Label analysisTop ingredients onlyGrade DKibble (Extruded)

Dr. Dog

Dr. Dog Adult Digestive Care

Editor ingredient insight

Dr. Dog Adult Digestion starts with chicken, rice, and soybean meal, with low fat and moderate protein. I would use it for a low-fat chicken-and-rice daily food, not for soy avoidance or prescription-level hydrolyzed feeding.

Logic-based verdict

This food can stay in comparison, but ingredient quality still needs a more conservative read.

Manufacturer-independentPublic-data basedIngredients · nutrition · safety

Protein source

Ingredient guide

Ingredient-label protein analysis

Animal protein

Chicken (#1)

Plant protein

Soybean Meal (#3)

Even high crude protein can be strongly influenced by processed plant protein.

This is hard to read as meat-protein centered.

Needs context

Ingredient grade

C

Grade C

Top ingredient profile

Chicken
Rice
Soybean Meal
Fresh-meat leadPlant booster present
Crude protein24%
Crude protein24%
Crude fat8%
Other 68%

Protein position, fat position, and calorie density position are relative to foods in the same processing type cohort.

biotechProtein position
Lower
query_statsFat position
Lower
local_fire_departmentCalorie density
Limited

There is enough public data to keep this food in comparison, but the top ingredient structure does not support a stronger positive claim yet.

Nutritional strengths

  • The first ingredient is a species-named fresh meat.
  • Top ingredients do not show a prominent FDA-investigated non-hereditary DCM ingredient profile.

What still needs work

  • Fresh meat carries a moisture variable, and processed plant protein adds a clearer protein-support signal. The crude-protein number should not be read as purely meat protein.
  • Processed plant protein sits in the top 3, so the crude-protein number clearly includes protein support beyond meat ingredients.
  • The first ingredient is a species-named fresh meat, but refined grain or starch follows immediately after it, so ingredient quality needs a more conservative read.

Alternative foods

Smart chicken alternatives

Exact protein-type matches come first, then close protein-family matches fill the comparison.

301 alternativesKibble (Extruded) · protein type/family cohort

Brand context

Brand background availableRecall research scope limited

Founded in 2013 in South Korea. The English-language public recall sources checked here are not enough to make a confident recall call for this brand.

Ingredient analysis

Only the top ingredient read is confirmed publicly, so this section stays conservative until the full panel is available.

Top ingredients only

The complete ingredient panel is not publicly confirmed, so this read uses the visible top ingredients and guaranteed analysis.

restaurantIngredient Quality Analysis

C3/6
Ingredient Grade
Mixed
1Chicken
Fresh Meat · Top
2Rice
Refined Carb · Mid
3Soybean Meal
Processed Plant Protein · Lowest

Ingredient Analysis Comments

  • Chicken is a named fresh meat ingredient. The animal source is clearly identified. It reads as an top-tier protein source.
  • Rice is a refined carbohydrate source. It usually reads as a starch and energy source rather than a protein driver. It reads as an mid-tier carb source.
  • Soybean Meal is a processed plant-protein booster. It can lift crude protein without the same animal-protein share, so the animal-protein read should stay separate. It reads as an bottom-tier plant protein booster.
restaurantIngredient Grade CMixed

Full collected ingredient list

3 ingredients
ChickenRiceSoybean Meal
Primary positive ingredients
Support positive ingredients
Alternative protein
Neutral ingredients
Caution ingredients
High-caution ingredients

Why processed plant proteins are reviewed cautiously

Ingredient lists are ordered by input weight, not protein contribution. Fresh meat 100g and Soybean Meal 50g can both contribute about 20g of protein, and Pea Protein can deliver a similar amount at around 30g. So these ingredients can materially lift crude protein even outside the top three. The review treats processed plant-protein boosters cautiously because they can weaken the animal-protein-centered profile most guardians expect from a high-protein food.

Why did the base review land here?

Ingredient qualityNutrient disclosure levelManufacturing & trust

This review score combines ingredient composition, nutrient disclosure, manufacturing trust, and core nutrient caution signals.

Nutrient disclosure

Limited disclosure

This section is more about what is still undisclosed than about reading a complete nutrient story.

Safety verification

No fails

No major red flag jumps out first, though undisclosed rows still define the limits of this safety read.

Public data trust (ETF)

D tier

Only basic guaranteed analysis is visible, so deeper nutrition comparison stays hard to trust.

Final word

Treat this review as an early screen. If the food stays interesting, verify it again with your dog-specific context before acting.

Back to all foods