It appears that you are not registered yet. Please click here to register for free!
 
Business Calendar Classifieds Community Entertainment Gallery Media Sports Weather
theBubbler
theBubbler Members Classifieds Directory Events Forums More>
  
Go Back   theBubbler > Wisconsin Forums
Register or Login:
theBubbler Blogs Features Classifieds Directory Members Quick Links Help


» October 2008
S M T W T F S
282930 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
» Donate
Contribute to theBubbler!
» Today's Birthdays
None
» Online Users: 104
4 members and 100 guests
Chica, dgridley, keith, scphelps
Most users ever online was 581, 04-24-2008 at 07:03 PM.
» theBubbler Chatters
Currently Active Chatters: 0
No one is currently using the chat
» Stats
Members: 12,004
Threads: 7,167
Posts: 25,860
Top Poster: keith (6,257)
Welcome to our newest members:
takeatote
the5barkers
cbhinman
daddysgirl1982
natesvision05@aol.com
gerarda
eukeria
mailing
jamie789
pygmy goats
» theBubbler Store
Amazon Item of the Week for 10/08/2008
Click here to see all of our Featured Products
» Current Poll
Which "one hit wonder" song makes you crazy?
Achy Breaky Heart - 25.00%
2 Votes
Come on Eileen - 0%
0 Votes
Ice Ice Baby - 12.50%
1 Vote
Louie Louie - 0%
0 Votes
Macarena - 0%
0 Votes
Mickey - 12.50%
1 Vote
My Sharona - 12.50%
1 Vote
Surfin' Bird - 0%
0 Votes
All of these songs make me batty! - 0%
0 Votes
Other - which song annoys you the most? - 37.50%
3 Votes
Total Votes: 8
You may not vote on this poll.
» theBubbler Babble
» Adopt A Pet
» Sponsor




View Single Post
Old 03-19-2007, 11:39 AM   #1 (permalink)
CarolsCritterCare
County Executive
Moderator
 
CarolsCritterCare's Avatar
 
Name: Coon Mom
Join Date: Nov 2006
County: Jefferson
Community: Rome
Posts: 4,438
CarolsCritterCare is on a distinguished road
Classified Rating: 0% (0)
Recipes: 13
Links: 0
Popular Sweetener is Toxic for Dogs

Popular sweetener is toxic for dogs
By Sharon L. Peters, Special for USA TODAY

A sugar substitute found in a variety of sugar-free and dietetic cookies, mints and chewing gum is proving highly toxic, even fatal, to snack-snatching dogs.

Xylitol, popular in Europe for decades but a relative newcomer to the U.S. alternative- sweeteners market, can be "very, very serious" to dogs when ingested, says Dana Farbman, spokeswoman for the Animal Poison Control Center of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

PET PROBLEMS: Recall affects 90 brands of pet food

"It doesn't take a whole lot (of xylitol), and the effects are so rapid that the window of opportunity to treat the dog is extremely small," Farbman says.
The ASPCA sent an advisory to veterinarians last August warning them about the potential for serious harm or death. Veterinarians have used a variety of means to get the word out, including posting signs in their offices and making copies of the bulletin for clients to augment the caution the ASPCA has posted on its website.


Concerned that millions of people are still unaware of the risk, veterinarians with forums for widespread public announcements are spreading the word that way as well. Among them: Miami veterinarian Patty Khuly wrote about the problem on her doolittler.com blog, and Colorado Springs veterinarian Anne Pierce devoted her entire weekly newspaper column a week ago to xylitol.
Within 30 minutes of consuming a small amount of a xylitol-sweetened product, the ASPCA says, dogs can experience a dramatic drop in blood sugar, and they usually begin vomiting, become lethargic and can have difficulty standing or walking. Some have seizures, develop internal hemorrhaging and lesions and suffer liver failure. As few as two or three sticks of xylitol gum could be toxic to a 20-pound dog, the ASPCA says.
Immediate and aggressive veterinary treatment, which includes glucose drips and IV fluids, has proved effective in many cases.
The ASPCA's poison control unit is aware of 10 dog deaths from xylitol since 2002, and it has received scores of reports of dogs becoming gravely ill. But only a fraction of veterinarians and consumers alert the ASPCA when a dog becomes ill or dies from toxins, and there is no national clearinghouse tracking xylitol-suspected toxic reactions.
Moreover, it's not always entirely clear what caused the problem when a dog arrives at a veterinarian' s office with seizures or liver failure. "I suspect that there are more cases than we know about because they come in with liver failure, and the owner is not aware of what has been ingested," Pierce says.
She believes that xylitol ingestion is "an emerging problem" and that the number of cases probably will increase with time, "depending on how widespread xylitol as a sweetener becomes."
Xylitol is an all-natural sugar substitute derived from beets, birch tree bark, corncobs and other natural sources. It's as sweet as sugar but has 40% fewer calories. Unlike sugar, xylitol does not require insulin to be metabolized.
Right now, xylitol is used mostly in cookies, candies, cupcakes and other sweets developed for people who have diabetes. It's also sold in bags of crystals for baking. Because of its bacteria-killing properties, it is put into some oral care products, including Tom's All Natural and Biotene toothpastes.
It also is beginning to be used in a broad assortment of products intended for the general public. Among them: Jello sugar-free puddings and a wide variety of sugar-free gums, including Trident, Orbit, Stride, Icebreakers and Altoids.
Makers of products with xylitol say their products are designed for people, including diabetes patients, who are seeking an alternative to sugar; they were never recommended for dogs and were never intended to be ingested by dogs. Owners should be careful because some dogs, Khuly says, "get into just about everything and eat everything they find."
There is no indication that any of the other sweeteners on the market adversely affect dogs. And there is no evidence so far that xylitol is toxic to pets other than dogs. But cats, for example, don't scavenge for sweets as dogs do, so it's possible there are risks that have not yet been discovered. For now, veterinarians advise pet owners to keep xylitol away from all animals.
__________________
Carol
Pet Sitter
http://www.carols-critter-care.com
WI Licensed Wildlife Rehabber
http://carolscrittercare.wisfolks.com/
http://www.cafepress.com/romeswildlife

If life were fair, Elvis would be alive and all the impersonators would be dead ~ Johnny Carson
CarolsCritterCare is offline   Reply With Quote
Sponsored links
 

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:32 PM.

Business Calendar Classifieds Community Entertainment Gallery Media Sports Weather

theBubbler.com
POWERED BY OnYourMark, LLC.
22603 West Main Street
Sussex, WI 53089
Phone: 262-820-8201
Fax: 262-820-8202
Call Toll Free: 1-800-747-3399
info@thebubbler.com
OnYourMark, LLC is a full-service web design, production, programming, hosting and Internet marketing company with audio, photography and video services in our studio on Main Street in Sussex, Wisconsin or at your location.

We serve clients in industry, healthcare, eCommerce, professional services, real estate and construction, information services, hospitality, advertising agencies, and more...throughout Wisconsin and the USA. Please contact OnYourMark for a free, no-obligation consultation about increasing your inquiries and sales while decreasing your costs via the web.
Copyright © thebubbler.com | All Rights Reserved Privacy Statement


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.0.1


Free Classifieds for Wisconsin People and Businesses - Free Wisconsin Want Ads - Free Wisconsin Classified Advertising -Ad Management by RedTyger