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Source:   (AP)
Link:  http://news.lp.findlaw.com/ap/o/632/03-30-2007/18ac0024dfca2cdf.html

Friday, March 30, 2007

FDA Testing Finds Chemical in Pet Food

ANDREW BRIDGES Associated Press Writer

(AP) - WASHINGTON-Recalled pet foods contained a chemical used to make
plastics, but government tests failed to confirm the presence of rat poison,
federal officials said Friday.

The Food and Drug Administration said it found melamine in samples of the
Menu Foods pet food, as well as in wheat gluten used as an ingredient in the
wet-style products. The FDA was working to rule out the possibility that the
contaminated wheat gluten could have made it into any human food, but was
not aware of any risk to people.

It wasn't immediately clear whether the melamine was the culprit in the
deaths of more than a dozen cats and dogs and the illnesses of hundreds
more, said Stephen F. Sundlof, director of the FDA's Center for Veterinary
Medicine.

In a news conference, FDA officials said that the apparently
melamine-contaminated wheat gluten also was shipped to a company that
manufactures dry pet food, but they would not name the company.

The FDA is attempting to determine if that company used any of the wheat
gluten, imported from China, to make dry pet food, Sundlof said.

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.

Cornell University scientists also found melamine - used to produce plastic
kitchen wares and used in Asia as a fertilizer - in the urine of sick cats,
as well as in the kidney of one cat that died after eating the company's wet
food.

Menu Foods recalled 60 million containers of cat and dog food 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 new finding comes a week after scientists at the New York State Food
Laboratory identified a rat poison and cancer drug called aminopterin as the
likely culprit in the pet food. The FDA said it could not confirm that
finding.

New York officials have detected melamine in the recalled food as well. Yet
New York remained confident in its aminopterin finding, said Patrick Hooker,
commissioner of the New York state Department of Agriculture and Markets.
Hooker added that neither aminopterin nor melamine should be in pet food,
but that it was unclear why the latter substance would be poisonous to the
cats in which it was found.

"While we have no doubt that melamine is present in the recalled pet food,
there is not enough known data on the mammalian toxicity levels of melamine
to conclude it could cause illness and deaths in cats. With little existing
data, many questions still remain as to the connection between the illnesses
and what has caused them," Hooker said.

The recall involved nearly 100 brands of "cuts and gravy" style dog and cat
food made by Menu Foods. The recall covered products carrying names of major
brand-name and private-label products sold throughout North America.

Menu Foods used wheat gluten to thicken the gravy of its pet foods, FDA
officials have said.

Menu Foods spokesman Sam Bornstein did not know whether company testing had
found melamine in its products. The company planned a press conference later
Friday.

The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review first reported the melamine finding in
Friday's editions.


2007-03-30T16:49:18Z
Copyright 2007 
The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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