Dr. Richard Patton

Animal Nutrition Consultant

What to Feed Your Dog

3 LEG Stool 4-13-11

The three critical aspects of controlling body condition.

Rhetorically speaking. In a book about the fate of human societies, the author framed the discussion with a rhetorical question, why did European decedents come to dominate Native Americans instead of the other way around, with Geronimo scalping the king of England.  In this book, Garrad Diamond went on to answer this question with convincing insight.  The discussion here could be framed by another rhetorical question: Why, if fat is the problem, has per capita consumption of fat gone down precipitously for the past 30 years, yet obesity has increased dramatically?

An ancient tale. Often someone will begin to relate a tale with the opening statement, to make a long story short.  As we know, they frequently fall short of being short.  I can promise you the version of the story today will be shorter than the actual story, which is four billion years old.  All mammals have a set of genes and metabolic machinery that has been perfected by four billion years of evolution, and it is remarkably similar in all mammals, including our pets and ourselves.  The most obvious feature of mammalian DNA is the incredible ability it bestows on us to survive on lack.  As written in my book:

“A silent force powers each creature’s daily survival.  It is all the thousands of enzyme systems faithfully transferred forward by genes to deal with lack or insufficiency.   This can be first a lack of a basic nutrient, such as protein or copper, and secondly lack of subsequent or secondary products, such as amino acids or copper dependent enzymes.  We can endure the lack of certain nutrients for months, and in some instances, years.  Everyone has skipped a meal now and then, many fast for days on a voluntary basis, and the annals of history are full of tales of survival for weeks or even months on the most meager of ratios.  What is even more intriguing is that the emaciation of months of starvation in adult is usually repaired without a trace in a relatively short time.”

For example. One example of mammalian ability to deal with lack is seen with dietary calcium.  If the diet contains inadequate calcium, bone is dissolved to keep blood levels sufficient.  Liver stores vitamin A so efficiently that one can function perfectly with no vitamin A in the diet for months and even years.  Pregnancy can be sited as an example of this survival machinery at its most sophisticated.  In mild starvation, peripheral tissue sensitivity to insulin drops measurably.  The effect is to shunt critical blood sugar to the fetus, enhancing survival of the next generation at the temporary inconvenience of the mother.  But if the starvation becomes severe, full insulin sensitivity returns to peripheral tissues.  This at first seems incongruous, as it invariably results in abortion. But evolution knew what it was doing.  In dire circumstances, pregnancy greatly complicates survival chances, so emphasis reverts to keeping the mother alive, to be a mother later in better times.

Perfected by lack. All mammals are especially perfected to deal with lack of energy, the foremost nutrient, after water.  Regardless if talking of protein, fat or carbohydrate, there is a way to convert it to energy. Some amino acids (protein building blocks) are so quick to convert to energy that they are called glucogenic amino acids.

Ruined by excess.  However, mammals, including pets and people, have no ability to deal with constant, excess starch and sugar.  There is a logical explanation.  As four billion years of evolution adapted all creatures to their surroundings, constant high levels of starch and sugar were never encountered.  If you analyze anything that might constitute food or nourishment, anywhere in the world, it will be low in starch and sugar.   The average starch and sugar content of meat, fish, eggs, insects, plants, fruits, berries, and vegetables is about 4%.  Of course honey and berries are high in sugar.  But honey was rarely encountered, and berries are mostly water.  Eating berries to satiety actually does not overload metabolism, and even if it does, the berries don’t last but a few days in a primordial setting.

Hormone abuse. Contrast this 4% starch-sugar content of the primordial world with the average starch-sugar content of dry, expanded pet food, the type bought in the grocery store.  Most all dry pet food is 40% carbohydrate.  It should be obvious where this discussion is going; 4% versus 40%.  A single large feeding a day of a diet that is 40% carbohydrate is in drastic conflict with what we have evolved to thrive on, and constitutes literal hormone abuse.  Consider that there are eight hormones that raise blood sugar, yet only one that lowers it.  From this, we can conclude that nature saw a great deal of importance to keeping blood sugar held up to a minimum safe level, and relatively little need to lower blood sugar.  This one blood lowering hormone, insulin, was invented, so to speak, to capture the rare or occasional spike in blood sugar and save it as fat.  In this regard, insulin served a critical role in our evolution, and as we know, insulin is very proficient at this assignment.  The hormone insulin is identical, to the last molecule, in all mammals, and does the exact same thing in all creatures.

Dim light becomes sun light. As an analogy, suppose we had spent the last four billion years in a world of twilight and star light, when suddenly a brilliant sun appeared.  Our eyes would struggle to deal with this new development.  This is quite similar to what happened to mankind 10,000 years ago with the introduction of genetic modification of grain, and the advent of the agricultural revolution.  For perspective, 10,000 years in the history of evolutionary is the same as a second in 5 days.  Mammalian diets before the advent of farming were better.  Dr. Winston Price traveled the world in the 1930s evaluating the health of specific populations.  He found 11 societies that existed in two isolated groups at the same time.  Each had portions of their group adhering to their historical hunter-gatherer lifestyle, and a portion that had adopted modern western diets.  In all 11 cases, the hunter gatherers were healthier, with virtually no bone or dental problems.   Skeletons of people living in the near east prior to 10,000 years ago are three inches taller than those that came later.  The foraging of pre-agriculture humans provides an ideal model for us.  It is precisely what we are evolved to do.  Foraging has three inherent and important advantages; it keeps you moving (exercise), it invariably is automatic portion control, and it only serves foods of a chemical composition we are designed to eat (low in starch and sugar).

How did we get to this situation?  Forty percent of our pets are overweight, not coincidentally the same obesity seen in all Americans.  One of the reasons is due to a sneaky trick of Mother Nature.  As an ingredient in the diets, fat has over twice the energy of anything else.  This invites us to follow a false line of reasoning, as we assume lower fat is better.  Proof of this, any grocery store is full of manufactured foods touted as low in fat, reduced fat, less fat.   There is a coffee creamer known the world over as half and half, and it is available as fat free!  Fat is not the problem.   This has been known for over 100 years, and it has been proven unequivocally by the scientific community.  People on a low carb diet can eat all they want yet lose weight, and have a healthier blood lipid profile.

What is the solution to the obesity epidemic in our pets?  Americans spend more on pet care than the GDP of 87 countries.  The concern is there, but evidently we are not correctly applying what we know.  If weight loss is the problem we wish to address, it can be viewed as a three legged stool. The three legs are exercise, portion control and food composition. Sound familiar? Foraging should come to mind.

The solution is to feed as much raw, frozen, canned or freeze dried pet food as your budget will allow. Owners of several big dogs could rapidly go broke feeding a fresh or raw diet, but to the extent that the dry kibble can be reduced, or lowered as a percentage of the diet, nutrition will be better.  Even if no low carbohydrate diets can be provided, at least feed the needed amount of dry in frequent, small servings.

The Biologic Value Of Protein

4barrel staves from lapt 1-1-08Quality of protein gets little attention.  Do you realize that it is possible for a diet that is 17% protein to be more nutritious than one that is 28% protein?  The average pet owner thinks the higher the protein of a diet the better.  This is not true at all.  If the Dodgers had played the Padres and I told you the score of the ball game was 5, and said no more, you’d think me quite stupid.  The final score of a ball game involves two numbers, and one number is not enough information.  It is exactly the same thing regarding the protein in a diet.  To know the amount of protein in a dog food is not enough information.  There is a second number you must have to properly understand a diet’s value.  Besides the amount of protein in a diet, you must also know the quality of the protein.

The quality of a protein can vary widely.  This is because proteins are made from small molecules called amino acids.  When building a protein, nature has twenty principle amino acids to choose from to make all proteins. Some can be synthesized by mammalian metabolism, while others must be provided in the diet because animals can’t make them for themselves.   Thus, amino acids are divided into two types, essential (must be in the diet) or nonessential (can be made by mammals from other nutrients in the diet).  The quality of a protein is determined by the level of the valuable essential amino acids it contains.  If a diet is deficient in one essential amino acid, it does no good to add more protein unless it increases the deficient essential amino acid. The protein of egg is very high quality, because it contains a high level of essential amino acids.  As a matter of fact, it is probably the best protein there is.  This makes sense, as an egg must become and entire creature, with no additional input from anywhere.  Milk protein is another high quality protein, as nature intends it as the only source of protein for a growing mammal. Meat and fish are high quality proteins.  As a general rule, animal proteins are higher quality than plant proteins.  A diet that is 17% protein from egg will is better nutrition than a 28% protein diet that derives all its protein from beans.

It is possible to design an adequate diet using plant proteins, but it requires a full understanding of each plant protein’s amino acid content, and a careful blending to assure sufficient biologic value.  Said another way, a diet of all plant protein is much improved in nutrition if a little animal protein is included.

You can’t un-fry an egg.  Protein can be damaged in harvest or handling, yet not appear different in standard laboratory tests.  Protein content will be identical in an egg before and after it is fried.  And its nutrition will be essentially the same.  But meat and bone meal often undergoes such a rigorous manufacturing process that nutrition does suffer compared to the fresh raw meat and bone it came from. Heat can irreversibly alter a proteins structure, sometimes lowering its nutritive value.    

The Hopes and Hazards of Raw Pet Food

Posted by on Nov 10, 2014 in case studies | 5 comments

The Hopes and Hazards of Raw Pet Food

People charged with overseeing the safety of our food supply have a crucial role in society that is not properly appreciated. In a westernized community, food borne illness is so rare that citizens take food safety for granted. In the United States, the probability of a lethal food poisoning from any one meal is one in 73 million1. Such stellar success actually makes it difficult for authorities to get anyone to listen to them, except in moments of high drama or sudden fear. So maybe we should be more attentive when they sternly rap the desk...

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The care and feeding of a dairy nutritionist

Posted by on Jul 26, 2013 in blog | 1 comment

The care and feeding of a dairy nutritionist

In the beginning. Animal nutritionists are invariably ag school graduates. We don’t talk much about our ag school system anymore, but it was a driving force is America’s rapid rise to prominence in world commerce. In the 1860’s our government authorized the Morrill Land Grant Act, setting aside land in each state for a school for agriculture and engineering (Cornell, Penn State, Kansas State, etc.). This was soon followed by the creation of an Ag Extension Service, intended as a conduit for tech transfer. Today, the extension agent is less of...

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What to Feed Your Dog

Posted by on Apr 30, 2013 in blog | 8 comments

What to Feed Your Dog

Rhetorically speaking. In a book about the fate of human societies, the author framed the discussion with a rhetorical question, why did European decedents come to dominate Native Americans instead of the other way around, with Geronimo scalping the king of England.  In this book, Garrad Diamond went on to answer this question with convincing insight.  The discussion here could be framed by another rhetorical question: Why, if fat is the problem, has per capita consumption of fat gone down precipitously for the past 30 years, yet obesity has...

read more

The Biologic Value Of Protein

Posted by on Apr 2, 2013 in blog | 1 comment

The Biologic Value Of Protein

Quality of protein gets little attention.  Do you realize that it is possible for a diet that is 17% protein to be more nutritious than one that is 28% protein?  The average pet owner thinks the higher the protein of a diet the better.  This is not true at all.  If the Dodgers had played the Padres and I told you the score of the ball game was 5, and said no more, you’d think me quite stupid.  The final score of a ball game involves two numbers, and one number is not enough information.  It is exactly the same thing regarding the protein in a...

read more

Feed the World

Posted by on Feb 5, 2013 in blog | 0 comments

Feed the World

Our ambition to feed the world is soothed by images of monster grain barges tugging down the Mississippi.  In reality, quiet, unassuming breakthroughs in technology that can be applied on site will ultimately contribute more. In the world of modern agriculture, the chicken, hog and beef feedlot facilities all focus on one number to access their profit and competitiveness. That number is feed conversion, used as the only criteria for any and every management decision. Their complete focus is the amount of grain required to produce a pound of...

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Case Study: Adaptability Perfected by Lack

Posted by on Dec 19, 2012 in case studies | 0 comments

Case Study: Adaptability Perfected by Lack

The eloquence of lack: Billions of years of dealing with lack have made mammals good at it.  As a biological entity, mammals have an exact and precise set of enzymes, hormones, and all attendant molecular machinery that evolved by Darwinian selection. By the dawn of upright man, about four million years ago, this biochemistry was within 2% of today’s precision. One could argue that mammals are the ultimate designer product, having their gene pool skillfully crafted and engineered to interface with their environment with maximum efficiency....

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Posted by on Dec 19, 2012 in slider | 0 comments

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