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The list seems to be expanding of products allowed into North America that are have been laboratory tested to be extremely toxic, therefore dangerous to children and pets. 

Someone said a month ago that the pet food announcements of March, 2007 were just the tip of the iceberg and I would say that person was aware of the lack of safety protocols in China. 

Expert analysis conducted by Expertox a company in Texas established in 1996 that have over fifty years of environmental assessments tested pet toys sold in Walmart.

Expertox claims the results show these pet toy products contain elevated levels of deadly toxins.You have to wonder why Mattel recalled millions of its toys for children that contained lead paint made in China and still we are selling them for pets. 

One can assume that the levels of lead are not safe for children but are safe for our family pets.Of course, two Veterinarians dispute the findings from the Texas lab claiming these levels pose no real threat to cats and dogs.  

I wonder whether these two had fifty years of environmental safety assessments and where they received this education.  Veterinarians really should stick to what they do best, and that is to try to help pets live a longer healthy life not a quick death.

Just as children put toys in their mouths, dogs and cats also play in this manner and that is how the chemicals are ingested into the bloodstream through saliva.  In doing this, the pet is exposed to heavy metal toxins that can cause death. The tests also revealed high levels of arsenic, mercury, cadmium as well as lead, so it is a combo platter of lethal chemicals.

CAT TOYS CONTAINING CADMIUM:

We are all familiar with those cloth cat toys that contain catnip, which they found high levels of cadmium. In addition, a plastic toy for cats that looks like a dumbbell also was found to be tainted.

DOG TOYS CONTAINING CADMIUM:

A Walmart toy made of cloth that looks like a hedgehog contained high levels of cadmium.  These are sold almost everywhere today besides Walmart, and Petsmart even the Dollar Stores are filled with these products on every street corner.

If you were to import any products to Europe, you would have to do your research and prove your products meet the ROHS Directives set out by the EU legislation.  These directives called “Restriction of Hazardous Substances”, set very high standards for Mercury, Lead, Cadmium, Chromium and Bromine Flame Retardants. You would have to demonstrate that you have complied with these strict regulations before your products would be allowed into European countries including detailed product analysis.  I doubt whether these products would have met the European Union standards, however they are welcomed into the US and Canada.

Since we cannot rely on importers, our governments should be doing the screening of products before they enter the country not after they are on the shelves.   I would think we would be checking for shipments due to terrorist’s attacks anyway we might as well inspect how they were manufactured in the country of origin.   Companies buying these products from overseas manufacturers could have conducted their own screening, however most are in denial that there is a problem for obvious reasons.

There is a device called XRF Screening, which detects lead in any product and instead of each of us buying one of these – the government should be purchasing such products to protect its own population.

After all, we will be all using hospitals, drugs and medicine to cure our children and pets of lead poisoning and that costs a lot of money.

If your dog exhibits these symptoms, please take it to the nearest vet for blood tests and a check up.

Signs of Lead Poisoning:

Vomiting, Poor Appetite, Diarrhea, Lethargy, Abnormal Behavior and eventually Seizures.  How common are these symptoms these days?

Drugs are used to “chelate” chemicals like lead or mercury by binding to them and they are excreted out of your pet’s system.  Lead poisoning may kill your pet so check where your toys came from and then check your dog.

There are also herbs that can detox your pet from harmful chemicals.  Chemicals tend to intensify in the liver and gentle herbs can help with cleansing them out of the body.  What is Cadmium and why is it so dangerous? Cadmium as defined by the US Department of Agriculture is an extremely toxic chemical found in the industrial paint industry and found in batteries.  Cadmium is a known cause of cancer. The lead is in the pain used to coat toys that your dog is putting in its mouth.On September 11, 2007, China signed an agreement with the US that prohibits them from using lead paint. I do not believe other chemicals were included in this agreement.  However, it appears to be a slap on the hand that feeds you.  As we have allowed our manufacturing jobs to go overseas, we are paying the price in cheap, dangerous products coming back into our country and killing our kids and pets.The list of contaminated products from China continues to grow, and now includes:Toys for childrenToys for petsPet Foods

People Foods

Fish

Jewelry

If Beijing is increasing inspections of their own products, when will the US and Canada start inspecting imported products?

What is really puzzling is how this invasion of deadly products was allowed to occur because lead paint has been banned since 1978?

A lady from Illinois was worried about her Shelties playing with these toys she purchased so she hired a lab in Illinois to do testing on 24 dog toy products.

She has lost 3 Sheltie dogs over the past four years and that is a very high number of deaths.  Her elderly mother noticed all the dog toys were made in China.  The Illinois Department of Agriculture decided they were in the acceptable limits of levels of lead. What is so acceptable about levels of lead?   The lab in Illinois found that a tennis ball from Petsmart tested 355 times higher than the amount found in the lab in Texas.

Dr. Ernest Lykissa, a PHD from Expertox in Texas reported that a dog playing with this tennis ball is getting a good dose of lead.

A latex green monster toy tested 907.4 micrograms of lead, that’s is almost 1 part per million, a very high content. It also tested at 334.9 micrograms of chromium which is also high.

As an old railroad engineer once said after a major train wreck,  “ Someone was asleep at the switch”.

Further purchasing and usage of these toxic products, would depend on how much you really love your pet.

Teri Salvador

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http://www.DogHealth1.com


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5 Responses to “Toxic Pet Toys May Kill Your Dog”
  1. Teri says:

    Hi Sue: and thanks for your question.
    Toxicity or a toxic level is defined as the degree to which something is able to produce illness or damage to an exposed organism. Chemicals are just one type of toxic substance which are as mentioned lead, cadmium, chromium and poisons.
    The Laboratory tests I spoke of in the article revealed a cloth toy with high levels of cadmium, a tennis ball with a painted logo registered high levels of lead. Latex rubber toys tested postive for cadmium and chromium.
    The signs of toxicity, for lead are: nausea, vomiting, weight loss, constipation, diarrhea, hyperactivity, and in extreme cases seizures and coma. Skin contact with Chromium can result in severe symptomatic necrosis of the skin, nausea, vomiting, shock, coma and death. Inhaling cadmium or exposure to cadmium fumes may cause flu like symptoms including, chills, fever, muscle aches, and respiratory damage. Severe exposures can cause brochitis, and pulmonary edema. The concentrations found in these toys which came from China, found in your pet stores to this day, where above accepted laboratory findings, and high enough that if your dog to be ingested into their system by licking the toy and chewing on it which is what dogs do. If so, they are getting a good dose of toxic and dangerous chemicals. These are similar to what is found in children’s toys. There are no standards for toxicity in pet toys, and hardly any for children. These laboratory studies were undertaken by and paid for by a woman who had 3 dogs and they all died in a similar fashion. She hired the laboratories and published the findings. Also pet food bowls made of ceramic also contain lead as do dishes for people. I recommend using stainless steel bowls for dogs and cats.
    What can you do?
    How can you protect your pet? Talk to your veterinarian. Do your research. Check with the manufacturers of your pet’s toys; ask for proof of their safety testing. Strongly consider discarding your pet’s current products which are made in China. When buying new products, look for items made in the United States or Canada. Also, avoid toys made of latex, as they are more likely to contain lead. Above all, be proactive and don’t take chances with the health of your pet.
    To your pet’s good health,
    Teri Salvador
    www. Doghealth1.com

  2. Sue says:

    Other than lead, for each of these substances, what is a toxic level? What are the signs for each?

  3. Teri says:

    Hi Megan:
    Yes it is enough to discard the tennis ball, as there is not enough information on where these products are made until we get the whole story. There is a supplier listed on the BlogRoll on my site called Botanical Dog, which you can access by clicking on the link.
    They have natural dog toys listed on their product list on their site. I can imagine some crafty entrepreneurs will get on this right away and start creating healthier toys for our pets to play with, than is on the market at the moment. Stay tuned!! and thanks for your comment. The laws of attraction do work.

  4. Megan says:

    My yorkie, Yogi, has a tennis ball that I’ve been concerned about. this is enough to discard it. Prayerfully, he won’t show signs of any poisoning.

    Do you have any product recommendations?

    Hugs,
    Megan
    http://www.thelawofattractionstation.com

  5. Philip says:

    Teri:
    A great timely article since I have issues with commercial pet foods such as I think we should export them to China.

    As The USA has to form standards of what is good enough for our food and that of our pets, strong sanctions should be applied to products imported from China. I tend to think no one is doing anything about it, so its left up to the average consumer and to people such as yourself to bring the dangers of Chinese products to the attention of the public.

    Keep up the good work.
    Philip

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