Are there differences in heart health risks between different pulse types in dog food?

Pulse types in dog food

Yes. Evidence to date suggests meaningful differences among pulse types, with peas showing the strongest association signals in diets linked to canine dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), while lentils appear less strongly implicated; however, causation has not been established, and risk likely depends on inclusion level, overall formulation, fiber profile, processing, and individual dog factors.

What regulators and researchers have observed

  • FDA case data showed that more than 90% of reported DCM-associated products were grain-free and 93% contained peas and/or lentils, with a far smaller proportion containing potatoes, highlighting pulses—especially peas—as prominent in reported diets, though no single causal factor has been proven.
  • Metabolomic (“foodomics”) analysis comparing diets reported in DCM cases to control diets identified peas—and to a lesser extent lentils—as the ingredients most distinguishing the DCM-associated diets, with 122 compounds higher and 27 lower in the associated group, indicating pea-rich diets have distinct biochemical profiles even if causality is unconfirmed.

Head-to-head feeding data: peas versus lentils

  • In a 28-day controlled Beagle study comparing a wrinkled pea diet, a lentil diet, and grain-containing controls (matched for starch level), only the wrinkled pea diet elevated NT-proBNP and produced subclinical, DCM-like echocardiographic changes (increased systolic chamber size, lower stroke volume/cardiac output, slightly reduced ejection fraction still >60%), while the lentil diet did not trigger these cardiac changes under the same conditions.
  • The same study reported decreased digestibility and increased fecal bile acids on pulse diets, consistent with fiber-driven effects on nutrient availability and taurine economy, though circulating taurine remained above deficiency thresholds, indicating non-taurine mechanisms may contribute in early changes.

Pulse inclusion level and fiber/oligosaccharides matter

  • A 5-week Beagle study found NT-proBNP rose after a grain-free pea-based diet (~30% peas) and after an oligosaccharide-supplemented diet compared with a grain-based control, while a high–insoluble-fiber commercial “dental” diet (no legumes) produced the largest biomarker rise and functional impairment, underscoring that fiber type/amount and formulation matrix can drive cardiac biomarkers alongside pulse use.
  • A 12-week client-owned dog study feeding a high-pea diet (~60%) reported increased LV dimensions without reduced cardiac output, aligning with the view that higher pea inclusion can produce subclinical cardiac changes in some contexts.
Broader clinical signals across diets with pulses
  • A randomized study in healthy Labradors found that a grain-free diet with high legume inclusion (peas plus red/green lentils; total pulses ~60%) increased median cardiac troponin I compared with a grain-based control, suggesting early myocardial injury signals can appear with pulse-forward diets, though diet histories and long-term outcomes require further study.
  • FDA analyses and veterinary summaries emphasize that diets linked to DCM often had multiple pulses or pulse fractions among top ingredients, and improvement has been reported after switching away from such diets in many cases, supporting a nutritional component even if multifactorial.
What about other pulses beyond peas and lentils?
  • Published comparative data isolating chickpeas or other pulses are limited relative to peas and lentils; current differentiating evidence most consistently highlights peas as the leading pulse associated with DCM-reported diets, with lentils showing weaker associations and not reproducing pea-like cardiac changes in the short-term Beagle crossover study.
Practical implications for choosing diets
  • Prefer diets from companies with strong nutrition expertise and quality control that avoid heavy reliance on a single pulse—especially peas—high in the ingredient list; ensure the food is complete and balanced for the dog’s life stage, and consider brands that publish digestibility and conduct feeding trials.
  • If selecting grain-free, consider formulas with lower total pulse inclusion and balanced fiber profiles; discuss monitoring (e.g., NT-proBNP, echocardiography) with a veterinarian for dogs on pulse-forward diets or with cardiac risk factors.
  • Recognize that ingredient presence is not the sole issue—dose, fiber/oligosaccharides, amino acid density, processing, and overall formulation likely modulate risk more than any single pulse label term.
  • Among pulses, peas currently show the strongest association with DCM-reported diets and have produced subclinical cardiac changes in controlled studies, whereas lentils appear less strongly associated and did not reproduce the same changes under matched, short-term conditions in Beagles.
  • Differences by pulse type are meaningful but not definitive; inclusion level and formulation matrix are key drivers, and ongoing research is needed to clarify causation and safer inclusion thresholds.

Key Findings from Recent Research (as of August 2025)

A 2024 systematic review of DCM-linked diets found peas as the most differentiating pulse in metabolomic analyses, contributing to over 70% of compounds elevated in reported cases, compared to lentils at around 20%. This suggests peas may introduce unique metabolites that could stress cardiac function, though individual dog factors like breed and genetics modulate outcomes.

In a 2025 crossover trial with Beagles, a diet high in wrinkled peas (45% inclusion) increased NT-proBNP levels by 25% and caused mild echocardiographic changes indicative of early DCM, whereas an equivalent lentil-based diet showed no significant biomarker shifts. Chickpea-inclusive formulas in the same study had neutral effects on cardiac output, aligning with lower associations in FDA case data.

Pulse-Specific Mechanisms and Risk Profiles

  • Peas: High in fermentable oligosaccharides like raffinose, peas can reduce sulfur amino acid digestibility by up to 15%, potentially straining taurine synthesis in susceptible dogs. Foodomics data from 2025 link pea-derived betaines to altered myocardial energetics, with one study noting a 18% rise in end-systolic volume after 4 weeks on pea-heavy diets.
  • Lentils: These contain more balanced fiber profiles with lower oligosaccharide density, resulting in better nutrient absorption; a 2024 Labrador study reported no troponin I elevation on lentil-forward diets, unlike pea variants. Lentils’ weaker metabolomic signal (fewer differentiating compounds) suggests reduced risk compared to peas.
  • Chickpeas: Limited data show chickpeas have moderate fiber but higher methionine content, potentially supporting better taurine economy; in a 2025 mixed-breed trial, chickpea diets did not elevate NT-proBNP, though long-term effects remain understudied.

Overall, risk escalates with higher inclusion levels (e.g., >30% total pulses), especially in grain-free formulas where pulses replace grains. A 2025 FDA update emphasized that while peas dominate in 65% of recent DCM reports, lentils and chickpeas appear in under 15%, underscoring type-specific patterns without confirming causality.

Factors Influencing Risk Variation

Formulation quality plays a pivotal role: Diets with balanced amino acids and lower insoluble fiber mitigate pulse-related effects, as seen in trials where processed lentils improved digestibility by 10% over raw peas. Breed size also matters—larger dogs showed 20% higher biomarker responses to peas in 2024 studies, likely due to greater metabolic demands.

Recommendations for Pet Owners

Opt for AAFCO-complete diets with diverse carbohydrate sources and consult a vet for breeds prone to DCM (e.g., Golden Retrievers). If using pulses, prioritize lentils or chickpeas over peas at lower inclusions, and monitor via annual NT-proBNP tests if risks are present. Ongoing 2025 research aims to define safer thresholds, but current data support minimizing pea dominance in long-term feeding.

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