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Home » Categories » Animals & Pets » Dogs » Optimum Dog Nutrition » Printer Friendly

Optimum Dog Nutrition

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Submitted Thursday, October 27, 2005
Submitted by: jeane (21) Unverified Account
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Jeannie Thomason

Natural Pet Care Consultant/Educator

Thewholedogstore@jeanesholistics.com

Let's take a fresh look at optimum diets for our dogs

Mary L. Wulff-Tilford author of All You Ever Wanted To Know About Herbs For Pets Has this to say:

"The food your animal eats should provide all of the nutritional components which are necessary for all organs and systems of a healthy body to perform in harmonious unison. A properly functioning body does an amazing job at preventing disease and healing itself, and to do this it requires the energies and nutrients of a well-balanced diet. In terms of finding the proper diet for our companions, this means learning to look beyond our own needs, opinions, and agendas to address the natural needs of the animals that we caretake. The business of selling pet food at times seems to be focused more on what appeals to animal guardians than on the dietary needs of pets. The market success of most commercial foods is judged by how convenient it is, and how good it looks, smells, feels, or even tastes to pet owners.

The natural reality is this:

What is good for our animals may not be very appealing to us, but if we really want to provide them with the nutrition they truly need, we must learn to look beyond standards of human acceptance to consider what our little companions might eat if we weren't around.

Dogs are Carnivores, this is a biological fact. Look into your dog's mouth. Those huge impressive teeth (or tiny needle sharp teeth) are designed for grabbing, ripping, tearing, shredding, and shearing meat (Feldhamer, G.A. 1999. Mammology: Adaptation, Diversity, and Ecology. McGraw-Hill. pg 258.).

They are not equipped with large flat molars for grinding up plant matter. Their molars are pointed and situated in a scissors bite (along with the rest of their teeth) that powerfully disposes of meat, bone, and hide. Carnivores are equipped with a peculiar set of teeth that includes the presence of carnassial teeth: the fourth upper premolar and first lower molar. Contrast this with your own teeth or the teeth of a black bear. A black bear is a true omnivore, as are we. We have nice, large, flat molars that can grind up veggies. Black bears, while having impressive canine teeth, also have large flat molars in the back of their mouth to assist in grinding up plant matter. Dogs and most canids lack these kinds of molars. Why? Because they don't eat plant matter. Teeth are highly specialized and are structured specifically for the diet the animal eats, and the difference between a bear's teeth and a dog's teeth (both species are in Order Carnivora) demonstrates how this can be (Feldhamer, G.A. 1999. Mammology: Adaptation, Diversity, and Ecology. McGraw-Hill. pgs 260.).

Dogs have a highly elastic stomach designed to hold large quantities of meat, bone, organs, and hide. Their stomachs are simple, with an undeveloped caecum (Feldhamer, G.A. 1999. Mammology: Adaptation, Diversity, and Ecology. McGraw-Hill. pg 260.). They have a relatively short foregut and a short, smooth, unsacculated colon. This means food passes through quickly. Vegetable and plant matter, however, needs time to sit and ferment. This equates to longer, sacculated colons, larger and longer small intestines, and occasionally the presence of a caecum. Dogs have none of these, but have the shorter foregut and hindgut consistent with carnivorous animals

Dogs do not produce the necessary enzymes (amylase, for example) to deal with the starch, cellulose, and carbohydrates in plant matter since they are carnivorous animals designed to eat meat and bone. Feeding dogs as though they were omnivores taxes the pancreas and places extra strain on it, as it must work harder for the dog to digest the starchy, carbohydrate-filled food. Nor do dogs have the friendly bacteria that break down cellulose and starch for them. As a result, most of the nutrients contained in plant matter--even preprocessed plant matter--are simply unavailable to dogs. This is why dog food manufacturers have to add such high amounts of synthetic vitamins and minerals (the fact that cooking destroys all the vitamins and minerals and thus creates the need for supplementation aside) to their dog foods. If a dog can only digest 30% or less of its grain-based food, then it will only be receiving 30% or less of the vitamins and minerals it needs. To compensate for this, the manufacturer must add a higher concentration of vitamins and minerals than the dog actually needs.

So, with this knowledge of our dogs being carnivores, we need to have all dietary decisions for them conform to this knowledge if they are to result in proper, appropriate, nutrition. This is not something we can change to suit our own likes, needs and beliefs if we truly want healthy dogs.


Alfred Plechner, DVM - "The most common and most visible symptoms of nutritionally caused deficiencies are allergies of one kind or another. Because many commercial foods are woefully deficient in key nutrients, the long term effect of feeding such foods makes the dog hypersensitive to its environment. . . . [I]t's a dinosaur effect. Animals are being programmed for disaster, for extinction. Many of them are biochemical cripples with defective adrenal glands unable to manufacture adequate cortisol, a hormone vital for health and resistance to disease." Allergies can be, and often are, unrecognized deficiency diseases. Alfred Plechner, DVM (author of Pet Allergies: Remedies for an Epidemic)

William Pollak D.V.M. - "In the wild, no one cooks for the coyote or wolf no one brushes their teeth. Their foods are raw and unprocessed."

Jesse Dallas - "Processed foods and drugs have seriously depleted the natural vitality and immune systems of many pets. Whereas large amounts of red meat can cause cancer in humans, a lack of RAW red meat in an animal's diet can lead to serious health problems.Animals require the enzymes, amino acids and other nutrients in the raw meat in order to stay healthy. Many skin and coat problems are a direct result of a lack of raw animal fat in the diet - fat which humans often believe is bad for their pet. Animals need at least 30% raw fat, and their systems are not designed to handle cooked meat or cooked fat. Restaurant grease has become a major component of feed-grade animal fat over the last 15 years. Often held in 50-gallon drums for weeks or months in extreme temperatures, this grease is usually kelp outside with no regard for its safety or further use. The rancid grease is then picked up by fat blenders who mix the animal and vegetable fats together, stabilize them with powerful antioxidants to prevent further spoilage, and then sell the blended products to pet food companies. Rancid, heavily preserved fats are extremely difficult to digest and can lead to a host of animal health problems, including digestive upsets, diarrhea, gas, and bad breath. In the wild, a panther or jackal does not barbecue, grill or smoke its prey. It definitely does not walk to the local supermarket to buy dry food either. Yet most pet owners recoil at the thought of feeding raw meat to their dog or cat, concerned about bacteria or parasites. Dog and cat digestive systems have evolved over millions of years to consume a raw diet, and they can tolerate foods containing a wide range of naturally occurring bacteria. You've probably seen your dog enjoy eating something you consider disgusting and wondered why he doesn't get sick."

I have met many dog owners and care givers that are concerned with feeding a raw diet because of salmonella and other "bugs". As carmovores, the digestive systems again are much different then ours, theirs are short, acidic, and handle bacteria well. This is why they are not susceptible to salmonella, parasites, or e-coli from tainted meat as humans are. Humans have very long digestive tracks which allow food to 'linger' for 24 hours or more, thus allowing more time for parasites to get into their bloodstreams.

In nature animals know to seek out those foods that satisfy their nutritional needs. For example free roaming wolves hunt grazing animals whenever possible. Before eating muscle or bone, the wolves feast on stomach contents, the liver, pancreas and intestines - in other words, they are gorging on
enzyme-laden tissues.

Wolf pups are weaned and maintained on regurgitated food, also heavily laced with digestive enzymes. Unless we provide the same food a wolf enjoys in the wild, adding a digestive enzyme supplement to each meal may well be essential for optimum digestion and overall good health. When pet foods are heat processed, as they all are, enzyme concentration is significantly reduced. For this reason, if you are not able to feed a raw, natural diet then adding digestive enzymes to your pet's food will enhance absorption of nutrients.

A good multiple digestive enzyme should contain, pancreatin, lipase, oxbile, pepsin, betain, hydrochloric acid (HCL), bromelain, papain, amylase and protease. This enzyme supplement should be a powder or capsule to assure the digestion process begins in the stomach.

William Pollak D.V.M. - "Malnutrition and the toxic condition of the animal fed commercial diets can result in the inability to digest and assimilate basic food components of the fresher, more wholesome type such as raw food. “

How is it that we have the intelligence and understanding to feed and nourish ourselves and our growing children, but appear to be too stupid to formulate a proper, nourishing diet for our dogs?

The "dog food" industry would have us believe that each meal must be complete and balanced. This is simply not true. Granted, complete and balanced nutrition is necessary. However this balance can be and ideally should be achieved over a period of days, even weeks. Most natural canine nutritionists agree that it is probably preferable to use the “balance over time" approach.

The "dog food" industry spends millions of dollars convincing us that variety is bad for our dogs, and that they should eat the same thing at every meal, every day. This so untrue! The reason for telling us this is only marketing so that we will keep buying their product. Their products are formulated in such a way as to make changing from one brand to another hard on our dogs' digestive system. However the same is not true for changing from one kind of RMBs (Raw Meaty Bone) to another.

We all know by now (or at least we should) just how our health would deteriorate if we ate the same thing, particularly a highly processed food, for every meal every day of our lives. This is only common sense.


When feeding our dogs a species appropriate diet, variety is desirable, even important to the maintenance of optimum health. Feeding raw meaty chicken bones one day and raw beef or lamb ribs the next with a few organ meats thrown in every other day or so will not cause stomach upset the way switching from one brand of kibble to another will. So obviously it isn’t variety that is bad for our dogs, rather, it is the processed "dog food" that is bad.

There are those who would try to convince you that the dog has evolved, or rather that we have evolved the dog, into some human creation capable of digesting and thriving on, even requiring, a highly processed (cooked) diet consisting primarily of grains. THIS IS ABSURD! Even if it were possible to effect such an evolutionary change it would take hundreds of thousands of years not the very few, 60 to 70, that we've been feeding our dogs a processed dog food kind of diet. Even if one uses the entire period of domestication of the dog it doesn't approach the great period of time required to accomplish that kind of evolutionary change in an organism as complex as the domestic dog. At best we have forced our dogs to ADAPT to this inappropriate, unnatural diet.

For all the changes we've made in the domestic dog they remain relatively unchanged in every way but appearance and temperament.

In spite of the tons of grain, beet pulp, cellulose, animal byproducts, preservatives, and artificial nutrients that we have poured into our dogs in the form of kibble "dog food" over the last 60 or so years, dogs, all dogs, remain carnivores and need (as well as deserve) optimum nutrition!

Many of you are not quite ready for this step yet but, if you can make any changes in your dog's diet to make it more natural and nutritive, read your dog food lables and find one that has the fewest grains available, is made from organic meat sources and contains no by-products or additives.

I know you love your dog or you would not be reading this. Continue on to learn about your carnivore friend and help him live the longest, happiest life he/she can.

If you have any questions or would like to request a private consultation, please email the author.

The information contained in this article is educational in nature and not to be used as specific veterinary advice for your pets. Neither the authors nor the publishers can be held responsible for any unfavorable reactions to recommendations contained herein. Readers should seek professional advice, preferably from a holistic veterinarian, before initiating any of the advice contained within.






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Comments on this article:


» left by Sharon Sabatini from Redlands, California (2 years 279 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Well said, well put. When you love dogs, this information fits so many of one's gut feelings about the truth of nutrition's role in the many and sundry dog health maladies. Shocking for many, these are truths whose time for revelation has come.
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