. That's *exactly* what
I'm trying to determine.
"There may be benefits from feeding raw meat. Like everything else,
you have
to weigh the risks against the benefits. Like most issues in veterinary
medicine it isn't possible to find hard figures to base your assessment
on. There are definite risks. Are you sure of the benefits? "
You've hit the nail on the head. What are the risks, and
the benefits? I've seen many benefits firsthand, in the dogs who
are fed raw diets. I've seen many problems in dogs fed nothing but
kibble: association with bloat, increasing pet obesity, rampant allergies,
what seems to be a very high rate of cancer. Frankly, the only benefit
I've seen in kibble diets is convenience, and insurance against obvious
malnutrition.
The risks of raw feeding? Obviously, raw meat has a higher
rate of bacterial presence than cooked food. But does that
translate into actual infection and illness in the pet who eats it?
If so, how great a risk, and how severe are the consequences? A little
occasional diarrhea? Some animals die from salmonella, but is it
a significant risk? Greater than the risks associated with processed
diets?
From what I've found so far, it appears to me that there are many
benefits of a raw diet, if I use human-grade meat and handle it as safely
as possible. Before going full-raw, I've been trying to determine
whether there's any statistical scientific evidence that such a diet is
overall more risky to my dog than kibble. If I find such evidence,
I'll certainly reconsider!
Answer: It is OK with me if you post the question and response,
because I have them posted on our site already and you are a direct participant
in the discussion posted. I would appreciate it if you would make it clear
that I do not intend to participate in a long-term debate on this subject
and do not plan to respond to future emails regarding it. I think it is
an important subject because of the interest in it but it is a subject
for which logical debate is limited by a lack of scientifically substantiated
data on all sides of the issue. All I can do is give my most considered
opinion, just as others are doing. Mine is that the risk appears to outweigh
the benefits based on my experiences, the bulk of the data that can be
substantiated and the information sources I trust. You just have to weigh
that with the rest of the information you are accumulating and make your
own decision.
I do have one question, which you can view as simply rhetorical if you
do not wish to respond. Why not just cook the meat in the diet you plan
to use?
Mike Richards, DVM

Last edited 08/30/02
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