Canina Garlic Powder Vet. For dogs
- Garlic stimulates the appetite, is odorless for humans and is readily consumed by your dog
- Garlic can prevent the risk of a tick bite
- The allicin in garlic has an antibacterial effect
- Prevents signs of aging and increases motivation
- contains the essentials Amino acids lysine (3%) and methionine (0.5%)
Note on the alleged toxicity of garlic in dogs by Mrs. Krukemeyer (veterinarian):
I and all other colleagues have never come across garlic poisoning for over 20 years as a veterinarian. According to the latest scientific findings, garlic is significantly less toxic to dogs than normal kitchen onions: Here, poisoning should only occur from 40g per 1kg dog, i.e. 1.4kg (!) Onions for a 35kg dog per day. In the case of garlic, the toxic dose should therefore be significantly higher. Who feeds their dog kilos of garlic? It is the same as always: stick to the dosage, avoid overdosing. Then the garlic can only help, not harm.
The veterinary toxicological institute of the University of Zurich (Prof. Dr. Nägeli) thinks the following: Feeding garlic can have positive effects on the health of dogs. A dose of 4 grams per medium-sized dog per day of the fresh clove of garlic is recommended! Again, no veterinarian has ever had to treat garlic poisoning. However, I would not feed dogs fresh garlic cloves, but rather correctly dosed and correctly concentrated supplementary food such as garlic powder or tablets from Canina pharma.
CANINA garlic powder for dogs Feeding
recommendation per animal and day: 1 teaspoon per 10kg body weight
CANINA garlic powder for dogs Composition / Ingredients:
Composition: Garlic, yeast, fish meal, seaweed
Ingredients: 35.8% crude protein, 24.5% crude ash, 6.2% crude fat, 0.7% crude fiber, 0.5% methionine, 3% lysine
Complementary feed for dogs
Garlic stimulates the appetite, is odorless for humans and your dog will be happy to ingest it
- Garlic can reduce the risk of a tick bite
- the allicin in garlic has an antibacterial effect
- Prevents signs of aging and increases motivation
- contains the essential amino acids lysine (3%) and methionine (0.5%)
Comment on the alleged toxicity of garlic in dogs from Ms. Krukemeyer (veterinarian):
I and all other colleagues have never been exposed to garlic poisoning for over 20 years as a veterinarian.
According to the latest scientific findings, garlic is significantly less toxic to dogs than normal kitchen onions:
Here, poisoning should only occur from 40g per 1kg dog, i.e. 1.4kg (!) Onions for a 35kg dog per day.
In the case of garlic, the toxic dose should therefore be significantly higher.
Who feeds their dog kilos of garlic?
It is the same as always:
stick to the dosage, avoid overdosing. Then the garlic can only help, not harm.
The veterinary toxicological institute of the University of Zurich (Prof. Dr. Nägeli) thinks the following:
Feeding garlic can have positive effects on the health of dogs.
A dose of 4 grams per medium-sized dog per day of the fresh clove of garlic is recommended!
Again, no veterinarian has ever had to treat garlic poisoning.
However, I would not feed dogs fresh garlic cloves, but rather correctly dosed and correctly concentrated supplementary food such as garlic powder or tablets from Canina pharma.
CANINA garlic powder for dogs Composition:
garlic, yeast, fish meal, seaweed
Composition:
35.8% crude protein, 24.5% crude ash, 6.2% crude fat, 0.7% crude fiber, 0.5% methionine, 3% lysine
CANINA garlic powder for dogs Feeding
recommendation per animal and day: 1 teaspoon per 10kg body weight