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Week 82 min read

The prove-it test: re-challenging safely

by Ben, co-founder

The prove-it test: re-challenging safely

Your dog finished the trial better than they started. There's one way to know for certain the food was the reason: bring the old food back and watch what happens. Vets call it a re-challenge. We call it the prove-it test, and it's completely optional.

Why it's quick

If food really was the trigger, the reaction to re-exposure is fast. In the studies, dogs flare within a median of 12 hours, and 98% show within seven days. So this isn't weeks of undoing your progress - it's a few days, usually less.

How to do it safely

  1. Swap back to the old food at normal meal sizes. No need to overdo it.
  2. Watch closely for the old signs - scratching, paw-licking, gut upset. The first 48 hours are the most likely window.
  3. Stop at the first clear sign. You have your answer; there's nothing extra to learn by pushing on.
  4. Go straight back to the new food. The flare settles again, and now you know it wasn't coincidence.
  5. Write down the timings. "Itching back within a day, settled again within a week" is exactly the kind of note your vet will thank you for.

Who should skip it

If the original reactions were severe - angry skin infections, serious stomach upsets - talk to your vet before deliberately poking that bear, or just don't. And if you'd simply rather not risk a setback after eight good weeks, that's a fair call too. A dog who improved on the new food and stays well on it is answer enough for most people.

Some owners want certainty, some are happy with better. Both are fine ways to finish.

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Some Grub chihuahua character in a tie

the food behind the project

One novel protein.
None of the usual suspects.

Some Grub is a cold-pressed, hypoallergenic dog food built around insect protein - a protein most dogs have never met, which is the whole point of a food trial.

See the food