Thanks- I am going to look for one. I didn't find one yesterday.
Anything to extend Bo's life and make him more comfy- he's the
world's best dog!!
Sharon
On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 17:34:24 -0800, Sharon wrote:
Yeah- thanks Chuch, I will try it and report back. Do you all think
the area to be trea
Sharon and Chuck,
About three years ago Brooks Bradley described an IR laser for deep treating
thing
inside of the body. The IR laser's beam is invisible and the unit can be
fabricated into a two cell flashlight.
"Ole Bob"
--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal
On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 23:24:31 -0500, Denise Every wrote:
><>
>
>I'm thinking you probably saw some changes fairly soon after you started
>using it, which would have been incentive to keep on doing it until it was
>gone? How soon after you started did you see the first sign it was doing
>something
day job yet and sign up for
1-800-DIAL-ESP ..lol
Denise Every deni...@citlink.net
Equuilibrium Studio - Horse & Animal Art
http://www.stores.ebay.com/equuilibriumstudioequineart/plistings/list/all/de
pt0/index.html
- Original Message -
From:
To:
Sent: Monday, March 17, 2003 11:11 PM
Commentary interspersed...
On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 22:33:55 -0500, Denise Every wrote:
>Chuck,
>
>>
>
>I've been in the medical field for (ack!) nearly 30 years and just when you
>think you've heard it all, well, guess not! :)
You better not EVE
ist/all/de
pt0/index.html
- Original Message -
From:
To:
Sent: Monday, March 17, 2003 2:22 PM
Subject: Re: CS>Lypomas
> On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 09:07:17 -0600, Dan Nave
> wrote:
>
> >Does anyone know how to get rid of (non-cancerous) lypomas
> >or fatty tumors that appea
On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 17:34:24 -0800, Sharon wrote:
>Yeah- thanks Chuch, I will try it and report back. Do you all think
>the area to be treated needs to be shaved first or does it matter?
>Sharon
You should be able to get down to the skin without shaving. It's a fat pencil
looking device.
Yeah- thanks Chuch, I will try it and report back. Do you all think
the area to be treated needs to be shaved first or does it matter?
Sharon
Ditto on Chuck's idea.never woulda thunk
it!! Kit
At 01:32 PM 3/17/03 -0600, you wrote:
Cool ideas Kit & Chuck! I haven't had a dog with one in
Ditto on Chuck's idea.never woulda thunk
it!! Kit
At 01:32 PM 3/17/03 -0600, you wrote:
>Cool ideas Kit & Chuck! I haven't had a dog with one in so long I figured
>there should be some "new" way to get rid of them!
>
>Nancy Estes
>dog...@apex2000.net
>
>
>> On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 09:07:17 -
Cool ideas Kit & Chuck! I haven't had a dog with one in so long I figured
there should be some "new" way to get rid of them!
Nancy Estes
dog...@apex2000.net
> On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 09:07:17 -0600, Dan Nave
> wrote:
>
> >Does anyone know how to get rid of (non-cancerous) lypomas
> >or fatty tumor
On Mon, 17 Mar 2003 09:07:17 -0600, Dan Nave
wrote:
>Does anyone know how to get rid of (non-cancerous) lypomas
>or fatty tumors that appear under the skin?
You can experiment with laser therapy easy enough.
Red laser keychain pointers are dollar store items.
Put the point on the site and pulse
If you have a vet who practices TCM...it may help
In Chinese Med. tumours are caused by "stagnation"
so they treat them, thusly.Kithi Nancy!
At 01:05 PM 3/17/03 -0600, you wrote:
>
> They're like any tumor in that they're cells gone mad, so to speak - but
they
> are fat cells and "
Re: CS>LypomasThey're like any tumor in that they're cells gone mad, so to
speak - but they are fat cells and "harmless". But, like with your and my
dogs, they can cause problems due to location. Once they're attached they're
difficult to impossible to surgically remove. I don't know if anybo
Why what was the outcome? I have a dog with one on his spine, and it
is growing very slowly. The vet told me to wait and see two years
ago, and that it would not be removable because of the location. I
would love to find a way to get rid of it. I wonder if anyone knows
why these occur?
Sharon
I've had one dog where this turned into a real problem. If the lypoma doesn't
grow and doesn't attach it's mostly a cosmetic problem. However, if it does
grow and does attach, as it did on my dog's rib cage, it cannot be safely /
effectively removed. My little 13" Beagle ended up with a huge
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