Pet Care Pet Care

Dog Digestion

Dog digestion starts at the mouth. The teeth useful for ripping an animal apart and cutting the tissue off arelonger and sharper than the equivalent teeth in our mouths. Our backteeth (molars) are flatter and more useful for grinding foods into pow-der. Dogs' habits of eating consist of tearing their food apart, cuttingoff pieces with the back teeth, and gulping them with only sufficientchewing to make them small enough to swallow.

The next difference is in the saliva. Dogs, on the other hand, have very little of that starch digesting enzyme, ptyalin. It was this discovery years ago that caused peoplestudying dogs' eating habits to say that they couldn't digest starch.Probably these people never saw a human wash down a huge mouthfulof a doughnut with a gulp of coffee - and stopped to think that thattoo is digested.

Our pets' stomachs secrete somewhat stronger juice than do ours. For example, a bone ingested into a healthy dog's stomach becomes softand pliable in less than an hour. This bone is acted upon by thisstronger juice which is rich in hydrochloric acid and pepsin, and it actually dissolves in the stomach. Actually the same thing might hap-pen in the human stomach, but it would take much longer.Upon leaving the stomach the food in a dog is mixed with the samekind of juices - pancreatic enzyme and bile - which affect our food.Here, then, is where most of the digestion of starch takes place. Thehuman who washes down the half-chewed doughnut and the dog whogulps its starchy meal both live and thrive because digestion takes placein the small intestine. When the pancreatic enzyme (amylase)works on these starches in our case, they are so fine that the enzymehas little trouble breaking them down. In the dog, when the starchyfoods are fed in too large lumps, the enzyme cannot do its work effec-tively. To some degree the same thing happens in the human digestivetract if a person fails to chew a nut or a kernel of sweet corn - neither isdigested anymore than it would be by a dog. Occasionally a dog willregurgitate any such indigestible material, but inure often it will not.In feeding dogs it has been found that it indeed pays to feed eithervery finely ground raw starch or precooked starches. Cornmeal fed rawis an inefficient food, but cornmeal that has been boiled until the starchgranules have been cracked open, so that they are vulnerable to theattack of the amylase, is an efficient, if incomplete food. Another pointof difference between dog owners and their dogs is the length of thesmall intestine. Food travels through it more quickly in dogs and thereis less time for absorption - another reason for feeding easily digestedfoods. Cereals, vegetables, and fruits should be cooked to facilitatedigestion. Meats are digested as easily raw.

Now, there are certain known requirements that must be met in thediet of every dog of every breed. These are the essentials without whichour pets develop nutritional deficiencies. First of all it is obvious that adog must have enough food. This is another way of saying that theremust be sufficient food to furnish energy for its daily life. We measurethis energy in the food by burning it in a device called a calorimeter tosee how many heat units it holds. The heat units are called calories. Itis now known how many calories any resting animal of a given sizerequires. An animal needs more, of course, as it exercises or worksmore. Living, exercise, or work all require energy, and this energy isextracted from the food. If a dog gets too few calories it will live on itsfat; in other words, it'll get thin. If it gets too many, it may discard the must be cautious. Some very fat dogs become so inactive that theirhearts cannot stand exercise. Their spirits are willing, but their heartsmay be weak, their muscles flabby, and their lung capacity greatlyreduced. In cases like this gradual daily increase in the pets' activity isimportant.
Thyroid extract, which causes a dog to burn up its food and fat morerapidly, should be used with great care, if at all. Owners have beenknown to kill their pets by giving human doses of thyroid extract.Drugs are not necessary if common sense and willpower are used.Some people find it easier to pamper a dog by overfeeding than totake care of its health by regulating its diet. This may be easier for atime, but only for a time. The wise owner knows that obesity is danger-ous to the dog and that in the long run firmness in matters of diet isperhaps the greatest kindness he or she can show the pet.

Dog Care

All Natural High Protein Dog Food
Ask the Dog Doctor Veterinarian
Caffeine Dogs
debark a Dog
Death of a Dog
Dog Bathing
Dog Bedding
Dog Birth
Dog Boarding Kennel
Dog Body
Dog Body Structure
Dog Bone
Dog Care
Dog Diet
Dog Digestion
Dog Digestive System
Dog Discharge
Dog Diuretics
Dog Drugs and the Reproductive System
Dog Drugs Applied to Skin
Dog Drugs to Kill External Parasites
Dog Drugs to Kill Internal Parasites
Economic Impact of Dog Ownership
Dog Emergency
Dog Euthanasia
Dog Eye Problems
Dog Eyes
Dog Faqs
Dog Feeding
Dog First Aid
Dog Grooming
Dog Grooming Stripping or Plucking
Dog Growths
Dog Mouth
Dog Nail Care
Dog Owner Responsibility
Dog Personality Guide
Dog Physical Exams
Dog Tail
Enlarge Heart in Dog False Dog Pregnancy
Feeding Dog
Female Dog Reproductive System
Fluke Dog
Dog Pregnancy
Dog Spaying
Dog Surgery
Dog Teeth
Dog Tongue
Dog Training Tips
Dog Vitamin
Dog Whelping
Dog Water
Foreign Object in Dog Foster Dog
High Fat Dog Food
How Long Does a Dog Live
How Much to Feed a Dog
How to Accustom Your Dog to a Diet
How to Choose a Dog
How to Choose Vet
How to Get Your Dog to Swallow Medicine
How to Restrain a Dog
ow to Tell If Your Dog Is Sick
How to Untrain yourDog
ow to Wean Dog
other Dog Health
Old Dog
Puppy Feeding
Respiratory Infection Dog Treatment
Tetanus in Dogs
Tonsilitis in Dogs
Types of Dog Food
Variety in Dog Diets
What Cause a Dog to have Intussusception
What type of Dog Food Should I Feed My Dogs
What You Can Catch From Your Dog
hat You Should Know AboutDog Feeding
When is a Female Dog Ready to be Breed
Why Breed Dog
Dog Health

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