| Literature DB >> 21217849 |
Natália Kovalkovičová1, Irena Sutiaková, Juraj Pistl, Václav Sutiak.
Abstract
According to world statistics, dogs and cats are the species that owners most frequently seek assistance with potential poisonings, accounting 95-98% of all reported animal cases. Exposures occur more commonly in the summer and in December that is associated with the holiday season. The majority (>90%) of animal poisonings are accidental and acute in nature and occur near or at the animal owner's home. Feeding human foodstuff to pets may also prove dangerous for their health.The aim of this review was to present common food items that should not be fed (intentionally or unintentionally) to dogs, i.e. chocolate, caffeine, and other methylxanthines, grapes, raisins, onion, garlic, avocado, alcohol, nuts, xylitol contained in chewing gum and candies, etc. Onion and avocado are toxic for cats, too. The clinical effects of individual toxicants and possible therapy are also mentioned. Knowing what human food has the potential to be involved in serious toxicoses should allow veterinarians to better educate their clients on means of preventing pet poisonings.It can be concluded that the best advice must surely be to give animal fodder or treats specifically developed for their diets.Entities:
Keywords: human food; intoxication; pet
Year: 2009 PMID: 21217849 PMCID: PMC2984110 DOI: 10.2478/v10102-009-0012-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interdiscip Toxicol ISSN: 1337-6853
The total methylxanthine concentration in chocolate (www.merckvetmanual.com).
| Type of product | The total methylxanthine concentration |
|---|---|
| dry cocoa powder | 28.5 mg/g |
| unsweetened (baker's) chocolate | 16 mg/g |
| cocoa bean hulls | 9.1 mg/g; 0.5–0.85% theobromine |
| semisweet chocolate and sweet dark chocolate | 5.4–5.7 mg/g |
| milk chocolate | 2.3 mg/g |
| refined chocolate candies | 1.4–2.1 g/kg |
| white chocolate | an insignificant source of methylxanthines |
| cocoa beans | 1–2% theobromine |
LD50 of methylxanthines in animals (www.actionagainstpoisoning.com).
| Methylxanthine | Animal | LD50 (mg/kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Theophylline | Dog | 300 |
| Cat | 700 | |
| Caffeine | Dog | 140 |
| Theobromine | Dog | 250–500 |
| Cat | 200 | |
| Mouse | 837 | |
| Rat | 1 265 |