Pet Food Manufacturers Comparison Chart
Dairy Ingredients in Pet Foods (Colostrum, Milk, Whey, Cheese, Yogurt)
Rationale for Dentatreat™
Rationale For Equine Diet™ and Supplements
Probiotic Supplementation
Biotic pH- and pH+
Rationale For Nutritious Oils
Clinical Veterinary Nutrition
Omega-3 Spectrum Dry
Vitamin Basics DSM
Oxidation: The Unspoken Danger in Processed Pet Foods
The Truth About Pet Foods
Rationale for Archetype Diets
Wyscin and Other Raw Food Safety Innovations at Wysong
Wysong's Master Key To Health
Does America Owe an Apology to its Pets
How to Apologize to Your Pet
Welcome - Wysong Pet Health and Nutrition
The Safety of Vitamins and Minerals in Pet Foods
Vitamin C in Pet Foods
Vitamin D in Pet Foods
Vitamin K in Pet Foods
Salt in Pet Foods
Yeast in Pet Foods
Methionine in Cat Foods
Montmorillonite Clay in Pet Foods
Mung Bean Sprouts in Pet Foods
Probiotics and Enzymes in Pet Foods
Proteinates in Pet Foods
The Soy in Pet Foods Myth
Taurine in Cat Foods
Turmeric in Pet Foods
Kelp in Pet Foods
Lecithin in Pet Foods
Limestone in Pet Foods
Meats in Pet Foods
Methionine in Pet Foods
Enterococcus Faecium in Pet Foods
Fish Oil in Pet Foods
Flax Seeds in Pet Foods
Fruits and Vegetables in Pet Foods
Garlic in Pet Foods
Poultry (Chicken) Giblets in Pet Foods
Grape Seed Extract in Pet Foods
Guar Gum in Canned Pet Foods
Corn and Soy in Pet Foods
Di Calcium Phosphate (DCP) in Pet Foods
Digests in Pet Foods
Ecklonia Cava in Pet Foods
Wysong Pet Food Ingredients Explained
Animal Plasma in Pet Foods
Artichoke in Pet Foods
Aspergillus in Pet Foods
Black Pepper in Pet Foods
Bugs, Mice and Grass as Pet Food Ingredients
Carageenan in Pet Foods
Chitin in Pet Foods
Citric Acid in Pet Foods
'Real Chicken' in Pet Foods
Fluff, Puff, and Smoke in the Pet Food Industry
Irritable Bowel Syndrome in Pets
Pet Foods and Bird Flu
High Protein Pet Foods and Kidney Disease
Dog and Cat Urinary Problems
Wysong Prevention and Therapy Guide
Allergen Free Pet Foods
Cold-Processed Canned Pet Food
Pet Foods Developed by Vets, Breeders, etc.
Grain Free Pet Food
Pet Foods Without Added Vitamins and Minerals
Tapioca in Pet Food
Are Meat By-Products in Pet Foods Bad?
Why Feed Any Processed Pet Foods?
Animal Testing and Pet Food Feeding Trials
Pet Nutrition is a Serious Health Matter
Large Breed Puppy Foods
Can Pets Consume Raw Bones?
Should Pets be Vegetarians?
Should Pets be Vegans?
Euthanized Pets as a Pet Food Ingredient
Rodents as Pet Food Ingredients
Rabbit vs. No Rabbit in Pet Foods
Breed Specific Pet Foods
22 Pet Food Fallacies
GMO Ingredients in Pet Foods
Diet Guides for Pet Health Conditions
How Important is Caloric Content in Pet Food?
The Pet Food Ingredient Game
Can Pet Health be Simple?
What are the Healthier Grains?
Raw Pet Food Deceptions Exposed
The 'Food Allergies Are Cured...' Myth
The Challenge of Properly Diagnosing Pet Food Ingredient Allergies
The 'Don't Feed Your Pet Table Scraps' Myth
The 'Don't Feed Your Pet Bones' Myth
The 'Exotic Pet Food Ingredients Mean Good Nutrition' Myth
Pet Food Toxins
Why You Should Not Rely On Pet Food Ranking and Pledges
The "Order of Pet Food Ingredients" Myth
Should You Feed Raw To Your Pet?
The Case Against Raw Frozen Pet Foods
Does 'Organic Pet Food' Mean Healthy?
Wysong Pet Foods Preservation Methods
Why are Wysong Pet Food Bags Small?
Reusing Wysong Pet Food Packaging
Why Does Wysong Make Formulation And Ingredient Changes?
Why Wysong Pet Foods Are Not Always Uniform
Wysong Pet Food Can Linings
The 100% Complete Pet Food Myth
The Real Problem in Pet Feeding
Does Your Pet Need a % of Something?
How to Rotate Wysong Pet Diets
Why Intermittent and Varied Pet Feeding
Pet Foods for Both Canine and Feline
Combining Raw Foods and Wysong Pet Diets
Fresh and Raw Pet Diets
Wysong Feeding Recommendations for Finicky Cats
How to Use Wysong Human Supplements for Pets
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong Dry Diets
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong Supplements
Wysong Pet Foods Processing Methods
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong True Non-Thermal™ Raw and Canned Diets
Archetype Diet Differences
Archetype Special Features
Rx Diet Regulations
Pet Inoculant Uses
What Wysong Pet Diets to Begin With?
How to Transition to Wysong Pet Foods
Wysong Pet Foods Feeding Amount Guidelines
Wysong Pet Food Quality Control
Rationale for Feline Diets
Special Wysong Pet Food Features
About Wysong Healthy & Holistic Pet Food
Wysong as a Holistic Company
Comparing Pet Foods Based Upon What Matters
How To Choose Healthy Pet Foods
Ingredient Sourcing
Wysong Media
 

Vitamin C in Pet Foods

Articles have been published in the past claiming that supplemental vitamin C has been clinically tested and proven to cause liver and kidney problems in dogs. A quote from the article states, "The different dietary forms of vitamin C like: ascorbic acid (in an ‘L’ form), sodium ascorbate or calcium ascorbate are all synthetic water soluble forms. They end up in the dog’s kidneys where they change the uric pH while waiting to be discharged from the dog’s body. This change in the natural pH within the kidney puts additional stress on them and can cause many problems." (Cusick, The Animal Advocate)

The critical point to keep in mind with regard to potential toxicity of any substance is that the dose makes the poison. Even water and oxygen, certainly "essential" nutrients, are toxic at high enough dosages. Vitamin C can also be toxic if overdone. For example, Teare, et. al. used 1200 mg of vitamin C daily (25-50 mg is sufficient for beneficial effects) in dogs to induce toxic results.

Using massive doses of vitamin C to achieve toxicity is very misleading and irresponsible. The public looks to scientists for honest, fair, informed, and balanced (not sensationalized) direction. As mentioned earlier, any substance used at extreme levels over a long period of time may cause organ damage, as well as other health problems. It should be noted that prey animals contain vitamin C at higher levels than what is found in Wysong pet diets. Thus, Wysong doesn’t use toxic levels of vitamin C in its pet foods.

Dozens of reports in the scientific literature demonstrate that vitamin C, at moderate levels, may benefit those species, which are able to synthesize it on their own (this includes mammals – i.e. dogs, cats, and humans). Not only is it beneficial metabolically in dozens of ways, but it also helps to regenerate a variety of internal antioxidant systems. Further, vitamin C (natural and synthetic) is a water-soluble vitamin, which means that it is not stored in body tissue. Excess vitamin C that is not used by the body (animal or human) is excreted via the urinary system. It is one of the safest vitamins known to man.

The natural vitamin C found in Wysong diets is used primarily as an antioxidant. Vitamin C, when used as a food antioxidant in home-prepared or commercial pet foods, is effective, safe, and very important. It is a preferred substitute for chemical preservatives such as BHT and BHA, which have been linked to health problems. The danger that arises from oxidized fats and free-radical pathology is far greater than any conceivable harm from the low levels of vitamin C used to prevent it.

Is the resolution of how to best feed a pet dependant upon who can cite the most scientific references, or what the National Research Council guidelines say, such as, "pets don’t require vitamin C"? Certainly not.

Knowledge continually grows and changes. We are not at an endpoint in any of the scientific disciplines, and the field of nutrition is no exception. Each time guidelines are determined, all previous nutritional information regarding specific dosages, etc. become obsolete. Nutrient levels are determined by research in which only one nutrient is varied in what is believed to be an adequate diet. However, every time a new minimum or maximum level is determined, it means all the previous tests using this nutrient at its previously believed "correct" level are invalid. The notion of a definitive set of levels for nutrients at any one point in time, other than when bias becomes fact, or people need nutritional demons to vanquish, is not possible.

Wysong disagrees with the reductionistic approach to nutrition and health. This is the approach taken by the majority of the food industry. Nutrition is not reducible to milligrams, IUs, and micrograms. Instead it is holistic.

Nutrition is individual. Every organism is genetically unique. Further, it is not within the capability of science to determine with exactness what the requirements are for whole populations, species, breeds, etc. To suggest that anyone can do so is misleading. The same can be said with regard to what is toxic for a particular species, and at what levels.

Arguments that pets don’t need vitamin C are pure guesswork, not science. A ubiquitous vitamin, such as vitamin C, that is increasingly being shown to exact dramatic preventive and therapeutic effects is indeed likely required in spite of an unrealistic and exaggerated "study" that seems to show the contrary.

The Wysong Optimal Health Program™ is a "recipe" for life based on the belief that all creatures will experience their best potential when they live as closely as possible to their genetic, archetypal expectation. Natural forms of nutrients are different from the synthetic forms because of their complex interrelationships with other beneficial biochemicals. Wysong believes this is important and it is the reason that totally food-derived vitamin C supplements for animals and humans are offered.