Should Pets Get Iodide Pills?

The message from emergency officials Thursday was clear: the risk of radiation floating 5,000 miles from Japan to the West Coast was minimal. Even if something made it to out shore, the experts agree that it would not be enough to have any health impacts.

That goes for pets too.

Pet owners should not give their dogs, cats or other pets potassium iodide tablets, a UC Davis veterinary cancer researcher warns.

"At this point there is no risk to pets in California stemming from radiation released from the tragedy that continues to unfold in Japan," said Michael Kent, a faculty veterinarian who specializes in radiation cancer therapy, in a prepared statement.

He noted that UC Davis' William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital has been receiving dozens of phone calls daily this week from pet owners concerned about possible radiation health risks to their pets.

"While potassium iodide might help protect dogs, cats and other pets, as it would people, from the risks of radiation exposure in the unlikely event that radioactive iodine reaches here in appreciable levels, giving it ahead of time carries risks and would be ill advised," Kent said.

He cautioned that side effects for pets taking potassium iodide -- especially if they consume too much -- include severe allergic reactions; gastrointestinal upsets including vomiting, diarrhea and anorexia; decreased normal thyroid function; and damage to the heart.

At high enough levels, potassium iodide can even cause death.

His recommendations mirror Tuesday's public advisory from the California Department of Public Health, which warned Californians to not take potassium iodide as a precautionary measure.

--KCRA.com

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