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References

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Anthelmintic activity of medicinal plants with particular reference to their use in animals in the IndoPakistan subcontinent.

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Dr. Hans-Heinrich Reckeweg in 1952 to combine classic homeopathy with conventional medicine (Goldstein 2008). Disease patterns in each organ system, known as homo­toxicoses, are arranged in a six-phase table that begins with the excretion phase, then progresses to the inflammation phase and the deposition phase. As the disease worsens, the biologic divide is crossed and the organism is unlikely to be able to recover on its own. The following more serious and chronic phases are impregnation, degeneration, and finally dedifferentiation (development of neoplasia). Homotoxicology uses very small doses (nanopharmacology) of combinations of remedies to detoxify or reverse the progression of the disease, back through the inflammation phase to healing. It is believed that conventional anti­inflammatory drugs may retard the healing process. Various formulas are available to manage symptoms such as arthritis, traumatic injuries, cardiac disease, or viral infections, and extensive treatment protocols have been published for small animals (Goldstein 2008).

The homeopathic approach to vaccination warrants special mention, because practitioners may be frustrated by the unwillingness of an owner to use conventional vac­cines. A nosode is a potentized homeopathic remedy pre­pared from diseased tissue or an infected discharge (Hunter 2004). Nosodes have not been documented to provide protection, but users believe that the nosodes are free of the side effects, including chronic ill health or vaccinosis, that homeopaths ascribe to conventional vaccines. Some authors stress the importance of using certain conventional vaccines, as for tetanus or rabies, while avoiding vaccination of young animals when pos­sible (Hunter 2004; Saxton and Gregory 2005).

Nosodes are given orally to “protect” without vaccination. When conventional vaccination is performed or when disease has occurred, the nosode is given to mitigate the effects. Autogenous nosodes can be prepared from any secretion or body fluid, or even from a bacterial culture of a patho - genic organism, derived, for example, from an animal with mastitis (Sheaffer 1998; Wynn 1998). In a placebo- controlled double-blind study with dairy cattle, a nosode prepared from six common mastitis pathogens had no effect on new intramammary infections in the 11 partici­pating herds containing more than 1000 lactating cows (McCrory and Barlow 2006).

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Source: Smith Mary C., Sherman David M.. Goat Medicine. 3rd edition. — Wiley-Blackwell,2023. — 976 p.. 2023

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