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Rat Poison - The Cause of Pet Food Recall?

March 23rd, 2007 · 4 Comments

Apparently, it’s true:

A spokeswoman for the New York state Department of Agriculture and Markets said Friday that rodent poison was found in tainted pet food that killed several animals and sparked a nationwide recall.

A spokeswoman did not identify the chemical or its source, beyond saying that it’s rodent poison. State officials will be releasing laboratory findings later today. A news conference is expected at 1 p.m. EDT. Watch live on WMUR.com.

ABC News reported that the chemical was aminopterin, which was on wheat imported from China.

Various online medical sources indicate that aminopterin is also used in trials to treat leukemia.

Sixteen animal deaths led to the recall of 60 (m) million cans and pouches of pet food sold throughout North America under 95 brand names.

From WMUR

MORE INFORMATION

ABC NEWS Rat Poison to Blame for Some Pet Food Contamination

March 23, 2007 ABC News has learned that investigators have determined that a rodent-killing chemical is the toxin in the tainted pet food that has killed several animals.

A source close to the investigation tells ABC News that the rodenticide, which the source says is illegal to use in the United States, was on wheat that was imported from China and used by Menu Foods in nearly 100 brands of dog and cat food.

A news conference is scheduled for this afternoon by experts in Albany, N.Y., where scientists at the state’s food laboratory made the discovery a week after a massive recall of 60 million cans and pouches was issued.

The chemical is called aminopterin.

What investigators can’t say so far is whether this is the only contaminant, if it is in all of the recalled food, or if it’s in enough quantity in to sicken more animals.

There is some good news according to the source. Knowing the chemical should aid veterinarians who are treating animals that have been sickened by the pet food.

Aminopterin is used in the United States in, of all things, a cancer drug, according to the source.

For a week, investigators have been looking for a cause behind the 15 confirmed pet food deaths tied to contaminated pet food. Many animal doctors, including those at New York’s Animal Medical Center, suspect there will be a much larger rash of cases after they learned about an additional 200 reported cases of kidney failure in animals.

Doctors at the hospital, which is considered the Mayo Clinic of veterinary medicine, say they noticed the kidney failure while studying sick animals from last Friday to Monday, and traced the cases back to the 60 million cans and pouches of recalled food from Menu Food.

“I was shocked and surprised â?” acute kidney failure is not a common problem,” veterinarian Cathy Langston told ABC News. “I’ve already heard about 200 cases, and so I bet that there are probably going to be thousands.”

So far, the government and the pet food maker, which sells food under 91 brand names, have confirmed 15 deaths. But the investigation to locate the toxic contaminant that caused the kidney failure in animals had not pointed to a cause until today.

“This is very much like finding a needle in a haystack,” Don Smith of the Cornell Veterinary School said earlier this week. “We’re going to keep working at this until we find the cause.”

Investigators had already begun looking at the possibility that a pesticide or chemical may have been on the wheat used to produce the Menu Foods dog and cat food.

The Food and Drug Administration, which was notified of the tainted food one day before the recall, said it’s frustrated and realizes the growing crisis is an emotional one.

“This is tragic,” said Stephen Sundolf of the FDA’s Veterinary Medicine group. “It is certainly uncommon. We expect pet food to be safe.”

And it’s a crisis, if the New York hospital is right, that may not end for weeks.

“I’m worried that there are more deaths to come from chronic renal failure over the next several months,” Langston said. “It’s not over.”

Tags: General

4 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Lisa Brooks // Mar 23, 2007 at 3:21 pm

    I do not believe it is all rat poison. I believe we have another tainted grain issue. My dog eats dry Iams and has been sick with elevated kidney levels since christmas.

  • 2 angela // Mar 24, 2007 at 11:54 am

    My 15 year old lab died last month. Why? The vet claims fluid in the chest. But he stopped eating and drinking water. Didn’t move. He was eating Nutro dry dog food. The vet claims it came on “suddenly.” No warning. We then gave him gravy dog food to get him to eat. So we’re unsure why he died. In fact, no one will know until we hear more, or as I say, the real facts will come out. I will bet every dollar I have that there is MORE contamination with this recall. Why did it take three months to hear about this poisoning by CHINA? The food was contaminated since Dec. 2006. My family now has a new lab. We paid $850 and are training her again. Keep in mind, families with pets, especially dogs, give them training. This is costly. A good dog, requires special care, food and training. Imagine if our dear lab was a service dog? What would the cost be to replace him then? These dogs cost $50K up to replace. It is not like going to the pound and getting a replacement.

    I am so upset. Now I hear on my local news (not national) as well as international (Canadian) that it “might” be in the human food supply? They can’t rule this out? Let’s see. Where is our Homeland Security dept? Where is our Dept. of Agriculture?

    I read last week that one of the US processing plants for dog food which was part of this recall was located in Kansas. Apparently, this same plant was fined years ago for contaminated cow food, and the FDA or dept of agriculture had to intervene and warn them not to mix certain feed in their product for cattle.

    Mad cow?

    There is definitely more to come from this CHINA poisoning.

    I don’t believe anything they tell me.

    My otherwise healthy lab is gone and I’m now left wondering who is watching out for Americans!

    Angela
    Washington, State

  • 3 Jo // Mar 24, 2007 at 10:45 pm

    Before everyone gets too upset, PLEASE read the following, posted by Steve Dale, who was present at the press conference with Cornell, the FDA and the CDC — in order to determine the cause of the issue, and how best to remedy it, we need to keep clear heads and think about this rationally.

    http://www.stevedalepetworld.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=234&Itemid=71

    I hate that people’s pets have died, but we will all now be a lot more informed as consumers when it comes to feeding our 4-legged family members…

  • 4 Rhea // Mar 26, 2007 at 10:14 am

    I’ve been thinking of switching my dog from a combination of wet/dry food to just dry. Now I have a really good reason to do so.

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