for the same reason that any compound can be safe or dangerous depending on the 
quantity and/or whatever it is mixed with
sk
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lewis Mellman<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
  To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
  Sent: Thursday, April 05, 2007 10:17 AM
  Subject: [UC] poisoned pet food


  If melamine is poisonous, why is everyone's kitchen counter made with it?
  -Lew

  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17870750/<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17870750/>

  Updated: 4:22 a.m. ET April 1, 2007
  WASHINGTON - A greater sensitivity of cats to a chemical found in plastics 
  and pesticides could explain why they've died in larger numbers than have 
  dogs after eating contaminated pet food, experts said Saturday.

  The small number of confirmed reports of pet deaths bolstered by a far 
  larger number of unconfirmed anecdotal reports suggests cats were more 
  susceptible to poisoning by the chemical melamine that tainted the now 
  recalled pet food, officials with the Food and Drug Administration and 
  American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said Saturday.

  "I am concerned we have a situation where we have a sensitive species and it 
  is the cat," said Steven Hansen, a veterinary toxicologist and director of 
  the ASPCA's Animal Poison Control center in Urbana, Ill.

  Story continues below ?
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  Testing by the FDA and Cornell University has found melamine in samples of 
  recalled pet food as well as in crystal form in the urine and kidney tissue 
  of dead cats. They've also found the chemical, in apparently raw form in 
  concentrations as high as 6.6 percent, in wheat gluten used as ingredient of 
  the recalled cat and dog foods, said Stephen Sundlof, the FDA's chief 
  veterinarian.

  "There was a sizable amount of melamine. You could see crystals in the wheat 
  gluten," Sundlof told The Associated Press.

  Feline sensitivity a mystery
  Sundlof and others have not been able to explain why the chemical would have 
  caused the kidney failure seen so far in the roughly 16 confirmed pet 
  deaths, all but one in cats. There are anecdotal reports of hundreds more 
  pet deaths.

  "It has a very low toxicity, at least in rodents. The problem is, we don't 
  have information in cats, and that seems to be the most susceptible 
  species," Sundlof said of melamine. Sundlof also allowed that the tainted 
  cat foods could have contained higher concentrations of melamine than did 
  the dog foods.


  NBC VIDEO


  . Toxic chemical in pet food
  March 30: It's not clear that the chemical found in recalled pet food caused 
  animal deaths or illnesses, an FDA official said during a press conference 
  Friday.
  MSNBC

  Nestle Purina PetCare Co. said Saturday it was recalling all sizes and 
  varieties of its Alpo Prime Cuts in Gravy wet dog food with specific date 
  codes. Purina said a limited amount of the food contained a contaminated 
  wheat gluten from China.

  Earlier this month, Menu Foods became the first pet food manufacturer to 
  recall its products. It did so after cats began to fall sick and die during 
  routine company taste tests of its wet-style pet foods, sold under nearly 
  100 store- and major-label brands across North America. Other than in the 
  recalled products, melamine has not been found in other Menu Foods pet 
  foods, the company said.

  Chemical an ingredient in plastic
  Melamine is used to make plastic kitchenware, glues, countertops, fabrics, 
  fertilizers and flame retardants. It also is both a contaminant and 
  byproduct of several pesticides, including cyromazine, according to the 
  Environmental Protection Agency.

  The United Nations Environment Program considers melamine of low potential 
  risk, as does the EPA. The agency has sent FDA the database information it 
  has on the chemical and will provide technical assistance as needed, EPA 
  spokeswoman Enesta Jones said Saturday.

  Sundlof said the FDA hadn't found any studies of melamine in cats, and the 
  results of only a single 1945 study that tested it on dogs. That study 
  suggested the chemical increased urine output when fed to dogs in large 
  amounts.

  "That was pretty much it," Sundlof said.

  Still, it's well known that identical substances can have very different 
  effects on cats and dogs. For example, the flea killer permethrin is OK to 
  use on dogs but lethal to cats, Hansen said. The same could be the case with 
  melamine.

  "Cats are very sensitive to many different chemicals, whether drugs, 
  pesticides or plants. We certainly know they have some unique physiological 
  responses that make them susceptible in cases where we wouldn't expect it in 
  other species," Hansen said.


    Click for related content
  Purina release on the Alpo recall
  FDA: Recall of pet foods by Menu Food
  Q&A: What's really in your pet's food?
  FDA finds unapproved chemical in diet pet food
  Discuss your concerns about pet-food safety
  Newsweek: Is pet food properly regulated?
  Focus on wheat gluten
  The investigation has traced the melamine to wheat gluten that Menu Foods, 
  Nestle Purina PetCare Co. and Hill's Pet Nutrition bought from an unnamed 
  U.S. supplier. The latter two companies have recalled a limited number of 
  products since Friday. The wheat gluten, a protein source, was imported from 
  China.

  Sundlof said the recall could expand further, depending whether other pet 
  food manufacturers also bought wheat gluten from the same supplier.

  "We're still in the process of tracing it at this point," Sundlof said. 
  There is no indication the wheat gluten entered the human food supply, he 
  added.


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