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Shiria | 7 years ago
How Much Medication At The Same Time Without Damaging The Bodytoo Much? So, We Have A…

How much medication at the same time without damaging the bodytoo much?
So, we have a group of 22 kittens (6 months) and 2 mothers. All are treatet for ringworm (Microsporum Canis) and in 3 days are finished (only 8 showed symptoms, but since they all had contact, all had to be treated).
They were treated with Itraconazole (1 week treatment, 1 week break, 1 week treatment, another 1 week break and a last week treatment). Additionally they were bathed 1 once a week in Enilconazole.

Some of them are treated with marbocyl for cat flu right now (most likely Calici).

Additional they were tested positive for giardia and worms (Toxocaridae?) last friday after most of them developed bad diarrhea that smelled incredibly bad.
For the Giardia they get treated with Metronidazole (twice a day).
Fenbendazole is not an option, as it doesn’t help anymore most of the time.

So now I still need deworm them and make a flea treatment (as they have also fleas). I don’t want to do worm and flea medication at the same day – as that would mean that at least the ones with cat flu would get 5 medications at the same time.

Only two more days till the ring worm treatment is finished, so I thought of doing flea treatment the following day and deworming the day after that to spread the treatment a little.

Some of them are clearly not well right now, so while I would normally deflea/deworm at the same time, I’m a bit hesitant here.

What do you think?

What I have to add – one of the kittens died this morning without known reason. It was not extremly thin or dehydrated and acted normal when I saw it the first time this morning. When a collegue wanted to clean their room she called me because it would lie on the floor and couldn’t move. (I was like 20 meters away in another room) She said it made strange noises and lost poo (diarrhea). When I arrived it was already gone. The hair on his tail was poofed up, eyes/pupils wide, but no heart beat and breathing. I tried to bring it back, but without success.
It had no signs of being extremly sick. It was not affected by ringworm itself and hat no catflu. It had diarrhea, but ate well. It played, was active and so on. It showed no signs of liver problems (as Itraconazole could cause that) like yellow skin.

No one has seen what happened. I was thinking that it may has fallen off a wooden layer that are left and right to the door, right beneath the windows. The cats like to sit in it and look out the windows or wait for someone to come inside. But those are only like 1,20m in height.

So I’m even more worried that all those medicaton already was too much for that one :(.

2 Responses

Comments

  1. Jennifer Taylor

    I am assuming all medications were prescribed by a veterinarian and an exam done on all kittens? If so I would check with the prescribing Dr. I have had foster puppies who have been incredibly sick and on many medications at once at the advice of our vet. In the case of my foster pups they were very sick, the risk of not treating outweighed the risk of treating. That is a conversation though that you should have with the vet who examined and prescribed the meds. Best of luck with the kittens and so very sorry for your loss.

  2. Shiria Post author

    Thanks for your answer. Yes, all medication were prescribed by the vet of our shelter. I also planned to ask her this tomorrow when the next visit is scheduled. Just wanted to ask for other peoples experiences for similar situations.
    We also had very sick kittens, where the risk of not treating them was bigger than the risk of treating – but they had other problems.

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Essie Pfau | 7 years ago
How Long Should You Wait To Play With A Boxer Puppy (almost 8mos Old) After…

How long should you wait to play with a boxer puppy (almost 8mos old) after they eat? I’ve read about bloat and am trying to nail down our morning routine.

2 Responses

Comments

  1. Laura

    When our Dobe was a pup, we kept her quiet for an hour before and an hour after all meals. I would stick to that…and maybe, instead of playing, use puppy’s meal as a training opportunity, since mental work trumps physical work for wearing out a dog of any age. Use the meal as training treats instead of actual treats. 🙂

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Jerome Bronzini | 8 years ago
Hi, I Just Noticed Yesterday My Pet Rabbit Has Two Tiny Patches Of Missing Fur…

Hi, I just noticed yesterday my pet rabbit has two tiny patches of missing fur on the front legs, at the same spot on each leg. However, his behaviour seems completely normal (eating, running, playing,pooping as normal), so wondering what could cause this. Thanks

1 Response

Comments

  1. Anonymous

    Overgrooming, which can be caused by stress or allergies or any one of a number of other issues, will cause bare patches. If it gets worse, I’d get him to the vet.

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Pawbly | 8 years ago
My Younger Dog Is Getting Very Aggressive Towards My Older Dog, Including Real Biting. They’ve…

My younger dog is getting very aggressive towards my older dog, including real biting. They’ve always played in the past, with the younger being very submissive. What’s going on?

2 Responses

Comments

  1. Krista Magnifico

    Hello,
    In some cases it is a combination of he puppy getting older and more boisterous and demanding of time and attention and an older dog getting tired and/or unable to keep up. If it appears that the puppy is escalating the play to the point of biting simply because the previous tactics and attempts are not working I would recommend you start playing more with the puppy, find a park where the pup can really let loose, or get a puppy for your puppy so your old dog can be at peace.

  2. Anonymous

    Are they the same sex? That can contribute, as well as maturity.

    Work on obedience and other training with the younger dog, separate from the older dog. Wear his fuzzy butt out so he pesters the older dog less. I would start crating them when you can’t supervise just to keep both dogs safe, too – this behavior, if left unchecked, can turn into fighting.

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Pawbly | 8 years ago
On Friday, My Husband Stepped On Our Male Cat’s Paw And He Let Out A…

On Friday, my husband stepped on our male cat’s paw and he let out a yelp. Our female cat, violently attacked him and we were only able to stop the fight by locking her out of the room. Saturday, the male cat snuck his way into the room she was being held in and she violently attacked again. Today we have been switching them in and out of rooms to keep them apart. She has been sniffing where he has been excessively as if she has never smelled him before. They have been playing ok under the door, but when we cracked it slightly, the minute she saw him she hissed again and lunged trying to get him. They have lived together for over 3 years and this has never happened. What should we do?

2 Responses

Comments

  1. Anonymous

    This is certainly bizarre behavior. I’d keep them separated for now. Get your male to the vet to get his foot checked, too, in case he’s injured and she’s sensing that.

  2. Krista Magnifico

    Hello,
    I agree with Laura. I would be concerned that the male is injured and the female attacked because he smelled, or looked, or even acted differently. Cats (dogs too) will often attack another household pet when they act (smell/look) differently (the classic example is the pet having a seizure that the others then attack). In an effort to protect the male you should separate them. But I would have both cats looked at by your vet.
    I would also ask about trying Feliway, and even something to help her anxiety like an SSRI (prozac). Please dont wait. best wishes.
    please let us know how things go

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Pawbly | 8 years ago
Hello! My 4 Month Year Old Lab Had Diarrhea Last Night And Seems To…

Hello! My 4 month year old Lab had diarrhea last night and seems to go every 2 to 3 hours. I tried her on some rice and she vomited. She acts ok. She still will play then nap, which is kinda normal. After the rice her pooped looked green?I wonder if anyone has some advice to avoid dehydration? How soon should I take her in?

2 Responses

Comments

  1. Anonymous

    If your puppy is 4 months old, this is an emergency. Get her to an emergency vet NOW.

  2. Dawn Ferara, DVM

    I agree with Laura get your pup to a vet.

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Pawbly | 8 years ago
I Have Two Cats Both Around The Same Age Sushi And Loki. I Got Sushi…

I have two cats both around the same age Sushi and Loki. I got Sushi at 8weeks and Loki a week later at 10 weeks old. Sushi was playful and full of wonder. Loki was loveable and cuddly. After getting them both fixed, Loki started to pull away a little at a time. It’s been a year now and he don’t like to be touched,pet on,won’t cuddle. I don’t know what to do..help!

4 Responses

Comments

  1. Crystal Pfeiffer

    They get along well they play and they groom each other. It’s Sushi will be cuddly and lovable but Loki nothing.

  2. Christina Chambreau

    Working with a holistic veterinarian or trying some holistic approaches at home can reverse the behavioral change that I feel was caused by the surgery or the anesthesia. Some animals are sensitive and do have serious reactions that I could not treat when I merely had my conventional treatment. 

    I strongly recommend finding an integrative
    veterinarian with whom to work. This is a person trained in many different
    approaches, including using conventional drugs only when absolutely needed.
    Working with one can increase the chance that your cherished companion can live
    a long and healthy life after recovering from this current problem. There are
    good ones and great ones, and a few homeopathic veterinarians will consult by
    phone or email. You can go to the web sites for each type of holistic practice
    and use their referral list to find one near to you. Many practitioners are
    members of only one or two of the organizations, so you do need to go to every
    site to find who is near you:
    1. Wide range of treatments: http://www.AHVMA.org, American Holistic Veterinary
    Medical Association and http://www.civtedu.org.   
    2. Homeopathic veterinarians (these can often help you by phone if no other
    holistic practitioners are nearby that you like): http://www.theAVH.org and
    http://www.DrPitcairn.com;
    3. Chiropractic and Osteopathic – http://www.animalchiropractic.org; http://equineosteopathy.org/ (they treat
    dogs, too)
    4. TCVM (Acupuncture and Chinese medicine): http://www.IVAS.org, http://www.aava.org &
    http://www.TCVM.com
    5. Herbal – http://www.VBMA.org


    At home you could take a class to be attuned in Reiki and offer it to everyone in the house on a daily basis. This may reverse the problem (see below). flower essences are totally safe and could help him become normal again. Maybe try a session with Sharon who makes the Anaflora line and is also an animal intuitive. 


    Personally, I think every person who lives with or works
    with animals must know at least Level I Reiki. The practitioner offers this
    energy and the animal comes over to get it (or places her hands upon the
    animal), or it can be done from a distance, even around the world with the
    intent for healing to occur. The energy flows through the healer into the
    animal. This is based on directly applying Chi (energy) to rebalance the energy
    field so it no longer needs to produce the physical symptoms. It is a very good
    adjunct to any healing modality, especially to relieve pain and inflammation. I
    have seen cats who began to eat again when their food was treated with Reiki.
    It also “takes the bad out of” things. By doing Reiki on smelly water
    in restaurants I have been able to drink sweet tasting and smelling water. Use
    Reiki anytime that you must give injections, vaccines, drugs, flea or heartworm
    drugs, or other substances with potential toxicity. Reiki is great to calm
    animals, relieve discomfort, and can deeply heal some problems in some animals.
     

    1. Great information on Reiki – http://www.reikicourse.org
    2. Kathleen Prasad is a wonderful teacher and works with my favorite sanctuary
    and holistic education center, BrightHaven http://www.brighthaven.org. Kathleen leads
    a free monthly telechat for anyone trained in Reiki and using it with animals.http://www.animalreikisource.com/

    3. If you cannot find a Reiki Class near you (same class for people and animals
    as it connects you through an “attunement” to the healing energy of
    the universe, making you a channel of healing), the following groups offer long
    distance, free, attunements. 

    a. http://theholisticcare.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=13
    b. http://freereikiattunement.com/
    c. Christine at cbearse@earthlink.net, http://www.awakeningrainbows.com. To receive
    free distance Reiki send her your first name only, city and state, and whether
    or not you have had any Reiki training.  She invites you to include your
    pets as well.  She uses a teddy bear and does a full body Reiki distance
    treatment for one hour each Sunday evening from 9 p.m. until 10 p.m. EST. 
    d. And a team of over 100 healers will send free healing energy until you say
    not to. Email Barbara at nancelot01@aol.com with your healing request, name of
    animal, species, color & age. In the subject say request through Dr.
    Chambreau

    4. for a fee:

    Excellent recommendation in 2015 – http://reikishamanic.com/

    http://www.ReikiBlessings.com offers many types of
    energy healing classes- search a bit to find the reiki ones or email them. Long
    distance healing and training is at http://www.animalhealers.homestead.com. 
    5. Get a free treatment for yourself at http://www.interdimensionalhealing.com.

  3. Crystal Pfeiffer

    Thank you Christina I have a cousin who works in that field. I’m going to make a Call to her for Loki. Thank you I wouldn’t have thought about it.

  4. Christina Chambreau

    I am so glad, Crystal.
    If you want to learn more yourself, join our Thur 1-2 eastern Blabs run by Jeff Feinman (free) and then look at taking his on line course coming up or one of my two in Maine and Maryland in Sept/Oct. Sign up for my RSS feed on my site to learn more.

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Pawbly | 8 years ago
I Adopted My Dog On July 31,2016 She Got Spayed And Everything Was Going Fine…

I adopted my dog on July 31,2016 She got spayed and everything was going fine except she has being peeing or popping and today we were play with her in the house and when she turned over we noticed the area where the cut was inflated and we don’t know why if you guys can tell me what i should, thank you.

1 Response

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  1. Dawn Ferara, DVM

    Call the vet who did the surgery or your local vet and get her seen ASAP!

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Pawbly | 8 years ago
He’s An Indoor Cat, Escaped Few Days Ago And I Believed He Fell In The…

He’s an indoor cat, escaped few days ago and I believed he fell in the drain behind my house because he came back full of dirt. I think he might have hurt his leg jumping out of the drain. He’s not limping, didnt show any sign of hurt at first but when I tried to lift him up he got angry, when I checked his front leg, it didnt feel broken and he got really grumpy when I touch it. He’s still eating/drinking but less than usual. He’s also pretty moody and lethargic, less playful.

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Pawbly | 8 years ago
Our Dog Recently Started Showing Stiffness In Her Rear Right Leg. It Seemed To Happen…

Our Dog recently started showing stiffness in her rear right leg. It seemed to happen after playing but didn’t notice anything out of normal while playing. We have taken her in twice, first time they gave her “vitamins”, glucoseamin. Second time, nonsterodial anitinflamatory and mild pain reliever. It seemed to bother her less but has done nothing for longterm, she is sore after 2-5mins of any exercise (very limited exercise to take it easy but keep mobility). She is a 6yr old Weimaraner. I’m not sure I trust this Vet (banfield) and I know without a full scan hard to answer. Any advice for treating the symptom with an understanding of the breed too would be greatly appreciated. Looking online for answers really has only added more confusion and stress. Either she’s dying or has a strain/sprain, is the scope of possibilities online…so not much help. Thank you for your time.

5 Responses

Comments

  1. Christina Chambreau

    Bradd, this is where, when I only had my conventional veterinary training, I would
    often be very frustrated because even expensive tests led me no closer to ways to heal deeply as I had limited options. The holistic
    philosophy has taught me that there is an underlying vibrational imbalance that
    causes most problems and the healing goal is to resolve that imbalance with
    treatments selected for that individual animal. Your dog should be able to walk completely normally for the rest of his life, maybe with some continuing treatments. To better understand this
    perspective, read the first few chapters of Don Hamilton’s Homeopathic Care of
    Cats and Dogs, the few pages in my book, the Healthy Animal’s Journal or Wendy
    Jensen’s Practical Handbook of Veterinary Homeopathy: Healing Our Companion
    Animals from the Inside Out,

    While you may be able to help as home, especially If you were trained in different healing modalities (see below – YOU BE THE
    HEALER) by using Reiki,
    T-Touch, HTA, flower essences, acupressure, herbs, essential oils, supplements,
    homeopathy and more. I am giving multiple suggestions because only some may be
    available in your area, and each animal is unique, so what works with one does
    not work with all. This is the joy of holistic approaches – we have dozens of
    things to try, while conventional has merely a few.
    1. Even before you are trained in Reiki, you can ask for this energy healing
    that cannot hurt and may help (See REIKI, below, for web sites to request
    healing). Once you are attuned, offer it daily to the whole house. This will not cure, but may help and will never harm. 
    2. Flower essences are totally safe, so select one or more to try. These
    flower essence companies have combinations for animals : SpiritEssences.com,
    Anaflora.com; GreenHopeEssences.com; petessence.com Many other companies like
    Bach with single remedies can help you select essences.  At your local pharmacy (maybe) or health food
    store (for sure) you can buy rescue remedy. This combination of Bach flowers can
    help especially when the pain seems worse, or if there is a healing crisis when working with a holistic vet. Put 4 drops in one ounce of water and
    use it: in the mouth, rubbed on more hairless areas of the skin, on the paws,
    in a bowl of water in a room not near the drinking water. It can be given
    topically or orally as often as it seems to help.
    3. Most importantly, change to a raw (or lightly cooked) meaty bone diet as
    this it is more digestible than any processed foods so builds up the immune
    system allowing her body to self heal.

    FIND AN INTEGRATIVE VETERINARIAN
    I strongly recommend finding an integrative veterinarian with whom to work.
    This is a person trained in many different approaches, including using
    conventional drugs only when absolutely needed. Working with one can increase
    the chance that your cherished companion can live a long and healthy life after
    recovering from this current problem. There are good ones and great ones, and a
    few homeopathic veterinarians will consult by phone or email. You can go to the
    web sites for each type of holistic practice and use their referral list to find
    one near to you. Many practitioners are members of only one or two of the
    organizations, so you do need to go to every site to find who is near you. http://christinachambreau.com/learn-more/links-to-healing-resources has all the organizations (chiropractic, homeopathic, acupuncture and chinese herbs, osteopathy, postural work, western herbs) listed. 


    If you are interested in better health in general, please read the following.  I hope you are too overwhelmed by all this information but your Weimaraner is so young (I have ones liveing over 15 years) that I would love to help her recover from this and live a lot longer. 
    7 KEYS TO HEALTHY ANIMALS
    1. Know the current level of health. Most health problems are the result of an
    underlying energy imbalance.  As we cure animals of “disease”,
    we find that other things we thought were normal go away, so we can use these
    clues to know that animals are not healthy yet.  Your goal is for your
    animal to have great energy, no doggy odor, no hairball vomiting, little
    shedding, a glowing coat and many more. Below is a complete list of these signs
    (Early Warning Signs of Illness). In young animals, these apparently
    “normal” problems may be the only indications to start exploring new
    options for lifestyle or treatment.  Buy the Healthy Animal’s Journal
    (www.HealthyAnimalsJournal.com) so you can see how these early warning symptoms
    and obvious ill symptoms change over time.  

    2. Feed the best. What are the best diets for people or animals — the most
    processed or the freshest, most organic?   The best ingredients should be
    the most consciously raised – local, organic vegetables, free ranging protein
    sources. Dogs and cats have ripping and tearing teeth, bone crunching teeth, no
    digestive juices in the mouth, jaws that do not chew, a stomach full of acid
    where the food sits for 4-12 hours and a very short transit time in the intestines.
    Dogs and cats do not pull out a knife to de-bone their prey and do not pull out
    matches to light a fire to cook their meat and vegetables. Therefore the best
    diet for dogs and cats is raw meat including raw bones, pureed raw and cooked
    vegetables and a few supplements (Calcium if no bones are eaten is critical).
    Grains are not good for most animals, but if there are none of the early
    warning signs (see below) and no illnesses, you can feed some grains,
    preferably the higher protein ones. Start as young kittens and puppies or at
    whatever age you read this (Brighthaven.org, a cat sanctuary switches 16 years
    old and older cats to raw meat diet and some have lived to 27 and 30, and now
    one to 35). Second best is same quality, but cooked.  Even grocery store
    quality meat and vegetables are much better than most processed foods.
    Processed foods are an effort for the food industry to use up its waste
    products except for a few companies with great motives (and even they sometimes
    get bad or inferior ingredients). Processed foods are also a problem for the
    environment – they are not sustainable. Many dogs and cats need probiotics,
    especially if fed processed, dead foods. My current favorite is Mitomax. I have
    had many animals’ minor health problems clear up while using this. Unlike other
    probiotics, it is very stable and is ok at the low stomach pH. Every animal
    needs and wants a different combination of foods and supplements at different
    times in their lives depending on different stressors and health challenges,
    just as we do. With any food, observe each of your animals for the effect that
    food has on them and change if decreased energy or poor coat or other Early
    Warning Signs. NEVER feed DRY food to cats – even as treats. It causes most
    cats to drink more water resulting in stress to the kidneys and also can
    trigger bladder problems in cats. You can now buy many commercial raw meat
    diets. You must research them as well. Ask where the ingredients are raised?
    Are chemicals used? Are the chickens, beef, pork, etc raised in humane ways,
    out in the sun to get the Vitamin D in the meat, etc? My favorite newest books
    to guide you are: Steve Brown’s Unlocking the Canine Ancestral Diet; Hofve and
    Yarnall’s the Paleodog; Becker and Taylor’s Dr. Becker’s real food for healthy
    dogs and cats; Taylor and Brown’s See spot Live Longer; and Basko’s Fresh food
    and Ancient Wisdom.

    3. Vaccinate the least. In my opinion, vaccines have caused more harm to
    animals than anything else we have done. Do you get measles and mumps vaccines
    every year of your life? Researchers in conventional veterinary medicine agree
    that we vaccinate too often, in too many combinations, and that this level of
    vaccination, while preventing epidemics, is harmful to the health of
    susceptible animals.  On-going studies show that antibodies are high 10
    and 16 years later for dog and cat distemper and dog Parvo so I recommend just
    a few baby shots and NO more. While Rabies is also a viral disease, you must
    follow the law, which is every 3 years.

    To help prevent damage from the Rabies vaccine, or any others that are
    accidentally given, do the following. First, learn Reiki (see below) and hold
    the vaccine syringe in your hand until the “draw” is gone, then Reiki
    the injection site once you are in the car, then Reiki the whole animal daily
    until they do not “draw”. If you have not yet learned Reiki, use the
    contacts below to have it done for your animal after the vaccine. For two weeks
    before and two weeks after, give the totally safe Vaccine Detox, a flower
    essence from http://www.SpiritEssences.com. Give triple the dose of calcium (or add
    some calcium) for 3 days before and 5 days after the vaccines. Dr. Peck is
    finding a drop in calcium at vaccination time. Then use the Early Warning
    signs, below, to see if further holistic treatment is needed if any of them
    appear or worsen. A wonderful list serve on vaccines, their harm and
    alternatives is at yahoo groups. To register, go to
    novaxk9s-subscribe@yahoogroups.com A great web site ishttp://vaccines.dogsadversereactions.com/ 

    4. Use the fewest chemicals, remembering that there are chemicals in vaccines.
    Each animal is an individual and will respond differently to heartworm, flea
    and tick preventatives. My kindle book, FLEAS BE GONE: a holistic
    veterinarian’s guide to natural flea control will help you avoid these. Some
    are very sensitive to chemicals used in the yard or the house and in vaccines –
    they will become profoundly ill. Others will be triggered by these chemicals to
    just not have full health.  Chemicals in foods can cause allergic type reactions,
    so again feeding a fresh diet from local ingredients will be best. Healthy
    yards have lots of weeds. House cleaners can be made from foods and microfibril
    cloths clean like a charm. Healthy animals never get fleas and ticks

    5. Understand how animals become ill and how they heal. First there is an
    energetic imbalance (they are just not right), then functional (the dog is
    itchy), then inflamed (skin is red, infected, swollen and hot) and finally
    tissue changes (thick, black skin). Results of any treatment can be no change,
    amelioration (current symptoms disappear with no other improvements, then
    return), suppression (current symptoms disappear and they become more ill) or a
    cure (everything about the animal to begins to improve, especially the overall
    energy level.)  
    Keeping a journal is critical to determine what treatments are helping problems
    to become less frequent and less severe. You can stand firm with what you feel
    is working even if your professional disagrees and change approaches when
    needed. You can create your own using a three ring binder, a notebook, a
    calendar. Be sure to have a master symptom list, pages where you list
    treatments you have started or been given, and pages where you make daily or
    frequent entries about every symptom on the master symptom list, especially
    including the overall energy level, emotional state and new changes. Some
    people have found my book makes it easier.
    http://christinachambreau.com/bookstore/healthy-animal-journal/healthy-dog-journ is
    a great one to use in print or e-version is available.  

    6. YOU BE THE HEALER.  I strongly recommend getting some training in
    understanding the wide range of approaches to health so you can be in charge of
    what you choose for treatments for your animals. There are so many different
    ways to stimulate healing that you never need to give up trying. From books,
    on-line and in classes you can learn Reiki (which can take the “bad”
    out of vaccines and any needed drugs, or even make food healthier), massage,
    HTA, TTouch, acupressure, flower essence therapy, all of which are 100% safe to
    use for any problems. There are many more approaches you can do to help heal
    your animals with some training since they need to be used more carefully –
    homeopathy, herbal medicine, Chinese herbs, aromatherapy. In addition to
    classes there are many very good list serves filled with people experienced
    with not vaccinating and feeding raw meat diets. Classes are found through your
    health food store, by phone or on-line. As with human health approaches, there
    are many different opinions, so you need to experiment and see what makes your
    animals more or less healthy. 

    7. Select the best healers for each animal’s health team. Most people want a
    veterinarian (preferably integrative) and an energy healer. You decide what
    needs to be tried next for your animal. When you realize the animal is not
    improving – seek different care. Use conventional veterinarians for diagnosis
    and emergency treatment, or if other methods are not working. Again,
    integrative veterinarians (see above) will be able to do both, and have the
    philosophical understanding of the vibrational causes of illness. 

    Learn more and more

    Every Thursday from 1-2 eastern Dr. Jeff Feinman and myself
    host a talk at http://www.BLAB.IM

       If you sign up here
    you will get a weekly reminder – and know when we change the time to help
    people come during lunch.

    https://blab.im/dr-jeff-feinman-do-no-harm-care-for-your-pets-holistically-with-drs-jeff-and-christina-1

     

    Books – I have books with comments listed –
    (www.MyHealthyAnimal.com)

    Classes – I teach many different classes. The best way to
    find them is to subscribe to My RSS feed on my site (click on RSS on any page)
    and the newsletter.

    Email me if you wish to host a class in your town or on the
    internet. HealthyAnimals@aol.com

    Magazines – Animal Wellness Magazine – use ccdvm code when
    you subscribe (and Feline and Equine Wellness, too). 

    Whole Dog Journal and Dogs Naturally Magazine (they have
    webinars on raw feeding that are excellent), too.

    Internet – over 50 shows archived–

            
    http://www.homeopathyworldcommunity.com/page/drchristinachambreau

    Search online for the many other classes and lectures
    available for the 

    Most skills in classes about health approaches for people
    can be extrapolated to animals. The acupressure points are the same, remedies
    are used the same way, Reiki is good for everything, etc.

     

    I also do Pet Health Coaching to help you learn about the
    current health issues, what you can do at home to build health and save money,
    and I match you up with the veterinarian we think would be best.

     

    Good Health for your pet, Dr. Chambreau

    REIKI:
    Personally, I think every person who lives with or works with animals must know
    at least Level I Reiki. The practitioner offers this energy and the animal
    comes over to get it (or places her hands upon the animal), or it can be done
    from a distance, even around the world with the intent for healing to occur.
    The energy flows through the healer into the animal. This is based on directly
    applying Chi (energy) to rebalance the energy field so it no longer needs to
    produce the physical symptoms. It is a very good adjunct to any healing
    modality, especially to relieve pain and inflammation. I have seen cats who
    began to eat again when their food was treated with Reiki. It also “takes
    the bad out of” things. By doing Reiki on smelly water in restaurants I
    have been able to drink sweet tasting and smelling water. Use Reiki anytime
    that you must give injections, vaccines, drugs, flea or heartworm drugs, or
    other substances with potential toxicity. Reiki is great to calm animals,
    relieve discomfort, and can deeply heal some problems in some animals.  

    1. Great information on Reiki – http://www.reikicourse.org
    2. Kathleen Prasad is a wonderful teacher and works with my favorite sanctuary
    and holistic education center, BrightHaven http://www.brighthaven.org. Kathleen leads
    a free monthly telechat for anyone trained in Reiki and using it with animals.http://www.animalreikisource.com/

    3. If you cannot find a Reiki Class near you (same class for people and animals
    as it connects you through an “attunement” to the healing energy of
    the universe, making you a channel of healing), the following groups offer long
    distance, free, attunements. 

    a. http://theholisticcare.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=13
    b. http://freereikiattunement.com/
    c. Christine at cbearse@earthlink.net, http://www.awakeningrainbows.com. To receive
    free distance Reiki send her your first name only, city and state, and whether
    or not you have had any Reiki training.  She invites you to include your
    pets as well.  She uses a teddy bear and does a full body Reiki distance
    treatment for one hour each Sunday evening from 9 p.m. until 10 p.m. EST. 
    d. And a team of over 100 healers will send free healing energy until you say
    not to. Email Barbara at nancelot01@aol.com with your healing request, name of
    animal, species, color & age. In the subject say request through Dr.
    Chambreau

    4. for a fee:

    Excellent recommendation in 2015 – http://reikishamanic.com/

    http://www.ReikiBlessings.com offers many types of energy healing
    classes- search a bit to find the reiki ones or email them. Long distance
    healing and training is at http://www.animalhealers.homestead.com. 
    5. Get a free treatment for yourself at http://www.interdimensionalhealing.com.

    Another wonderful healer, Deena Spears works long distance with Sound Tuning.
    http://www.Singingwoods.com. I have seen many animals and the people in a home be
    healed by her work.

    LISTS SERVES TO HELP YOU LEARN TO FEED THE BEST – 
    From the folks that brought us Jstsayno2vaccs is a new site for raw feeding –
    excellent –http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawk9s/  Here
    is what they say, “Lastly, we saw a need for a beginner’s raw feeding group.
    Many of the raw feeding groups have grown very large and often new people are lost
    in the shuffle. In addition, some raw feeding groups are specialized to one
    type of feeding only. We believe that feeding raw is the first step in whole
    health and have tried to create an environment of learning and support where
    there are no dumb questions and everyone gets individual attention. With that
    in mind Kathleen recently instituted a mentoring program where mentor’s sign up
    to help individuals, and new folks can opt into the program and receive private
    help in their journey. It has been a huge success. 

    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aunaturelK9 –
    the above groups breeding web site. Excellent.

    EARLY WARNING SIGNS OF ILLNESS FOR DOGS AND CATS

    1. Is your companion really healthy?
    2. Can you tell if the treatment you selected is deeply curing?
    3. Can your companion be healthier than you realize?
    YES – read on and evaluate your animal for true health.

    Most health problems are the result of an underlying energy imbalance, made
    worse from poor diet and vaccination.  They are rarely acute diseases
    (except injuries). Therefore, you may find that the problem does not clear up
    as you expect or it recurs. If so, you are dealing with an underlying
    predisposition to illness, and these clues to underlying ill health will help
    you select a remedy and monitor the results.  As we cure animals of
    “disease”, we find that certain other “NORMAL” things go
    away, too.  Do not be satisfied until most of the following symptoms are
    gone.  In young, apparently healthy animals, these apparently
    “normal” problems may be the only indications to start treatment.
    This is only the beginning of a list – as more animals are cured we will find
    new levels of health. Tracking these is easy when you use the Healthy Animal’s
    Journal by Dr. Christina Chambreau (www.HealthyAnimalsJournal.com)
    SKIN: doggy smell; attracts fleas a lot; dry, oily, lack-luster coat;
    excessive shedding; not grooming,    ear problems – waxy, oily,
    itchy, recurrent mites; eye discharge, tearing, or matter in corner of eyes;
    raised third eyelid; spots appearing on iris; “freckles” appearing on
    face; whiskers falling out; fragile, thickened, distorted claws that are
    painful or sensitive to trim.
    BEHAVIOR: Fears(of loud noises, thunder, wind, people, animals, life); too
    timid; too rough or aggressive (even at play); too hard to train; barks too
    much and too long; suspicious nature; biting    when petted too
    long; hysteria when restrained; clumsy; indolent; licking or sucking things or
    people too much; not using litter box or not covering stool.
    DIGESTIVE: Bad breath; tarter accumulation; loss of teeth; poor appetite;
    craving weird things(rubber    bands, plastic, dirt, cat litter,
    paper, dogs eating dog or cat stools, rocks, sticks…); sensitivity to milk;
       thirst – a super healthy cat on non dry food will drink at
    most once a week; red gum line; vomiting often, even hairballs more than a few
    times a year; mucous on stools; tendency to diarrhea with least    change
    of diet; obesity;  anal gland problems; recurrent parasites.
    STIFFNESS when getting up, early hip dysplasia; tires easily in hot or cold
    weather; can no longer jump up on counters, or go up or down steps.
    TEMPERATURE: Low grade fevers – Normal for healthy cats and dogs is
    100-101.5. 
    AGE & REPRODUCTION: Should live a long life (Shepards 17 years, Danes 12,
    cats 24). should be able    conceive easily, deliver normally,
    and not pass on “genetic breed” problems.

     

  2. PK Dennis

    Bradd,  I think you should seek a second opinion, and it would be best to find an orthopedic specialist.  It can make a world of difference to find the doctor that sees this type of thing every day compared to one that has only read about what might be wrong (or sees these problems only once-in-a-while).  

    There are a lot of bad reviews out there about Banfield – and I had a bad experience at a Banfield facility myself (they advertised that they had a holistic vet, and I called and set up an appointment to see that vet, but once I was in the exam room I discovered that they had switched doctors and that the holistic vet hadn’t been working there for over a year.  Can you say bait and switch!)

    There are other options that you should explore – T Touch, Acupressure, Acupuncture, massage, etc.  

    And how about an MRI instead of an X-ray?  Soft tissue injuries often show better in an MRI, but they do cost more.

    Good luck.  

  3. Bradd Bosley

    Thank you very much for taking the time to respond. Our dog is a family member like most of us here I I’m assuming. It can be frustrating and not knowing professionally how to help her is even more frustrating. I really appreciate your advice. I agree with Banfield..it seems band-aiding a problem is there go to option first. If they don’t know what’s wrong they just give anitinflamatory and pain killers. Tough to see a young active dog all drugged up with no positive results. I was able to get an appointment with a veterinarian physical and mobility therapist. Hopefully we will have some better answers tomorrow. Thank you again

  4. Bradd Bosley

    Thank you so much for all this great info. I am a culinary nutritionist and can’t agree more on healing humans and makes sense with animals through proper nutrition and the right vitamins and minerals. I really like the idea of taking a natural approach and I will most certainly read up on more homeopathic ways to help our little pooch. Again, I appreciate the time you put into supplying all this great info. I did have good luck and got an appointment with a physical and mobility therapist here locally that came highly recommended. I hope we will have some answers tomorrow. Thank you again,

    Bradd

  5. Bradd Bosley

    Thank you for responding to my question, I really appreciate the great advise. I did take X-rays but to your point maybe we try something more if we still can’t get answers. We were able to get her an appointment tomorrow with a physical and mobility therapist, so my figures are crossed. She’s too young and too happy to have any kind of mobility issues. Thanks again for taking the time to respond.