Cat Dental Disease: Feline Stomatitis Remedies



Dr Jones’ Free Book… If your cat has been diagnosed with a serious type of dental disease …

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20 Comments

  1. i tried everything for over a year and nothing worked. I had to puree the food due to pain. She lost so much weight and was getting violent from pain. I had to get all the teeth taken out to save her and as much as i didn’t want to do it im glad i did as now 2 years later she is back to her normal self.

  2. Does this work on a chihuahua dog with a teeth disease like the cat in the video and he has also a heart disease that I treat now with both Vetmedin and the supplements that you recommend. 🙂 Thank you a thousunds of times for all these free videos and help you give, I cried of thankfulness when I saw how I could help my dog. Love you soo much!! Forever thankful to you! 🤗🙏🏻🌈💖☀️

  3. I use MSM cream (put it on their ears), colloidal silver, and vitamin D in their food which helps. But as soon as I stop using them, the infection comes back in a week. Thank you for this video as it tells me what is going on with my cat. I will try the coconut oil and licorice root. And the CBD oil. Blessings.

  4. Hey Doc, gotta strange request for you, if you are interested that is. I would like to talk to you about bird flu. Give me a mark or a like and we can go from there. How about if I think I stumbled on the cure for them?

  5. Murray is like what’s he up to now with the third treatment I think it’s his turn now! Poor Murray the sweetest . How about a treat?

  6. Dr. Jones, will you please offer me some direction for my dog? She was diagnose with TWO torn CCL's and mild hip dysplasia. She is currently in week 6 out of 8 of bed rest and has had SEVERE muscle atrophy for the past month. She cannot use her rear leg muscles AT ALL and the muscles are hanging off her bones like loose skin. When I take her out to go potty, she drags herself around. I've been doing massage, red light therapy and range of motion exercises several times per day in hopes of triggering ANY slight muscle activity, with ZERO success. It's as if her legs are paralyzed. I'm supposed to start working her slowly back into some activity here in a couple weeks and I don't see how this is possible if I can't even get her leg muscles to so much as twitch. Is this reversible or is the atrophy too far along? I'm a little in over my head here and, I'm REALLY hoping you can help me. Her vet and I had a falling out, because she wanted me to get her the TPLO surgeries, which I could not afford and she is not open to any sort of alternate hollistic treatments.

  7. I don't use tap water, fresh spring water from source w/couple drops of sodium chlorite water per quart. I leave a bowl of coconut oil sit around for them to lick, diatomaceous earth in the food/sprinkle it on them occaisionally, perfectly healthy, Peac3!

  8. My cat hobo has a mouth disease he has to take pills the vet told me to have all his teeth remove but she said he still could have it so spend over. 1000 dollars and he still would have so I said no so he is on the pills for life

  9. Nanoparticle colloidal silver can work really well, and bovine lactoferrin is another natural option. A 1996 study showed lactoferrin to be helpful as an oral supplement and as a topical treatment. It was a small study, but the results were impressive.

    "Oral administration of bovine lactoferrin for treatment of intractable stomatitis in feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)-positive and FIV-negative cats"

    <<Abstract
    Objective: To study the effects of oral administration of bovine lactoferrin (LF) on intractable stomatitis in feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)-positive and FIV-negative cats, and phagocytosis of neutrophils in healthy and ill cats, simultaneously.

    Animals: 7 ill cats with diagnosis of intractable stomatitis (4 FIV positive and 3 FIV negative) and 7 healthy, FIV-negative cats.

    Procedure: LF (40 mg/kg ot body weight) was applied topically to the oral mucosa of cats with intractable stomatitis daily for 14 days and improvement of clinical signs of disease (pain-related response, salivation, appetite, and oral inflammation), expressed by scoring from 1 to 4, were evaluated. Assay of neutrophil phagocytosis was examined before and 2 weeks after starting LF treatment, using nonopsonized hydrophilic polymer particles (2 microns).

    Results: Oral administration of LF improved intractable stomatitis in all 4 respects. Phagocytic activity of neutrophils increased after LF treatment. This effect was observed in healthy and ill (FIV positive and FIV negative) cats.

    Conclusion and clinical relevance: Oral administration of LF improved intractable stomatitis and concurrently enhanced the host defense system. Topical application of LF to oral mucous membrane is useful as a treatment for intractable stomatitis even in FIV-positive cats.>>

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