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Author Topic: pigs that humans eat had the Melamine in thier urine... & more updated  (Read 8281 times)
ashgate
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« on: April 20, 2007, 10:38:53 AM »

http://www.news10.net/display_story.aspx?storyid=26836

Local Pig Farm Linked to Pet Food Recall?
Written by Trevor Tamsen, News Producer   

  Latest headlines by topic:
   • Agriculture
   • Science

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CERES, Calif. (AP) -- State agriculture officials have placed a Stanislaus County hog farm under quarantine after an industrial chemical that's tainted more than 100 brands of dog and cat food
was found in pig urine there.

Additional testing is under way to determine if the chemical, melamine, was present in the meat produced by American Hog Farm since April third.

Officials say so far evidence suggests that there is minimal health risk to people who have eaten pork produced at the farm.

State officials believe the melamine came from rice protein concentrate imported from China by Diamond Pet Food. The company's Lathrop facility produces products under the Natural Balance brand
and sold salvage pet food to the farm for pig feed.

Officials say American Hog Farm generally does ot supply meat to commercial outlets. They say the 15-hundred-animal farm sells to customers looking to purchase whole pigs.



http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/s_503671.html

Humans at risk from tainted pet food?
   
By Karen Roebuck
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Friday, April 20, 2007


Federal officials confirmed Thursday they are investigating whether pork products intended for humans are contaminated with the same industrial chemical that prompted a massive pet food recall and sickened cats and dogs nationwide.
Researchers also have identified three other contaminants in the urine and kidneys of animals sickened or killed after eating the recalled foods, including cyanuric acid, a chemical commonly used in pool chlorination, three researchers told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Cyanuric acid is what most likely sickened pets, one researcher said.

Melamine previously was found in the recalled pet food and two ingredients -- wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate -- as well as in the urine, blood, kidneys and tissues of infected animals.

Researchers and U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials said since it was discovered in the pet food, wheat gluten and in animals' urine and kidneys, they did not believe it was what sickened the animals.
 

The Trib learned yesterday that melamine-contaminated feed was fed to hogs.The FDA, U.S. Department of Agriculture and the California Department of Food and Agriculture are investigating.

Some animals that are believed to have eaten the contaminated food were slaughtered and sold as food before authorities learned their feed had been contaminated, said Nancy Lungren, spokeswoman for the California agriculture department.

The state quarantined the farm Wednesday, she said.

Yesterday, the urine of some pigs at the 1,500-animal American Hog Farm in Ceres, Calif., tested positive for melamine, although all appeared healthy, Lungren said. About half a dozen pigs were put down and researchers at the University of California-Davis are testing their kidneys, tissues, blood and other body parts for melamine contamination, she said.

The contaminated feed was bought April 3 and 13 as salvage pet food from Diamond Pet Foods Inc., which received contaminated rice protein concentrate used in some recalled Natural Balance pet food, Lungren said.

Diamond Pet Foods made the dog and cat foods recalled this week by Natural Balance after melamine was found in an ingredient, rice protein concentrate.

Researchers isolated a spoke-like crystal in pet food, wheat gluten and in the urine, kidneys and tissues of infected animals. That crystal serves as a marker for determining what animals were sickened in the outbreak. About 30 percent of those crystals are made up of melamine, one investigator said, and researchers spent several weeks trying to identify what is in the remainder.

Researchers in at least three labs found cyanuric acid, amilorine and amiloride -- all by-products of melamine -- in the crystals of animals' urine, tissues and kidneys, according to Dr. Brent Hoff, a veterinarian and clinical toxicologist and pathologist, at the University of Guelph, in Ontario, Canada; Richard Goldstein, associate professor of medicine at Cornell University's College of Veterinary Medicine and a kidney specialist, and Dr. Thomas Mullaney, acting director of Michigan State University's Center for Population and Animal Health.

Michigan State's lab so far has found only the amilorine and amiloride, but Mullaney said he was aware of at least three other labs finding the cyanuric acid in the animals. The FDA asked labs involved in the pet food recall to test for the three chemicals.

Finding cyanuric acid is the more significant finding, Hoff, Goldstein and Mullaney said, although they are not yet certain how toxic it is to animals.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Web site said, "When ingested (by humans) in large amounts, the substance may have effects on the kidneys, resulting in tissue lesions."

Because cyanuric acid was used in pool chlorination, more scientific studies have been done on that chemical than on melamine, amilorine and amiloride, Goldstein said. However, tests in dogs and rats found it is safe, he said.

Hoff, Goldstein and Mullaney said amilorine and amiloride were found earlier this week in low concentrations.


The findings have not been announced yet, because officials overseeing the research are seeking confirmation from as many labs as possible, they said.

Researchers ruled out aminopterin -- used as rat poison in other countries -- which New York state officials previously announced was in the pet food.

The FDA said the contaminated wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate used in pet food in the United States and Canada and melamine-tainted corn gluten used in recalled pet food in South Africa have been traced to companies in China.

The Chinese government told the Trib and the FDA yesterday that the Xuzhou Anying Biologic Technology Development Co. Ltd., which the FDA said supplied the tainted wheat gluten, did not export any wheat gluten intended to be used in food.

The FDA has received more than 15,000 calls reporting sick or dead cats and dogs since the pet food recall began last month, but the agency has not confirmed those yet.


Karen Roebuck can be reached at kroebuck@tribweb.com or (412) 320-7939.


It just shows that the world is a scary place.... for all living things.
« Last Edit: April 20, 2007, 10:43:01 AM by ashgate » Logged
Cindy Nevarez
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« Reply #1 on: April 20, 2007, 10:49:44 AM »

Gee...do ya think mainstream media will pick up on this???
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Geff
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« Reply #2 on: April 20, 2007, 11:52:24 AM »

This bit of cheer is from Pet Connection: (I DID NOT WRITE THE FOLLOWING, JUST SHARING FROM ANOTHER WEBSITE)

"Let’s recap a little.

Yesterday, the FDA holds a teleconference with the media. They say that, yes, they’re tracking the tainted rice protein powder, and, no, they can’t tell us where it went.

Christie and I are both listening in, and I know she’s in the question que. Kim of the Pet Food Tracker lets us know that Blue Buffalo has pulled a product. So when Christie gets the go-ahead for her question, she drops the bomb. Informs the FDA that Blue Buffalo has just posted a recall, asks if they’re one of the rice protein powder companies, and politely requests that the FDA will kindly name the others.

Silence in the room. And then cold silence, as the audio is cut to the media. Apparently Blue Buffalo’s timing was a little awkward for the FDA.

The FDA officials come back on the phone, confirm that Blue Buffalo is indeed one of the companies that got the rice protein powder, but insist they can’t name the rest while the investigation continues.

Christie presses. Shouldn’t consumers be told what the other companies are, so they can make an informed decision? The question isn’t answered, and is asked by other reporters in turn. The FDA refuses to budge on the point.

Hours later, late in the evening, Royal Canin pulls product.

Do I have to tell you that as we approach 11 a.m. ET this morning, neither of the latest recalls has made it to the FDA’s recall page? Do I have to tell you that we’re still waiting for more recalls, and that the FDA still won’t tell us what companies are involved? Anyone want to take bets that the companies will drop their releases late today, and that chances are good the FDA won’t update the recall lists until Monday?

Do I have to tell you how many people do their shopping on the weekend, and how many will do as they’ve been advised, and check the FDA recall list before getting food for their pets? How many of those will not be aware of the most recent recalls?

Over on Howl911, Nikki has made the point that what the FDA is doing would sound ridiculous if human food products were involved. Something like: “We’ve identified four bakeries that got the tainted ingredients, and it might have made it to products that are on your grocery shelves. Any recalls are vountary, and we can’t tell you which breads you might want to avoid. Have a nice day.”

Even if you accept — which we don’t, of course — that these are “just pets,” how about the potential economic hit some families will take if a pet becomes sick? Dr. Paul Pion of the independent Veterinary Information Network puts the costs to pet-owners in the range of $2 million to $20 million.

FDA, you work for us. Tell us the companies. We know you can’t force them to come clean with us, so let us know. Let us know.

Not only is it in the best interest of consumers, it’s also in the best interest of the pet-food industry. Until we know where tainted products are, who in her right mind will buy anything? Aren’t the companies that are not involved owed something, too?

In the meantime, veterinary and animal-welfare groups continue to warn against the dangers of home feeding. I got another such warning this morning. Does that strike anyone else as more than a little nuts?

The latest such warning is from the ASPCA:

    “While homemade diets can certainly provide pets with an adequate diet, they do require a substantial amount of work, plus guidance by your veterinary team to ensure that the final product includes a complete nutritional balance,” [said ASPCA’s Dr. Steven Hansen, a board-certified veterinary toxicologist.]

The ASPCA goes on to warn:

    - Ask your veterinarian to refer you to a specialist with an advanced degree in animal nutrition, certified by the American College of Veterinary Nutrition. A certified veterinary nutritionist will be able to formulate a balanced recipe for your pet.

    - Follow recipe directions exactly, without any substitution or omission of ingredients. This includes processing and cooking instructions.

    - Pets on homemade diets should be evaluated by a veterinarian a few times per year.

Excuse me? A team of veterinarians? Recipes exact? Evaluated by a veterinarian a few times a year?

Geez! Makes you wonder how we all manage to feed ourselves and our children without a team of physicians and PhDs. And yet, we manage to, “adequate”ly, for the most part.

We have not jumped on the home-feeding bandwagon here on the Pet Connection, because we think most people will either stay with or return to commercial pet foods. And we want those foods to be safe. That’s the point.

But, c’mon: Home feeding a pet isn’t as expensive, time-sucking or dangerous as some folks would have you believe. With contaminated commercial food still out there, it seems to me that emphasizing the risk of preparing pet meals at home is more than a little misguided and just plain nuts.

***

Media notes: It’s a rare event when both right-wing and left-wing blogs are outraged over the same story

In the Canada Free Press, Judi McLeod writes:

    Meanwhile the raw-materials-in-food-originating-from-China story–knocked from the headlines by Anna Nicole Smith, Dom Imus and the 24-7 television clips of Virginia Tech massacre gunman Cho Seung-Hui– has taken on more sinister tones.

    Earth to mainstream media: The story has deadly potential for bigger game than Fido and Fluffy. We all have to eat.

In the Huffington Post, David Goldstein writes:

    What we have here is a pattern, and there is absolutely no reason to assume that it is limited to the pet food and animal feed markets. Wheat gluten, corn gluten and rice protein concentrate are all used to supplement the protein content of both animal and human food, and all three have now been found to be contaminated with melamine. Three different Chinese manufactures have now apparently been implicated.

    Given the facts, it is now reasonable to assume either massive, industry-wide negligence, or intentional contamination, and that all Chinese produced high-protein food additives are now suspect.

Stay tuned. Christie has herself a nifty interview this afternoon, if it comes together as planned."
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Cindy Nevarez
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« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2007, 12:03:41 PM »

I LOVE this! I wonder how many are actually seeing/reading this? It hits home for sure!
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Geff
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« Reply #4 on: April 20, 2007, 12:40:30 PM »

I suspect very few are seeing it. The media is drastically undercovering this, & the FDA is doing everything in it's power to cover up.
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Cindy Nevarez
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« Reply #5 on: April 20, 2007, 12:46:45 PM »

I hope you are wrong, but I have a feeling you're not.
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« Reply #6 on: April 20, 2007, 01:07:42 PM »

I'm certain that very few people are seeing this.  I've had a hard time convincing even my family and friends who own pets that there is anything to be concerned about.  This latest round of news finally has some of them worried.

However, I wouldn't have known anything about it if I hadn't been reading this site, petconnection, itchmo, etc. on a regular basis since this all began.  Mainstream media is still largely silent...
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garypen
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« Reply #7 on: April 20, 2007, 01:20:49 PM »

I'm beginning to think FDA stands for Fools, Dolts, and A-holes.
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« Reply #8 on: April 20, 2007, 02:07:53 PM »

I just sent a thank you email to the reporter named in the first post. The newspaper & TV where I live (south of Seattle) is barely touching these subjects at all. Wonder if the media is terrified of the Bushies? The silence doesn't make sense otherwise.
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« Reply #9 on: April 20, 2007, 02:22:34 PM »

I'm beginning to think FDA stands for Fools, Dolts, and A-holes.

I certainly agree with the "F" and the "D"........but hmmm.....aren't A$$hol*s, um, "USEFUL?"......more like "Ruptured" A$$hol*s!.... Tongue
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Davis
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« Reply #10 on: April 22, 2007, 02:50:26 AM »

Fortunately I don’t eat pork....that farm is not too far from my location either.  I once worked for a human food company that sold their scraps and waste as pig feed.  This is common in the San Joaquin valley.  Perhaps those hogs can now be fed to the chickens we will eat, or put in pet food, so that it is not “wasted”.  After all, it’s all about profit, isn’t it?  I'm sure someone somewhere can profit by using this inexpensive source of now undesirable meat.  How about a little "mad cow" side dish of beef to go with your melamine pork, and a veggie helping of aflatoxin corn?  Yum!  What is our food supply coming to, both for our pets and us?   I'm certainly not saying that this was intentional on the part of Diamond, but it might interest you to know that they do have a past history of questionable practices with hog farmers (labeling issues).  Scroll down a ways in the article below.
http://www.avma.org/onlnews/javma/jul06/060701j.asp
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« Reply #11 on: April 22, 2007, 10:17:22 AM »

I don't either, but my immediate human family members do.
My husband said he thinks the mainstream media won't pay attention until a human dies from this. To that I said, it would probably happen in a USA Chinese restaurant to a Sweet and Sour Pork eating victim.
Also, we lived in Stockton for 16 years. The across-the-board attitude over there of 'all animals are commodities' literally drove me into a deep depression. If my husband didn't lose his Silicon Valley job causing us to move out of state I doubt I'd be sitting here talking to you.
I don't think you are very far from the real truth in what you say about what will happen to that 'surplus' meat. I seriously don't.
BTW, shortly after I moved to Stockton, I was raising/showing Scottish Terriers. A guy from the Lathrop Diamond plant (a may have had a different name then) approached me and convinced me to try their new food they were making there at that time. This would have been late 80s early 90s. I did, and one day when I poured some food out for the dogs a fully formed cooked mouse came out with it. Up untill then the dogs were having infrequent bouts with diarrhea, and I couldn't figure out the cause. After that happened, I decided to just get them off that food, which I did, and their problems cleared up. I couldn't believe it, but that food was sold in mainstream pet supply stores for many years to come. Looking back I suppose a little mouse now and then isn't bad compared to what's happening now.
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« Reply #12 on: April 22, 2007, 06:43:42 PM »

Depends if the mouse died from poisoning from the pet food!!!!!..... Shocked

I'm telling ya'.....the W.H.O. and the U.N. should be involved and there should be a boycott on China's hosting of the 2008 Olympics!!!!!......Tourists will be dropping like flies over there!!.....It just ain't safe!!!!!... Angry
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« Reply #13 on: April 23, 2007, 02:46:24 PM »

I did, and one day when I poured some food out for the dogs a fully formed cooked mouse came out with it.
Are you sure that wasn't the cat food?  Grin
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Cindy Nevarez
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« Reply #14 on: April 23, 2007, 02:51:48 PM »

You know...I did stand there for a full minute thinking it over real careful like...
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