Nutri Health "A
Radical Solution"
by
Dr. Dan Moore, The Natural Vet® |
|
For horses, pets, and people nutrition
and preventative health have never been more important than
today. Imagine 100 horses in a herd exposed to influenza,
some will get sick and some won’t-why? Imagine 100 people
exposed to anthrax, some will get sick, some won’t-why?
I know it is scary to think about either situation, but similar
scenarios are actually occurring right now in each of our
bodies. The battle is health versus sickness. This battle
never stops. It is constantly raging and we are the effect
of it. Or could we really be the cause of it? If everything
were well and wonderful everyday then I imagine we would be
well and wonderful but I think that it goes without saying
that that is impossible!
Stress is a major cause of illness but how does this relate
to our horses? First let’s define a working definition
of stress. My way to describe stress, right or wrong, is “being
the effect of something or someone you feel you have no control
over”. Anybody stressed lately? Unfortunately for our
equine friends stress is a part of life. Showing, trailering,
training, breeding, it seems there is always stress in horses’
lives. But, since they ARE at the effect of us it is our responsibility
to keep them “less stressed” lest they will get
sick. Let’s face it, though, we can’t quit showing
, performing, trailing and breeding etc. etc. I guess some
of us could just be professional petters, myself included,
but these guys really prefer to work right? Probably just
keeping them in a stall and not letting them perform or work
is the most major stress of all. So with reason let’s
assume we keep going about our normal business. But are there
other ways we stress our horses though without knowing it?
I absolutely think that we inadvertently
stress our animals everyday, and the bad thing is we do so
with the best of intentions. Take vaccinations for instance,
are they really that important? Most folks in the “real
world” would argue YES, but I have to ask myself, could
the cure be worse than the disease, especially if the disease
is very, very rare? And what if the disease were treatable
anyway and what if I could prevent it with good nutrition
including antioxidants? What longterm effects could these
vaccinations have? I ask these seemingly ridiculous questions
because I think our horses have changed for the worse since
my 21 years in practice. I believe they are weaker today,
less resistant than in the early 80’s and just seem
to have much more cancer, colic, founder, pulmonary disease,
allergies etc. So I question: WHAT HAS CHANGED? A good example
of this change is EPM. Why after million of years does the
horse suddenly have a problem with possum manure? I don’t
claim to have the answers to this but I have some theories.
Certainly we do vaccinate much more than
when I first started practice. We didn’t even vaccinate
for rabies then, but then one or two horse came down with
it and whammo … millions vaccinated. The same was true
for Encephalitis and Strangles and now West Nile and even
EPM, with provisional vaccines, no less, that may or may not
even work when all the facts are gathered. Have you ever vaccinated
a horse for influenza and it later came down with it? How
about vaccinated for Strangles and in a few short weeks it
was leaking pus all over the barn? How about, heaven forbid,
Rhino and the mares later aborted. I have – plenty of
times. In fact, so much so that now I don’t vaccinate
at all. We have about 30 Rocky Mountain Horses and we are
vaccine free for almost four years now – and we very
seldom get sick horses. No more abortions after horse show
exposure. No more strangles, knock on wood! Our horses are
just healthier!
Another thing I don’t do is deworm
every 2-3 months.. Foreign substances like deworming chemicals
and vaccinations just confuse the bodies’ healing mechanisms
to where it has no clue what is supposed to be part of the
body and what is not. It seems to just start reacting to everything.
Take for instance the allergy tests on those horses with hives.
Every one of them I have seen the results on seem to come
back allergic to everything. Like hay, grass, dust etc. –
you know, those things you can’t keep horses away from
anyway. The best you can do in most of these cases is wet
the hay right? Anyone have a horse sensitive to flies? Come
on, horses are supposed to live with flies not break out in
sores and hives. What has changed? The answer to deworming,
by the way, is to simply check to see if they even have worms
before deworming. All horse don’t have worms –
we check hundreds of samples in our office. TRUE all horses
are exposed to worms but guess what? SOME ARE RESISTANT, or
so it seems! In my early years of practice we used to always
check first with a fecal sample because we had to pass that
nose tube and that was potentially risky business. That was
a “known” risk, I believe an unknown risk is even
worse. Could it be that overzealous use of pastes could be
just as risky? Worse yet are daily dewormers! I have no doubt
that some day we will have super worms that are resistant
to everything! Daily dewormers are not helping. Paying for
a colic surgery is a great marketing stategy, especially if
it keeps you using drugs and chemicals, isn’t it? I
know I am stepping on toes here but it may be time to reevaluate.
This is tough when one has blinders on and just follows the
norm without question. I understand and I could be completely
wrong, BUT….Understand too, that I used to make my living
as a “conventional” veterinarian using vaccinations,
steroids, antibiotics and other such routine stuff. How could
I have made such a drastic change?
Thank goodness mainstream is
now changing too! For example, small animal practitioners
are being advised to no longer vaccinate just by the “calendar”,
ie yearly, but to consider the individual needs and actual
likelihood of exposure. True, this is very controversial,
but a real step in the right direction. Such recommendations
will be forthcoming for equines as well, but my concern is
that all the fear about the “new diseases” will
greatly hinder this coming. A major equine publication just
last year quoted “Looming Disaster with Our Current
Deworming Practices” siting such concerns as chemical
toxicity and the resistance factor I already mentioned. But
then another major equine magazine said Garlic was potentially
toxic because they didn’t know the difference between
an onion and garlic! So go figure! Bottom line is, it is our
responsibility, not the industry’s in general, to do
what is right for our horse. Everybody has their own agenda.
In the later Garlic article, by the way, if you questioned
it, you were referred you to a major university toxicology
hotline. It cost $45 for a consultation. While you waited
for the veterinarian, the recording attempted to sell you
a book on Natural Toxins in horses. I paid the $45 for a search
on garlic toxicity – never had they had a reported case,
plus, with ALL their research material at hand, they could
not find one substantiated reference to garlic toxicity –Onions
yes (5 pounds), Garlic NO! For your listening pleasure, my
recorded conversation can be heard on our website www.thenaturalhorsevet.net.
The $45 was worth it and it did go to a good cause I am sure,
but I didn’t buy the book. I apologize for being so
sarcastic here but Horse and Rider just blew that one in my
opinion. Such a shame for such a good magazine!
So we have talked about vaccinations
and deworming – what about these “non toxic”
chemicals? You know the kind for flies and such, that you,
too, breathe each time you spray them or spot them on. Sure
these substances are “nontoxic” but what about
subtoxic? After all, “toxic” is the amount of
the chemical or substance that is needed to kill an animal
or person. What about the subtoxic effects that might increase
viral and bacterial infections by weakening the immune system
“function”, ie lowering the white blood cell count,
slowing white blood cell movement, destroying the mechanisms
the white blood cells use to locate and destroy virus and
bacterial cells, etc. What about lowering production of the
essential immune system regulator interferon or weakening
or damaging antibody production? One such chemical on the
market today is 65% permethrin. You can’t use any amount
on you and you sure can’t use malathion, lindane or
even furacin – that yellow stuff for wounds - but it
is OK for equines! By the way, PLEASE read the label on furacin
– it has carcinogenic warnings all over it. Again, I
used to use it by the gallons. So please understand I am not
being critical, I guess I am just trying desperately to spread
the message that “if there is an alternative, find it
and use it”. And if you can’t find it ….
Keep looking! Please .. we as practitioners don’t heal
anything, none of us do, the best we can do is trigger the
body to heal itself. It is as simple as that! The problem
with so many drugs and chemicals is that they so badly confuse
the bodies’ healing by taking over, leaving only another
problem to deal with from the compounding effect of NEVER
having been healed in the first place. I hope this makes sense
and I hope you will help me keep looking.
Diets that we feed our horses are another
major factor in preventative health. Our horses did not eat
grain in the wild, especially so much corn. Why do we have
to add so much molasses to their feeds? Perhaps because they
don’t like the feed? Or is it because it is really not
good for them? Corn, for instance, has the same glycemic index
as sugar. In other words, a tablespoon of corn has the same
effect as a tablespoon of sugar. Molasses essentially is a
sugar. Just imagine the blood glucose rising after the first
meal of the day. Now imagine the blood sugar crashing to a
low level. Herein lies the problem- a sugar low equals “starving”
to the horses’ metabolism. The metabolic system does
all it can to get the blood glucose back up. The pancreas,
adrenals, thyroid, all kick in. These glands literally are
worn out by the vicious cycle day after day of high and low
sugar levels. Imagine asking your horse to act while on a
sugar low. This is probably the number one cause of moody
and hyper horses. I also believe this daily metabolic stress
is the reason we have so much founder and colic today. Even
when a minor stress comes along they have no reserves left,
because of the weekened adrenals and thyroid. The weak links
are the gut and the feet, hence colic or founder. This same
scenario even happens to dogs and cats. Have you seen the
amount of corn in pet foods lately? Based on the number of
doughnut shops, bagel shops and high fructose soda pop machines
around, a lot of people are destroying their “stess
resistance” with carbohydrates and sugar, too. The answer
for people is 25 grams of protein first thing in the morning
with fresh flax oil or virgin olive oil (two tablespoons).
The answer for horses is a good oil top dressed on the grain
which slows the absorption on the grain and prevents the high
spiking sugar levels in the first place. I don’t use
flax oil in horses only because I find it difficult to maintain
the freshness. Rancid or spoiled oil is worse. And heaven
forbid if you know anyone using corn oil, alias syrup, please
suggest they stop! For horses I prefer a mixture of soybean
and coconut oil. Our brand is called H2Oil, Hoof and Health
Oil. Despite what you read in the press, coconut is both good
for both man and beast. My favorite grain to top dress it
on is oats.
What else can we do to tip the scale to the side of wellness?
Use antioxidants! They are the scavengers of sickness, the
buzzards that clean up all the messes in our bodies; the rustolium
that prevents the rust in the first place, or better yet that
which stops the rust dead in its tracks! The rust, or oxidation,
is what turns the apple brown when you cut it in half. It
is oxygen gone bad, free radicals bombarding everything it
finds. Bottom line, if you want your animal friends to live
longer and healthier lives, give antioxidants daily and take
them yourself. It’s already been proven that antioxidants
are beneficial. It has been since the 60’s. Every day
our animal friends, as well as ourselves, are bombarded with
pollutants. We eat them. We drink them. We breathe them. Even
horse feed (not to mention our food) has pesticides, herbicides,
antibiotics, hormones, etc. in it! Water has chlorine, trihalomethanes,
alum, lime, and potassium permanganates just to name a few!
My goodness, just smell the air as you travel down the polluted
highway. I believe you get my “drift”!
If I only had one thing that
I could do to help tip the scale to wellness it would have
to be to use the antioxidant and natural “antibiotic”
Garlic. It is an awesome antioxidant, a tremendous source
of sulfur for the body and a tremendous bug powder when mixed
with the a few other ingredients. Sulfur is one of the most
basic substances needed to rejuvenate tissue. Do you know
that at one time garlic was used successfully to prevent polio?
It was also found to be a more potent antibiotic than penicillin,
ampicillin, doxycyline, streptomycin, and cephalexin- some
of the very same drugs used to treat Anthrax. It was even
effective against some strains of E. coli, staph and other
micro organisms. [Fitoterapia Vol 5, 1984] Other sulfur-bearing
antioxidants, Alpha lipoic acid, N-acetyl Cysteine, Taurine,
and Vitamin C have been shown to elevate levels of Glutathione.
This, too, is a potent antioxidant and also has been shown
to counter the toxicity produced by antrax.[Molecular Medicine,
November 1994; Immunopharmacology, January2000; Applied Environmental
Microbiology, August 1979; Bill Sardi, Knowledge of Health].
And don’t forget Grapeseed Extract, one of the most
potent antioxidants known to man.
Well, I guess if you are still reading
this you are either ready to shoot me, you are saying, “yea”,
or maybe “boy, that guy is nuts!” Regardless,
I ask you one more thing… if you are not familiar with
homeopathy, I suggest you please check it out. It, in it’s
truest form, is the answer to our situation today. And yes,
there are even remedies for symptoms of anthrax, smallpox,
radiation exposure, plague, etc. Though there are new strains
now the symptoms these diseases produce are nothing new. They
were here last century and often treated successfully with
homeopathic remedies, even then. I for one won’t be
lining up for vaccination - but I will be doing everything
I can to help my body help itself. The correctly chosen homeopathic
remedy simply triggers the body to do just that - heal itself.
But it goes without saying that all healing depends upon good
nutrition. If the body doesn’t have the nutrition it
needs, it is like a car without the gas, it simply won’t
run. What do you say… Let’s keep running! See
you at the races! Hope this helps!.
Sincerely,
Dan Moore DVM
The Natural
Vet® (877)-873-8838 http://www.naturalhorsevet.com
|