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Any time the horse experiences added stress, such as hauling,
excessive work loads, dramatic feed and water changes, cold,
damp weather or trauma experiences, the immune system can easily
become deficient. If this happens your horse is susceptible to
the bugs that are present. He is open and ready for anything
that may be available to him in his present environment. Generally
the thing that will tip you off that your horse needs this combination
is his lethargic attitude. He will be disinterested in his feed
and water, or if he coughs when you are warming him up and then
quits coughing when he is warmed up. The best way to approach
this is to feed it for a while before you are planning on exposing
him to the stress. He will then have a strong immune system,
and the bugs cannot find a strong hold with which to invade your
horse. If the horse shows signs of infection (mucous from nostrils,
etc.) you should also use #25 Infection Fighter in unison with
this mix.
You have heard me mention the immune system more than once in
my writings about the health of the horse. This is a subject
I am hearing about from the horse owner more and more all the
time. As I watch these new diseases come on the scene, I am made
increasingly more aware of the importance the immune system plays
in the welfare of the horse and his total health. We keep hearing
talk about the possibility of biological warfare threats posed
by terrorist groups, and we keep thinking the threat is in the
future. It may very well be a future threat, but I feel like
it is an issue to be dealt with now as if it were an issue. I
am not sure how much I want to get into this subject and how
much I need to get into it to help you see how important the
immune system is, and what we, as horse owners, can do to keep
from being caught unaware.
The Immune System and West Nile Virus
A few days ago I went to a veterinarian clinic which was hosted
by our community and the college, pertaining to West Nile Virus
(WNV). I spent about 5 hours listening to a very well informed
and well educated veterinarian, who has dealt with quite a few
cases of WNV. She is also, obviously a very good veterinarian
with a large practice. She showed video of actual cases she was
working with and spent a great deal of time explaining what they
had done to help these horses through this fast moving disease.
As you probably already know, this is a disease which is non-selective
in age, gender, and location. One thing they (the experts) know,
is it is spread by a mosquito. Some of the most severely affected
states, however, are Kansas and Nebraska, both of which have
just completed one of the worst drought summers in modern history.
Mosquitoes are known to like a wetter environment so it seems
odd to me these pests have chosen such a dry place to launch
their most ferocious attacks. Why did they not launch their attacks
equally as well in some of the wetter states, and why have there
still not been reports of the virus in coastal regions like western
Washington and Oregon? Why is the panhandle of Texas also among
the more seized areas and the southeastern part of the state,
where it is both warmer and more humid not where we are seeing
more of these cases cropping up?
Is the mosquito the only one to blame for WNV?
I think I have posed reason enough to ask the question, is
it just the mosquito or is there something else we are faced
with. How hard is it to keep the mosquitoes out of your horses
area anyway? It is hard enough to keep the pests out of my own
bedroom, let alone out of the stall area. The vet who was teaching
this particular class was talking to about fifty vets from around
this area and to my knowledge no one in the room, other than
her, had ever seen an actual case of WNV. She went into a lengthy
discussion on the vaccine being used to alleviate the symptoms
caused by WNV and how and when to administer. I wish I were more
educated about the drugs, but I just don't use them so I must
plead uneducated about them. I know she said they were using
dexamethazone, as an anti inflammatory and DMSO as a free radical
scavenger. If the horses could not support their own weight,
when slinged, they were pretty likely not to survive the ordeal.
She went on to say, a large percentage of the horses which showed
improvement early on in treatment would survive the disease,
and you should know within about 24 hours if they were on the
"will" or "will not" survive list. She also
stated Equitec (not sure of the spelling) was one of the most
important parts of the recovery. This is an immunoserum, as I
understood it, which is to stimulate the immune system.
What exactly is the Immune System?
What is the immune system and how does it work? The immune
system is, simply put, the vital organs working with the blood
and lymphatic system to accomplish the optimal welfare of the
body. When the immune system is not working in harmony or if
it is given excess work to do right when it is already working
as hard as it can, it simply can not, and will not, be able to
handle the job it is designed to do. What has this got to do
with anything? Well, every thing put into the body is either
food or it is not food at the cellular level. If it is recognized
as food the cell uses it. If it is not recognized as food the
cell simply can not use it, so it then becomes a toxin which
needs to be evacuated from the body. The immune system plays
a vital role in this evacuation. The liver, kidneys, blood, lymphatics,
digestion, skin, etc. are all asked to step up the pace to evacuate
these toxins. If the organ mentioned already has a full schedule,
it must miss some of the toxins, which causes congestion, either
in that organ or some other part of the body or the blood. In
other words it taxes the immune system.
Immune System Stimulation
To stimulate the immune system is fine if the immune system
is strong in the first place, but if it is not it simply drains
it more. I compare it to using a cattle prod on a cow that is
down and weak. It will stimulate her but it will not help her
stay up if she does get up. What the cow needs is something to
make her stronger so she can get up and stay up, not something
to stimulate her to do something she is not capable of doing.
The same stimulation will work well on a strong cow who just
needs a little gentle persuasion. I use this as an analogy to
help you see what is happening inside the body as pertaining
to the immune system. Remember, the physics do not change on
the inside of the horse which we know to be true on the outside
of the horse. Water still runs down hill unless under a pressurized
system, two objects cannot occupy the same space at the same
time, gravity is always at work to pull the body down, etc.
Is a weak Immune System the real problem?
Can the weakness in the Immune System be the reason no one
can positively say the WNV vaccine is working or not on these
horses? It is my observation, there are as many horses getting
the virus who have been vaccinated as there are who have not
been vaccinated. The vet teaching the clinic, I mentioned, said
the vaccine should be administered in three parts. The first
shot should be administered, then in thirty days the second shot
should be administered, then in thirty days a booster shot should
be administered. What is happening within these ninety days to
protect your horse from the virus? What if you were feeding to
build the immune system instead of waiting and wondering?
Feed the Immune System for Prevention
How can feeding do the immune system any good? Every part
of the horse is made up of it's own vitamins and minerals. For
instance, you are aware the bones and teeth need calcium to keep
them strong but so does the heart need calcium to perform it's
constricting action. Now, the body has it's own built in "pecking
order". When calcium is made available the heart will get
what it needs first, because the heart is most vital to the survival
of the body. The bones will get second pick because it is in
the bones where bone marrow and blood cells are produced, which
is of greater importance than are the teeth and then if there
is still some calcium available the teeth will get it. The body
treats all of the vitamins and minerals in this way. Therefore
if we want the liver, or the kidneys, or the heart, or the bones,
or the total of all of the above healthy, we need to feed what
makes them healthy.
How would a horse do it?
When a horse is grazing on natural vegetation, which
has not been sprayed for "weeds", he will eat a number
of different plants and a number of different parts of those
plants in the coarse of a day. This is the optimal feeding conditions
for the horse. Not only is he getting what he needs but he is
also getting an easily assimilated form of the vitamins and minerals
as they are available in the natural vegetation and the amount
of each he wants. This is what we must look at replicating when
we are feeding our confined horses. Horses fed on their natural
vegetation in this manner generally have a pretty strong immune
system because they pick the plants they need when they need
them. The difference in stimulating the immune system and building
the immune system is the difference it generally takes to win
the really tough battles fought within the internal body parts.
It is absolutely necessary to have the horses' bodily functions
helping you. This is why we concentrate on keeping the horses'
immune system working for us by building the natural strength,
or immune system, through nutritional supplementation. Once again
the best defense is a good offense, or prevention.
* Patent Pending
Ingredients:
#24 Immune Builder- barberry, cascara, Echinacea, eluthro,
garlic, licorice, olive leaf, parsley, plantain, red clover,
rose hips, sarsasparillo, wheat grass.
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