Home-Prepared Dog and Cat Diets, Second Edition [Paperback]
Author: Patricia Schenck | Language: English | ISBN: 0813801192 | Format: PDF, EPUB
Download Home-Prepared Dog and Cat Diets, Second Edition [Paperback] from mediafire, rapishare, and mirror link
Diets are now listed together in a cookbook style for ease of use, and recipes are adjustable for any size dog or cat, allowing exact nutritional values to be calculated. Nutrient content for protein, fat, carbohydrate, and fiber have been provided for every diet, along with the nutrient density. A companion website features downloadable spreadsheets with complete nutritional breakdowns for each recipe.
Useful for both veterinarians and pet owners alike, Home-Prepared Dog and Cat Diets, Second Edition is a unique handbook written by an expert in the field providing an introduction to the nutritional management of dogs and cats with easy-to-use recipes for home-prepared diets.
Clarification: Calcium Carbonate
We’ve had some questions from readers regarding the use of the term “calcium carbonate,” which is listed as an ingredient in a number of the diets found in this book, and therefore wanted to clarify what is meant by this ingredient. Baking soda comes in two forms: sodium bicarbonate and calcium carbonate. The sodium bicarbonate version is widely available as “baking soda” and is commonly used in baking, but none of the recipes in this book use it as an ingredient. The calcium carbonate version of baking soda is sometimes sold as “baking soda substitute” and sometimes referred to as simply “baking soda.”
To avoid confusing sodium bicarbonate and calcium carbonate, any time the calcium carbonate type of baking soda has been used in a diet in this book, the ingredient includes the specific term “calcium carbonate.” There are several manufacturers of calcium carbonate baking soda; for example, Amazon carries the Ener-G Foods product baking soda substitute. Calcium carbonate can also be sold for garden use, which is non-food-grade, so to avoid the use of the garden product in foods, the term “baking soda” was used in this book instead to indicate that readers should be sure to select a food-appropriate ingredient.
- Paperback: 560 pages
- Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell; 2 edition (April 20, 2010)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0813801192
- ISBN-13: 978-0813801193
- Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 1.2 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #231,025 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #59 in Books > Textbooks > Medicine & Health Sciences > Veterinary Medicine > Small Animal
- #90 in Books > Medical Books > Veterinary Medicine > Small Animal Medicine
Acknowledgments ix
Section I. Nutrition and Dietary Management 3
Chapter 1. Homemade Diets 5
Chapter 2. Food Safety 15
Chapter 3. Nutrients 23
Chapter 4. Canine and Feline Energy Requirements 51
Chapter 5. Feeding the Healthy Adult Dog or Cat 85
Chapter 6. Feeding the Puppy or Kitten 95
Chapter 7. Feeding the Pregnant or Lactating Dog or Cat 103
Chapter 8. Feeding the Senior Pet 113
Chapter 9. Feeding the Performance Dog 119
Chapter 10. Food Intolerance and Allergy 129
Chapter 11. Obesity 135
Chapter 12. Skeletal and Joint Diseases 143
Chapter 13. Diet and Gastrointestinal Disease 151
Chapter 14. Diet and Chronic Renal Disease 181
Chapter 15. Diet and Urinary Tract Stones 195
Chapter 16. Diet and Skin Disease 207
Chapter 17. Diet and Endocrine Disease 215
Chapter 18. Diet and Heart Disease 229
Chapter 19. Diet and Pancreatic Disease 237
Chapter 20. Diet and Hepatic Disease 243
Chapter 21. Diet and Cancer 255
Section II. Home-Prepared Diets 265
Tools Needed 265
Choosing a Diet 265
Preparing Diets 267
Dog Diet Recipes 269
Dog Diets 277
Cat Diet Recipes 433
Cat Diets 438
Appendix 1: Dog Diets by Protein Source 507
Appendix 2: Cat Diets by Protein Source 513
Index 517
See the supporting companion Web site for this book: www.wiley.com/go/schenck
A DANGEROUS error appears, several times, in "Home Prepared Dog & Cat Diets (Second Edition)." The error is alarming enough to cast doubt on the book's entire contents and credibility. I have a copy of the book in front of me as I'm writing this review, so I'm not mistaken.
In Chapter One, on page 8, under the subtitle, "Assessing a Homemade Diet Recipe," author Patricia Schenck discusses what a homemade diet recipe should include. After mentioning carbohydrates, proteins, fat, calcium and calcium/phosphorus supplements; Schenck claims, "Calcium carbonate (baking soda) or bone meal (source of calcium and phosphorus) should also be present."
Calcium carbonate IS NOT baking soda. Yet Schenck claims it is, on page 8 and throughout the book.
Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is often used as a dietary calcium supplement.
Baking soda is sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3). Baking soda IS NOT useful as a calcium supplement. It's often used as a leavening agent in baking.
Calcium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate are chemically different and will affect a dog's body differently when ingested.
Many of the recipes for dog and cat diets in "Home-Prepared Dog & Cat Diets (Second Edition)" use baking soda as an ingredient (For example, dog diet recipes on pages 416, 417, 424, and 425; and cat diets on pages 473, 498, 499 and 504). Each time "baking soda" appears in the ingredient list it's defined in parentheses as, "calcium carbonate." Schenck did not just make a one-time flub in Chapter One. The author mistakenly defines baking soda as calcium carbonate throughout the book.
Schenck includes baking soda in dog and cat diet recipes specifically formulated for animals with renal disease, each time indicating the baking soda is, "calcium carbonate.
edit: Note about this book mislabeling baking soda as calcium: Caution should be noted in the first part of the book (1-267) there are 2 instances of baking soda written to be the same as calcium carbonate; both in chapter one: page 8 (one occurrence) & page 12 (one occurrence), and in the recipe/diets portion (269-505) there were 21 instances found in the following... dog recipe section: 416-420 & 422-424 (recipes for dogs with renal disease), 425 (recipe for dogs with struvite urinary stones) & cat recipe section: 457-459 (recipes for senior cats), 473 (recipe for cats with cancer), 497-501 (recipes for cats with renal disease), 502-504 (recipes for cats with oxalate urinary stones)...these all label "Baking Soda" (which is also known as sodium bicarbonate, sodium hydrogen carbonate or NaHCO3) mislabeled as "Calcium Carbonate" (which is also known as CaCO3, and often used medicinally as an antacid/calcium source supplement). Do not give your pet Baking Soda as a Calcium supplement. There may be other reasons to use baking soda in a recipe, but it is not addressed in this book, and baking soda is wrongfully identified as calcium carbonate.
*I originally gave 4 stars, before seeing for myself this baking soda error...an error too easily overlooked, since it's listed as "calcium carbonate (baking soda)" and "baking soda (calcium carbonate)" & the eye/mind can correct (as one or the other) while reading, without realizing...not good if someone reads as "baking soda".
"HOME-PREPARED Dog & Cat DIETS 2nd Ed." (Schenck) is one of the most informative books on this subject I have found; that is available to the non-professional (but has the baking soda mistake...
No comments:
Post a Comment