dog nutrition

Dog Nutrition Online Section


 
Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on dog-nutrition
Email:
First Name:



Main Dog Nutrition Online sponsors


 

Latest Dog Nutrition Online link added

Ethiccash.com, Provider of great Adsense sitesINSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Dog Nutrition Online!



Natural Nutrition for Dogs and Cats
-By: Kymythy Schultze
-Price: $3.95 (New)
$2.99 (Used)

Dog Health & Nutrition for Dummies
-By: M. Christine Zink
-Price: $7.64 (New)
$4.00 (Used)

The Collins Guide to Dog Nutrition,
-By: Donald Reiszner Collins
-Price: $26.98 (New)
$2.20 (Used)

Better Food for Dogs: A Complete Cookbook and Nutrition Guide
-By: David Bastin, Jennifer Ashton, Grant Nixon
-Price: $10.47 (New)
$7.47 (Used)

Performance Dog Nutrition: Optimize Performance With Nutrition
-By: Jocelynn Jacobs
-Price: $16.79 (New)
$13.95 (Used)

Dr. Earl Mindell's Nutrition and Health for Dogs
-By: Earl Mindell, Elizabeth Renaghan
-Price: $9.07 (New)
$4.50 (Used)

Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats (Nutrient Requirements of Domestic Animals)
-By: Subcommittee on Dog and Cat Nutrition, Committee on Animal Nutrition, National Research Council
-Price: $236.00 (New)
$306.24 (Used)

 

Welcome to dog nutrition

 

Dog Nutrition Online Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Dog Nutrition Online. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Nutritional Diseases In Your Dog

from:

Similar to healthy dogs, sick dogs need to eat in order to supply energy and nutrients for growth, for replacement and repair; as well as to meet an ever changing need. Nutritional requirements for a sick dog usually do not differ greatly from those of a healthy dog. A sick dog's dietary needs, however, can become substantially different from those of a healthy dog.

Diseases in which a dog's diet will need to be changed are often due to true nutritional diseases, in which the diet itself is responsible for the disease. Most of the true nutritional diseases are deficiency diseases. What this means is that they are diseases caused by a diet that contains an insufficient amount of one or more needed nutrients. Most of these diseases were the result of inadequate or improperly balanced home-made food. Since cost-effective commercial food became more and more nourishing, most of these deficiency diseases gradually disappeared. Vitamin or mineral deficiencies are rarely seen as a primary disease any more. Both vitamins and minerals are inexpensive and are needed in such small amounts that today, few commercial dog foods fail to contain them in adequate amounts.

Although energy and protein continue to be a problem with some dog foods, the number of brands that still contain insufficient fat or poor quality, indigestible protein become less and less every year. When a deficiency of fat occurs, it most often appears as an insufficient amount of total energy in the diet which results in weight loss, sluggishness, dry and dull hair coat, poor physical condition and, in some extreme cases, emaciation and uncontrolled diarrhea. A deficiency of essential fatty acids may also occur, although it is unlikely. The total amount of the fats most often used in commercial foods can drop to as low as 1% of the diet and that diet will still contain sufficient fatty acids. The only exception to this might be in cases of dry foods where larger quantities of fat have turned rancid.

When a deficiency of fatty acids does occur, it appears as a loss of weight and condition, a dry, dull coat, but more specifically as eroded areas on the skin. These will most likely show on the pads of the feet, between the toes and over the bony protuberances of the body where pressure reduces the blood supply. Although these erosions may superficially resemble "hot spots," they differ from them in four major aspects such as: They do not respond to routine steroid therapy; they appear on both short-haired as well as long-haired dogs; they require an average of three months to heal; and adding fatty acids to the diet promotes their recovery, because a deficiency of fatty acids caused them.

A deficiency of protein in the diet is still sometimes seen. This causes weight loss and dull, dry hair coats. It may also produce anemia, reduce the body’s ability to cope with and recover from infections, and, if left neglected, will eventually lead to the dog’s death.


Other Dog Nutrition Online related Articles

4 Important Tips When Feeding Your Dog
Is Your Dog Malnourished
How To Feed The ôOutdoor Dogö
Can I Feed My Dog Meat Only
Energy Sources

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE

This space can be enabled / disabled from your admin panel!

 

Dog Nutrition Online News

Healthy Families In Healthy Montana - eMaxHealth.com

Since January 1999, Eat Right Montana (ERM), a statewide coalition promoting healthy eating and active lifestyles, has published a monthly packet of sound advice on nutrition and fitness. For its 11th year, the coalition plans to expand and enhance ...

Read more...


Older pets need a little extra care - Gilroy Dispatch

We recently lost our very old dog to a tragic accident. Please warn people about the extra care older pets need. We feel terrible, thinking we could have avoided the disaster we experienced. This request comes from a neighbor and friend whose dog ...

Read more...


The Agenda - Modesto Bee

SEARCHABLE DATABASE: Sold in your neighborhood Cop fires Taser, suspect's jacket ignites Gunman holds up Modesto convenience store on McHenry Avenue Baskin-Robbins found it hard to get scoop on Gary Condit Ex-Modestan Jeff Moorad buying San Diego ...

Read more...


Library staff chooses non-fiction favourites - Niagara Review

No, these are all elements of the top picks in non-fiction for 2008 by Fort Erie Public Library staff: Corina Aiello's choice is "Flight of the Dragonfly" by Melissa Hawach. Hawach tells with candour and passion of every mother's nightmare ...

Read more...


Top food trends for the new year - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Historically, nuisance species and surplus items are aggressively marketed as specialty items until these become choice. Examples are … read more Tilapias and portabellas. I’m sure a surplus of Pisco was discovered before the U.S. promotion ...

Read more...