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What mechanism links peas specifically to increased risk of DCM in dogs?

DCM in dogs

There isn’t a single proven causal pathway yet, but converging lines of evidence point to pea-forward formulations creating a “metabolic milieu” that can stress the canine heart in some dogs—likely via a combination of distinctive pea-derived metabolites, high fermentable fiber and oligosaccharides affecting nutrient/bile acid metabolism, and lower sulfur–amino-acid density impacting taurine economy in certain formulations and dogs. The association appears dose- and formulation-dependent rather than an inherent toxicity of peas.

Below is a concise synthesis of the leading, evidence-based mechanisms under study.

1) Pea-associated metabolite signatures (“foodomics” signal)

2) Fiber/oligosaccharides and digestibility effects

3) Taurine economy and sulfur amino acids
4) B vitamins, carnitine, and processing variables
5) Dose and matrix effects (it’s about how much and with what)
6) Why peas more than other pulses?
Practical implications

If helpful, I can outline label-reading tips to gauge pea inclusion and suggest safer formulation patterns to discuss with a veterinarian.

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