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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dogs with thyroid hormone poisoning from all-meat dog food or treats

By Broome, Michael R et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2015·Advanced Veterinary Medical Imaging·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Exogenous thyrotoxicosis in dogs attributable to consumption of all-meat commercial dog food or treats containing excessive thyroid hormone: 14 cases (2008-2013).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Fourteen dogs developed symptoms of hyperthyroidism, such as increased thirst and energy, after eating certain all-meat dog foods or treats that contained too much thyroid hormone. When the owners stopped feeding these products, the dogs' thyroid hormone levels returned to normal within four weeks, and their symptoms improved. The investigation revealed that the suspect foods had significantly higher levels of thyroxine, a thyroid hormone, compared to other commercial dog foods. This case highlights the importance of checking the ingredients in dog food to avoid potential health issues.

People also search for: dog hyperthyroidism symptoms · dog food with too much thyroid hormone · how to treat dog thyroid problems

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe findings in dogs with exogenous thyrotoxicosis attributable to consumption of commercially available dog foods or treats containing high concentrations of thyroid hormone. DESIGN: Retrospective and prospective case series. ANIMALS: 14 dogs. PROCEDURES: Medical records were retrospectively searched to identify dogs with exogenous thyrotoxicosis attributable to dietary intake. One case was found, and subsequent cases were identified prospectively. Serum thyroid hormone concentrations were evaluated before and after feeding meat-based products suspected to contain excessive thyroid hormone was discontinued. Scintigraphy was performed to evaluate thyroid tissue in 13 of 14 dogs before and 1 of 13 dogs after discontinuation of suspect foods or treats. Seven samples of 5 commercially available products fed to 6 affected dogs were analyzed for thyroxine concentration; results were subjectively compared with findings for 10 other commercial foods and 6 beef muscle or liver samples. RESULTS: Total serum thyroxine concentrations were high (median, 8.8 μg/dL; range, 4.65 to 17.4 μg/dL) in all dogs at initial evaluation; scintigraphy revealed subjectively decreased thyroid gland radionuclide in 13 of 13 dogs examined. At ≥ 4 weeks after feeding of suspect food or treats was discontinued, total thyroxine concentrations were within the reference range for all dogs and signs associated with thyrotoxicosis, if present, had resolved. Analysis of tested food or treat samples revealed a median thyroxine concentration for suspect products of 1.52 μg of thyroxine/g, whereas that of unrelated commercial foods was 0.38 μg of thyroxine/g. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results indicated that thyrotoxicosis can occur secondary to consumption of meat-based products presumably contaminated by thyroid tissue, and can be reversed by identification and elimination of suspect products from the diet.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25517332/