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Cats and Chemicals - Bad Mix

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Hey y'all,

 

Kathleen wrote .. NEVER use Essential Oils on Cats .. and she is

absolutely right! But I have seen this subject come up dozens and

dozens of times over the years .. its not just the Young Living idjits

who discuss it .. its being discussed with vigor (and no objection) on

another major list now.

 

There will always be someone come up with an example of how their very

healthy cat loves to eat drain cleaner or some other extreme example

of why cats are not negatively affected by chemicals .. but there is

really nothing to debate because exceptions are not sufficient to

establish scientific fact. If one has a cat they aren't particularly

fond of and want to get rid of the critter .. then using Essential

Oils or most any other chemical (including common household cleaners)

will do the job .. 99% of the time.

 

See the post below .. its pretty danged cut and dry. I recommend

folks read it to the end .. maybe it will stiffle arguements that cats

aren't harmed by chemicals, etc. As a minimum .. note ..

 

> " Cats are very sensitive to many different chemicals, whether drugs,

pesticides or plants.

> We certainly know they have some unique physiological responses that

make them susceptible

> in cases where we wouldn't expect it in other species, " Hansen said.

 

Y'all keep smiling. :-) Butch http://www.AV-AT.com

 

Cats May Be More Sensitive To Pet Food Contaminant

 

POSTED: 0119 GMT (0919 HKT), March 31, 2007

 

 

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Cats' greater sensitivity to a chemical found in

plastics and pesticides could explain why they have died in larger

numbers than have dogs after eating contaminated pet food that has

been recalled in North America, experts said Saturday.

 

The small number of confirmed reports of pet deaths, bolstered by a

far larger number of unconfirmed anecdotal reports, suggests cats were

more susceptible to poisoning by the chemical melamine, officials with

the Food and Drug Administration and American Society for the

Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said Saturday.

 

" I am concerned we have a situation where we have a sensitive species

and it is the cat, " said Steven Hansen, a veterinary toxicologist and

director of the ASPCA's Animal Poison Control center in Urbana, Illinois.

 

Testing by the FDA and Cornell University has found melamine in

samples of recalled pet food as well as in crystal form in the urine

and kidney tissue of dead cats. They've also found the chemical, in

apparently raw form in concentrations as high as 6.6 percent, in wheat

gluten used as an ingredient of the recalled cat and dog foods, said

Stephen Sundlof, the FDA's chief veterinarian.

 

" There was a sizable amount of melamine. You could see crystals in the

wheat gluten, " Sundlof told The Associated Press.

 

Sundlof and others have not been able to explain why the chemical

would have caused the kidney failure seen so far in the roughly 16

confirmed pet deaths, all but one in cats. There are anecdotal reports

of hundreds more pet deaths.

 

" It has a very low toxicity, at least in rodents. The problem is, we

don't have information in cats, and that seems to be the most

susceptible species, " Sundlof said of melamine. Sundlof also allowed

that the tainted cat foods could have contained higher concentrations

of melamine than did the dog foods.

 

Nestle Purina PetCare Co. said Saturday it was recalling all sizes and

varieties of its Alpo Prime Cuts in Gravy wet dog food with specific

date codes. Purina said a limited amount of the food contained a

contaminated wheat gluten from China. (Full story)

 

Earlier in March, Menu Foods became the first of three pet food

manufacturers to recall its products. It did so after cats began to

fall sick and die during routine company taste tests of its wet-style

pet foods, sold under nearly 100 store- and major-label brands in the

United States, Canada and Mexico. Other than in the recalled products,

melamine has not been found in other Menu Foods pet foods, the company

said.

 

Melamine is used to make plastic kitchenware, glues, countertops,

fabrics, fertilizers and flame retardants. It also is both a

contaminant and byproduct of several pesticides, including cyromazine,

according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

 

The United Nations Environment Program considers melamine of low

potential risk, as does the EPA. The agency has sent FDA the database

information it has on the chemical and will provide technical

assistance as needed, EPA spokeswoman Enesta Jones said Saturday.

 

Sundlof said the FDA had not found any studies of melamine in cats,

and the results of only a single 1945 study that tested it on dogs.

That study suggested the chemical increased urine output when fed to

dogs in large amounts.

 

" That was pretty much it, " Sundlof said.

 

Still, it is well known that identical substances can have very

different effects on cats and dogs. For example, the flea killer

permethrin is OK to use on dogs but lethal to cats, Hansen said. The

same could be the case with melamine.

 

" Cats are very sensitive to many different chemicals, whether drugs,

pesticides or plants. We certainly know they have some unique

physiological responses that make them susceptible in cases where we

wouldn't expect it in other species, " Hansen said.

 

The investigation has traced the melamine to wheat gluten that Menu

Foods, Nestle Purina PetCare Co. and Hill's Pet Nutrition bought from

an unnamed U.S. supplier. The latter two companies have recalled a

limited number of products since Friday. The wheat gluten, a protein

source, was imported from China.

 

Sundlof said the recall could expand further, depending whether other

pet food manufacturers also bought wheat gluten from the same supplier.

 

" We're still in the process of tracing it at this point, " Sundlof

said. There is no indication the wheat gluten entered the human food

supply, he added.

 

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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I actually do know that cats and EO's don't mix because their little

livers cannot take it. I don't ever use any on, near or on things

they sleep or eat in. These areas that they spray are areas they

don't sleep or hang out in (like the walls.....).

 

I think I got the solution from a natural pet care book that mentions

using mint tea lightly sprayed on the surface of the area. Again,

don't be alarmed! I know not tot use EO's on cats........

 

thanks though!

 

 

On Apr 2, 2007, at 3:52 AM, Butch Owen wrote:

 

> Hey y'all,

>

> Kathleen wrote .. NEVER use Essential Oils on Cats .. and she is

> absolutely right! But I have seen this subject come up dozens and

> dozens of times over the years .. its not just the Young Living idjits

> who discuss it .. its being discussed with vigor (and no objection) on

> another major list now.

>

<snipped>

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I don't doubt that cats do use the essential oils from plants, if you watch

a cat they will do some amazing things with plants/herbals but they are

doing it out of inner knowledge and not just cause someone told them too.

 

I have seen some cruelties in my time, have never been able to watch any

toward animals.

I believe half an aspirin is enough to kill a cat.

Leslie

-

" Nikki Sherritt " <nsherritt

 

Monday, April 02, 2007 11:35 PM

Re: Cats and Chemicals - Bad Mix

 

 

>I actually do know that cats and EO's don't mix because their little

> livers cannot take it. I don't ever use any on, near or on things

> they sleep or eat in. These areas that they spray are areas they

> don't sleep or hang out in (like the walls.....).

>

> I think I got the solution from a natural pet care book that mentions

> using mint tea lightly sprayed on the surface of the area. Again,

> don't be alarmed! I know not tot use EO's on cats........

>

> thanks though!

>

>

> On Apr 2, 2007, at 3:52 AM, Butch Owen wrote:

>

>> Hey y'all,

>>

>> Kathleen wrote .. NEVER use Essential Oils on Cats .. and she is

>> absolutely right! But I have seen this subject come up dozens and

>> dozens of times over the years .. its not just the Young Living idjits

>> who discuss it .. its being discussed with vigor (and no objection) on

>> another major list now.

>>

> <snipped>

>

>

> The information contained in these e-mails is not a substitute

> for diagnosis and treatment by a qualified, licensed professional.

>

>

> Step By Step Instructions For Making Herbal Labna Cheese! So easy, SO

> yummy!

> http://www.aromaticsage.com/cz.htm

>

>

> To adjust your group settings (i.e. go no mail) see the following link:

> /join

>

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