Vegetarian capsules/caplets

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drjsiems

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As I look closer at the Taurine I bought to make homemade cat food, I see that each 500 mg pill is a "vegetarian" caplet. What does that mean exactly? Did I read somewhere that "vegetable/vegetarian" capsules are not good for cats?

Judy
 
Vegetarian caplets don't contain gelatin, which is made from animals. I haven't seen anything that said they were not good for cats. Maybe others would know more.
 
It probably means they use a product derived from seaweed, agar agar to make the gelatin capsules. Don't you break open the capsules anyways to sprinke the taurine in the food? Agar agar is in a lot of foods including icecream and. other human products. I really don't think any tiny amount that would be in those capsules would hurt cats.
 
I knowingly used both terms. I think that I remember reading somewhere that vegetarian capsules (just the capsules - not what is in them) are are not good for cats. I am assuming if that is true, which I am trying to find out, then neither would be the vegetarian Taurine caplets that I just bought because they have something vegetarian in them. In other words I am trying to find out what makes empty vegetarian capsules unsafe - if in fact, this is true.

Judy
 
This discussion somehow got side tracked on the difference between caplets and capsules. IFrom reading your original post about measuring taurine, you are using caplets which are not emclosed in a shell. If you look on the bottle, most companies are fairly good at listing all of the ingredients in the formula.

Getting back to your question about capsule shells made with agar agar, I did a search and could not find anything indicating it is harmful to cats. Agar agar is sometimes also known as kosher gelatin. Because it can be eaten along with diary products by people who follow jewish dietary laws. I was surprized at how many products and recipes use it.

Another possibility is that the caplets you bought are listed as vegetarian because the taurine comes from a nonanimal source. Taurine can be. Made synthetically.

Bottom line is I couldn't find anything that would indicate the caplets you are using would have anything harmful to your cat(s).
 
The ingredients in this taurine CAPLET (a solid pill - GNC human brand) are taurine, dicalcium phosphate, and cellulose. Does anyone know if any of these ingredients are not safe for a cat's homemade food recipe?

Thanks!

Judy
 
Vegetarian protein is considered to be an inferior choice for cats because the amino acid profile does not match a cats needs as well as meat. Since you are not using these caplets as a primary protein source but to supplement a single amino acid, it should not matter that they are vegetarian.

Dicalcium phosphate and cellulose are both common ingredients in commercial cat food and are considered safe for cats. However, if your cat has kidney disease, it is best to avoid excess phosphate. Cellulose is just insoluble fiber. If you want a taurine supplement without added fillers, try something like this:
http://www.iherb.com/Now-Foods-Taurine-Powder-8-oz-227-g/7425?at=0

IMHO, I would use the caplets as long as my cat did not have kidney disease and pick a different supplement next time.

You might get more/better responses if you changed your subject to "raw food supplements".
 
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