AnimalVoicesNews

Note:  Perhaps even HUMANS should avoid wheat gluten too.  Oh, the lawsuits
that could be generated . . . . it boggles the mind.

Source: (AP) 
Links:  http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/03/30/pet.food.recall.ap/index.html

Dry food added to pet food recall list
POSTED: 7:15 p.m. EDT, March 30, 2007

Story Highlights
€ NEW : Hill's Pet Nutrition recalls Prescription Diet m/d Feline dry food
€ FDA says chemical used in plastics found in recalled pet food, sick
animals
€ FDA working to rule out any use of tainted wheat gluten in human food
€ Scientists not sure melamine was cause of pets' deaths

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal testing of recalled pet foods turned up a
chemical used to make plastics but failed to confirm the presence of a
cancer drug also used as rat poison. The recall expanded Friday to include
the first dry pet food.

The Food and Drug Administration said Friday it found melamine in samples of
the Menu Foods pet food involved in the original recall and in imported
wheat gluten used as an ingredient in the company's wet-style products.
Cornell University scientists also found melamine in the urine of sick cats,
as well as in the kidney of one cat that died after eating some of the
recalled food.

Meanwhile, Hill's Pet Nutrition recalled its Prescription Diet m/d Feline
dry cat food. The food included wheat gluten from the same supplier that
Menu Foods used. The recall didn't involve any other Prescription Diet or
Science Diet products, said the company, a division of Colgate-Palmolive Co.
(Watch the Menu Foods CEO discuss the case)

The FDA was working to rule out the possibility that the contaminated wheat
gluten could have made it into any human food. However, melamine is toxic
only in high doses, experts said, leaving its role in the pet deaths
unclear.

Menu Foods recalled 60 million containers of cat and dog food, sold
throughout North America under nearly 100 brands, earlier this month after
animals died of kidney failure after eating the Canadian company's products.
It is not clear how many pets may have been poisoned by the apparently
contaminated food, although anecdotal reports suggest hundreds if not
thousands have died. The FDA alone has received more than 8,000 complaints;
the company, more than 300,000. (Watch pet owner talk about her beloved
dog's death )

Company officials on Friday would not provide updated numbers of pets
sickened or killed by its contaminated product. Pet owners would be
compensated for veterinary bills and the deaths of any dogs and cats linked
to his company's products, the company said.

The melamine finding came a week after scientists at the New York State Food
Laboratory identified a cancer drug and rat poison called aminopterin as the
likely culprit in the pet food. But the FDA said it could not confirm that
finding, nor have researchers at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of
New Jersey when they looked at tissue samples taken from dead cats. And
experts at the University of Guelph detected aminopterin in some samples of
the recalled pet food, but only in the parts per billion or trillion range.
(Menu Foods recall information)

"Biologically, that means nothing. It wouldn't do anything," said Grant
Maxie, a veterinary pathologist at the Canadian university. "This is a
puzzle."

Meanwhile, New York officials stuck to their aminopterin finding and pointed
out that it was unlikely that melamine could have poisoned any of the
animals thought to have died after eating the contaminated pet food.
Melamine is used to make plastic kitchen ware and is used as a fertilizer in
Asia.

An FDA official said that it wasn't immediately clear whether the melamine
was the culprit. The agency's investigation continues, said Stephen F.
Sundlof, director of the FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine.

In a news conference, Sundlof and other FDA officials said the melamine had
contaminated a shipment of wheat gluten imported from China and purchased by
Menu Foods from an undisclosed supplier in the United States. At least some
of the that wheat gluten was used in all the recalled wet pet food,
according to Menu Foods.

Menu Foods said the only certainty was the imported Chinese product was the
likely source of the deadly contamination, even if the actual contaminant
remained in doubt.

"The important point today is that the source of the adulteration has been
identified and removed from our system," said Paul Henderson, Menu Foods
chief executive officer and president. Henderson suggested his company would
pursue legal action against the supplier.

Wheat gluten, a source of vegetable protein, is also used in some human
foods, but the FDA emphasized it had found no indication that the
contaminated ingredient had been used in food for people. The FDA said it
would alert the public quickly if the melamine was found in any foods other
than the recalled pet food.

About 70 percent of the wheat gluten used in the United States for human and
pet food is imported from the European Union and Asia, according to the Pet
Food Institute, an industry group. Menu Foods used wheat gluten to thicken
the gravy of its "cuts and gravy" style wet pet foods, FDA officials have
said.

One veterinarian suggested the international sourcing of ingredients would
force the U.S. "to come to grips with a reality we had not appreciated."

"When you change from getting an ingredient from the supplier down the road
to a supplier from around the globe, maybe the methods and practices that
were effective in one situation need to be changed," said Tony Buffington, a
professor of veterinary clinical sciences at Ohio State University.

The FDA's Sundlof said the agency may change how it regulates the pet food
industry.

"In this case, we're going to have to look at this after the dust settles
and determine if there is something from a regulatory standpoint that we
could have done differently to prevent this incident from occurring," he
said.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

MELAMINE-- White or colorless crystals used in the production of synthetic
resins for plastic tableware and other products.
-- Melamine can cause mild irritation of the eyes, skin, nose and throat in
humans. 
-- Chemical linked to bladder cancer in male rats. Female rats suffered
chronic inflammation of their kidneys.
Sources: OSHA, CDC 

Links at:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/03/30/pet.food.recall.ap/index.html

Pet food company under fire  (1:46)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tainted food no concern for pet owners going organic  (1:58)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rat poison found in pet food  (1:26)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vet advice for pet owners  (4:38)
VIDEO
RELATED
    Menu Foods recall information
    Ingredient from China checked
Food recalled after pets die
Pet owners file class-action suit


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