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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

Dangers Associated with Novel Ingredient Foods

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January 19, 2012 / (6) comments

Have you noticed the recent proliferation of over-the-counter pet foods that contain whacky ingredients? It’s not difficult to find foods that contain turkey, potatoes, salmon, whitefish, sweet potatoes, buffalo, lentils, and even kangaroo. What’s the deal?

 

Of course, I’m not privy to the thought processes of pet food manufacturers, but here’s what I think is going on.

Pet owners have become increasingly aware of the problems that some pets have with food allergies, food intolerance, or other conditions that respond favorably to changing an animal’s diet to one that contains novel ingredients. In the past, "lamb and rice" was the go to, over-the-counter combination in these situations, but after it became widely available, it lost most of its efficacy. Rice is probably still okay (it’s easily digested and not very allergenic), but so many dogs have eaten lamb at some point in their lives now that it isn’t really "novel" anymore.

Pet food companies saw an opportunity to bring products with new ingredients to the market. In the past, if you wanted/needed to feed your pet a diet that contained duck, potato, venison, etc., you first had to get a veterinarian’s prescription — unless you were willing to prepare the food yourself, of course.

This might seem a bit extreme — why shouldn’t you be able to feed your pet whatever you want? — but it did serve a purpose. Several years ago when I needed to come up with a treatment plan for a pet that I had diagnosed with a food allergy, intolerance, etc., I could be reasonably certain that the animal had never eaten things like sweet potatoes and duck before. Not so anymore.

What does this mean for pet health? If you choose to feed your pet one of these limited ingredient foods just for the heck of it or if you try to diagnose and treat a dietary responsive illness without involving your veterinarian, you might be setting your pet up for future problems. I haven’t had a case myself yet, but I can foresee a time in the not too distant future where I’m talking to a client trying to figure out what a good diet for their dog or cat might be, and the conversation would go something like this:

Me: "Has your dog ever eaten duck?"

Client: "Yes"

Me: "Eel?"

Client: "Yes."

Me: "Prairie dog?"

Client: "Yes."

Me: "Arrrrg!"

To confuse matters even more, if you try a novel ingredient food at home but don’t eliminate all other potential sources of the substance responsible for your pet’s symptoms from your pet’s diet (e.g., treats, flavored medications, etc.), his condition won’t improve, but you won’t know which ingredients to blame.

Veterinarians do still have the ability to prescribe limited antigen diets made from protein sources that have been hydrolyzed (i.e., broken down into such tiny pieces that they don’t stimulate the immune system). To avoid confusion, I’m starting to turn to these more than the novel ingredient foods that I have used in the past.

What I recommend to pet owners is this: Don’t feed a novel ingredient food to your pet without a very good reason to do so. You should think of these products almost like you would an antibiotic. If we misuse them now, they may not be effective in the future.

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Image: Tina Rencelj / via Shutterstock

 

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COMMENTS (6)
1
Vets' Knowledge of Diet
by DCIN on 01/19/2012 06:52am

"Veterinarians do still have the ability to prescribe limited antigen diets made from protein sources that have been hydrolyzed (i.e., broken down into such tiny pieces that they don’t stimulate the immune system)."

What are those prescription diets? Perhaps the problem is that many caregivers of cats with "special" dietary needs (cats are my perspective) have learned that our vets know little or nothing about a species-appropriate diet for cats. When there is a special dietary need, we are offered an overpriced bag of grain-loaded, dry food for an obligate carnivore. Why? Nutrition information is provided at vet conferences by Hill's or Purina, and those products have a large profit mark-up in the vets' offices.

No wonder caregivers of cats with "special" dietary needs turn to information on the internet and to novel proteins. Many even make their own raw food.

Thank you for reminding caregivers to eliminate all potential sources of the substance responsible for their pets' symptoms from the pets' diet (treats, flavored medications, etc.). When looking for an allergen, one must start with an absolutely clean slate.

Venita

by KLD on 01/19/2012 09:38pm

I've been working diligently with my dog's vet for 7 years to manage my dog's inhalant and food allergies. I've read this type of criticism before: "What are those prescription diets? . . . Nutrition information is provided at vet conferences by Hill's or Purina, and those products have a large profit mark-up in the vets' offices." I think the logic with those arguments is faulty.
1. Maybe the nutrition information is provided by a large company that provides specialized foods, but that doesn’t mean the food is bad. If the food doesn’t work, then the client will not buy it. The hydrolyzed protein diet works better than anything else I’ve feed my dog. (No, I haven’t feed raw [maybe that’s what wolves eat, but not domesticated dogs] or home cooked. I barely cook for myself.)
2. Why is it o.k. for the grocery store, big box retailer, or pet supply store to make a profit, but not the vet? The true cost of the prescription food is the incremental difference between a high quality commercial kibble and the prescription kibble. Someone is making a profit on the food I buy (commercial or home cooked) - it might as well be the most important partner in my dog's health.
3. If the vet really wanted to make a lot of money off of my poor dog, he’d not manage the allergies so he could treat the multiple infections and other chronic conditions.
Btw: Treats are also now made with novel ingredients.

2
Allergens
by TheOldBroad on 01/19/2012 07:10am

Many years ago I adopted a kitty with no fur from the waist down. She licked incessantly due to allergies. Bless her heart, she was miserable.

This was prior to hypo-allergenic diets being introduced to the market, so, using a recipe from the vet at the time, I cooked Miss Ivy a dinner of lamb, rice and other things to make it a balanced diet.

FAIL! She wouldn't eat it unless the rice was picked out.

Dealing with an allergic critter can be a long, involved process. We eventually solved the problem with allergy injections, but we tried so many things.

Today's post is an excellent reason to stick with a good, basic food until it's necessary to do otherwise.

3
other things in there
by teri on 01/19/2012 10:48am

In trying to help someone find an alternative to the vet prescribed food, I was looking at the ingredients of some of the "over the counter" novel ingredient food. It was amazing how many had ingredients other than "duck and potato" or whatever. Things like chicken fat, corn meal, wheat, and others. Not gonna help with a chicken allergy if it has chicken in it!!!

4
by MaggieC on 01/19/2012 12:10pm

The problem with this article is that it doesn't address puppies with food allergies/intolerances because there are so very few prescription food options for them that would meet the specific dietary needs of a puppy. Basically, if your puppy doesn't do well on prescription low-residue puppy food, you're pretty much SOL. It's even difficult to find over-the-counter puppy foods that don't contain beef, chicken, or lamb, and forget about finding limited ingredient puppy food without those protein sources. Luckily for me, I was able to find a limited ingredient duck and potato food that was suitable for all life stages or I'd probably still have a puppy who was loosing her fur and having constant diarrhea. Honestly, I couldn't more thrilled that there are so many "novel" ingredient pet foods because if these didn't exist I would have run out of prescription options for my puppy very quickly and been forced to spend half my time in the kitchen cooking for my dog because a lab/shepherd mix puppy isn't exactly a dainty creature with a small appetite.

5
novel pet foods
by lefty on 01/19/2012 04:12pm

This is very interesting. I always thought that much of this was just marketing to the owners. I myself am always down for trying novel foods and have trouble understanding how my cat can be happy eating the same thing every day. I have been feeding my cat these Fancy Feast gourmet foods, like salmon florentine, turkey primavera, etc. He loves them. He gets a can every evening, plus all the high-end kibble he wants. When I come home at night he is noisy and demanding until he gets what he expects. He is a thin cat, but not emaciated. These foods have veggies in them, and I know this is not "natural" for a cat. I do not contemplate putting a cat on a vegetarian diet. My cat will not touch such foods as Friskies Mixed Grill, etc. and seems as offended by them as I would be if I went to a dinner and got Bar S hotdogs with wonder bread. He also doesn't have the politeness that I would have. I have not seen kangaroo, eel or buffalo cat food. I understand that in Iceland and Japan people feed whale meat to animals, and I won't even go into my feelings about this here. I don't know what they put into these cat-foods to produce this kind of attachment. They seem much more appetizing to me than the low-end stuff, but the ferals in the neighborhood will eat anything.

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About fully vetted

Jennifer Coates, DVM

Photo of Dr Coates

Image credit: Jim Piraino

...graduated with honors from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 1999. In the years since, she has practiced veterinary medicine in Virginia, Wyoming, and Colorado. She is the author of several books about veterinary medicine and animal care, including the Dictionary of Veterinary Terms: Vet-Speak Deciphered for the Non-Veterinarian. Dr. Coates also writes short stories that focus on the strength and importance of the human-animal bond, and freelance articles relating to a variety of animal care and veterinary topics. Dr. Coates lives in Fort Collins, Colorado with her husband, daughter, and various species of pets.

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