/ 18 March 2007

Pet owners frantic over N American food recall

Pet owners were worried on Saturday that the pet food in their cupboard may be deadly after millions of containers of dog and cat food sold at major retailers across North America were recalled.

Menu Foods, the Ontario-based company that produced the pet food, said on Saturday it was recalling dog food sold under 48 brands and cat food sold under 40 brands including Iams, Nutro and Eukanuba. The food was distributed throughout the United States, Canada and Mexico by major retailers such as Wal-Mart, Kroger and Safeway.

An unknown number of cats and dogs had suffered kidney failure and about 10 died after eating the affected pet food, the company said.

Many stores that sold the affected brands frantically pulled packages off shelves.

At a Petsmart store in Union, Silviene Grzybowski became worried when the four types of Iams products she buys for her cat, Smokey, had vanished from shelves. The cat was very sick and had not been eating for days, she said.

”The vet told us to buy her her favourite food, but I’m going to call the vet right now,” Grzybowski said, looking at an announcement Petsmart had taped to shelves announcing the recall.

A complete list of the recalled products along with product codes, descriptions and production dates is available on the Menu Foods website.

Menu Foods’ chief executive and president Paul Henderson told The Associated Press on Friday that the company was still trying to figure out what happened.

He said that the company had received an undisclosed number of owner complaints that dogs and cats were vomiting and suffering kidney failure after eating its products.

The recall covers the company’s ”cuts and gravy”-style food, which consists of chunks of meat in gravy, sold in cans and small foil pouches from December 3 to March 6.

In Omaha, Nebraska, Susan Balvanz said she sometimes feeds her five cats packets of sliced meat and gravy sold by Nutro Products, one of the brands affected. ”I’ve done so much research on pet food. It didn’t surprise me, but it scared me all the same,” she said.

She said her nine-year-old cat, Boots, was especially fond of the food but seemed to have lost its appetite in the past few days.

At the Missouri Valley Veterinary Clinic in Bismarck, North Dakota, veterinarian Jacob Carlson has been referring worried pet owners to the Menu Foods website. ”We’ve had a lot of calls,” Carlson said, although none of his patients were sick.

The company said it makes pet food for 17 of the top 20 North American retailers. It is also a contract manufacturer for the top branded pet-food companies, including Procter & Gamble. — Sapa-AP

Associated Press writers Phyllis Mensing in Bismarck, North Dakota, and Rebecca Santana in Trenton, New Jersey, also contributed to this report