TOPICS:
- Health: Artificial Sweeteners
Can Cause Damage To Your Dog
January 7, 2007
Artificial
Sweeteners Can Cause Damage To Your Dogs
There has been a fair amount of
veterinary press recently about the dangers associated with dogs
ingesting xylitol, an artificial sweetener used in a variety of
products including candy, baked goods, chewing gum and
toothpaste. Ingestion of even small amounts of this sweetener
can cause seriously low blood sugar levels in dogs. In some
cases dogs have also developed liver failure after ingesting the
sweetener. It's important to ensure that products containing
xylitol are kept securely out of reach of our four-legged
friends.
The American Veterinary Medical
Association (AVMA) has issued a press release regarding this
issue. Read the press release on the AVMA's website at: www.avma.org/press/releases/061001_xylitol.asp.
From the American Veterinary
Medical Association:
SCHAUMBURG, Ill.
If you think it's no big deal
that your dog just ate some sugar-free gum or a cookie or two,
think again. You may want to make an immediate trip to your
veterinarian.
While veterinarians have
suspected that the sugar substitute xylitol can make dogs sick,
there is now further clinical evidence of an association between
the product and possible liver failure in dogs. A clinical
report appearing in the Oct. 1 Journal of the American
Veterinary Medical Association (JAVMA) discusses the sometimes
fatal conditions developed by dogs that have ingested xylitol.
Xylitol, a sweetener found in many sugar-free chewing gums,
candies, baked goods and toothpastes, is a naturally occurring
ingredient that may have far-reaching negative health effects on
dogs.
"Not all things that are
natural are safe," said veterinary toxicologist Sharon
Gwaltney-Brant, who along with veterinarian Eric K. Dunayer
co-authored the report. "There are plenty of things in the
environment that are toxic to pets."
While not all pets become ill
after eating xylitol, Dr. Gwaltney-Brant said the public—and
especially dog owners—needs to be aware of the potential
dangers. She added that pet owners should make sure that
products containing xylitol are kept away from dogs. If an owner
suspects that their dog has eaten products containing xylitol,
they should contact their veterinarian immediately.
"The potential for severe
illness is very high," she said. "People don't think
sugar-free gum can kill their dog. I didn't before I got into
this. But this is something people should be aware of."
In the report, Drs. Dunayer and
Gwaltney-Brant, staff members at the Animal Poison Control
Center of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals in Urbana, Illinois, used the Control Center's data base
to gather information on eight dogs that were treated between
2003 and 2005 after eating products containing xylitol. Each dog
became ill, and while three of the dogs survived, five of the
pets either died or had to be euthanized because of liver
failure possibly stemming from xylitol ingestion.
Dr. Gwaltney-Brant said three
additional dogs that ingested xylitol after the study was
conducted either died or had to be euthanized after becoming
ill. All three, Dr. Gwaltney-Brant said, had liver failure.
Dr. Gwaltney-Brant described
the potential negative xylitol effects on dogs as a
"species difference."
"People only absorb a
certain percentage of xylitol," she said. "The human
body doesn't even notice it. However, in dogs, xylitol triggers
significant insulin release, which drops the blood sugar. It is
definitely a species difference. People aren't in danger from
sugar-free gum containing xylitol; dogs are."
The number of xylitol-related
pet exposures is on the rise, according to Dr. Gwaltney-Brant,
partly because of increased awareness, but more so because
xylitol is being used in more products. The incidence of
reported xylitol exposures climbed from 70 in 2004 to 170 in
2005. As of August, the Poison Control Center reported 114 cases
of xylitol exposure this year.
"This is the tip of the
iceberg now," she said. "Anything that is sugar-free
could potentially have substituted xylitol for the original
sweetener."
The extent of xylitol's
potential effects on the liver are new—and certainly not good
news—for dogs, their owners and veterinarians.
"The fact that xylitol-containing
products can cause problems in dogs is a relatively new
find," Dr. Gwaltney-Brant said, explaining that the
sweetener had already been tied to low blood sugar in dogs—but
not liver failure. "Once you start looking at something,
you see a lot more of it."
Some sugar-free chewing gums,
Dr. Gwaltney-Brant said, are as much as 70 percent xylitol,
depending on the brand and whether the product is used as a
primary sweetener.
"A 22-pound dog who
consumes 1 gram of xylitol should be treated," she said.
"This can equate to 3 to 4 pieces of some gum
products."
One dog in the study that had
to be euthanized because of its condition had eaten four large,
chocolate-frosted muffins that contained about 1 pound of
xylitol.
"They use it like
sugar," Dr. Gwaltney-Brant said. "Baked goods can
easily contain a large amount of xylitol."
There is no information on
whether severe xylitol poisoning has occurred in cats, Dr.
Gwaltney-Brant said.
"If we get exposures, we
have blood sugar checked as a precaution," she said.
Dogs, however, are potentially
at risk. And while further studies need to be conducted to
definitively establish a cause-and-effect relationship between
xylitol ingestion by dogs and liver damage and bleeding
disorders, Dr. Gwaltney-Brant hopes the message gets out.
"Liver failure is one of
our main concerns when dogs get into this," she said.
"The low blood sugar we can deal with. But the liver
damage, even with aggressive treatment, can make it difficult to
save these animals."
For more information, a copy of
the study, "Acute hepatic failure and coagulopathy
associated with xylitol ingestion in eight dogs," or an
interview with author Dr. Sharon Gwaltney-Brant, contact David
Kirkpatrick at 847-285-6782.
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