She didnt eat her eggs and bacon. Slept most of the day.slurped some water.
I got home from work and she was up and about with a wiggly tail. I wrapped an antibiotic in a piece of cheese,she ate it.
She was looking for food.we didnt have anything ready for her.i gave her 3 cans of tuna with the water,she ate it all.she seems to like tuna. If its tuna she wants,its tuna she will get. Ill hit the store tonight and grab her a bunch of big cans. Should probably get rice to mix with it.
I cant say that shes getting better or cured. But she doesnt seem to be getting any worse than she was a month ago.The only side effects ive seen so far is shes got the hershey squirts and her claws grew pretty damn quick.
Nope. Rice is carcinogenic and only carbs and should not be eaten by either man or dog.
The following is for humans. I don't know about dogs.
There are many types of cancer cells that live off of glucose. Not eating glucose can starve the cancer cells. Humans can live just fine without glucose by using keytones (protein breakdown products) as an energy source. Many cancers cannot. Thus, by eating a ketogenic diet, it can have a potentially devastating effect on cancer.
Yes, the medical research is unclear on this, but that research is funded and published by the same people that get, on average, $200,000 per cancer patient, and are literally working towards depopulating the planet to bring about their neo-Malthusian Utopia. In the field of cell biology on the other hand, this is well known.
So, take that however you want. I worked in a lab that studied cancer cells (specifically how failures in the autophagosome can lead to escape from apoptosis). My experience (lab work and reading other's work) suggests that many types of cancer will starve in a body that is ketogenic.
Of course I don't know for certain. I am not saying "for certain." But there is a lot of evidence that supports a ketogenic diet for the (vast) majority of cancer types, and contraindicating evidence has a lot of ties to conflicts of interest.
u/94f450d
I'm not a vet. I don't know about dog diets. I do know that for humans adding any type of fiber to the diet will aid in firming up the stool. I'm not sure exactly how to accomplish that for a dog, but for humans it's pretty straight forward. You can potentially add something like psyllium husk to tuna, or some other good, neutral flavor fiber additive if you can't get your dog to eat celery. :)
Yes, this. And they pulled almost all rice baby cereal off the market because the arsenic content is too high!
I'm starting to lean towards thinking that OP is not really interested in doing the hard work towards a solution, but just want to feed the dog shit it should not have and hoping a pill can solve their problem.
No effort on the fasting/keto meat o ly mentality from OP at least.
Like wtf giving terminal sick dog rice!?
I think OP is also probably overwheight and therefore does not want to look into Ketogenic because it will force introspection regarding existing cognitive dissonance.
Hope I'm wrong though, but been reading these posts since they started and I have given multiple feedback with very little interest from OP.
Reread what you just posted. When you figure out why i dont comment back to you,let me know.
Not going to put more effort in this thread. If you don't want to just say, then fine, it's your dog.
Posting here just to gather sympathy instead of doing the difficult decision is not going to save your dog.
Taking mine and others advice on the other hand will..
I think it's more lack of knowledge or a lot of trust in his vet. Doctors recommend rice as part of the BRAT diet when people are sick because it's easy to digest. And then vets always recommend meat and rice when a dog or cat is sick. Or broth or baby food. And rice is cheap.
Vets, like doctors, may want sick patients, and also not be trained in nutrition or homeopathy.
Heck, half the time doctors don’t know about pharmaceutical conflicts.
It’s why we have to do that side investigation ourselves and not take them as an authority, but as a potentially useful tool to get to things we’ve learned we need.
Also, regarding comments on OP, it can be very difficult to filter through the noise when already in a stressful state and especially when getting a lot of excess and conflicting guidance. Anon is doing ok. Everybody has room for improvement all the time.
Might be good to see a pet nutritionist with a prepared list of options and suggestions from here if help is needed to filter through the noise. They can probably be found available for web appointments.
I forgot about this thread.
Just found it again.
I agree with you.