โFeb-03-2017 09:21 PM
โMar-03-2017 08:11 AM
โMar-02-2017 03:27 AM
โFeb-15-2017 07:32 AM
โFeb-15-2017 06:36 AM
โFeb-09-2017 04:59 AM
BCSnob wrote:
I did a little investigating on pentobarbital
The ld50 for dogs is 80mg/kg
The recommended euthanasia dose for cows is 85mg/kg
If a cow was euthanasia with pentobarbital and the drug was evenly distributed throughout the cows body (which is what my reading suggests occurs) the beef would be contaminated at 85mg/kg.
In order for a dog to get a leathal dose of pentobarbital from contaminated beef it would need to eat consume its body weight in the contaminated beef.
It just does not add up that the contamination in the canned food came from a euthanasized cow being used for the beef chunks.
โFeb-09-2017 04:22 AM
โFeb-07-2017 05:09 AM
โFeb-07-2017 04:31 AM
โFeb-07-2017 02:24 AM
โFeb-06-2017 04:20 PM
โFeb-06-2017 04:10 PM
โFeb-06-2017 04:07 PM
BCSnob wrote:
A couple of websites are claiming that an FDA spokesperson confirmed to eFoodAlert that FDA testing performed at Vet-LIRN labs detected pentobarbital in the deceased dog's stomach contents, the open can of food from the owner, unopened cans of food collected from the owner, and cans from the retailer where the owner purchased the food. I would prefer to see this information directly from the FDA not as hearsay.
If correct, the manufacturer more likely has an issue within their processing plant not at the USDA inspected processor. In order for there to be a lethal dose of pentobarbital for a dog in the beef chunks the cow would have had to be dead when it was brought past the USDA inspector at the processing plant who is onsite checking the status of the animals prior to slaughter.
โFeb-06-2017 12:43 PM
โFeb-05-2017 05:23 AM
darsben1 wrote:
Except the government recall website states all beef the company uses is FDA approved. SO if true it was in the human supply chain and went unnoticed or it is something else.
Also notice it was a VOLUNTARY recall not an ordered recall