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Published byAntonia Hunter Modified over 9 years ago
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Additives to Food Animals By: Elizabeth Jurgens
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California Beef Recall Involving ‘Diseased’ Cattle Spreads to 35 States Rancho Feeding Corp. recall of 8.7 million pounds of meat products “diseased and unsound” animals that weren’t properly inspected Class I recall – could cause serious illness or death
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% Disposable Income Spent on Food
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Types Antibiotics Hormones
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ANTIBIOTICS Treatment of sick animals – Less controversial Subtheraputic – Low dose treatment – Food and Water
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Drugs Penicilin Tetracycline Eythromycin Tylosin Lincomycin Virginiamycin Bacitracin Baytril
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Why low dose? Treat undiagnosed diseases Promote growth Increase Feed Efficiency
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Feed Efficiency Improved Carcass – Beef: higher marbling, less carcass and liver condemning Improve daily weight gain – 6% Beef (4% feed efficiency) – 10% Swine (5 % feed efficiency) – Reduces stress, increases absorbance in gastrointestinal tract
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Concerns Bacterial resistance – 10% drug resistant pathogens – Passed through uncooked meat or proximity to animals – Degree of transfer is unknown – 15-17 million lbs/year (93 billion lbs meat)
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Baytril Used to treat sick birds from E.coli May compromise use of Cipro – treats anthrax, campylobacteriosis, and salmonellosis In the drug class fluoroquinolone
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Fluoroquinolone FDA approved use in poultry drinking water (1999) 11,000 people contracted resistant campylobacter FDA encouraged pulling Baytril use in poultry (2013)
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Meat Industry’s Side Not enough evidence to support fluoroquinolone resistance Other reasons for resistance – Over reliance in human medicine – Failure to take antibiotics for full prescription duration – Increased cluttering (i.e. hospitals, daycare)
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Meat Industry estimated loss of $45.5 million for swine production if drug banned – 22.8 billion lbs of pork sold each year 0.2 cents per pound
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Labels Approved: – Variations of Raised without antibiotics, No antibiotics ever, No antibiotics administered, No antibiotics, No antibiotics added – USDA stamp next to antibiotic claim gives assurance Unapproved: – No Antibiotic Residues, Antibiotic Free, Drug Free, Chemical Free, No Antibiotic Growth Promotants
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HORMONES Added to meat and dairy products to increase milk production and growth – rbGH – recombinant bovine growth hormone – Estrogen, testosterone, and progesterone – Estradiol, testosterone, and progesterone (natural) – Man-made steroids from estrogen, androgen, and progestin
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rbGH Use is not permitted in European Union/Canada Most denatured by pasteurization Critics: treated milk contains higher level of hormones – FDA concluded no evidence that a biologically active form is absorbed – rbGH is not active in humans (no health consequences)
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Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1) rbGH causes higher level in milk? – FDA concludes there is the same level in treated and untreated milk – Different study says increases by 2 to 5 ng/ml (compared to 3-10 ng/ml in untreated) Present in both humans and cattle Assumed that humans can absorb more from milk – Associated with increased risk of cancer? – Estrogen levels and risk of ovarian/breast cancer
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rbGH – more concerns Milk drinkers have 10% higher IGF-1 levels in blood than non-milk drinkers – Same as in people who drink soymilk Udder infections more common – Increased antibiotics
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rbGH – more concerns Assuming no degradation/complete absorption – IGF-1 represents 0.09% normal daily production – Infants: drinking 1.5 liters treated milk a day; <<1% of infants normal IGF-1 production
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Milk and Early Puberty? Study from China showed no linkage between cow’s milk and age of puberty (2012) – apply to US citizens? Previous studies in US have been inconclusive Other causes: higher BMI among girls, household products
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Labels
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Law FDA prohibits use of hormones on pigs and poultry – Labels are misleading – FDA requires disclaimer on these labels
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Hormones in Beef Inject natural oestradiol, progesterone, and testosterone; synthetic zeranol, trenbolone, and melengestrol Linked to breast, prostate and colon cancer? – inconclusive Maternal beef diet leads to lower male sperm count? (2007) – did not pinpoint direct cause
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Environmental Concerns Growth hormones pass through cattle in manure – contaminating soil, groundwater Downstream sights contain more androgenic and estrogenic pollutants Fish in river different skull shapes
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Discussion Hormone runoff in water supply? Should sub-therapeutic antibiotics be banned? Should rbGH be banned?
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