Pet Food Contaminant Poses Little Risk to Humans: Report
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The FDA has only ever confirmed the deaths of 16 pets from
contaminated food since the recall began March 16. But the agency
has acknowledged that pet owners have reported the deaths of about
1,950 cats and 2,200 dogs. It's not known how many of those were
linked to the recalled pet food.
The findings released Monday that melamine poses very little
risk to consumers was echoed by experts interviewed by
HealthDay last week.
"Nothing that has been shown so far is of real [health] concern,
as far as human-consumed products go," said Dr. Barry Kellogg, a
Florida-based veterinarian and medical director of disaster
services at the Humane Society of the United States.
His view agreed with recent statements by officials at both the
FDA and USDA.
"We believe the likelihood of a human illness from melamine is
unlikely," Dr. David Acheson, the FDA's assistant commissioner for
food protection, told reporters late Thursday. He and other
government officials say they have so far turned up no sign of
melamine-linked sickness in either humans or in the chickens and
hogs fed the contaminated pet food.
So why might something that may have caused lethal kidney
failure in pets be harmless for people eating potentially
melamine-tainted meat?
There are many reasons mitigating consumers' risk, the experts
said. They include:
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Melamine's low toxicity. "As recently as 2000, [experts]
almost took melamine off the list of products to be tested [in
foods], because its toxicity is so low," Kellogg said. In fact,
one standard measure of a compound's ability to cause harm found
that people would have to ingest three times their body weight of
melamine to run any serious health risk.
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Lower dosages. "Remember, dogs and cats are primarily
eating just one product, so they were eating [melamine] at high
concentrations every day," noted Dr. Stephen Hooser, assistant
director at Purdue University's Animal Disease Diagnostic
Laboratory. Hooser also suspects that Chinese workers who added
the melamine to wheat gluten and rice proteins may have added
much more to some lots than to others. "So, there might have been
some spots where there was a lot of it, and that got passed on to
certain pets," Hooser said. Humans, on the other hand, didn't eat
the pet food directly. Instead, it was fed to hogs or chickens
that naturally excrete much of the melamine away. In fact, very
little of the compound could be expected to settle in the
animals' muscle tissue -- the prime source of meat eaten in the
United States. And, unlike pets eating a single food, consumers
"are not exclusively eating chicken or pork," Hooser said.
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Different physiologies. "There are lots of differences
between species on how they respond to chemicals," Hooser noted.
Cats can develop kidney failure from chewing on Easter lilies,
and dogs can die after eating grapes -- neither of which harm
humans. Cats, especially, have very acidic urine, and it could be
that melamine and its metabolite, cyanuric acid (also detected in
the recalled pet food), "might form crystals in the kidneys of
cats. So, the acidity of their urine may help in the formation of
these damaging crystals," Hooser said.
The original recall of pet foods, by Menu Foods of Ontario,
Canada, involved more than 60 million cans and pouches of moist dog
and cat food.
More information
For more information on the pet food recall, visit the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
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