Yes, the reference range for "normal" in dog bloodwork, urinalysis, etc. is based on kibble fed, lab beagles who are mentally and physically ill (very sad). I just spent a small fortune retesting with procedures for my 3 year old, intact male, raw and lightly home-cooked fed dog. The protein in the urine was probably due to the fact he is intact and there are various secretions that can be present in any given urine sample from him. That is my guess. Turns out that the poorly run, veterinary labs flag everything as disease without considering these other factors. Combine that with the techs at these labs who were rejected from the human health labs and all the pot use on the job and the fact that the lab can make twice as much money for repeat tests and there is a problem.
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Yes, the reference range for "normal" in dog bloodwork, urinalysis, etc. is based on kibble fed, lab beagles who are mentally and physically ill (very sad). I just spent a small fortune retesting with procedures for my 3 year old, intact male, raw and lightly home-cooked fed dog. The protein in the urine was probably due to the fact he is intact and there are various secretions that can be present in any given urine sample from him. That is my guess. Turns out that the poorly run, veterinary labs flag everything as disease without considering these other factors. Combine that with the techs at these labs who were rejected from the human health labs and all the pot use on the job and the fact that the lab can make twice as much money for repeat tests and there is a problem.