TO: Our Associates
RE: Anesthesia Toxicity
What most of us lay people don't know or even think about
is, that a pet that is undergoing surgery or teeth cleaning is being
administered serious toxins. In addition, the body is being
subjected to severe trauma that we don't think about either.
Now don't misunderstand, whan an animal needs to "be put
under" for fixing a traumatic injury, modern veterinary medicine
is usually at its very best with the latest technology. Thank
the Lord for conventional vet medicine with their tremendous
diagnostic and trauma procedure skills.
What we would like you to think about is the risk involved in
elective surgery like for teeth cleaning. We have tons of
people call after the fact with all kinds of horror stories. To
this day we can't figure out why people want to clean their pet's
teeth when good clean food will do it naturally for the pet.
Our philosophy is if an animal is getting all the necessary
nutritional requirements its bones, hair, teeth, etc. require, then
the pet will not need teeth cleaning no matter what anyone says.
Frankly all of us here have had old dogs and old cats and none
of them ever had their teeth cleaned and they died with all their
teeth in relatively good repair. Granted their teeth were not
"sparkly white", but they never acquired gum diseases nor any
other mouth diseases just because they didn't brush their teeth.
Nutrition--the right calcium, phosphorous, magnesium and other
minerals for strong teeth and gums is what an animal needs, not
$200 for a teeth cleaning. Think about how much good
wholesome food you could buy for your pet or even the natural
nutritional supplements you could buy for $200 and how long
they would last.
One of the more grim side effects of anesthesia toxicity is
the accumulation of the toxins in the liver and how this ultimately
affects other organs in the body as well as the nutritional uptake
in the digestive system. Plus a little known side effect is the
possible change in the pet's personality. We hear about this
a lot. Why does the pet's behavior change? Because the pet's
polarity of positive was changed to negative. It is pretty
difficult getting the pet back to where it was without all the
drugs. Yes, drugs have an extreme negative effect on a pet.
Yes, you can get the toxic effects of anesthesia out of your
pet's body by doing a de-toxing (purifying the blood) procedure.
But that's not the issue. The issue is why traumatize your pet
and your pocketbook in the first place.
Food for thought about the true best interest of your pet's health.
Yours for excellent pet health.
The Team