Friday, June 5, 2015

PB & X

Written by Jason Nicholas, BVetMed

Read the label before indulging your sweet Cairn with Peanut Butter!
Is Peanut Butter Safe For Dogs? 

If you're like many people, you might want to give your dog some peanut butter as an occasional treat.  Or you might want to use peanut butter as a trick or reward to get your dog to take their medications?  In many cases this is perfectly fine (so long as it's not in excess — as too much can cause pancreatitis and/or contribute to obesity).

However, with the introduction of a unique line of peanut and other nut butters onto the market — Nuts ‘N More —  the answer to the question of whether or not it’s safe to give, even a small quantity of, peanut butter to your dogs is no longer a straightforward one.  Why?  Because of the sweetener that’s been used to replace the sugar in this line of peanut and other nut butters.  That sugar substitute is called xylitol. 

Is Xylitol Safe For Dogs? 

Xylitol is a sweetener that's gaining in popularity because of its dental benefits for people as well as its suitability as a sugar substitute for people with diabetes.  Because of its ability to help prevent cavities and tooth decay and its low glycemic index, xylitol is proving to have some good dental and other health benefits for people.  Unfortunately, while xylitol appears to be perfectly safe for people, it is extremely dangerous for dogseven in small quantities. 

Ingestion of as little as 0.1 gram (g) of xylitol per kilogram (kg) of body weight (0.1 g/kg) can cause a rapid and dangerous drop in a dog’s blood sugar (a condition called “hypoglycemia”). Hypoglycemia can show as staggering, appearing disoriented, collapse, weakness, and seizures. 

Just slightly more than that, approx. 0.5 g/kg xylitol ingestion, can lead to debilitating, and sadly often deadly, destruction of a dog’s liver cells. 

These quantities, or toxic doses, are based on the data that the animal-specific poison control hotlines have collected from reported cases.  To highlight that these are reported cases is important, because not every case of toxicity makes it to the vet, and not everyone that does go to the vet is called into the animal poison control hotlines.  So the actual toxic doses could be even lower, and dogs with certain pre-existing medical conditions (such as diabetes, hepatitis, and others) are likely to be even more sensitive to the toxic effects of xylitol.






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