Did You Know? AAFCO Doesn’t Approve Pet Foods
...quality control to ensure you’re feeding a high quality food to your pet, rather than just one with good marketing. Pet food labels currently provide very little useful information and...
...quality control to ensure you’re feeding a high quality food to your pet, rather than just one with good marketing. Pet food labels currently provide very little useful information and...
...is needed to substantiate any claims that are made on product labels. But the “veterinarian recommended” claim is probably rarely questioned, so how rigorous the evidence there really is remains...
...dogs ranged from 6 months to 2 years and 6 months, which is quite a bit of extra good-quality time with your best friend! In the interests of full disclosure,...
...consisting mainly of whatever is found in the gut contents of their prey. As such, even very low carbohydrate diets can be safely fed to many cats of all life...
...with excellent nutritional expertise and the highest standards of quality control. The authors found that kittens with gastrointestinal symptoms were more likely to be taken to the veterinarian for gastrointestinal...
...help with your pet’s itchy skin. Though it is fair to try this approach, unfortunately, omega-3 fatty acids are typically only have mild benefits for skin problems and are unlikely...
...fraud. Deficiencies are uncommon in good quality commercial complete & balanced pet foods; when they occur, they are typically due to quality control problems at specific manufacturers. As pet foods...
...criteria for high-quality pet food so their diets are more likely to be nutritionally unbalanced or have labeling that does not meet current guidelines. Finally, if your pet is eating...
...dogs and cats (and humans!) and be visible in the feces, especially if not thoroughly chewed, this doesn’t mean that corn isn’t a safe and nutritious food. Like all grains,...
...not be the only finding with this problem. The FDA’s 524 cases include only those pets diagnosed with DCM, but there is likely a spectrum of changes in the heart...