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A quality-controlled rodent diet

J C Topham, J K Eva

    Laboratory Animals
    |April 1, 1981
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    This study assessed 65 rodent diet batches for nutrients and contaminants. Rodent diet quality was consistently high, with nutrient levels optimal and contaminant levels below safety thresholds, except for cadmium.

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    Area of Science:

    • Animal Nutrition
    • Food Safety
    • Toxicology

    Background:

    • Ensuring consistent nutritional quality and safety in rodent diets is crucial for research reproducibility.
    • Fixed-formula diets are commonly used but require regular quality control assessments.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To evaluate the nutritional adequacy and contaminant levels in multiple consecutive batches of a fixed-formula rodent diet.
    • To determine if the diet meets established nutritional standards and safety limits for contaminants.

    Main Methods:

    • Assayed 65 consecutive batches of a fixed-formula rodent diet.
    • Quantified levels of 19 essential nutrients.
    • Measured concentrations of 16 potential contaminants, including cadmium.

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    Main Results:

    • All 19 nutrients consistently fell within the nutritionally desirable range across all batches.
    • Levels of 15 out of 16 contaminants were well below maximum recommended safety levels.
    • Cadmium levels, while monitored, were also assessed in relation to established safety guidelines.

    Conclusions:

    • The fixed-formula rodent diet demonstrates consistent nutritional quality and safety for research applications.
    • Routine quality assurance confirms the diet's suitability, with minor considerations for cadmium monitoring.