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Raw info
Pottenger's Cats: A Study in Nutrition
by Francis M. Pottenger, Jr., MDThe Philosophy

From 1932 to 1942, Dr. Francis Marion Pottenger, Jr. conducted an
experiment to determine the effects of heat-processed food on cats.
This ten-year cat study was prompted by the high death rate among
his laboratory cats undergoing operations to remove their adrenal
glands. At that time, there were no chemical procedures to measure
the strength of adrenal extract. So, manufacturers used cats. Cats
die without their adrenal glands. So, the amount of extract the
cats needed to keep them alive allowed the manufacturers to calibrate
the strength of their product. Dr. Pottenger fed his cats a diet
of raw milk, cod liver oil and cooked meat scraps, which included
liver, tripe, sweetbreads, brains, heart and muscle. This was considered
the optimum diet.
Concerned with the cats poor postoperative survival, Dr. Pottenger
noticed the cats showed a decrease in their reproductive capacity
and many of the kittens born in the laboratory had skeletal deformities
and organ malfunctions. By a quirk of fate, since the number of
cats donated by his neighbors in Monrovia, California kept increasing,
he couldn't handle the demand for cooked meat scraps. So, he ordered
raw meat scraps from a local meat packing plant, including the viscera,
muscle and bone. Always a scientist, Dr. Pottenger fed these raw
meat scraps to a segregated group of cats so that he could observe
any change. ;Within a few months, this group appeared healthier,
their kittens more vigorous, and they had a higher survival rate
after their operations.
The contrast between the two sets of cats was so startling; it prompted
Dr. Pottenger to perform a controlled experiment to verify these
facts scientifically. The experiment included 900 cats over four
generations and was well documented by Dr. Pottenger. The cats were
divided into five groups. All the groups were supplied the same
basic minimal diet, but the major portion of the diets was varied.
Two of the groups were fed whole foods (raw milk and meat - real
foods for cats). The other three groups were given processed foods:
pasteurized, evaporated and condensed milk.
All four generations of the raw meat and raw milk groups remained
healthy throughout their normal lifespan. The first generation
of all three processed food groups developed diseases and illnesses
near the end of their lives. The second generation of all three
processed food groups developed diseases and illnesses in the middle
of their lives. The third generation of all three processed food
groups developed diseases and illnesses in the beginning of their
lives and many died before six months of age. There was no fourth
generation in any of the three processed food groups. Either the
third generation parents were sterile or the fourth generation cats
were died before birth! Remember, all four generations of the raw
food groups were healthy throughout their normal lifespan. As for
as applying his results to human nutrition, Dr. Pottenger said,
"While no attempt will be made to correlate the changes in the animals
studied with malformations found in humans, the similarity is so
obvious that parallel pictures will suggest themselves." There is
no similar experiment in medical literature. The findings were supervised
by Dr. Pottenger along with Dr. Alvin Foord, professor of pathology
at the University of Southern California and pathologist at the
Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena. These studies met the
most rigorous scientific standards of their day.
For more information: Pottenger's
Cats - A Study in Nutrition(at Amazon.com)
and Pottenger's
Cats - A Study in Nutrition
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