Dog Food Chat banner

Meat content on chicken feet

5.4K views 13 replies 8 participants last post by  Mondo  
#1 ·
Okay...just want to run this by you guys to make sure I'm not off base.

I am thinking that there is virtually no actual meat on a chicken foot. It is mainly made up of skin, cartlidge and bone. Since purines are usually found in the actual meat, chicken feet would be purine free...or at least very very low purine. Right?

I am always looking for more species appropriate foods to give Duncan and if I'm correct in my thinking I can add chicken feet (and I won't really have to feed them sparingly).

Thanks for any input...
 
#6 · (Edited)
Awesome link. Thanks Re.

I have also read that the purines in veggies are different from the purines in meats. And, for dogs with HUU the purines in the meats are actually more harmful then the purines in veggies or other non meat foods. Don't know how true that is, though. I am just always looking to feed the foods that are lowest in purines..chicken and low purine veggies,etc. I don't give Duncan spinach either... :smile:

I hadn't looked into cherries helping with uric acid. Thanks for the link, Mondo.
 
#7 ·
we use cherry juice when we are juicing....the idea is to get the body in a more alkaline state.

i don't know how it works for dogs....

but....if you can't feed chicken to duncan, then i don't see how you can feed chicken feet, even though it's mostly bone...but it's not all bone....or tendons and cartilage, is it?

sometimes, though, the only way to find out is to feed a certain food, just one, and then see what happens...i know my honey doesn't get gout from any of the usual gout foods.
 
#8 · (Edited)
I can feed chicken to Duncan, but not a lot. It is my understanding that the purines are found in the meat (muscle) and organs of the animal. I know for a fact that there are no purines in fat. I feed Duncan fat trimmings all the time. I actually have a 5 pound bag of beef fat sitting in my freezer that Duncan has been slowly eating, he loves it.

"Most of the edible meat on the feet consists of skin and tendons, without much muscle. This gives the feet a distinct texture different from the rest of the chicken's meat. There are many small bones which makes it difficult to eat for some; these are often picked out before serving. Being mostly cartilage, chicken feet are very gelatinous."
Chicken feet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I'm not sure how cherries would work either. However, I am pretty sure the veggies Duncan eats are what help to keep his urine neutral/alkaline.
 
#10 ·
They are just a treat for us here, but the whole bunch loves them.
 
  • Like
Reactions: luvMyBRT