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Cesar Dog Food

Bestie Paws, March 2, 2026

๐ŸŽฏ Key Takeaways: 10 Critical Facts About Cesar Dog Food

Is Cesar good for dogs? It’s safe and Aafco-compliant for adult maintenance, but it’s a mid-tier food โ€” adequate nutrition, not optimal nutrition.

Is Cesar discontinued? No โ€” Cesar is actively sold nationwide. However, the brand has discontinued their Softies treats line specifically. Individual flavors rotate in and out, causing confusion.

What’s the #1 healthiest dog food? No single brand holds that title universally โ€” but brands employing board-certified veterinary nutritionists and conducting Aafco feeding trials consistently rank highest.

Where is Cesar made? Cesar dog food is manufactured in the Usa under the Mars Petcare branch, though some ingredients are sourced globally.

How do reviews rate Cesar? Wet food earns 2.5 stars (Dog Food Advisor) to 4.0 stars (Hepper/Dogster); dry food earns just 1 star from Dog Food Advisor.

Does Cesar make dry food? Yes โ€” but only three flavors, and the dry formulas are significantly lower quality than the wet food.

What’s in Cesar chicken flavor? The grilled chicken classic loaf lists chicken, beef lung, chicken liver, chicken broth, and water as its first five ingredients.

How much does Cesar cost? Approximately $0.50โ€“$1.25 per tray for wet food, making it one of the most affordable wet food options available.

Is Cesar wet food better than the dry? Dramatically yes โ€” the wet formulas have significantly more meat protein and fewer controversial fillers.

Has Cesar been recalled? Cesar has only had one recall โ€” a voluntary recall in 2016 for their Filet Mignon loaf due to small pieces of plastic found during manufacturing.


๐Ÿพ 1. Cesar Is Not Discontinued โ€” but the Confusion Is Real, and Here’s What Actually Happened

This is one of the most-searched questions about Cesar, and the answer is straightforward: Cesar dog food is not discontinued. The brand remains actively produced and widely available at Walmart, Target, grocery stores, pet stores, and online retailers throughout the United States.

So where does the “discontinued” rumor come from? Several things converged to create confusion:

Cesar has confirmed they discontinued the Softies treats line specifically. This treat discontinuation led many owners to assume the entire brand was going away. Additionally, Cesar has reformulated many of their recipes in recent years, swapping first ingredients and updating packaging, which meant some beloved specific flavors disappeared from shelves temporarily or permanently.

๐Ÿ”„ What ChangedWhat It MeansStill Available?๐Ÿ’ก Impact on Your Dog
Softies treats discontinuedEntire treat line removedโŒ No longer soldSwitch to Cesar Meaty Bites or Jerky Bites ๐Ÿฆด
Recipe reformulationsWet food now lists beef, chicken, turkey, pork, lamb, or duck as the #1 ingredientโœ… Improved versions availableBetter protein quality than older formulas ๐Ÿฅฉ
Loaf recipes went grain-freeCurrently all Cesar loaf recipes are grain-freeโœ… AvailableSee Dcm concern note below โš ๏ธ
Some flavor varieties rotatedCertain niche flavors pulled; new ones addedVaries by flavorCheck Cesar’s website for current lineup ๐Ÿ”„
Packaging redesignNew look, same brandโœ… Same productDon’t mistake new packaging for a different product ๐Ÿ“ฆ

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: If your dog loved a specific Cesar flavor that’s no longer on shelves, contact Mars Petcare directly at 1-800-525-5273 to confirm whether it’s been permanently discontinued or is experiencing a temporary supply disruption. Flavors do cycle in and out of production.


๐Ÿ“‹ 2. The Wet Food Ingredient List Is Surprisingly Meat-Heavy โ€” but the Dry Food Tells a Very Different Story

This is where Cesar gets genuinely interesting, because the quality difference between their wet and dry products is one of the largest gaps in the entire pet food industry.

The Cesar Classic Loaf in Sauce Grilled Chicken Flavor lists its first five ingredients as: chicken, beef lung, chicken liver, chicken broth, and water. That’s a legitimately meat-forward formula. The chicken is whole meat, the beef lung and chicken liver are nutrient-dense organ meats, and there are no plant-based protein boosters in the recipe.

Different Cesar food recipes feature different organ meats, like beef lungs and chicken liver. Organ meats tend to be more nutritious than muscle meats โ€” they’re often higher in iron and B vitamins, as well as fat-soluble vitamins like vitamin K, vitamin A, and vitamin E.

Now compare that to the dry food:

The dry food has much fewer options โ€” just three flavors. These each have real beef or chicken as the first listed ingredient with 26% minimum crude protein, but following the named meat, the ingredients take a nosedive in quality with artificial colors and anonymous meat meals.

๐Ÿ”ฌ Ingredient ComparisonCesar Wet (Classic Loaf)Cesar Dry (Filet Mignon)๐Ÿ’ก Verdict
First ingredientChicken (real whole meat)Beef or chicken (whole meat)Both start strong โœ…
Second ingredientBeef lung (organ meat)Chicken by-product mealWet food wins decisively ๐Ÿฅ‡
Third ingredientChicken liver (organ meat)Ground yellow cornWet food wins again ๐Ÿฅ‡
Plant protein boostersNoneCorn gluten meal, soyWet food is genuinely meat-based ๐Ÿฅฉ
Artificial colorsNo (wet classic)Yes โ€” present in dry formulasDry food is disappointing โš ๏ธ
Added sugarNo (wet)Yes โ€” present in dry foodSugar has no place in dog food ๐Ÿ”ด
Dog Food Advisor rating2.5 stars (15 recipes)1 star (3 recipes)Massive quality gap ๐Ÿ“Š
Grain-free optionsYes (all loaf recipes)No (grain-inclusive)Each has trade-offs โš–๏ธ

Dog Food Advisor rates Cesar dry food as a grain-inclusive dry dog food using a moderate amount of named by-product and unnamed meat meals as its dominant source of animal protein, earning the brand just 1 star.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: If you feed Cesar, stick with the wet food โ€” it’s genuinely a different product in terms of quality compared to the dry. The dry formula contains artificial colors, added sugar, and anonymous meat meals that the wet formulas avoid entirely. If your dog needs dry kibble, Cesar’s dry range is not where this brand shines.


๐Ÿ— 3. Cesar Chicken Is Actually One of Their Strongest Recipes โ€” Here’s Why It Outperforms the “Gourmet” Sounding Flavors

Dog owners gravitate toward names like “Filet Mignon” and “Porterhouse Steak,” but the nutritional reality is that Cesar’s chicken recipes often deliver better actual meat content than the fancier-sounding options.

The Cesar Classic Loaf Grilled Chicken Flavor contains chicken, beef lung, chicken liver, chicken broth, water, pork by-products, and chicken heart โ€” showing a dry matter protein reading of 45.5%, a fat level of 22.7%, and estimated carbohydrates of about 4.5%.

Those numbers are noteworthy. A dry-matter protein of 45.5% with carbohydrates under 5% is excellent for a wet food โ€” and significantly better than many products costing twice as much.

๐Ÿ— Cesar Chicken Flavor โ€” Nutritional SnapshotValueWet Food Average๐Ÿ’ก Assessment
Dry matter protein45.5%~38โ€“42%Above average โ€” strong showing ๐ŸŸข
Dry matter fat22.7%~20โ€“25%Within normal range ๐ŸŸข
Dry matter carbs~4.5%~10โ€“18%Exceptionally low โ€” excellent ๐Ÿ†
Named meat ingredientsChicken, beef lung, chicken liver, chicken heartVaries widelyMultiple specific animal proteins ๐Ÿฅ‡
Plant protein boostersNone detectedCommon in many brandsProtein is genuinely from meat sources โœ…
Calories per tray (3.5 oz)~80โ€“100 kcalVariesAppropriate for small breeds โšก

Free of any plant-based protein boosters, the chicken recipe looks like the profile of a wet product containing a significant amount of meat.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: When comparing Cesar flavors, look for recipes that list multiple named animal parts (chicken, chicken liver, chicken heart) rather than vague terms like “meat by-products” or “animal liver.” The chicken and turkey classic loaf recipes tend to have the cleanest ingredient lists in the lineup.


โš–๏ธ 4. Cesar Wet Food Sits in a Genuine Middle Ground โ€” It’s Better Than Its Reputation but Not as Good as Its Marketing Claims

Most online discussions about Cesar fall into two extreme camps: people who consider it garbage because it’s cheap, and people who defend it fiercely because their dogs love it. The truth is firmly in the middle, and understanding where Cesar actually sits in the market matters.

Cesar products are manufactured in Mars Petcare facilities located in the U.S., with select ingredients sourced globally. All formulas are free from harmful chemicals like Bha and Bht, and they meet Aafco guidelines for nutritional adequacy.

๐Ÿ† How Cesar Compares Across the Wet Food MarketRating SourceScore๐Ÿ’ก Context
Dog Food Advisor (Classics Wet)Independent review2.5 / 5 stars โญDinged for by-products, sodium nitrite, carrageenan
Dog Food Advisor (Simply Crafted)Independent reviewHigher ratedLimited-ingredient line praised for transparency
DogsterIndependent review4.0 / 5 stars โญโญโญโญPraised for reformulation with real meat first
HepperIndependent review4.0 / 5 stars โญโญโญโญStrong on flavor variety and small-breed focus
Customer reviews (retailers)Consumer feedback~4.2 / 5 average โญโญโญโญDogs love the taste; some gastrointestinal concerns

The wide rating spread reflects genuinely different evaluation criteria. Dog Food Advisor penalizes Cesar for controversial additives (carrageenan, sodium nitrite) and by-products. Sites that weigh palatability, convenience, and Aafco compliance rate it higher.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: For most small-breed dogs, Cesar is safe for occasional or partial feeding, but not necessarily ideal as a sole long-term diet due to its moderate protein and higher sodium content. The smartest approach for many owners is using Cesar wet food as a topper or mixer with a higher-quality dry kibble rather than feeding it exclusively.


๐Ÿงช 5. The Controversial Ingredients Hiding in Cesar That No One Explains Properly

Every Cesar review mentions “controversial ingredients,” but few actually explain what they are, why they’re there, and whether you should genuinely worry. Let’s fix that.

Cesar’s grilled chicken recipe includes sodium nitrite (for color retention), carrageenan (a seaweed-derived thickener), and sodium tripolyphosphate โ€” alongside the meat proteins.

โš ๏ธ IngredientWhat It IsWhy It’s in CesarThe Actual Concern๐Ÿ’ก Should You Worry?
Sodium nitriteColor preservativeKeeps the meat looking pink/redLinked to nitrosamine formation (potentially carcinogenic) at high cooking temperaturesModerate concern โ€” present in many processed foods but avoidable ๐ŸŸก
CarrageenanSeaweed-derived thickenerCreates the loaf/sauce textureHas been linked to gastrointestinal inflammation in some animalsResearch is mixed โ€” some dogs may be sensitive ๐ŸŸก
Sodium tripolyphosphateMoisture preservativeUsed as a preservative and to maintain moisturePotential concern in large quantitiesLow concern at typical food levels ๐ŸŸข
Pork by-productsRemaining edible parts after prime cuts removedAdds protein and nutrients affordablyCan include almost any edible part of the animal, and quality varies depending on raw materialsQuality varies โ€” not inherently bad ๐ŸŸก
Xanthan gumThickening agentStabilizes sauce textureCan cause digestive issues in sensitive petsLow concern for most dogs ๐ŸŸข
Artificial colors (dry food only)Synthetic coloringMakes kibble look appealing to humansProvides zero nutritional benefit to dogsUnnecessary โ€” avoid if possible ๐Ÿ”ด
Added sugar (dry food only)Sucrose or similarEnhances tasteCan affect blood sugar and contribute to obesityUnwelcome in dog food ๐Ÿ”ด

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: If the controversial ingredients concern you, Cesar’s Simply Crafted line avoids most of them entirely. Simply Crafted is their limited-ingredient recipe โ€” each meal is made with five or fewer ingredients, with no artificial colors, flavors, fillers, or preservatives. It’s designed as a topper rather than a complete meal, but it’s by far Cesar’s cleanest product.


๐Ÿ’ฐ 6. Cesar’s Pricing Is Among the Lowest in Wet Dog Food โ€” but There’s a Hidden Cost-Per-Calorie Problem for Larger Dogs

Cesar’s affordability is one of its biggest selling points. Depending on the size you choose โ€” either 3 oz., 5 oz., or 12 oz. โ€” pricing can range anywhere from $0.50 to $3 per serving.

But here’s what most reviews don’t address: Cesar’s small trays (3.5 oz) contain roughly 80โ€“100 calories each. A 10-pound Chihuahua needs about 275 calories per day. A 20-pound French Bulldog needs about 450 calories per day. The math gets expensive fast for anything beyond toy breeds.

๐Ÿ“ฆ Cesar Pricing Breakdown (2026 Estimates)SizePrice RangeCaloriesCost Per Day (10-lb Dog)Cost Per Day (20-lb Dog)
Classic Loaf single tray3.5 oz~$0.75โ€“$1.25~85 kcal~$2.50โ€“$4.00 (3 trays) ๐Ÿพ~$4.50โ€“$7.50 (5 trays) ๐Ÿ’ธ
24-tray variety pack3.5 oz each~$15โ€“$28 ($0.63โ€“$1.17 ea)~85 kcal each~$2.00โ€“$3.50 ๐Ÿ“ฆ~$3.50โ€“$6.50 ๐Ÿ“ฆ
Wholesome Bowls3.0 oz~$1.50โ€“$2.50~55โ€“70 kcal~$6.00โ€“$10.00 ๐Ÿ’ธNot practical โŒ
Simply Crafted (topper)1.3 oz~$1.00โ€“$1.50~25โ€“35 kcalTopper only โ€” not sole food ๐Ÿฅ—Topper only ๐Ÿฅ—
Dry food bag5 lb~$12โ€“$16~340 kcal/cup~$0.40โ€“$0.60 ๐Ÿ’ต~$0.60โ€“$0.85 ๐Ÿ’ต
๐Ÿ• Comparison: Monthly Feeding CostCesar Wet Only (10-lb Dog)Cesar Wet Only (20-lb Dog)Premium Wet Brand (10-lb Dog)
Approximate monthly cost$60โ€“$120$110โ€“$225$80โ€“$150
Practicality ratingโœ… Manageable for toy breedsโš ๏ธ Gets expensiveComparable cost, higher quality

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: The most economical way to use Cesar is as a topper or mixer โ€” add one tray to a higher-quality dry kibble rather than feeding wet food exclusively. This gives your dog the flavor excitement and moisture benefits of wet food while keeping costs reasonable. For a 10-pound dog, one Cesar tray mixed with a quarter-cup of quality kibble creates a satisfying, balanced meal at roughly $1.50โ€“$2.00 per day.


๐Ÿญ 7. Mars Petcare Is a Giant โ€” and That’s Both Cesar’s Greatest Strength and Its Biggest Limitation

Cesar traces its history back to the 1930s when it was known as Kal Kan, manufactured in Vernon, California. In 1988, Mars changed the name of its entire dog food line to Pedigree, and the Cesar brand eventually emerged as a dedicated small-breed sub-brand in the late 1990s.

Understanding that Cesar sits within the Mars ecosystem โ€” alongside Pedigree, Royal Canin, Nutro, Greenies, and Iams โ€” explains a lot about its positioning. Mars has the resources to maintain enormous safety infrastructure, but Cesar is intentionally positioned as their affordable, mass-market wet food brand. It’s not trying to compete with Royal Canin (also Mars-owned) on ingredient quality โ€” it’s trying to deliver palatability and convenience at grocery-store prices.

๐Ÿญ Mars Petcare Portfolio โ€” Where Cesar FitsBrandMarket TierPrice Point
Royal CaninPremium veterinary/breed-specific$$$$Higher ingredient quality; feeding trial validated ๐Ÿ†
NutroPremium natural$$$Better ingredient sourcing; no by-products ๐ŸŸข
IamsMid-premium$$More research-backed formulations ๐ŸŸข
PedigreeBudget mass-market$Similar tier; Cesar focuses on small breeds ๐ŸŸก
CesarBudget gourmet (wet-focused)$Palatability leader at this price point ๐Ÿพ
GreeniesTreats/dental$$Different category โ€” dental health focus ๐Ÿฆท

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: If your dog loves Cesar but you want to upgrade within the same parent company (ensuring an easier transition), consider Nutro Ultra Small Breed or Iams Small Breed โ€” both Mars brands with higher ingredient standards at moderate price increases. Your dog may accept the transition more readily since Mars products often share similar flavor profile foundations.


โš ๏ธ 8. The Grain-Free Concern That No One Is Talking About With Cesar’s Loaf Recipes

Here’s a genuinely important detail that most Cesar reviews either bury or skip entirely: currently all of the Cesar loaf recipes are grain-free recipes, and while grain-free diets may be preferred by some people, it’s important to understand that grain-free dog foods or foods that contain legumes or potatoes have shown a link to heart disease in dogs.

The Fda began investigating a potential connection between grain-free diets and dilated cardiomyopathy (Dcm) in dogs in 2018. While the investigation has not established definitive causation, the correlation was significant enough for many veterinary cardiologists to recommend caution with grain-free formulas โ€” especially those relying on peas, lentils, or potatoes as primary carbohydrate sources.

Many of Cesar’s foods are not clearly marked as grain-free diets, so it can be easy to overlook. This is the critical point. Unlike brands that prominently market their grain-free status, Cesar doesn’t always make this obvious, meaning owners may be feeding grain-free without realizing it.

โš ๏ธ Cesar Grain-Free Status by Product LineGrain-Free?Key Carb Sources๐Ÿ’ก Dcm Risk Consideration
Classic Loaf in Sauceโœ… Yes (all loaf recipes)Dried yam, potatoesMonitor Fda updates; discuss with vet ๐ŸŸก
Filets in GravyVaries by recipeCheck individual labelsRead ingredient list carefully ๐ŸŸก
Home DelightsSome include grainsRice, vegetables in some varietiesLower concern if grain-inclusive ๐ŸŸข
Simply CraftedVariesMinimal ingredients (5 or fewer)Very limited carb sources ๐ŸŸข
Wholesome BowlsVariesSweet potato, green beans, grainsCheck individual recipe ๐ŸŸก
Dry food (all 3 flavors)โŒ No โ€” grain-inclusiveCorn, wheat, brewer’s riceNo Dcm concern from grain perspective ๐ŸŸข

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: If you’re feeding Cesar loaf recipes as your dog’s primary food, mention the grain-free status to your veterinarian at your next visit. They can assess whether taurine supplementation or an occasional grain-inclusive food rotation would be appropriate for your specific dog. This is particularly important for breeds predisposed to Dcm, including Dobermans, Great Danes, Boxers, and Cocker Spaniels.


๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ 9. Cesar’s Safety Record Is Genuinely Strong โ€” One Recall in Nearly Four Decades of Production

In a pet food landscape where recalls are increasingly common, Cesar’s safety history stands out as remarkably clean.

Cesar last issued a recall in October 2016 for their Classics Filet Mignon wet dog food due to plastic pieces posing a choking hazard, with no reported illnesses or deaths.

Mars Petcare voluntarily recalled two lots of Cesar Classics Filet Mignon Flavor wet dog food due to a potential choking risk from hard white pieces of plastic that entered the food during the production process.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Cesar Recall History โ€” Complete RecordDateProductReason
October 2016Classics Filet Mignon Flavor (2 lots only)Plastic fragments from manufacturingVoluntary recall; no illnesses or deaths reported โœ…
All other years (1989โ€“2026)No other recallsN/AClean record for nearly four decades ๐Ÿ†

For context, that’s one recall in approximately 37 years of continuous production โ€” an exceptionally clean track record, especially considering Cesar produces millions of individual trays annually. Major competitors like Blue Buffalo have experienced multiple recalls, and even premium brands like Hill’s had a significant vitamin D recall in 2019.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: A clean recall record doesn’t automatically mean a food is nutritionally superior โ€” it means the manufacturing process is well-controlled. Mars Petcare’s massive infrastructure, company-owned facilities, and in-house quality assurance laboratories contribute to this consistency. This is one area where being owned by one of the world’s largest pet food companies is genuinely beneficial.


๐ŸŒŸ 10. If You Want Better Than Cesar but Your Dog Is Addicted to Wet Food โ€” Here Are Your Realistic Upgrade Paths

Many dogs become extremely attached to Cesar’s flavor profiles, and transitioning picky small-breed dogs to a new food can be genuinely challenging. Here’s a practical upgrade ladder:

๐Ÿ’ฐ Budget LevelRecommended AlternativeWhy It’s Better Than CesarTransition Difficulty๐Ÿพ Best For
Same price ($)Cesar Simply Crafted (as topper) + quality kibbleCleaner ingredients; no additivesEasy โ€” same brand ๐ŸŸขOwners who want to improve without switching brands
Modest upgrade ($$)Nutro Small Breed WetNo by-products; better sourcing; same parent companyModerate ๐ŸŸกEasy transition within Mars family
Mid-range ($$)Merrick Lil’ PlatesGrain-inclusive; higher meat content; no carrageenanModerate ๐ŸŸกSmall breeds needing premium wet food
Premium ($$$)Wellness Complete Health Small Breed PรขtรฉNamed meat proteins; chelated minerals; no controversial additivesMay require patience ๐ŸŸกHealth-conscious owners with budget flexibility
Super-premium ($$$$)The Farmer’s Dog (fresh)Human-grade; individually portioned; vet-formulatedGradual transition needed ๐ŸŸ Maximum nutrition investment

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: When transitioning a picky Cesar-addicted dog, try mixing the new food underneath the Cesar tray rather than on top. Dogs often eat from the top down, so they’ll hit the Cesar flavor first and continue eating through the new food mixed in below. Gradually increase the ratio over 10โ€“14 days.


โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

Can I feed my dog Cesar every day? Cesar’s wet dog food, with the exception of Simply Crafted, is formulated to meet the nutritional levels established by the Aafco Dog Food Nutrient Profiles for maintenance of adult dogs. So yes, it can be fed daily as a complete meal. However, for long-term health, many veterinary nutritionists recommend complementing it with a quality dry kibble or rotating proteins to ensure broader nutrient coverage.

Is Cesar safe for puppies? Cesar has a puppy formula that is made to meet the nutritional needs of young dogs under 12 months. Their standard adult formulas, however, are formulated only for adult maintenance โ€” not for growth โ€” and should not be used as a puppy’s primary food. Always choose the specifically labeled puppy formula for dogs under one year.

Why does my dog love Cesar so much but won’t eat other brands? Cesar’s recipes are formulated with high palatability as a primary goal. The combination of organ meats (liver, lung, heart), animal fat, natural flavors, and the soft loaf/sauce texture creates an intensely appealing sensory experience for dogs. Once accustomed to this level of flavor intensity, some dogs find blander foods less exciting โ€” similar to a person who eats heavily seasoned food finding plain meals boring.

Does Cesar cause diarrhea? Some dogs experience soft stools on Cesar, particularly when switching from dry food or when feeding the higher-fat formulas. Cesar wet food ranges from roughly 20โ€“25% fat on a dry matter basis, which is higher than many dry kibbles. For dogs prone to pancreatitis or with sensitive stomachs, this fat level may cause digestive upset. Introduce gradually and monitor stool quality during the first week.

Is Cesar the same as Pedigree? They share the same parent company (Mars Petcare) but are different product lines. Cesar was historically part of the Pedigree family, evolving from Kal Kan to Pedigree Select to Cesar Select Dinners in the late 1990s. Today, Cesar is specifically focused on small-breed wet food with gourmet positioning, while Pedigree targets the general mass market across all breed sizes.

Is Cesar better than Pedigree? For wet food specifically, Cesar’s classic loaf recipes generally offer higher protein content and more named animal ingredients than comparable Pedigree wet food. The dry food comparison is closer โ€” both brands use similar-quality ingredients in their kibble lines. If you have a small breed dog and are choosing between the two, Cesar’s wet food typically edges out Pedigree in meat content.


This review reflects independent analysis of publicly available ingredient lists, Aafco statements, Fda recall records, manufacturer disclosures, and multiple independent review sources current through early 2026. Cesar is a Mars Petcare brand; this article has no affiliation with Mars, Inc. Every dog is unique โ€” if your small breed is thriving on Cesar with a healthy weight, good coat, firm stools, and consistent energy, that’s meaningful real-world evidence. But if you notice persistent itching, digestive issues, or dull coat, a conversation with your veterinarian about dietary alternatives is always worthwhile.

Recommended Reads

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