Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
just got these a few days ago for some GI mucous in Derby's stools from the vet
He;s a personal friend & i dont want to insult him about the origin of these chews..they only say on the bottle they are manufactured exclusively for BUTLER SCHEIN
then the manufacturer's name is there & where they are located
BUT never states where they are made..
anybody have any info on this product?
i would certainly appreciate the feedback
Thanks in advance!!
trued posting in the Med & health forum but had some difficulty finding the tab for ADD a discussion
thanks again
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Butler Schein makes nine million products, is this the one the vet gave you? http://www.vetdepot.com/protegrity-gi-canine-probiotic-20-soft-chew...
See info I posted below. Horrible stuff.
Butler Schein Animal Health is a division of the Henry Schein company. You could try calling them to ask the source of the product, but you probably won't get anywhere as they do not sell directly to the public.
But if that is the product the vet gave you, I wouldn't use it no matter where it came from. It's filled with garbage and dangerous chemical preservatives:
Ingredients:
Skinless Chicken, Chicken Liver, Corn, Chicken By-Product Meal, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Wheat Flour,
Glycerin, Propylene Glycol, Phosphoric Acid, Salt, Potassium Sorbate and Calcium Propionate and BHA and
Citric Acid (Preservatives), Iron Oxide.
http://www.vetdepot.com/product-labels/protegrity-gi-canine-probiot...
There are dozens of good probiotics on the market that only contain probiotics, not corn & BHA.
from the Dog Food Project Ingredients to Avoid:
Propylene Glycol |
A colorless viscous hygroscopic liquid, CH3CHOHCH2OH, used in antifreeze solutions, in hydraulic fluids, and as a solvent. Used as humectant in semi-moist kibble to keep it from drying out. May be toxic if consumed in large amounts, and should definitely not be an ingredient in a food an animal will eat daily for weeks, months or even years of its life. In countries of the European Union, propylene glycol is not cleared as a general-purpose food grade product or direct food additive.
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The thing is, this is isn't my opinion, lol. It's all right there in black and white. Those are the ingredients from the product's website (and I imagine they are on the packaging) and that's what BHA and Propylene Glycol are. And why would a probiotic need corn, wheat, chicken, by-products, etc.? It's the good bacteria, which is what probiotics are- that's beneficial. Certainly, corn, wheat and BHA aren't of any benefit.
The vets dispense this kind of crap because they don't research it and they don;t know what's in it. The salesman says, here's a good probiotic, dogs like it, and the vet orders it. Sometimes, the office manager orders it. I guarantee you the vet hasn't looked at what's in it, and might not know what that stuff is if he did look. That's not his field of expertise. He's not a nutritionist or a chemist.
The best probiotics I have found are Proviable DC (some vets do carry it; all can order it. You can also get it on-line) or iFlora Healthy Pets (order on-line)
But even Iams' Prostora (sold thru vets) is better than the Schein product. It has lots of suger, but no by-products, BHA, etc.
What was Derby's diagnosis? is she on any meds? Metronidazole? If so, be sure not to give any probiotics within two hours of the antibiotics.
Good choice.
we live in a scary consumer world, I knew it for humans but now I know it's not just for us.
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