Friday, June 21, 2013

Top Ten Reasons for Pets To Take 
Probiotics

DH DeForge, VMD
www.AnimalDocAMMultiMedia.blogspot.com
21June2013





"I can't believe they bought all of this pizza for me!"


“Mainstream human medicine would be way different if they focused on prevention even half as much as they focused on intervention…”  ~Anonymous

It is time that veterinary medicine, also, makes a commitment to spend more time on nutrition during all Stages of a Pet's Life.  Good nutrition is a preventive medicine and can lead to the extension of a pet's life.  Raw diets are the "fad diets" of the New Millennium.  They should be avoided. Please read below comments from the ASPCA and AVMA about  raw diets in our pets.

ASPCA experts say raw food diets for pets that include raw meat, eggs and milk may be dangerous for your furry friends.  We typically recommend that pet parents opt for well-balanced, high-quality commercial and cooked foods instead.
The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) agrees! In studies published in AVMA’s journal, homemade and commercial raw food diets for dogs and cats were found to contain dangerous bacteria like E. coli and Salmonella, just to name a few. Other tests showed that unprocessed food diets can lead to nutrient deficiencies or excess that can cause serious illnesses in pets. Also, pets chewing on raw bones can lead to obstruction or perforation of their gastrointestinal tracts, and fractured teeth.
Become your pet's dietary advocate!  Begin studying more about the foods that you feed and the supplements that are available for your pet.  Consider speaking to a Veterinary Board Certified Nutritionist.  Contact Dr. Lisa Freeman, Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Nutritionists at Tuft's Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine. Call Tuft's and get an estimate for a phone consultation with Dr. Freeman.  Also, start a journey, today, in discovering the positive effects of adding a Probiotic supplement to your pet's diet. 
What is a Probiotic?  Probioitcs are live organisms that normally live in your gastrointestinal tract.  At times, they are deficient in number. By adding a Probiotic, a beneficial effect occurs.  People confuse Prebiotics with Probiotics all of the time.  Prebiotics are dietary substances  that serve as food for the Probiotic bacteria and therefore enhance the effect of the Probiotic.  Some Prebiotics are complex sugars such as Inulin and Lactulose and the carbohydrates found in fruit.  Natural Prebiotics for animals are oatmeal, wheat, barley, legumes, bananas, berries, leafy greens, and leeks.  People never consider adding these Prebiotics to commercial dog foods or feeding them separately as a treat. Prebiotics are super foods that should be considered partners to Probiotics. 
Probiotics recolonize the small intestine with good or helpful bacteria that can be reduced by stress, sickness, or with the usage of antibiotics.  Probiotics produce substances that inhibit harmful bacteria and stimulate the body's immune system.  Never rely on Probiotics to treat a condition that your pet might be affected with at home without consultation with a veterinarian.  A thorough physical exam with appropriate diagnostic testing, in sick animals, must be accomplished to guide appropriate therapy.  In healthy animals, it is this author's opinion, to make Probiotics a part of daily life.
Veterinary medicine has produced no studies that definitely prove when and for what reasons Probiotics should be used.   However, there are a plethora of clinical cases that have drawn attention on the positive effects of the use of Probiotics in companion animals.
Here are 10 REASONS that I utilize Probiotics in my General Practice.   Consult with your veterinarian before using a Probiotic for any of the reasons listed below.
  1. Extended Antibiotic usage-always give your Probiotic 2 hours after your antibiotic
  2. Aging-The Geriatric Patient
  3. Illness-poor health; unthrifty; and debilitated pets
  4. Poor diet in the past that is now being corrected under veterinary supervision
  5. Urinary Tract Infections
  6. Stress situations like traveling and pet boarding
  7. Seasonal Allergy and Dermatitis in general
  8. Intestinal Parasites
  9. Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  10. Food Allergy Colitis
The question I am commonly asked is: Which Probiotic should I use?

Presently, two veterinary Probiotics are available:
  • See NestlePurina.com-Fortiflora
  • See Iams.com-Prostora

If you visit a health food store, you will find a wall totally dedicated to human Probiotics.  Many human Probiotics can be utilized in animals. The human Probiotic must contain bacteria shown to survive passage through the stomach.  Products in capsules and tablets must be able to break down in the small intestine and not just pass undigested into the stool.  Go to www.ConsumerLab.com and read about Probiotics.  Most importantly, discuss your choice of any human Probiotic with a Board Certified Veterinary Nutritionist or with your local veterinarian.  Read about the track record of the manufacturer of the Probiotic you are looking to purchase.  For the dosage of your Probiotic, it is essential to have a meeting with your family veterinarian or a Board Certified Nutritionist.

Probiotics are becoming very important in human nutrition circles.  We should consider their beneficial properties in animals just as important.  Always speak to your doctor before starting any supplement in the pet that you love.

20June2013
Don DeForge, VMD
Medical Director-Silver Sands Veterinary Center
17 Seemans Lane-Milford, CT 06460
1-800-838-3368
Facebook Silver Sands Veterinary
Editor: AnimalDocAMMultiMedia.blogspot.com
Dr. DeForge welcomes your questions and comments at DonDeForge@aol.com



Monday, June 10, 2013

Saving Your Pet's Life With
Love!
Dimentia and Animal Alzheimers
Don DeForge, VMD
Animal Doc AM Multi-Media
10Jun2013


One morning you will awake and the dog or cat you love will seem different.  You will call and your pet will look at you with a blank face.  Your friend will seem lost, confused, and helpless.  You will question the increased pacing at night and changes that have occurred in the sleep cycle of your companion. Other family members realize something is wrong.  A trip to the local veterinarian, that has treated your pet for a dozen years, is agreed upon and scheduled.

When you reach the doctor, the veterinarian states a battery of tests is needed to separate physical problems from the behavioral changes of aging.  A chemistry profile and CBC is run; your pet is examined for infectious disease; endocrine testing for possible diabetes, thyroid, and adrenal disease is completed; x-rays are taken of the chest, abdomen, and orthopedic system.  Dental X-rays are recommended to rule out oral pain as a cause of changes in behavior.  If all of these tests are normal, your veterinarian might recommend a referral to an internal medicine doctor and/or neurologist for pets.  Your LDVM might additionally suggest an MRI of the central nervous system and head.  It is always a good idea to accept referral to a specialist about the need for additional testing when a diagnosis of Cognitive Dysfunction is being considered..

There are many names for cognitive dysfunction.  Some call it Senior Dimentia; others coin the term Age Related Senility; and some phrase the problem Pet Alzheimers.  Here are some of the signs to look for at home in your aged dog/cat that would make a trip to the veterinarian very important:

  • Housebreaking habits have stopped; a well trained dog/cat starts to urinate and defecate in the home at night
  • Wandering at night; restlessness and pacing
  • Panting
  • Unable to recognize other pets or people in the home
  • Not interested in favorite play toys
  • Sleep habits change;  a good sleeper only sleeps for short times and then becomes restless
  • Pacing at night or during the day without rest
  • Disinterest in people visiting; in the past your companion became very excited about visitors
  • Not wanting to go on walks and car rides; these were special events in the past
  • A decline in memory-i.e.-forgetting tricks that were common to perform; forgetting where food and water bowls have been placed; not knowing where the doors of exit are in your home
  • Litter box training has ceased 
  • Constant meowing
  • No longer wanting to be near your or sit in your lap; going off in a corner and hiding
The good news is that there are some fairly new treatments for Canine Congnitive Dysfunction that have shown promise.  After your doctor runs all of the tests that are appropriate and diagnoses Cognitive Dysfunction ask for a referral to an Internal Medicine doctor about initiating appropriate treatment.  The Internist might recommend Anipryl-[Selegiline] in your dog.  There are also a number of nutritional supplements with anti-oxidants that have shown promise in treating Canine Dimentia.  Hills Veterinary Diets has a food that is called B/D to support memory and learning ability.  

Hill's Prescription diets state:
B/D Key Benefits:
Prescription Diet® b/d® is formulated with the following benefits:
  • Clinically tested to support memory and learning ability in older dogs
  • Antioxidants to help protect brain cells and support a healthy immune system
  • High levels of L-carnitine to help preserve muscle mass
  • High in Omega-3 fatty acids to support brain health
  • Appropriate levels of protein, phosphorus and sodium to promote heart and kidney health
  • Contains fruits and vegetables with naturally occurring vitamins and antioxidants


Also:
Virbac Animal Health has a new product for Cognitive Dysfunction:

NOVIFIT® (NoviSAMe®) Tablets

NOVIFIT Tablets help support dogs and cats with cognitive dysfunction, so you can bring older pets and their owners back together.
NOVIFIT Tablets contain the natural, nutritional supplement S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe) and are recommended for the management of behavioral disorders linked to brain aging. In fact, NOVIFIT Tablets feature the only SAMe formula clinically proven to help with cognitive dysfunction.1
  • Provides a reliable, first-line treatment option for behavioral disorders associated with cognitive decline and brain aging in dogs and cats.
  • Helps improve activity levels, awareness, and memory associated with previously learned tasks.
  • Helps improve age-related behavior problems, including:
    • Disorientation
    • Changes in social interactions with people and other pets
    • Changes in sleep-wake cycle
    • Loss of house-training skills

What about Cognitive Dysfunction in cats?  Yes....it does occur in cats.  The syndrome is much more difficult to diagnose because of a cat's habits vs. a dog's daily activity.  The same work-up for physical underlying disease must be performed by your LDVM or by an Internal Medicine doctor.  There are cat specific diseases that must be eliminated that could cause some of the changes seen in Dimentia in Cats.  One of these is oral or dental disease.  When cats suffer from "bad" pain or chronic pain, they don't exhibit outward signs of discomfort.  They live with this "bad" pain thinking there is no other life......i.e. accepting a life with chronic pain!  A true tragedy?  Some quiet cats become aggressive from oral pain; some high-strung cats can develop lethargic tendencies from oral pain.  Head tremors can be present; teeth chattering ; food habit changes; and even somnolence can all occur with oral pain.    Some pet owners dismiss this as the behavior changes of senility.   This is a terrible error.  The pet owner must visit their veterinary health care professional.  The signs noted can be very significant physical signs of pain.  A doctor who has expertise in oral radiology should determine if oral disease is the culprit of the signs noted by the owner by taking dental x-rays under general inhalation anesthesia.  

Danielle-Gunn Moore from the Universty of Edinburgh states:
Management of cats with CDS
Professor of Feline Medicine, Head of Companion Animal Sciences
University of Edinburgh, Hospital for Small Animals
Dr Danielle Gunn-Moore, at the University of Edinburgh's Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, states:
"Scientists already thought cats were susceptible to dementia because previous research had identified thick, gritty plaques on the outside of elderly cats' brain cells which are similar to those found in humans. But, by pinpointing this second key marker, the Edinburgh-led team says we can be sure that cats can suffer from a feline form of Alzheimer's.
 This newly discovered protein is crucial to our understanding of the aging process in cats. We've known for a long time that cats develop dementia, but this study tells us that the cat's neural system is being compromised in a similar fashion to that we see in human Alzheimer's sufferers. The gritty plaques had only hinted that might be the case -- now we know.
"The shorter life-span of a cat, compared to humans, allows researchers to more rapidly assess the effects of diet, high blood pressure, and prescribed drugs on the course of the disease. However, we also need to understand more about our geriatric cats for their own benefit, so we can slow down the degeneration the disease brings and keep them as happy cats for as long as possible."

Behavior in the cat can certainly be modified by arthritis; brain tumors; CNS Vascular Problems; Hypertension; Hyperthyroidism; Kidney and Liver pathology; Urinary Tract Disease; Gastro-intestinal Disease; and Diabetes etc.  Because of this, it is essential that your LDVM perform a comprehensive medical work-up or make a referral to an Internal Medicine doctor before diagnosing Dimentia in your cat.

As with human Alzheimer's, the goal is to slow the progression of the disease process until a cure can be found.  You can be part of: saving your pet's life with love!  Interactive games; spending more time with your pet; encouraging recognition of what has been forgotten; and speaking to your pet in tones of love...... can make a major difference when coupled with supplements and dietary changes.  Call your veterinarian today.  Schedule a consultation....it is time to give back to your special friend the love that has been provided to you so freely and selflessly!

Questions?  Contact Dr. DeForge about this blog
at: Animal Doc AM Multi-Media--E-Mail DonDeForge@aol.com
Medical Director-Silver Sands Veterinary Center
17 Seemans Lane
Milford, CT. 06460
203-877-3221
Facebook-Silver Sands Veterinary
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10June2013