so your a vet, huh?--do you deny that NSAID use is palliative and not preventative medicine? Do you deny that NSAIDS erode the mucosal lining of the stomach and the intestines--which eventually leads to leakage and peritonitis, which leads to toxemia and septicemia? Do you deny that dehydration increases the likelihood and speed of erosion of the mucosal lining? do you deny that while on NSAIDS horses are not able to heal their mucosal lining? do you deny that lasix induces dehydration? do you deny that stacking makes the likelihood of adverse NSAID outcomes more likely? are you trying to claim that osteoarthritis is curable? finally, what point where you trying to make with the picture of enzymatic cartilage degradation, what the hell did it have to do with my points-- and most importantly, did you even understand what it illustrates?
ps: i often find that people who dispute others not with fact and reasonable debate, but with insults usually are the ones who know the least or are liars--i also tend find that those who take personal something that has nothing to do with them and was not directed at them, tends indicate a guilty conscience. you don\'t talk like a vet, you talk like an a$$.
here\'s just a quick google search to support for my \"crap:\"\"The principles of treatment of equine osteoarthritis is similar to those of humans--treat the pain and dysfunction palliatively as long as possible. The definitive treatments in man are joint replacement or joint fusion. In the horse, the only definitive treatment available is joint fusion (arthrodesis).\"
http://www.equineortho.colostate.edu/questions/tjd.htmhttp://www.merckvetmanual.com/mvm/index.jsp?cfile=htm/bc/51800.htmhttp://books.google.com/books?id=2iEkI4YKoHgC&pg=PA321&lpg=PA321&dq=nsaid+side+effects+in+racehorses+dehydration&source=bl&ots=my_O9ptIK7&sig=2LCUyxzHw1FCwUlEMSyRyZ-TeuY&hl=en&sa=X&ei=HUwDUM2MH4Ts2AWA9cWbCw&ved=0CFgQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=nsaid%20side%20effects%20in%20racehorses%20dehydration&f=falsehttp://redalyc.uaemex.mx/redalyc/pdf/559/55919726003.pdfhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2885.1986.tb00008.x/abstracthttp://www.aaep.org/images/files/EffectCOX1inhibitorandCOX1sparingdrugsequinerightdorsal.pdfhttp://www.cvm.ncsu.edu/docs/documents/release_NSAID_research.pdfhttp://www.usef.org/documents/drugsmeds/nsaidandyourhorseweb.pdfhttp://www.azequine.com/nsaid.pdfhttp://equimed.com/drugs-and-medications/reference/furosemidehttp://www.eaglefernequine.com/pdf/Newsletter%20Jan%202011.pdfhttp://www.2f-stemcells.de/downloads/Barakat_%20Old_Horse_Arthritis.pdfhttp://www.williamvandry.com/2012/05/09/professor-william-vandrys-view-may-2012-2/sighthound Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> i wasn\'t going to get involved in this discussion,
> primarily because of the overwhelming
> dunning-kruger effect on display all over the web
> in relation to this, but there are three
> assertions i see from all of the apologists that
> are flatly incorrect, and that when coming from
> those claiming vet or medical knowledge can\'t even
> be simply labeled as incorrect or ignorance, but
> must be labeled as outright lies.
>
> After this, I didn\'t want to keep reading but I
> did ...
>
> the first is that apologists keep referring to
> NSAID and anti-inflammatory medications given to
> IHA and other horses as \"preventative.
>
> No one with any medical knowledge (whether vet or
> MD or nurse or well versed layman) would refer to
> this as preventative medicine; it isn\'t, it\'s
> palliative medicine.
>
> I\'m a veterinarian, and you are simply wrong. I
> suggest you go learn about the inflammatory
> cascade and how to interrupt it. Here\'s a handy
> little chart about inflammation that proves you
> completely wrong. If you would like to discuss
> specific detail, go ahead:
>
http://www.equineortho.colostate.edu/images/trauma> 2.gif
>
> I didn\'t bother reading the rest of your crap.
>
> Edit: Damn. I did go ahead and read the rest of
> your crap.
>
> This sentence that you wrote:
>
> \" ... this effect is worsened dramatically by
> dehydration--a state that race horses are kept in
> almost permanently though lasix and water
> pulling.\"
>
> ... shows you are so completely factually
> ignorant of basic race horse daily husbandry, and
> what you are talking about, that I would delete
> your entire post if I were you, out of sheer
> embarrassment.