Another Chemical Emerges in Pet Food Case

felyne

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I just got this from the Environment and Human Health, Inc group in our state:http://www.ehhi.org

Another Chemical Emerges in Pet Food Case
By DAVID BARBOZA NEW YORK TIMES
May 9, 2007

\tSHANGHAI, May 8 - A second industrial chemical that American regulators have identified as a pet food contaminant may have been intentionally added to animal feed by producers seeking larger profits, according to interviews Tuesday with chemical industry officials.
\tThree chemical makers said Chinese animal feed producers often came to purchase cyanuric acid to blend into their feed because it was cheaper and helped increase protein content. In the United States, cyanuric acid is often used as a chemical stabilizer in swimming pools, though it is not thought to be highly toxic on its own.
\tUp until now, American regulators had focused on a chemical called melamine. Animal feed producers here have acknowledged recently that for years they added melamine to animal feed to gain bigger profit margins.
\tBut American regulators and scientists have also been aware for several weeks that cyanuric acid may have played a role in causing sickness or death in pets.
China said on Tuesday that it had found two companies guilty of intentionally exporting pet food ingredients containing melamine to the United States.
\tThe country's watchdog for quality control released a statement on its Web site late Tuesday saying officials at the two companies were also detained for their roles in shipping tainted goods that may have contributed to one of the largest pet food recalls in American history.
\t"The two companies illegally added melamine" to wheat gluten and rice protein, the government said, "in a bid to meet the contractual demand for the amount of protein in the products."
\tThe revelations from chemical producers help address uncertainties about the presence of cyanuric acid. For instance, it has not been clear whether it is a derivative or a byproduct when melamine is broken down in the animals, or whether the cyanuric acid was separately placed in the feed.
\tIn China, chemical producers say it is common knowledge in the chemical and agriculture industry that for years feed producers in China have quietly and secretly used cyanuric acid to cheat buyers of animal feed.
\t"Cyanuric acid scrap can be added to animal feed," said Yu Luwei, general manager of the Juancheng Ouya Chemical Company in Shandong Province. "I sell it to fish meal manufacturers and fish farmers. It can also be added to feed for other animals."
Yang Fei, who works in the sales department of the Shouguang Weidong Chemical Company in Shandong Province, echoed that view: "I've heard that people add cyanuric acid and melamine to animal feed to boost the protein level."
\tThe Food and Drug Administration in the United States said Tuesday that farmed fish had been fed meal contaminated with melamine and other contaminants but that the level was probably too low to harm anyone who ate the fish. Moreover, the feed was mislabeled as wheat gluten, when in fact it was wheat flour spiked with melamine and other nitrogen-rich compounds to make it appear more protein-rich than it was, officials said.
\tTwo of the Chinese chemical makers say that cyanuric acid is used because it is even cheaper than melamine and high in nitrogen, enabling feed producers to artificially increase protein readings which are often measured by nitrogen levels of the feed. The chemical makers say they also produce a chemical which is a combination of melamine and cyanuric acid, and that feed producers have often sought to purchase scrap material from this product.
\tCompetition among animal feed producers here is intense. But the practice of using cyanuric acid may now provide clues as to why the pet food in the United States became poisonous.
\tScientists had difficulty pinpointing the precise cause of the deaths, for neither melamine nor cyanuric acid are thought to be particularly toxic by themselves. But scientists studying the pet food deaths say the combination of the two chemicals, mixed together with perhaps some other related compounds, may have created a toxic punch that formed crystals in the kidneys of pets and led to kidney failure.
\t"I'm convinced melamine can't do it by itself," said Richard Goldstein, an assistant professor at the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine. "I think it's this melamine with other compounds that is toxic."
\tOn May 1, scientists at the University of Guelph in Canada said they had made a chemical discovery that may explain the pet deaths.
In a laboratory, they found that melamine and cyanuric acid may react with one another to form crystals that could impair kidney function. The crystals they formed in the lab were similar to those discovered in afflicted pets, they said.
\tIn the United States, some contaminated pet food and protein meal recently found its way into hog and chicken feed, which led the government to ask farms to quarantine and slaughter some animals as precaution.
But on Monday, a joint assessment by scientists working for the Food and Drug Administration, the Agriculture Department and several other federal agencies said there was a very low risk of danger to humans who consume meat from animals that were accidentally fed melamine-tainted feed.
\tThe scientists said the dilution was a major factor in lowering the risk. The government also said that both chickens and hogs fed the melamine-tainted feed appear to be healthy.
\tIn pets that apparently consumed a higher concentration of melamine, however, a result was often kidney failure.
\tThe General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine in China said an investigation named two animal feed companies previously under suspicion: the Xuzhou Anying Biologic Technology Development Company and the Binzhou Futian Biology Technology Company.
\tChina essentially acknowledged Tuesday that the two companies had cheated pet food companies by adding a fake protein to the feed to make pet food suppliers think that they were purchasing higher-protein feed when in fact they were getting lower-protein feed.
\tChina also said that a nationwide survey did not uncover other companies using melamine in feed products. Chemical producers of cyanuric acid, however, say the practice for them may be different.
\t"The substance is nontoxic - it's legal to add it to animal feed," Mr. Yu at Juancheng Ouya Chemical said of cyanuric acid. "The practice has been around for many years. I often sell it to animal feed makers."

Rujun Shen contributed reporting.
 

jean44

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I don't trust any food products from China. There is no way to know what adulterants may be in them or that the label on a bag matches the contents. All such products should be embargoed and/or quarantined until the FDA inspection process is improved.

I'm also concerned about the safety of food meant for human consumption. Contaminated pet food has been fed to hogs, chickens and fish. I'm not sure about the FDA's claims that the risk to people is minimal. And if mislabeled contaminated flour was sent to pet food factories where else might it have ended up? The more I read the more worried and angry I become.
 

starfish

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my first reaction to this topic was "oh, great"



this cannot be good at all for the animals


and to add insult to injury, I found THIS on catchannel.com http://www.catchannel.com/News/recal...od-may-03.aspx

Until I read that, I never knew there were that many products in the entire industry. It seems EVERYTHING is contaminated.
 
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felyne

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Thanks for that. And we haven't even begun to scrutinize what's really going into human food. The good point is, we are becoming aware as a whole, and I thank the internet for that.
 

catsallover

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Someone on the news said that the melomine and cyanuric acid together cause crystals in the kidneys, and that that was what was going on. Anyone know anything about this?
 

norman's mom

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I've been reading everything I can get my hands on regarding this recall. The cyanuric acid is old news -- I saw something on it at least a week ago.
The combination of the cyanuric acid & the melamine is what they are now suspecting to be the cause of the crystals, and those form in the bladder or kidneys. I have been livid about this because I used to use cheap food in my cat trap (lots of ferals in the neighborhood at the time), and when we were about to move, I donated my remaining cans to animal control, save for one. I gave Norman one can of Hill Country Fare as a treat. I now fully expect that this was the source of his crystals and our sudden emergency trip to the vet around that time. He was licking himself and screaming, growling & hissing, which is just not like him at all. He never growls or hisses. (We call him "Ghandi"!) The vet said that there was blood in his urine, that he had these bladder crystals, that a couple of things on the urine stick were off the chart (can remember what, and apparently, the vet didn't write it down because it doesn't seem to be in his record). Having that brush with this stuff was enough to get me really interested in what is happening. If you check www.itchmo.com daily, the blogger seems to keep very up-to-date information on the recalls. It's been my source for news on the recall. There is still one company out there that received the contaminated ingredients and hasn't stepped forward. The FDA, of course, is not naming names. So, we wait....
 
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