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Reference: Complete Veterinary Manual, Tony & Marcy Pavord, 2005.

New Treatment Modality for Laminitis Sufferers!

Hi all,

Just saw a great little article and vid on 3-D shoes for laminitis horses.  I can see a place for it to treat horses and other equids with so many other problems!

 

Check this out!

Laminitis Therapy 3-D Shoes!

https://www.csiro.au/en/News/News-releases/2013/Hollys-Christmas-wish-comes-true

xx
Lizzi

Elizabeth Thompson DVM, writing as Lizzi Tremayne

 

integrative

Integrative Vet Med: Eastern, Western, Ancient, Modern.

Integrative: Eastern, Western, Ancient, Modern.

Hi all! 

I’m Author Lizzi Tremayne. In case you didn’t know, by other name is Elizabeth Thompson, DVM. Like Dr. Usha Knabe, interviewed by Anne Leueen in the following post, I took most of Sharon Willoughby’s animal chiropractic course as well as becoming certified in veterinary acupuncture in 1992 via the IVAS course.

I spent much the next almost 30 years performing Postural Rehabilitation on sport and pleasure horses plus and acupuncture on horses, down cows and dogs and cats in the USA and New Zealand, so Anne’s post holds a place near and dear to my heart. 

So without further ado, let me present Anne Leueen, who has provided us with our first guest post, on Integrative Medicine. 

Integrative: Eastern, Western, Ancient, Modern. These are the combinations of medical practices used by an integrative practitioner. I spoke recently with Dr. Usha Knabe, an integrative veterinary practitioner, about her practice and her treatments for horses.

What got you started with integrative medicine?

I was qualified as a veterinarian and had always been interested in acupuncture and Chinese medicine. The turning point for me was my dog Tess.

She had a herniated disk in her back and was paralyzed.  She had surgery and came back from that and did well in rehab. But then another disk caused paralysis and she  was now 14 years old. I did not think I could put her through another surgery.

A client of mine had a German Shepherd that had responded well to acupuncture so I took Tess to her vet who was qualified in Eastern medicine and acupuncture. He treated Tess.

She fell asleep and when he was finished, she stood up, did a whole body shake and walked off! She had three or four more treatments combined with Chinese herbal treatment and she was fine. I thought “Oh my God! this is incredible! How do I do this?”

What training did you do?

Other vets had recommended the Chi Institute in Florida for training and qualification in Traditional Chinese Veterinary Medicine.

integrative
Chi Institute symbol for continuing education courses.

The Institute offers modules geared to working vets. I did the five modules which are a mix of online and onsite. So I travelled to Florida for the onsite and did the online lectures and labs as well.

At the end of each module I had to write a test. The last module there was a physical exam involving acupuncture for dogs and horses .

There was also a three hour written exam. In order to pass the exams I had to submit case studies and achieve a 75% or better result. This gave me a CVA which is Certified Veterinary Acupuncturist.

Does the Chi Institute course include more than acupuncture?

I also took courses in the  study of the Chinese herbs and qualified as a certified veterinary herbalist.  There are some animals who will not tolerate acupuncture so the herbs can help as they work on the same channels or meridians as the acupuncture.

I did the Institute’s course in  Tui-Na which is the Chinese medicinal massage. This is a very ancient practice and is also good for animals that will not tolerate acupuncture.

When you think about it Western medicine is very young compared to other medical traditions. And it is the herbs and the needles that are working on the animals. Animals cannot react to a placebo effect as humans can.

Have you had success with treating horses with integrative medicine?

Yes! When I had been working as a vet for four  years I  was introduced to Sharon Willoughby’s work in chiropractic in Chicago. She was frustrated by the fact that traditional veterinary medicine, at that time, had nothing to address problems above the horse’s limbs.

She trained as a human chiropractor and transferred this to horses and had success. So I took the Chiro course, “Options for Animals”, and took all the modules. 

Options for Animals

Sharon Willoughby did the lectures and would educate the human chiros and give them exposure to working with horses and the vets on the theories and practices of chiropractics.  In the labs the vets and chiros would work together and help each other.

Initially regular vets were very dismissive but the clients would be happy when the animals would get better. Very early in my practice of chiro I had an amazing success.

Work with racehorses

I had a client, who had a Thoroughbred racehorse, that had got his leg caught in the starting gate in a race. He wrenched his pelvis backwards and the vets said they could not fix him. I said to the client:  “I’ve just learned chiro for the back end of the horse. Let me try to see if I can help him.  If he makes it back then you can pay me.” 

After the first treatment he went out and rolled, which meant he was more comfortable in his back. The pelvis started to get more motion and a month later, when I went to treat him, he was not there. He had gone back to the track! Down at the track no one knew about the chiro treatment. He started to workout and got better and stronger. Sooner than I would have liked the owner entered him in a race!

I was so nervous I had to watch the race on a screen in the canteen.

At the start he didn’t gallop out of the gate. The jockey was so nervous that he might get a leg caught again he just had him trot out. Then he canters.

Then he gallops and catches the back of the field. Then he gets to the middle! Then he gallops to the front of the field and he wins!  I was leaping up and down. I was crying. And do you know what this horse’s name was? It was We’ll Fool ‘Em All. 

integrative
Dr. Usha Knabe cheering for Canada at a Nations Cup held at the Global Dressage Festival in Wellington , Florida.

He went on to have a successful career. The word got around and I was interviewed for the Discovery Channel. That was the start and chiro became more acceptable.

I also got called in to  look at Wando, who was the Canadian Triple Crown winner in 2003, and then I got interviewed by the National Post and Lloyd Robertson for CTV. Then chiro for horses really took off.

I thanked Usha for her time and…..just for the record…..she does chiro work on my horse Biasini and I consider it to be an integral part of his maintenance. 

Thank you, Anne, for joining us here today, and thanks to the rest of you for being here!

 Please go by and visit Anne on her wonderful equestrian blog here. At Horseaddict.net

I’m sure she’d love to see you!

Until next week, stay safe and enjoy your animals and families!

xx

Lizzi

Welcome to Horse and Vet Books’ First Horsey Blog Post!

I write horsey historical fiction and horsey veterinary fiction and nonfiction. Problem is, Amazon doesn’t think such genres exist. I want to prove them wrong.

I play with horses–and have done for a long time.

three little girls riding
Yes, like this long. We were heading off for an overnight. Alone. 🙂

I love to read and write books with horses in them.

I know there are plenty more of us who want to read and write these sorts of stories.

Maya NI Champs
With Blue Mist Shemaya at North Island Combined Drive Championships

I also know there are gutsy horsey chicks and guys out there who don’t think a heroine who races into danger on a half-broken Mustang is TSTL. (“Too stupid to live…”, a common complaint about heroes and heroines by readers who never leave their armchairs.) I’d never heard the term… probably because I was out there doing what most horsey people do–living my life like that… all the time.

Maybe you’re one of us. And for you, I made this website.

You’ll find the sort of books you understand–with horses, vets, kids and grownups, real lives, real injuries, real tragedies, and real triumphs.OAVS 7

Have a look through the site. I hope you see something you like. Leave a comment if you will, and let me know if this is a bit of you.

This is a living page. If there are books you need to see up here, let me know. I can’t possibly have all of them up yet!

If you want to write a blog post on a related subject, let me know on the  Contact Us page.

Scream it out!

We are here!

xx

Lizzi