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Healthy Pet Network
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Pets at Risk: From Allergies to Cancer, Remedies for an Unsuspected Epidemic
by Alfred J. Plechner with Martin Zucker
This method
by Dr. Plechner has helped many thousands of pets lead normal happy lives.
Without it, many would have been euthanized. This information is decades
ahead of mainstream veterinary medicine.
Albert J. Simpson, DVM
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194 pages
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$15.00 US plus shipping
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Pets at Risk provides a clear guide
for healing, written for both pet owners and veterinarians alike. Dr.
Plechner explains that many health problems originate with genetic or
acquired disturbances to the adrenal cortex production of cortisol, an
important hormone. A domino effect ensues, affecting the hypothalamus-
pituitary- adrenal axis. Other hormones go awry and immune function is
compromised.
Dr. Plechner also identifies adverse environmental
influences such as food intolerance, poor diet, toxins in the environment,
and stress, among others, as factors that also may affect adrenal malfunction
and overall pet health.
In Dr. Plechners therapy program, he
uses a safe and effective combination of pharmaceutical and plant based
(natural) cortisone preparations, depending on the severity and stage
of disease. Many once-sick animalssome seriously illhave made
remarkable recoveries and lived long and healthy lives on this program.
My independent clinical experience shows that low-dose cortisone
along with thyroid replacement, is hugely beneficial for restoring lost
immune competence present in many canine conditions, explains Dr.
Plechner. In most affected felines, cortisol alone works.
Pets at Risk creates the blueprint for an effective
working partnership between pet owners and veterinarians. A part of the
treatment includes pharmaceuticals, which must be prescribed by a veterinarian,
along with a healthy diet and careful attention to food allergies, which
require an attentive pet owner.
In the final chapter of his book, Dr. Plechner relates his
findings in animals to illnesses in human beings. Dr. Plechner has presented
his clinical perspectives in 2002 and 2003 to physicians at the Broda
O. Barnes, M.D. Research Foundation in Connecticut, an organization dedicated
to education, research, and training in the field of thyroid and endocrine
balance. After learning about Dr. Plechners findings, one physician,
David Brownstein, stated: His revelations from years of clinical
practice have connected the dots between unrecognized hormonal defects
and immune system disorder. As a medical doctor, I find that his work
explains many of the chronic problems I see in my patients. This book
shows how safe and effective hormone treatments can be used to rebuild
the immune system. The information has great therapeutic significance
not just for sick animals but for sick humans as well.
The following is excerpted from Pets at Risk: From
Allergies to Cancer, Remedies for an Unsuspected Epidemic (NewSage
Press 2003). This material is copyrighted by Alfred J. Plechner, DVM
and NewSage Press,
and may not be copied or excerpted without direct permission from the
publisher.
Chapter One
Endangered Dogs and Cats
Veterinarians are frustrated. They treat pets engulfed by
relentless disorders with multiple and seemingly unrelated clinical signs.
They frequently can do little more than temporarily relieve their patients
and make them more comfortable, but are unsuccessful in reversing the
decline in vitality and health, or the course of disease. Many times veterinarians
have no choice but to euthanize hopelessly sick pets, even young ones.
On a daily basis veterinarians see animals like the following cases I
have worked with:
- Georgette, a beautiful three-year-old Golden Retriever,
developed the canine equivalent of breast cancer. Another veterinarian
had removed the mammary gland tumor and treated the dog with radiation.
Within weeks, however, an adjacent mammary gland became cancerous. The
vet removed the new tumor and again treated the dog with radiation.
At this point, the veterinarian was extremely pessimistic about the
chances for survival and indicated to the owners that the dog probably
had no more than three to six months to live.
- Miles, a seven-year-old Airedale weighing just over a
hundred pounds, had developed aggressive behavior and had bitten his
owner on two occasions. Just prior to these attacks, a strange expression
of rage suddenly appeared on Miles face. Something had to be done
or else Miles would probably have to be euthanized.
- Buster was dying. This six-year-old domestic longhair
male had been previously diagnosed with feline leukemia and treated
with chemotherapy by another veterinarian. By the time I treated the
cat, he had chronic diarrhea, was losing weight, and unable to hold
his food down. Buster had anemia and white gums, typical of advanced
disease, and major hair loss, a side effect of the chemotherapy. A blood
test revealed that the cat had serious hormonal imbalances affecting
his immune system. He was overproducing killer cells that were not only
attacking the leukemia virus but also his own tissue.
- Bob, a three-year-old male mixed breed dog, and Cherry,
a five-year-old shorthair female cat, shared the same household and
the same daily diet of lamb and rice kibble. Their owner, like most
people, believed that this type of diet was safe and hypoallergenic,
meaning food that does not cause allergic reactions. Yet, his dog and
cat had developed diarrhea and vomiting. Both animal companions had
flaky skin and weight loss, signs of improper food absorption, and were
clearly unhealthy. The concerned owner brought the animals to my clinic,
puzzled over their illness.
- Candy had been a national field trial champion at the
age of two, but a year later, the Brittany Spaniel had refused to run,
point, and fetch. She had been bred but could not conceive. Candy also
developed valley fever, a mysterious and hard-totreat fungal
condition that damages the lungs.
These cases are examples of an insidious, unsuspected epidemic
that sickens, weakens, and kills companion animals before their time.
Pure and mixed breeds. Males and females. Neutered, spayed, and intact
animals. All are at risk. Many are suffering because of this unrecognized
epidemic. As a result, veterinarians are seeing the following manifestations
of ill health:
- More chronic diseases, particularly chronic health problems
among younger animals that previously affected mostly older animals.
- Middle-aged animals with the appearance and organs of
old animals.
- More animals with weakened immune systems.
- More animals unresponsive to conventional treatment.
- More relentless skin allergies with inflammation, ulceration,
and itchiness.
- Severe hypersensitivity to food and insect bites.
- Conditions among many breeds that were originally thought
to affect only one particular breed.
- Inability to develop protective antibodies from vaccinations.
- Miscarriages and sterility.
- Aggressiveness, rage, and strange behavior.
Are Pets Headed for Extinction?
During more than thirty-five years in practice, I have treated
tens of thousands of dogs and cats with these kinds of problems. Many
years ago, I was fortunate to discover a common underlying mechanism for
multiple illnesses of pets that involves certain imbalances within the
endocrine and immune systems of the body.
Endocrine refers to the system of glands that produces hormones,
molecules that serve as messengers in an amazing network of inner intelligence
that regulates the function of the body. Health and orderliness are based
on this inner intelligence. There are myriad hormones made in the body,
many of which scientists still dont clearly understand. These substances
are secreted by glands such as the adrenals, ovaries, and thyroid
that are overseen by higher centers in the brain. The problem I
have identified starts with hormonal imbalances that affect the immune
system, a network of cells and organs that defends the body against bacteria,
viruses, and disease.
I have seen these imbalances many times, creating so much
bad health that I seriously fear for the survival of our cherished pets.
One thing is for sure: if this epidemic continues to grow, basic health
care costs of pets may become so prohibitive that many people will not
be able to afford pets at all.
The physical starting point of the problem I have identified
is a defect in the adrenal glands, important hubs of hormone production.
The defect creates a damaging domino effect among other hormones that
weakens the immune system. The end result is a major loss of protection
against disease and a greatly increased risk for disease.
I became alarmed and concerned early on in my veterinary
practice more than thirty years ago. As more clients brought inexplicably
sick animals into my clinic, I became dissatisfied with just treating
the superficial signs. Moreover, the conventional treatments I was trained
to do were having little impact on animals seemingly more susceptible
to disease and allergies and who were living shorter and sicker lives.
I saw dogs dying at six or eight years instead of twelve
or fourteen. They developed bizarre autoimmune diseases pitting them in
a life-and-death struggle not just against bacteria and viruses but against
the very food they ate. I saw cats with confounding combinations of inflammatory
bowel disease, failing kidneys, and urinary tract disorders.
My medical school training did not prepare me to deal with
this inundation of ill health. So I had to learn on my own. Over time
I learned that many of the problems I saw had an apparent common denominator
of skewed hormones and compromised immune system. Some animals with this
endocrine-immune disturbance would develop clinical signs of disease early
on in life. Others would develop disease later. I liken this disturbance
to a timebomb. Some animals have long fuses. Others short fuses. Sometimes
the disturbance manifests dramatically in acute illness. Other times,
the endocrine-immune disturbance slowly unravels an apparently healthy
and orderly system, infecting the system with increasing chaos like a
computer virus. In the process, animals are often unable to absorb medication
and respond to conventional treatments. Until the imbalances are corrected,
the treatments may not work.
Sometimes stress, poor diet, exposure to toxic chemicals,
and parasites such as fleas can aggravate, or even cause, the imbalances.
My clinical studies indicate, however, that animals are more likely to
react to these factors simply because their immune systems are compromised
by hormonal imbalances. For instance, the scratching itching and skin
problems typically associated with fleas are usually secondary to hormonal-immune
imbalances. Correct the imbalances and the animal becomes healthy. The
fleas go elsewhere and target other weak animals.
The solution is to identify the hormonal defect and correct
it. This is what I did for Georgette, Miles, Buster, Bob, Cherry, and
Candy, all of whom recovered from their illnesses. After years of treating
thousands of dogs and cats with serious and chronic health problems, I
want to share the same program that I use so successfully with pet owners
and their veterinarians, so they can recognize hormonal defects, correct
them, and restore health to ailing animal companions.
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