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Expert
Posts: 2685
     
| Crooks - 2015-06-30 3:26 PM
$200 for 300ml. Treatment dosage is 4mg/kg/day or 2.3 grams once daily for 28 days. Strength is 2.3grams per 10ml of molasses flavored suspension so 10 ml daily for 28 days then use the remainder to wean off to prevent acid rebound or use as daily maintenance or prevention. Works out to $6.67 per day to treat & $1.67 per day for maintenance or prevention.
Next questio. Would be if other companies can't find a good carrier for the drug to get where it needs to go in paste/liquid form, how have you?
I don't mean to sound rude at all, just honest questions. Looking for the best route possible. | |
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 Ice Cream with Sprinkles on Top
Posts: 2442
      Location: Always in the Jungle of Ohio | Where can you buy the Horseprerace tubes? Thanks! | |
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Expert
Posts: 2685
     
| Horseprerace.com | |
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 Ice Cream with Sprinkles on Top
Posts: 2442
      Location: Always in the Jungle of Ohio | RoaniePonie11 - 2015-07-01 7:13 AM Horseprerace.com
Thank you so much! | |
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 Regular
Posts: 54
  Location: Valley City,ND | I'm a PCCA Certified Compounding Pharmacist and Registered Pharmacist so I have the chemistry and research training. I spent quite a few years in the lab researching and experimenting with many bases and combinations until I finally found one that is at the Eagle Analytical Lab in Houston Tx. I have the lab report proving stability and potency for 18 months as of now and at 24 months I can start applying for my commercial and NADA numbers. I can email you or anyone interested the 18 month lab results (the one on my website is the one year lab result report--I'm in the process of updating the website). I understand the confusion--everyone thinks if it is labeled and sold in the USA then it has to be okay or correct--but far from it--it can be made in a garage in Panama by people that don't know what a gram is, sent to the US, and sold --all with no guarantees or proof of what is in that tube. The FDA is on to them but this is happening with animal and human drugs and the companies keep changing names and locations. That's why it is up to the horse owner to question where their horses' medications are coming from and ask for proof of stability, potency, standards in the lab compounding or manufacturing these products. The FDA cannot keep up and shut them down fast enough to protect the human or animal public--it's going to have to be up to us to do some of the research ourselves. | |
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Expert
Posts: 2685
     
| Can you post your site please? | |
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Expert
Posts: 1611
  
| http://www.myprecisionpharmacy.com/home.asp
$11.95 a tube
Ranitidine/Omeprazole paste tubes
Get your vet to write you a script and you can treat at 1/2 tube for 30 days and then use it as preventative at 1/4 a tube for shows. This is the company most vets like Dr. Ford buys their paste from and slaps their name on it. Safe, affordable, and it works... | |
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  Friendly horse swapper
Posts: 4122
   Location: Buffalo, TX | No time to read the posts, but maybe this has already been said...from Dr. Madalyn Ward, DVM in Texas...I've fed her papaya for my horses for years!
A Papaya a Day Keeps the Ulcers Away Since digestive health plays such an important role in our horses’ health and happiness, and since we’ve focused so much on ulcers recently, in this article I’m offering a highly educational article by Gillian Clissold on beneficial properties of papaya on digestion. Enjoy! The Role of Papaya Papaya aids digestion in part by increasing mucous secretion in the mouth, esophagus and stomach. In some cases, a horse that had been turning its nose up at food starts eating within moments of the administration of papaya. There seems to be what could be called a “reverse Pavlovian response”. The horse’s mouth waters, so it feels the urge to eat. Even more importantly, papaya initiates a thickening of the horse’s natural stomach lining which provides protection against excess acid. It both gives damaged tissues a chance to heal, and helps prevent new ulcers. In horses moving vigorously (race horses, eventers, endurance horses) the esophageal mucous protection can help keep reflux from damaging the esophagus. In an ulcer study published in the March 2005 issue of The Horse Journal, “rapid relief within three to five days” was reported. The same study reported that the other major natural products for digestive problems, herbal blends, worked considerably more slowly. In one case a weanling with severe ulcers and a bloated stomach did not respond to expensive pharmaceuticals but did recover to papaya. A race horse that had such severe ulcers it could not race, even after many weeks on an acid reducing pharmaceutical, had a clear endoscopic exam after three weeks on papaya, and then won a stakes race. Unlike most of the conventional anti-ulcer treatments, papaya is safe for long-term use. The calcium/magnesium antacid type products work by neutralizing acid and coating the stomach wall with a chalky protective layer. However, if they are used over an extended period, resulting high levels of magnesium can interfere with the absorption of calcium. Low calcium levels can cause nervousness, bone changes, weak and aching muscles and abnormal heart rhythms. The expensive pharmaceuticals which reduce acid production are great for most acute ulcer symptoms. However, acid is needed to control and modify bacteria in the gut. If the acid levels are low for many months, “bad” bacteria, particularly Salmonella, can overpopulate the digestive tract and create conditions for colic. Furthermore, prolonged low acid levels can cause poor absorption of vitamin B12, inefficient utilization of dietary protein, food allergies, bloating and foul manure. Papaya is also useful in conjunction with administration of certain medicines. Many barn managers “prep” the horse with a half dose of papaya to trigger extra mucous in the digestive tract lining just before they administer an anti-inflammatory capable of damaging the stomach lining. They then administer the anti-inflammatory, and follow up with another half dose of papaya to wash away the foul taste of the medicine. Similarly, endurance riders and eventers who give electrolytes to their mounts mix the powder with papaya before administering. The extra mucous triggered by the papaya protects the mouth, esophagus and stomach from the caustic burn of frequent electrolyte administrations. The mucous producing characteristic of papaya is complemented by the enzyme it contains, papain. Papain is the main active ingredient in meat tenderizer. It closely resembles the digestive enzyme pepsin. Old horses benefit from papaya because its enzyme breaks down what their less efficient digestive tract can’t and they gain weight. Papaya also helps foals who get “scours” when the hormones in their mother’s milk changes during the first heat presents the foal’s digestive tract with a new challenge, for which it does not have the appropriate microbe population. The papain enzyme picks up where the foal’s own system is insufficient. Weaning is a stressful time, too. Not only are foals anxious (creating conditions for an ulcer), but they must deal with a change in diet, for which they may not have the correct balance of gut “bugs”. In addition to the papaya induced ulcer-preventative mucous secretion, the papain helps weanlings digest new diets while their gut microbes are adjusting. Cribbing often decreases when horses have papaya daily. Cribbing incidence at weaning is drastically reduced, and about half of adult cribbers also reduce or cease the habit. While most positive effects of papaya are evident in a week, in the case of a confirmed cribber, it can take up to a month for improvement. (Cribbing associated with stomach pain or missing nutrients is most responsive to papaya.) Similarly, when antibiotics kill good gut bacteria, leaving the digestive tract unable to sufficiently break down food, diarrhea results. Papaya picks up where the bacteria leave off, and antibiotic-induced diarrhea can improve. When horses get diarrhea during trailering, it can in part be due t
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 Regular
Posts: 54
  Location: Valley City,ND | Www.equinerxsolutions.com Equine Pharmacy Solutions | |
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One Grateful Mom
Posts: 2702
    Location: wolverton,mn | I'm just going to weigh in on equinerxsolutions,I have used the company for various things and I think it's great! The omeprazole worked super for a mare we treated. I would use the product again in a minute | |
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