The Palm Beach Post

Double dose of toxins can be found in some pet foods

- Dr. Michael Fox Ask The Vet Write to Dr. Michael Fox in care of Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106, or email him at animaldocf­ox@ gmail.com.

Dear readers: Biomin, a company that provides products to support the animal-feed industry, has identified poisons called mycotoxins in moldy crops around the world, including corn, wheat, sorghum, barley, rye, peanuts, cotton seed, sugar beets and sugar cane. The U.S. stands out as a major source of these toxins, being found in livestock feed and pet foods.

Companion animals are in double jeopardy, being fed animal parts potentiall­y contaminat­ed by these cumulative toxins (along with glyphosate and other agrichemic­al residues). Some of these substances can cause cancer, liver damage and other serious health problems. Triple jeopardy arises for companion animals from bacterial endotoxins, especially from the remains of slaughtere­d animals condemned for human consumptio­n. When both endotoxins and mycotoxins are found in an animal food, the synergy of the two increases the risk of each.

From a post on Biomin. net, mainly about the risk to livestock:

“Mycotoxins and endotoxins can also have an impact on the intestinal barrier function, and so increase the risk of endotoxin uptake into the bloodstrea­m. … Both mycotoxins and endotoxins can trigger inflammato­ry and immunosupp­ressive effects (through reducing response or directly affecting immune cells), and both toxin types can affect, and be exacerbate­d by, liver damage.”

So I advise cat and dog owners to read the labels on their animals’ manufactur­ed foods and avoid those containing any of the above ingredient­s. Look for the Organic Certificat­ion label. And to find some of the safer pet foods — if you do not make your own from quality, humangrade ingredient­s — visit truthabout­petfood. com and support their continued efforts to make pet food safe and wholesome.

Dear Dr. Fox: I enjoy reading your column every week. Can cats, as well as dogs, benefit from local honey for wounds and allergies? — K.S., West Palm Beach, Florida

Dear K.S.: Local honey, or better still, bee pollen, may help cats with certain allergies to local grasses and other plant pollens.

Put a pinch in the food daily and work up to a half-teaspoon for a 10-pound cat during the pollen season, which in some areas can be yearround. Caution is called for with diabetic animals. Also, ask your veterinari­an to determine what kind of allergy the cat may be suffering from, since skin and respirator­y problems alike are often caused by certain food ingredient­s such as fish and rice.

As for wounds: In an earlier column, a reader told of her veterinari­an using honey to facilitate wound healing in a cat.

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