Sunday, 29 May 2011

Pancreatitis In Dogs And Dog Food

Types Of Dog Food Which Help Pancreatitis In Dogs



Pancreatitis in dogs is directly effected by the food which your dog eats. The food which he/she eats can either be a feast or a boon to them. A good dog food will be loaded with natural ingredients found in the wild were your dog originally comes from. So they are a match when it comes to nature. The same thing goes for the anti-oxidants which are found in blueberries, cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, carrots, and other types of fruits and vegetables. Anti-oxidents are another thing which can be found in a good dog food. A 3rd component is the pro-biotic mixture of this food. You can look at the ingredient list and if the strains of good flora are familiar to that of what you would find in a health food store containing pro-biotics which you would take, then you know this has pro-biotics in it and ones which you recognize as well meaning they are probably a good brand meaning the dog food manufacture cares about what they feed your pet.


Pancreatitis In Dogs And The Pancreas



The pancreas has a major duct which runs the length of this organ and provides both insulin and enzymes to the pulverized contents of nourishment in your dogs stomach. the length of this duct contributes to pancreatitis in dogs as it runs the length of the organ and a backup in it will cause backup secretions in the entire organ.  If your dogs digestive system, the parasympathetic nervous system, does not understand what signal to give the pancreatic organ in terms of how much insulin and enzymes to put out for a commercial dog food containing roadkill the pancreas might secrete extra fluid which is not needed by the stomach. This might cause the fluid to remain in the pancreas and be auto-digested by this organ. When this happens the organ swells and this generates the name pancreatitis in dogs in relation to naming the disease.



pancreatitis in dogs


Acute And Cronic Pancreatitis In Dogs



Well, Google talks a lot about the acute and cronic forms of this disease. I have read various papers from universities on this subject and it seems some suggest that once this disease starts then it can come back again. So it is not necessarily a one shot deal. Labrador retreivers are more prone to this being in the cronic form. But again it comes down to dog food. If you have a poor dog food this might contribute to dog pancreatitis. Simply because a poor dog food is harder to digest for a variety of reasons including the theory mentioned about the parasympathetic nervous system contributing to pancreatitis in dogs. Believe me not something fido wants.


Pancreatitis in dogs is starting to get better diagnosis.

Friday, 27 May 2011

Pancreatitis In Dogs, Facts And Knowledge

Pancreatitis In Dogs; What Does A Dogs Pancreas Do?

The canine pancreas is responsible for 2 functions and is the chief architect for pancreatitis in dogs. The 1st function, or one of the functions, is the production of enzymes needed for the digestion of food. This allows products such as lactose to be broken down into sub-components like glucose, and galactose when lactose is combined with the lactase enzyme. In the case of the mineral iron, an iron—cytochrome-c reductase is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction of the iron molecule and produces the necessary cellular products from that reaction. So a dogs pancreas produces enzymes which are responsible for the necessary chemical reactions required for Fidos optimal cellular health. The 2nd function is the production of insulin which is needed to for energy production. We all know about insulin and what it does for our body. It is again, the same for your dog is it not?

pancreatitis in dogs

What Is Pancreatitis In Dogs?

Well, pancreatitis in dogs is thought to be the release of enzymes from the pancreas too quickly. These enzymes, being released too fast, are auto-digested by the pancreas itself. This is in comparison to what these enzymes normally should do and that is act on the food which is eaten and then digested. So in other words the pancreas in a dog produces too many enzymes and these enzymes then almost start a self distruct sequence. This is what cause dog pancreatitis. People have problems with diabetes, so I wonder whether they too have problems with an inflammed pancreas. What do you think?

Cronic v.s. Acute Pancreatitis In Dogs

Cronic dog pancreatitis is the condition where their pancreas just keeps on getting inflammed. Acute pancreatitis in dogs is supposedly a one time deal. But more on this later. The pancreas is an organ, therefore, it is VERY vital to your friend and companions health condition. Think about it. If you had problems with your pancreas, and lets say it is diabetes, if you didn't use insulin what would your health condition be like?

Pancreatitis in dogs, in a human this condition exposes itself as diabetes, and the poor health symptoms show up the same as in fido.