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Pets
and Nutrition
Keeping the Immune System Healthy
During the
glacier age, mineral rich soil was deposited over the Earth. However,
erosion and chemical farming methods have contributed to depletion of
trace minerals from our topsoil, and from the plants grown in this soil.
When trace minerals are deficient in our food and water, the body's
defense systems cannot function properly. Likewise, animals lacking proper
amounts of copper, iron, selenium, etc. have been found to be much more
likely to develop disease.
Keeping
the immune system healthy
can reduce the need for constant antibiotic treatment.
Most people
and animals are usually prescribed drugs — specifically antibiotics and
vitamins — at times when they are ill. However, antibiotics kill germs
and rarely discriminate between good and bad germs. When the 'good' germs
are constantly assaulted by antibiotics, the 'bad' germs can become super germs
which may become impervious to drugs. Keeping the immune system healthy
can reduce the need for constant antibiotic treatment.
Vitamins are
fortifiers and control the body's appropriation of minerals. However, if
there are no vitamins and no trace minerals, the body has no fusion to
perform and therefore the vitamins are useless. Additionally, replacing
minerals in both your diet and your pet's diet is essential.
Minerals + Diet =
Health
An example
of this is seen in race horses in upstate New York who were given
crystalloid minerals. (Crystalloid means that minerals bypass the
digestive system and are absorbed directly into cell walls, strengthening
the immune system.) A marked improvement was seen in the animals'
behavior. The horses were much more alert, less nervous and jumpy. Their
coats improved, and one horse with a two year old bare patch of skin from
a prior injury began to grow back its hair. Muscle soreness and stiffness
disappeared, and the horse's racing ability improved.
Proteins may
also not be assimilated well, if trace minerals are deficient. This is
important if your pet's diet doesn't include raw green foods in addition
to the meat found in most pet food. You may be enjoying dinner and feeding
your dog a premium food, but both of you may still be starving
nutritionally because the food is unable to be processed. Properly
balanced minerals with electrolytes (the electrical charge for your body's
battery) would be a wise investment to keep the immune system working
correctly. Supplementing diets with individual minerals may help somewhat.
However, you may not be administering the required dose needed, or you may
be upsetting the body's mineral balance. One should add to their diet a
mineral supplement that contains all the needed minerals in the proper
amounts.
Enzymes Are Important
Enzymes are
catalysts for many biological functions. Without them life would not exist
— for they are the driving force behind all life processes. Enzymes are
responsible for keeping your internal systems working, and a lack of
sufficient quantities of enzymes may promote degenerative disease. Only
raw or uncooked foods contain enzymes and since almost all pet food is
processed with heat, or cooked, the enzymes are destroyed. Every animal is
born with an integral supply of enzymes. Unfortunately, as generations go
by and less enzymes are taken into the body, those stores are used up.
Dr. Edward
Howell, as early as 1920, discovered this association between enzyme
intake and health. He theorized that, normally, enzymes are present in
foods used for the digestion of that food. If they are not present, then
the body's store of enzymes must be diverted for digestion, leaving fewer
enzymes to fight disease and perform essential bodily functions.
Research
indicates that most animals, including canines and birds, have distinct
organs that allow the food enzymes time to act before initiating the
body's own digestive process. This pre-digestion is important to the
body's absorption of nutrients. If it is not present, the food may pass
through the system without benefit of vitamins and proteins. Your pets may
live as long, but their quality of life suffers.
A study of
Dr. Francis Pottenger's cats (over 600 of them) revealed that when the
animals were fed only cooked or processed food over many generations,
degenerative disease presented itself at younger and younger ages. These
animals suffered from kidney, heart, thyroid and gum diseases, as well as
allergies, infections and a host of other maladies. They had fewer enzymes
to give their offspring, resulting in minimal reserves of enzymes in the
ensuing generations. We have seen this evidenced in the early onset of
arthritic conditions.
Read
all about the Importance of a Healthy Immune System in your pet here
Supplementing Is Wise
Enzymes are
normally lost through sickness, pregnancy, stress, extreme weather
conditions, urine and feces. Unless you replace these, your pet's immune
system will be compromised. Please note that this is the same for humans
— as exhibited by our younger generations developing earlier cases of
heart disease, arthritis and susceptibility to allergies. If your pets
depend on canned or dried food, it is necessary to consider supplementing
their diet with nutritional enzymes. If your diet lacks lots of raw foods,
they you may want to take supplements too.
Enzymes are
available in capsule, pill or powder form at health food stores. Powders
can readily be mixed into pet food. An alternative is to grow wheat or
barley grasses in small containers either in soil or hydroponically. Your
pet can then munch to their hearts content or you can chop up the greens
and stir it into their food. Regardless of which method you choose, the
addition of live enzymes to your pet's diet will fortify their immune
system and help prevent degenerative disease.
This
article was excerpted from "Are
You Poisoning Your Pets?" by Nina Anderson & Howard Peiper. The
book is out of print and has been incorporated into a new book, Super
Nutrition for Dogs n' Cats.
Info/Order
the book (Super Nutrition)
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