I have a suggestion. Is the air real dry where you live? Maybe it is just dry 
skin, add some kind of oil to their food maybe?
thanks debbie

--- On Thu, 10/16/08, Nenah Sylver <nenahsyl...@cox.net> wrote:

From: Nenah Sylver <nenahsyl...@cox.net>
Subject: RE: CS>CS & Yeast/fungi
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Thursday, October 16, 2008, 10:07 AM








Paula,
I don’t know about using DMSO. However, IF the infection is systemic and it’s 
coming out through the skin—have you considered that since the dogs drank CS 
non-stop, perhaps the beneficial intestinal bacteria may be depleted? If so, 
that will allow the yeast to proliferate.
 
Good luck.
Nenah
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Paula [mailto:pa...@hbeark.com] 
Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2008 6:03 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CS>CS & Yeast/fungi
 
I've been battling excessive itching/scratching on two of my dogs for over a 
year and am getting nowhere. . . . Both dogs have been drinking straight, low 
ppm EIS free choice for at least a year. They are raw-fed and no vax. 
Ordinarily that means no yeast problems so I have to question the diagnosis. 
But, assuming she's right, how can I kill the yeast?
 
My understanding is that EIS isn't as effective for fungal problems as it is 
for bacterial and viral problems. If this were something like nail fungus, I'd 
add DMSO to the EIS for penetration. I don't think I should do that in this 
instance - right? I don't want to drive the problem into their skin if it is 
just on the surface. If this is some sort of on-going detox, it seems like the 
oral EIS should have handled it by now. I still don't want to waste it if it 
isn't going to work. This isn't isolated areas, it is the entire dog in both 
cases. My 3rd dog is not affected and has the same diet, same everything as the 
other two.