Karen and I had this discussion this morning about feeding Thanksgiving Turkey to our doods. Can we or can't we? Pancreatitis? Here's the discussion:
Got an email from Adrianne re: if it's okay to give turkey to Samantha for Thanksgiving. I knew I'd read some kind of warning about that, so looked it up. The white meat is okay provided it's free of skin, fat, gravies, etc. The dark meat, organs, and especially the SKIN are dangerous...vets report a noticeable increase in cases of pancreatitis in dogs around Thanksgiving.
Do you want to post a warning...maybe in the next few days before Thanksgiving? Maybe main forum instead of Food Group, more people will see it?
Hi Karen, I was just as surprised as you to read that dogs can't have turkey. I feed ground turkey and from the time I was a kid my mother would take ALL the innards (from that yucky bag from inside the turkey) and put it in a pot with celery and onions and simmer it to make a soupy concoction that she used to baste the bird with and at the end of the day, it all went to the dogs. The heart, liver, gizzards, neck were in that soup. I had never heard of not feeding turkey and pancreatitis.
When I did a google search "dogs eating turkey pancreas" a bunch of nonsense replys came up. Like: "dogtopics, funtrivia, and various blog posts, invisable fense and yahooanswers. My point is not 100% reliable info. I next went to Dr. Pitcairn: no listing in Index under "turkey" but under "Pancreatitis:" "This condition, usually seen in overweight, middle aged dogs, often appears as a sudden, severe illness. Symptoms: loss of appetite, vomiting, diarreah, weakness, abdominal pain. Prevention: a properly balanced natural diet and regular excercise. Do not overfeed, because obesity is a predisposing factor to pancreatitis." No mention of turkey!
I think any human food is OK for dogs in moderation. The problems, like in people, comes from feeding too much fat, in high quantities, for too long. Many of the food warnings, especially old ones were fosered by the dogfood companies to convince people that they should not feed people food to dogs. Any high fat food should be given in moderation. Not just turkey, but ham and fish, too.
Regular Ground beef has more fat than ground turkey. Tuna, salmon and pork have more fat then turkey. For Thanksgiving and Christmas, I will definetly be sharing my bird with my dogs. But for a few days before and after, I will lower the fat. I am wary of putting out general statements like "Don't feed your dog _______." Anything is OK in moderation. I used to have a Samoyed who loved chocolate. I gave it to her & she lived to 16.
It did seem odd to me, too- then I started thinking, of all the protein sources i've seen used in dog food & treats- duck (much higher in fat than turkey)-bison, salmon, venison, rabbit, beef, etc etc- I can't remember ever seeing turkey used, even in the highest quality stuff. So maybe it just has to do with the holidays in general, and people wanting to over-indulge their dogs by sharing too much of the holiday foods. I do know that turkey is higher in trytophan than any other protein source, but in people, all that does is make you sleepy. As usual, you look at things so rationally.
You are right, as usual. The problem is with dogs who are already predisposed to it for various reasons; breed, age, hormonal imbalances, diabetes, and high-fat diets in general. Neither poodles, labs, or GR's are prone to it. Evidently, the dogs who are already predisposed are then given turkey skin & other high-fat "treats' at holiday time and that's what causes a peak in the cases seen at Thanksgiving & Xmas.
Sorry to be an alarmist! :-)
This got us to thinking about many myths about feeding our dogs and how they are advanced by people especially now that the Internet can bring many opinions to you in an instant. When we say RESEARCH everything, it is really true. You can see through our conversation, that you can feed your doodles turkey, but you also need to know about fat content and obesity connected to it.
We wish all of you a Happy Tnanksgiving, and share some of that bird with your doodles!
Can we BUST any other myths?