I saw your cyanuric acid/English pool story in one of the pet food threads and am really inspired to make sure the levels are good in my pool. The kids swallow water all the time. Thank you. I also think this addresses the concerns many of us had about what was not in the Safety Assessment. Synergy and cyanuric acid level issues are so glaringly missing, yet few scientists or media openly, publicly questioned the missing pieces. All they really looked at was melamine alone. What a sham!
That was a shocking story about the pool water. Sounds like somewhere between 150 to 500 ppm was all it took to cause severe burns. At least with your own pool, you can make sure you don't exceed the recommended doses.
The melamine risk assesssment was a bigger sham than I had thought when you read that post. If people knew about the risk of direct exposure from pet and human foods being processed in the same places, maybe
that would finally raise standards for pet foods.
Looks like if you consume melamine, you'd also run a risk of interaction with cyanuric acid if you drink chlorinated water. The EPA was studying chlorinated pool and drinking water to assess risk from chlorine which was determined to be low - but look at what they concluded:
http://www.epa.gov/hpv/pubs/summaries/sdditriz/c14660rr.pdf"CONCLUSIONS
The chlorinated isocyanurates react with saliva and stomach fluid as fast as they hydrolyze. Thus, any chlorinated isocyanurate
compounds that are ingested as small amounts of pure materials or in pool water or drinking water treated with these materials are
destroyed too quickly for the chlorinated compounds to be of toxicological consequence. The only cyanurate compound which is
relevant for toxicology due to ingestion under normal use conditions is cyanuric acid and its salts."If you eat vegan gluten burger contaminated with melamine followed by a dip in the pool or chaser of chlorinated water...who knows what would happen?