How To Help Your Dog With Food Allergies

February 2nd, 2010 | by admin |

Because every dog is unique, it’s sometimes very difficult to determine what causes food-related allergies and what doesn’t. Common pet food culprits include wheat, corn and soy. Various proteins also create their share of problems in certain dogs. I was shocked to learn that some dogs are allergic to chicken, while I know from first-hand experience that my Jack Russell Terrier Lucy used to be allergic to beef. Here’s an approach worth trying if your dog is exessively itching and scratching.

If excessive itching and scratching are the problems, that may simply be the lack of Omega 3,6 and 9 fatty acids in your dog’s diet that’s making their skin and coat dry. Winter indoor heating may also be exacerbating the condition. Adding simple food additives to your dog’s food may be the key without switching diets. Supplements like Mrs. Allen’s Shed Stop, Flaxseed Oil, Pet Botanics Skin & Coat supplement, Royal Coat from Ark Naturals or Health & Shine from Dr. Harvey’s are all viable solutions for supplementing your dog’s diet with the needed Omegas that dog’s and cats need to lubricate their skin and coats.

Excessive and compulsive foot licking, or chewing and biting other parts of the body, are generally a sign that allergies are to blame.

Assuming it’s food allergies and not environmental, many vets and pet nutritionists recommend substituting a protein source that your dog doesn’t normally eat. Lamb is often used for this purpose, because it’s not as common a dog food ingredient. Lamb, in and of itself, is not “non-allergic”, but it’s less common than chicken and beef so it enables you to introduce something new into your dog’s diet, in effect, starting with a clean slate.

Some vets sell expensive “allergy free formulas” but there are ways to figure this out on your own and a lot less expensively. Increasingly, pet owners who have dogs with food allergies are feeding various pet food mixes like Dr. Harvey’s, Solid Gold Holistique Blendz or The Honest Kitchen’s FORCE formula, which is grain free, or Sojourner Farms’ new grain free Europa formula.

Mixes, while a bit more work, allow you to more closely control what your dog is eating by beginning with a good “base” that contains the proper nutrients and vitamins especially formulated for dogs. Then, you can experiment by introducing your own protein sources (whether raw or cooked) and seeing how your dog reacts over the next few days.

Because The Honest Kitchen FORCE Formula is grain free but chicken-based, I would stick to the Dr. Harveys or the Europa which have no protein or grain sources. The Solid Gold Holistique Blendz formula is also a good choice but that already contains fish protein. Because fish-based protein is an unlikely protein source for your dog to begin with, it’s unlikely that it will cause allergy problems now — same theory with the lamb or any other uncommon protein like venison or buffalo or rabbit. If later you find that chicken is ok, I would give The Honest Kitchen FORCE Formula a second look, too.

Beginning with one of these neutral, grain-free formulas, try adding chicken for a week. If that goes well, than your dog is probably ok with chicken. Then try beef. Then lamb. Try, fish, too. If that goes well, than it was probably one or more of the grains.

Now a picture is starting to form. Your dog’s allergies have improved with a grain free diet that includes certain proteins.

As we mentioned before, the point of introducing a different protein source to test your dog’s tolerance is because if your dog is suffering some type of food-related reaction, common sense tells you it’s something she’s already eating. Can’t be having reactions to something she never had yet, right?

Please note that when switching a dog’s food, do it gradually over 5 to 6 days. Begin a 4 to 1 ration, old to new food, than 3 to 2 on day 2, than half and half on day 3, than 2 to 3 on day 4 and 1 to 4 on day 5. Day six, you’re switched over completely. Than the real allergy testing can begin in earnest by sticking with the new protein source for a week and than introducing a new one every week taking note of your dog’s reaction or, hopefully, lack of one.

As you’ve probably figured out by now, there’s no one answer or “Silver Bullet” that will miraculously solve all your dog’s allergy problems overnight. You have to break the cycle by moving your dog to a neutral, grain-free food and begin experimenting with different proteins. Once you find a protein or combination of proteins that work, try slowly introducing grain formulas back into the diet to see if there’s a reaction or not. Using this gradual, common sense method combined with a good quality dog food should have your dog on the road to a happy, itch-free life.

Gene Sower
http://www.articlesbase.com/pets-articles/how-to-help-your-dog-with-food-allergies-18332.html

  1. 6 Responses to “How To Help Your Dog With Food Allergies”

  2. By littlenicolekhhs2004 on Feb 2, 2010 | Reply

    Breastfeeding mothers: What is your experience with dairy or food allergies gong through your milk to baby?
    My baby is coming up on 5 months. My baby is/ has been colicky, spits up frequently, sometimes 2-3 times after every feeding, violent explosive poops, green poop, slimy poop. She used to poop every other day, now she poops 5-6 times a day. I think it is diarrhea. How did you figure out it was a food allergy and what did you do about it?

  3. By dueinoctwith#3 on Feb 2, 2010 | Reply

    My boys had a sensitivity to things that i would eat that would make their reflux worse and cause diarrhea, the dr said that is a common problem and that you should elimate things from your diet while nursing to see how they react. Dairy is the most common thing that affects the breastmilk.
    References :

  4. By sunnie_CA on Feb 2, 2010 | Reply

    I would definitely take her to the pediatrician. You don’t want her to get dehydrated from this issue.
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  5. By neato1975 on Feb 2, 2010 | Reply

    The only way to determin if it is a food allergy is to cut out all possible offending foods for several days and then slowly add them back in and track what time you ate things and when your baby exhibits symptoms. Is your baby nursing long enough to get hindmilk? Mine gets the green, slimey poop when he nurses for short periods of time and gets too much foremilk.
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  6. By Alyssa's mommy on Feb 2, 2010 | Reply

    My baby has problems when I eat dairy. I went to a GI specialist and confirmed it. Now I just don’t eat dairy.
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  7. By mandyhornbeck1981 on Feb 2, 2010 | Reply

    First, you can do an elimination diet to narrow down what foods might be causing this. Once you have some suspects, your baby can have a skin prick test by an allergist or her pediatrician or family doctor can order a RAST test (blood test) and test for those specific foods.

    However, her symptoms sound like it could be lactose intolerance. If she’s recently taken a course of antibiotics or had a stomach bug, either of those things could have wiped out the population of good bacteria in her gut and caused either LI or any number of other digestion problems.
    References :
    Mom of a lactose intolerant toddler who has outgrown (YAY!) his food allergies.

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