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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Lead poisoning risk in dogs eating lead-shot game trimmings

By Høgåsen, Helga R et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2016·Norwegian Veterinary Institute·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Lead intoxication in dogs: risk assessment of feeding dogs trimmings of lead-shot game.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A dog could experience serious health issues if fed trimmings from game shot with lead bullets. Lead ingestion can lead to symptoms like stomach problems and neurological issues, and in severe cases, it can be fatal. The study suggests that even small amounts of lead from these trimmings can pose a risk to dogs. To keep pets safe, it's advised to avoid giving them any meat from around the wound channel of lead-shot game.

People also search for: dog lead poisoning symptoms · what to do if my dog ate lead · lead shot game meat safety

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Expanding lead-based bullets, commonly used for hunting of big game, produce a scattering of lead particles in the carcass around the wound channel. Trimmings around this channel, which are sometimes fed to dogs, may contain lead particles. The aim of this study was to assess potential health effects of feeding dogs such trimmings. RESULTS: Lead ingestion most commonly causes gastrointestinal and neurological clinical signs, although renal, skeletal, haematological, cardiovascular and biochemical effects have also been reported. Experimental data indicate that a daily dose of around 1 mg lead as lead acetate/kg body weight for ten days may be considered as a Lowest Observed Effect Level in dogs. Acute toxicity documentation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicates 300 mg/kg body weight as the lowest dose of lead acetate causing death in dogs after oral ingestion. Our assessment suggests that dogs fed trimmings of lead-shot game may be affected by the amounts of lead present, and that even deadly exposure could occasionally occur. The intestinal absorption of lead from bullets was assumed to be 10-80 % of that of lead acetate, reflecting both the variability in particle size and uncertainty about the bioavailability of metallic lead in dogs. CONCLUSIONS: Despite data gaps, this study indicates that feeding dogs trimmings of lead-shot game may represent a risk of lead intoxication. More research is needed to assess the exact consequences, if lead-based bullets are still to be used. Meanwhile, we recommend that trimmings close to the wound channel should be made inaccessible to dogs, as well as to other domestic or wild animals.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27457446/