Please Don’t Panic About the Grain-Free Thing

Are grain-free dog foods good or bad for your dog?

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Learn more about DCM in the September 2018 issue:DCM in Dogs: Taurine’s Role in the Canine Diet

Note: read our update on the FDA’s latest report from July 2019 here.

I’ve been getting calls, emails, social media messages, and countless forwarded articles from other websites and publications about the grain-free dog food warning – perhaps even from you! And the first thing I want to tell you is to take a breath!

The FDA issued a warning (linked here) that it is investigating a possible link between diet and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in dogs.

The grain-free dog food warning spread like wildfire through social media channels, but unfortunately, it also rapidly got dumbed down to a ridiculous level; it quickly evolved into something like “grain-free foods cause canine heart disease,” or worse yet, “boutique foods might kill your dog. The FDA characterizes the issue as a “potential association” between diets with very specific attributes (and certainly not ALL grain-free diets) and canine DCM – not a cause.

Please note that the FDA’s headline did not say anything about “grain-free diets” causing heart problems – though almost all the blog posts and articles in other publications have been saying exactly that. If you read the FDA’s statement, you will see that they said there may be a link between some grain-free diets and canine DCM, but there are also many other things going on that may be responsible for an observed rise in cases of canine DCM.

grain free dog food concerns

Linda Case, long-time animal nutrition expert and author of Dog Food Logic, has written an in-depth article for WDJ’s September issue that goes into lots of detail about what is known about the dietary causes of DCM, including several issues regarding taurine and the amino acids (cysteine and methionine) that dogs use to produce taurine. Click here to read her article about the connections between diet and DCM in dogs. Hint: It’s not as simple as the possibility that the diets are lacking the amino acid precursors to taurine.

[Whole Dog Journal has covered taurine deficiency in the past, regarding vegetarian diets for dogs, low-fat dog foods, and canine congestive heart failure.]

But for now, hopefully to put your mind at ease, I’m going to briefly discuss some of the pertinent facts that make the story a little more complicated than the “grain-free diets cause heart disease” headlines.

What We Know About Dilated Cardiomyopathy in Dogs

The FDA received a report from Cardiac Care for Pets, a practice that employs 19 veterinary cardiologists in Maryland, Kentucky, Virginia, and Texas, that they had seen a spike in canine DCM cases – and not just in the breeds that have a genetic predisposition to developing DCM, but also in breeds that are not known for an inherited propensity for the condition. Their report also included the fact that all of the cases had something in common: all the dogs had been eating diets heavy in peas, lentils, chickpeas, and potatoes.

Other veterinary cardiologists were noticing the same thing. The FDA received reports recently of about two dozen additional cases, including three dogs that died of the condition. After reviewing the medical records of these dogs, the FDA felt it was prudent to issue a measured warning, in part to alert dog owners and veterinarians to be aware of signs of the condition in potentially affected dogs (which, it is hoped, will elicit more data). Its warning, specifically, stated that vets and dog owners should be alert for signs of DCM in dogs eating foods “containing peas, lentils, other legume seeds, or potatoes as main ingredients.”

That’s our emphasis, but it is repeated in the FDA’s warning:

“Diets in cases reported to the FDA frequently list potatoes or multiple legumes [our emphasis again] such as peas, lentils, other ‘pulses’ (seeds of legumes), and their protein, starch, and fiber derivatives early in the ingredient list, indicating that they are main ingredients.” [Again, our emphasis.]

What is a “main ingredient”? There isn’t a legal definition, but in our book, it’s anything in about the first five ingredients on the list. As you probably know, food ingredients are listed on labels (by law) in order of their weight in the formula before the food is cooked. The first four to six ingredients generally represent the majority of what is in the food.

That said, the FDA’s warning also addressed “multiple legumes.” Our readers should be alert to the fact that food manufacturers sometimes list smaller amounts of several similar ingredients, or several constituent parts or “fractions” of the same ingredient. This not only visually minimizes the seeming presence of those ingredients in the food, but also makes the total of the ingredients ahead of these fractions seem to be present in more significant amounts than they actually are.

For example, it would appear that a food that lists its ingredients as “Chicken, peas, pea protein, pea fiber…” contains more chicken than any other single ingredient. But if you added up the total amount of pea-based ingredients, they would surely outweigh the chicken.  This is what the FDA is getting to with its warning about “multiple legumes” – foods in which the legumes, taken together, might outweigh the animal protein sources.

If You Feel Your Dog’s Food is Connected to DCM:

Based on the FDA’s report, here are our first take-away points:

  • No matter what your dog eats, if she has any signs of DCM – including decreased energy, cough, difficulty breathing, and episodes of collapse – you should make an appointment to see your veterinarian ASAP, preferably one who can refer you to a veterinary cardiologist.
  • If you feed your dog a food that contains any potatoes, peas, lentils, or other seeds of legumes (such as chickpeas/garbanzo beans, soybeans, other types of beans, and alfalfa seeds), look at the ingredients list. If the food contains one or more of these ingredients high up on the ingredients list, has several of these ingredients, and/or is a limited-ingredient diet – typically, one containing only one animal protein source and one or two carbohydrate sources – the possibility is good that the food is one of the type that is being looked at as possibly causing a higher incidence of DCM.
  • In contrast, foods that are not limited-ingredient foods and contain just one of those ingredients, or that have one or two of these ingredients fairly low on the ingredients list (say, as the fifth or sixth or lower-level ingredient/s on the list), are not the kind of diet that has been connected with DCM.
  • If you feed your dog a diet that meets the description of the foods that have been described by the FDA as potentially problematic (foods that have potatoes, peas, lentils, or other seeds of legumes as main ingredients), consider these points:

– Are you feeding your dog this food because it’s the only diet you have been able to find that does not trigger other health problems in that dog? If so, continue feeding the diet, but carefully monitor your dog for any hint of signs of DCM. Also, discuss possible alternative diets and/or a blood test for taurine levels, with your veterinarian.
– Are you feeding your dog this food because you like the company, or it was recommended to you, or for no particular reason? Then consider switching to a diet that either contains fewer or none of these ingredients, and read on for more recommendations.

Not All Grain-Free Foods Are Under Suspicion

Within a matter of days of the FDA’s press release, we watched in dismay as the issue was reduced to, in the majority of cases, “grain-free diets cause heart canine heart disease. ”

Please understand that there are grain-free diets that do not contain potatoes, peas, lentils, or other seeds of legumes as main ingredients. For example, there are many raw diets, fresh-cooked/frozen diets, canned diets, and even some dry/kibble diets that are grain-free that do not contain potatoes, peas, lentils or other seeds of legumes.  Not all grain-free diets have been implicated as concerning as regards canine DCM.

But, as we have been saying for some time (most recently here), grain-free diets have gotten inordinately popular for no particular reason. Many dog owners buy these products because they have heard some vague argument that “grains are bad for dogs” – an ill-informed blanket generalization we have fought against for ages. There is no particular advantage – and actually, several disadvantages – to feeding a grain-free diet (of any kind) to a dog who doesn’t have any problems with eating and digesting grain.

Points to Consider About Grain-Free Dog Food

  • Grain-free diets are often far higher in fat and calories than many dogs require. In dogs who gain weight easily, there is a very real danger of having to reduce the amount of food that one feeds the dog so much (in order to keep him from gaining too much weight), that he is at risk to become malnourished. In other words, if you cut his portion of a super-high-calorie diet to a reasonable number of calories, he may not get enough of the vitamins and minerals he needs.
  • Commercial diets that contain grains have been around longer and have been more thoroughly tested (in clinical settings and through common use) for far longer than diets that use increasingly novel non-grain sources of carbohydrates.
  • As Linda Case explains further in her article in the September 2018 issue, certain types of diets (specifically, diets that contain lamb meal and rice diets, soybean-based diets, diets high in rice bran or beet pulp, and high-fiber diets heavy in soybeans), have been previously identified as possible dietary causes of low taurine levels in dogs – something that is known to contribute to the development of DCM.

Our advice has long been to feed a grain-free diet only to dogs who have a problem with digesting multiple grains. (And, if you know which grain is giving your dog problems, you could also find a food that contains different grains, instead.)

However, we would not want to be on the record as saying “all grain-free foods are bad.” That’s another ridiculous overstatement. There are some terrific grain-free foods on the market – and some dogs do far better on these products than any grain-containing foods they have been fed. Owners have to look for products that work well for their individual dogs – and be willing to change as their dogs’ needs change.

Overreaching by Those With an Axe to Grind

It was bad enough to see the FDA’s warning reduced by a combination of poor reporting, poor reader comprehension, and social media hysteria to “grain-free foods cause canine heart disease.” But some media outlets also included statements from an animal nutrition expert whose opinions on diets are consistent with those of the pet food industry corporate giants; she has repeatedly been quoted as implicating “boutique” pet foods in the current rash of reported cases of DCM. What’s a boutique food? She doesn’t define this, but we suspect it’s anything made by any company whose annual sales are less than umpteen million…

This same expert has also implicated foods that contain “exotic ingredients,” which she provided a partial list for in one article: “kangaroo, lentils, duck, pea, fava bean, buffalo, tapioca, salmon, lamb, barley, bison, venison, and chickpeas.” Hmm.

All in all, we have lost track of the number of times she has been quoted as saying that pet owners should avoid “boutique, grain-free, or exotic ingredient diets” – and, unfortunately, this over-broad and ill-defined description is finding its way into more and more discussions of this concerning issue.

We have one more bone to pick with this expert; one of her articles on this topic suggests that dog owners do themselves a favor and “stop reading the ingredient list!” This makes us absolutely see red, as it harkens back to the “bad old days” of pet food. Twenty years ago, the making of pet food was a black box. “You guys, we are the experts here, trust us!” was the message of Big Pet Food. Consumers could no more find out where a food was made or where its ingredients were sourced than find out where the company CEOs ate breakfast. A suggestion that consumers shouldn’t worry their pretty little heads about what is actually in the food they buy for their dogs, and which is listed on the label by law for the protection of consumers and their dogs, is downright insulting.

We’d like to suggest that concerned owners keep reading labels and educating themselves about canine nutrition, and, for now, limit themselves to the facts that are currently known by the FDA about this spate of canine DCM cases (here is that link again!). Also, Linda Case’s excellent article in the September issue of WDJ will also help shed much-needed light on this complex and concerning issue.

164 COMMENTS

  1. I have fed Purina to my dogs and cats for years. I usually feed Pro Plan to my dogs and indoor dry and wet food to my cat. Most of my dogs have lived past 12 with no health issues. I know everyone says Purina is trash but no one says why.

  2. I subscribed to WDJ for a long time – I believe over 20 years. But this year I let my subscription expire. This article supports my reason for not renewing my subscription. The author of this article is not an expert on canine nutrition, yet gives advice on feeding your dog. This is wrong. You should consult with a veterinary nutritionist and possibly a cardiologist for an article like this. I have fed my dogs based on information from WDJ for over 20 years. I always felt good about what I fed. Then, one of my dogs developed DCM and the cardiologist told me to take him off grain-free. I later learned that the food he was eating was manufactured by a company that did not employ experts to formulate the food, nor make any effort to determine if the recipe was digestible, etc. I was shocked. In all my years of reading WDJ, I never saw an article on dog food that discussed what expertise a company has in formulating dog food and what sort of analysis they do to determine digestibility,etc. – yet this is a very important consideration when choosing a dog food. Suggest consulting with experts when discussing canine health and nutrition.

  3. I’m crushed that my attempts to care for my baby could have harmed her. She struggles with beef allergies and has had difficulty with chicken meal, so I tended to go limited ingredient or single protein diet. Almost all of those are grain free.

    We tried a hydrolyzed protein diet recently at the suggestion of a second opinion vet. We tried science diet years ago and it was odor and colorless and she wouldn’t eat it. This vet gave royal canin and she loved it. $50 a bag, 8 lbs, so given we still had to use allergy meds I went back to regular food. Acana. Happens to be grain free, but I buy because it was lamb.

    I balked at corn being in that hydrolyzed diet and the vet said royal canin is beyond reputable and does extensive studies. She believed in the food, and wasn’t trying to sell me anything. So, I’m going with royal canin Chihuahua. With corn, and chicken meal. And if she doesn’t scratch her face off we will stay with that. If she does, Chewy will give me something else. I thought about going back to Nutro Ultra, small breed. But, I did see they are on the list so I’m glad I ordered the RC last night.

    The visit to the vet was for back pain and she felt she had an enlarged heart. The radiologist said “unremarkable.” So she didn’t schedule a follow up. Now I’m scared. They are small and completely dependent on us, and they deserve the very best. If only we knew what that was…..

    • For many reasons I avoid all corn and soy in the food I feed. I understand why hydrolyzed proteins are recommended, due to allergies.
      I haven’t feed beef in decades because of the games the FDA allows manufactures/sources to play with antibiotics and growth hormones in human beef supply. It also tends to have a higher fat content. I also read recently concern over limited ingredient foods, which originally sounded good. I believe it was in a WDJ article, but not positive.
      There was also a reference to avoiding the 3 L’s, which I think we’re lentils, legumes and definitely Lamb.
      I fed Science until 2003, and wasn’t happy with it, Switched to Wellness Complete Health and keep adding to it with healthy food I eat. Within less than a month, my girls coats more than doubled and we’re shinier and healthier.
      It’s difficult to know what to do. I trust WDJ. Not Fb groups.

  4. Does anyone have a recommendation for a good GF Dehydrated food? Currently feeding my 10 mo. Aust. Labradoodle Spot Farms. The 2nd ingredient is ‘Dried Potatoes’ and the 10th is ‘Sweet Potatoes’. No peas or lentils. Should I be alarmed that the 2nd ingredient is dried potatoes?

  5. I have more research to do but at first I strongly suspected “grain free” targeting to be another eat more gmo camp. Nope, the new case histories are very real, detailed, can look up on FDA site.
    More researching and not yet done: many more products in our food chain besides grain are now “dessicated” with different forms of Roundup. So I am thinking while we are trying to limit the amount of glyphosate given to our dogs, (since a lot will die of cancer), we are not truly aware of how many pulses and bean products are also being doused with Roundup just prior to harvest (i.e. dessicated). Possibly all dried pulses? (that aren’t organic)
    Potatoes: if not organic, also sprayed at harvest?
    And do the pulses somehow chelate out the taurine?
    Or read Stephanie Stennif of MIT on glyphosate: It chelates out vital nutrients: minerals etc.
    That’s really the only reason I was looking for “grain free”; looking to feed less Roundup and hoping to avoid encouraging cancer since my dog is now 12 and going strong but aging.

    • Saponins, trypsin inhibitors, phytates and lectins. Good nutrition needs to look at how the ingredients are processed. Soy for dairy animals, that is not first roasted, is a known nutritional inhibitor.

      Peas and potatoes, added to dog kibble, are high in lectin. Lectins are a known anti-nutritional factor. If, however, they are first processed in a way that neutralizes the lectin, then important amino acids like taurine, will not be bound, inhibited from absorption.

      Humans always fermented potatoes, whether they were waxy (Yukon Gold) or starchy varieties. I teach anaerobic fermentation for human nutrition, and how to reduce anti-nutrients. Many of my clients use the sane method to create pet food, although I am very pro-raw.

      What if you supplement taurine? The gut still cannot neutralize all the potential anti-nutrient chemicals in grains, legumes and tubers. Instead, the nutrients will be chelated, rather than absorbed. Again, the anti-nutritional factor goes beyond lectin. They are saponins, trypsin inhibitors, phytates and lectins.

      The issue may not be the pea, the garbanzo, the potato, but instead, their natural chemicals which must be neutralized before consumption.

      Also…..sorry to go on so long, but this is crucial….heat treatment of some high-carb foods which contain specific amino acids, causes a chemical reaction producing acrylamide, a known neuro-toxin and cancer-causing compound, etc., etc.

      Look beyond the raw ingredients. Dairy and beef nutrition science has learned that raw grains, legumes must be pre-treated. Of course, that adds greatly to the cost. So instead, they use chemical additives which earn them a patent, if they develop it.

      There are some additives used in kibbles, too halt the negative reactions. These can backfire, creating health issues or death. It’s a huge topic and I am trying to articulate by finger-typing…..please forgive typos, or odd words my swype feels like throwing in….

  6. Could not find any specific information; whether the legumes interfered with the absorption of taurine, or the synergistic reaction of the processing of the legume ingredient kibble destroyed the taurine. Speculation is just that. However, my understanding was the latter, that somewhere during the processing of these foods the taurine was lost. My dog did a great recovery with some sardines, a dog vitamin supplement that had taurine in it, and a switch to lamb and rice dog food that has taurine as a listed ingredient. My understanding is that with the lamb and rice the taurine is added after the processing. Yes, maybe it does have something to do with “bad” synergy between legumes and taurine – but who the heck knows for sure – either “they” don’t yet know, or don’t want to tell. To be safe, In My Opinion (I’m not a scientist or vet, pet food maker, etc.), only serve your dog food that has taurine on the ingredient list, supplement with some taurine or taurine rich food, or raw food (for you raw foodies – if you know it has taurine…).

  7. Fortunately I heard about DCM a few years ago. My English Labrador suddenly became sluggish on our daily hikes, and I was wondering why. I took her in for blood tests and yes, she was taurine deficient. I immediately changed her diet from a Grain-free Salmon & Potato type to a Grain-Free Lamb & Rice diet, because taurine is added into the kibble mix AFTER the processing. With some doggie vitamin supplements with taurine, and lots of sardines as treats, she bounced back to her old self within a few months. Yes, taurine is also high in cat food. It is sad that so many pets suffered when their owners thought they were doing a recommended good thing – the new grain-free foods. FYI – I found that all of my Labradors were in overall better health without a chicken based diet – not sure why.