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How to Protect Your Dog from Rabies Vaccine Damage
Posted on November 19, 2014 at 11:42 AM |
If you don’t think one rabies
vaccine can change your dog’s life forever, then you might want to
read what I’m about to share …
A story just crossed our desk
about Mia Kraft, a 3 year old girl who had her face disfigured by her
grandparents’ dog.
“I don’t really know what
happened,” said Rick Taylor, the owner of the dog and Mia’s grandfather. “My
dog just went for her.”
The reason for Mr Taylor’s
confusion was that his dog Tebow, a 5 year old American Bulldog, had regularly
been with Mia with no previous issues.
“She has been around it since she
was born,” Taylor said. “He is really well-trained, he is very friendly. I just
don’t understand.”
And Tebow’s vet isn’t
helping him to understand … Vets Refuse to Recognize Vaccine Damage
The interesting part of this
story is the day before Tebow bit Mia, he was vaccinated for rabies, along with
parvovirus and distemper.
The first problem with this is
that a five year old dog shouldn’t need to be vaccinated for parvovirus and
distemper … these vaccines have been shown to protect animals for a minimum of
7 years (and in the case of distemper, as long as 15 years).
But the bigger problem is that
one rabies vaccine seems to have cost Mia a lot of pain …… and ultimately cost
Tebow his life.
The day before his attack on Mia,
Tebow was vaccinated at Countryside Veterinary Small Animal Clinic. Countryside
owner and veterinarian Bruce Hood said in his 20 years of experience he has
never heard of vaccines leading to aggressive behavior in dogs.
“Usually if we have any kind of
reaction, we will have an immediate reaction of breaking out in hives or some
swelling in the face, or they will be lethargic for 12 to 24 hours,” Hood said.
“But even that is rare.”
Hood said he doesn’t remember
Tebow exhibiting any aggressive behavior on Friday, and he doesn’t know what
might have been behind Saturday’s bite.
“If the dog was startled, it
could have been a reflex reaction,” Hood said. “It is hard to say exactly what
the scenario was.”
Wiseman said Tebow may have been
a little more irritable than normal if he was sore from the vaccines and being
touched in a sensitive area may have led to a reflex reaction.
A reflex reaction that happened
just once … and just one day after his rabies vaccination.
Cynthia Wiseman, a veterinarian
at Springfield Veterinary Clinic who was contacted by the News-Leader for
comment about the attack, echoed Hood’s comments, saying she has never heard of
vaccines leading to aggression in dogs.
Which is curious………..
Because there are plenty of cases
just like Tebow’s … if only vets would open their eyes to them. Not an Isolated Case
Maggie was an eight month old
healthy and happy female German Shepherd puppy who lived in Jacksonville,
Florida, with Robert Davis and Ashley Shell and their three beautiful
children.
Maggie’s life changed completely
the day she received her first rabies vaccination.
Within hours of her vaccination,
a golf ball sized mass developed at the sight of the injection. Almost
immediately, Maggie became lethargic, refusing food and water over a few days,
as well as developing red eyes, along with nasal discharge, as her body tried
to rid itself of the harmful neurotoxins that were clearly affecting her.
Within three to four days of the
jab, Maggie developed what appeared to be “rabies-like” symptoms, which
included increasing aggression toward her loved ones, accompanied by a deranged
stare and dilated pupils, a newly found affinity to chew wood, increasing
desire to ingest her own feces and other indigestible items, fascination with
reflections, severe restlessness at times with destruction of bedding and
pillows, inability to follow directions, loss of impulse control, development
of reverse sneezing as well as, of course, the worsening development of
multiple grand-mal seizures daily. Ignored By Vets Again
In spite of multiple visits to
various traditional veterinarians, no local veterinarians would admit that her
rabies vaccination played any role in Maggie’s symptoms.
In fact, most of the
vets became combative and defensive when this possibility was brought up.
One vet even went so far as
to say that the golf ball sized lump had nothing to do with the rabies
vaccination, but was more likely due to Maggie “bumping into something.”
But while many conventional
veterinarians refuse to see the link between rabies vaccination and aggression,
there are many holistic vets who clearly see the link.
Understanding that link
between individual chronic diseases and the rabies vaccine involves what homeopathic
physician Samuel Hahnemann called a miasm. Rabies Miasm The miasm is an underlying
disease, like the part of the iceberg lurking beneath the water’s surface. You
can see and deal with the tip of the iceberg — in this case, individual disease
symptoms — but the iceberg’s essence (the miasm) is submerged, unreachable and
deadly.
“Clinically,” says homeopathic
veterinarian Dr Richard Pitcairn, “you see certain symptoms. A miasm is a
chronic disturbance unrecognized except as it’s manifested by acute flare-ups
of what seem to be individual diseases.”
“What I’ve seen happen is, after
vaccination, dogs develop what we call the ‘rabies miasm’, where they become
more aggressive, more likely to bite, more nervous and suspicious,” notes Dr
Pitcairn. “They may also have a tendency to run away, to wander, and also
sometimes to have excessive saliva, and to tear things up. It’s not that they
have rabies, but they seem to express some symptoms of the disease from
exposure to the vaccine.”
The symptoms of rabies miasm
suggest that it’s much more common than you might suspect.
Rabies
Miasm Symptoms
How Vaccines Cause Aggression
Every vaccine has two components:
the actual virus that it is meant to create an immune response to, such as
parvovirus, and an immune adjuvant that enhances the immune response.
Vaccine adjuvants
are typically made from a variety of highly toxic compounds including
aluminum, MSG, and mercury. Adjuvants are added to boost the immune system, or
to make it react as intensely as possible for as long as possible.
Dr Russell Blaylock MD warns:
“Studies have shown that these adjuvants, from a single vaccine, can cause
immune over-activation for as long as two years. This means that the brain
microglia remain active as well, continuously pouring out destructive chemicals.
In fact, one study found that a single injection of an immune activating
substance could cause brain immune over-activation for over a year. This is
very destructive.”
To better understand what happens
in the brain, Dr Harold Buttram and Catherine Frompovich write:
“In explanation, microglia and
astrocytes are first-line immunological responder cells located in the brain
that defend against foreign infectious invaders. Normally this response, such
as to a viral infection, is of limited duration and harmless to the brain.
However, when microglia and astrocytes are over-stimulated for prolonged
periods, which vaccine adjuvants are designed to bring about, this extended
activation can be very destructive to the brain causing inflammation and/or
bleeding.”
How to Protect Your Dog from Rabies Vaccine Damage
Two days after his attack on Mia,
Tebow’s owner signed his release, relinquishing ownership to Animal Control.
It’s reported Tebow will be held there for a 10 day observation period, and
then euthanized.
Tebow’s case is not isolated.
Fortunately for Maggie, her family caught her symptoms and worked with a
homeopathic vet to resolve them before she bit any of the kids. Maggie
continues to improve … and hopefully there is a rabies exemption in her state
or her troubles will start all over again with the next vaccine.
Finally, support the Rabies Challenge Fund. World renowned
scientists, W Jean Dodds DVM and Ronald D Schultz PhD are working as volunteers
to increase the interval between rabies boosters by proving that the vaccine
gives immunity, first for five years, and then for seven years. They’re also
working to establish a blood “titer standard” to provide a scientific basis to
avoid unnecessary boosters with a simple blood test. This non-profit group is
supported solely by dog lovers and dog groups.
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