Bioregulatory Medicine Applied to Fur Babies with Dr. Marlene Siegel

Tue, Mar 21, 2023 4:51PM • 1:56:16

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

therapy, dog, veterinarian, started, lymphatic, owner, ozone, put, years, animals, cat, pets, surgery, body, week, hours, eating, presented, called, bladder

SPEAKERS

Bill Clearfield

 

Bill Clearfield  00:27

Hey, how are ya? Good, how are you? Good Is that too much light in front of me? You know you’re kind of reflexive off your glasses. I don’t know if you can do anything.

 

00:39

Yeah looking down

 

Bill Clearfield  00:50

just starting to get dark here so where are you? Florida? Okay. All right. Well, it’s only five o’clock here.

 

01:01

I know I just came from that coast. It was so weird to know how late it was at home and be there and it was so early.

 

Bill Clearfield  01:10

Yeah, well, I’m from Northeast Pennsylvania. So I got you I got used to it. I’ve been here 10 years. I kind of like it actually. So.

 

01:20

Okay, I’m queuing up my presentation for you. Okay.

 

Bill Clearfield  01:25

All right. So we have a little bit of time usually start right around five and we have folks show up sometimes as late as 20. After so, I’ll let them in. You don’t have to do anything.

 

01:38

Okay. And I probably won’t monitor the chat. If you’re okay with me. Let’s

 

Bill Clearfield  01:43

do that. We’ll do that. So, a lot of times what we’ll do is we will just look at it at the end. And I’ll read the questions to you. Okay.

 

01:53

Okay. And I’ve got a lot to present. I’ve timed it four times and I was right at 57 minutes.

 

Bill Clearfield  02:00

Okay, that’s fine. We’re not we you know, we don’t have a you know, you’re not doctor you know, Dr. Lawson. Yeah. Talk for five hours if you let them That’s adorable. Usually usually, you know, most of the rest of us run out of steam after a while are excited. It’s it’s time to time to go to ballroom dance or something so

 

02:32

well, I think it’s going to be pretty engaging and just a lot of case presentations that are examples of the things that we do. So it’ll be well it’s

 

Bill Clearfield  02:44

a little different for us you notice is you know, we’re we’re people doctors. Although my my one, my one I had a couple of forays with animals. So I had when I first learned acupuncture, I had a golden retriever who had a stroke and couldn’t walk his back legs were paralyzed, and we took him to the vet, the vet said, Well, you know, I’m when I’m asleep. It was about 10 years old. It was like Labor Day weekend or something. So I said well you know, I had a book called about on animal acupuncture so they drew lines. When a cat No, so I just kind of lined them up. And I put needles in him. He didn’t move. We had a two story house. He used to what he used to do was come up as he wakes me up to take him out by hitting his head against mine. Head buddy, right, you know, and but we left them down on the first floor. Well, the next day, sure enough, you know, we put the needles in and left him in all day and I took him out when it was bedtime. And sure enough, the next day he was there. And he lived for three more years. So funny. Yeah. So yeah. And he wasn’t in any pain or anything. You know, he was actually pretty good. So that was the one and then I had a friend who had a saw a little white dog. Anyway, it had liver liver, it was about five years old had liver enzymes of like 13,000. And so we were just beginning to play around with glutathione then. So that wanted to put the dog to sleep. And so she says to me, is there anything you can do? And so I said, Well, I don’t know We’ll let’s try this right. And I gave the dog and put it in the scruff of his neck. I did it every day for two weeks. I gave him about 600 milligrams of glutathione his neck and then then like every other day for a couple of weeks and then in a month they went dog went back and the liver enzymes were down to normal. And the vet said, What did you vet said, What did you do? So she told them what we did? And you think that the lady wouldn’t the vet would have called me up and said what did you do? Now? Called the veterinary board and said I was practicing veterinary medicine without a license. Oh, I’m so sorry. Because your own dog was a friend of mines dog. Okay, yeah. So sound familiar, John.

 

05:29

I’m Marlene. I’m so happy that you’re with us tonight.

 

05:36

I invited another veterinarian who I’m training in doing photodynamic therapy so I’m hoping she’ll join it’ll be Dr. Anderson bill if you see her come on. And then

 

Bill Clearfield  05:47

just a couple of names here I don’t recognize which is always nice. We always,

 

05:51

for me, ALA is also the other person I invited. She is the rep of the in the United States for Weber laser. And she also has a cancer clinic in Tijuana.

 

Bill Clearfield  06:03

Okay. There’s the sherry low patent. That’s the name I don’t think I recognize. Like, welcome. Thank you for coming.

 

06:13

What was the name of the doctor of the cancer clinic in Mexico?

 

06:17

That she’s not a doctor but she Jennifer Mi La. Okay, Jennifer, Jennifer. The name of the clinic is Baja Med Center, I believe. Okay. So she does a lot of, of course, they do a lot of cases, but she also does a lot of research and then she’s the rep for Weber laser in the United States.

 

06:38

Okay, lately. Been Doc, you have another success story with a dog. I just had to put down my 16 year old Border Collie. But about a year ago he was starting to just roam around the house almost like he was looking for a place to die. And he was starting to really get weak and Doc started to do glutathione on him. And there we go again. Recording yet, record again. And then also put them on some CBD CBD treats and he started to run again. He’d like literally started running again. And we had another year with him. It was pretty awesome.

 

07:21

That’s wonderful. Yeah. And we do use a lot of glutathione as well. Do you? Yeah, it’s part of our IV therapies. Nice. Nice.

 

07:32

Marvy. Marlene, did you happen to hear our last week’s lecture on gluta rule, which is transdermal glutathione.

 

07:40

No, I was traveling so I didn’t make it on. I’ll go back and yeah, I’ll go back and listen.

 

Bill Clearfield  07:48

They’re all recorded, but I don’t think I put that one. I didn’t say it’s been a little crazy.

 

07:54

I was just wondering, Bill has anybody been getting the gluta real I haven’t received my

 

Bill Clearfield  07:58

you know, I have a bottle of it. And I remember I was I had I had my grandchildren’s residual cold and so a doctor a detail. Patel told me to do four sprays a day for he said one day it would be gone and it took about three. But the only thing is that when when you spray that stuff right away it does not smell very good.

 

08:22

If if I can cut your a one C from 10 to five I’m interested I spoke with his researchers is key researchers and he gave me protocols. So I hope we can start sharing those just unbelievably Fantastic. Fantastic. It’s doing what they’re claiming now and I’ve seen glutathione save so many lives from COVID from pneumonia from lung congestion. And this seems to be by far the best thing we’ve heard of as far as getting it into the body. Spray it on rubber Dan, you got it. Yeah.

 

08:57

We’re great for our pets because getting more things down their mouth is just not so much fun.

 

09:03

I was wondering how do you get it through this to their skin through that first?

 

09:07

We do it IV

 

Bill Clearfield  09:11

I gave it in the scruff of the neck I just put it in the

 

09:15

sub cube. Yeah.

 

Bill Clearfield  09:18

Seemed seemed okay. So awesome. I wouldn’t know how to

 

09:24

I won’t tell.

 

Bill Clearfield  09:26

I get I get an IV and John I think maybe.

 

09:30

I also invited a couple of newcomers to our group tonight was the academic dean of a new osteopathic school that’s coming out. And some other very nice people with open minds. We’re looking for people like us.

 

Bill Clearfield  09:47

I don’t know about that. Yeah, it’s true. Hey, bad boys.

 

09:52

Coming out of the woodwork now doctors who really want to help people. So it’s kind of a what

 

Bill Clearfield  09:57

a what a concept right?

 

10:00

novel concept. I’ll be quiet.

 

10:04

Are you feeling John? Excellent.

 

10:08

Yeah. He’s definitely found good. And

 

10:14

yeah, I just had a heart valve last month, Marlene, so I’m coming back from the grave. You look great. Yeah, thank you. Now I have to figure out now what do I do with the time left like all of us, right.

 

Bill Clearfield  10:29

Well, we know what you’re going to be doing, John, I’m going to be helping you. You’re going to be helping me. So the first help I need Before we introduce our speakers. I’m looking to if anybody has any knowledge of this, we want to take we want to be able to register everybody so that our speakers have a way to contact them afterwards. And I don’t really know how to do that. I’m looking at some other other outfits and other than zum zum has something called webinars. It’s a little expensive for us, since you know we’re running on the cheap at the moment. So if anybody knows how to like run a meeting online and get read, get get like an automatic registration. Can you let me know and what the steps are to take because that’s kind of our next kind of our next step. You’d want to reach out to Dr. Avery Jackson. He’s created his own zoom platform. It’s called Mowgli he’s created his own medical establishment. Yeah, he’s doing it all. Okay. All right. I still have to get him. Okay. All right. Thanks, Steve. Okay, well, it’s a little bit after it’s five. So thank you for all for coming to this one tonight is going to be a little different than usual. Dr. Marlene singer has been with us for a few weeks now. And she’s a veterinarian, an integrative veterinarian, and she said she would like to Jad some interesting information for us. Even though you know, we’re not veterinary persons. So why don’t you mute everybody else out? Why don’t you introduce yourself and tell us you know who you are and why you went to LaSalle college and all that good stuff. Which college that lets out. That’s where I went. Oh, my first day first English class 101 first day of college, who am I and why did I come to the LaSalle college?

 

12:25

I love it. Well, Dr. Marlene Siegel and I’ve been practicing veterinary medicine for 40 years, but doing integrative work about 25 years and I’m actually going to tell my story inside the presentation. So I’ll just get started if you want me to go for it. All right, I need to share my screen so share screen. Go Okay, now I gotta play. Okay, we are good. You can see

 

Bill Clearfield  13:02

we’re good. Hang on a second. I’m gonna record okay. Okay, thank you. So much.

 

13:11

I’m trying to find my cursor, so I can get rid of that got it apart. But I don’t know if that’s gonna go away. I love this little cartoon. Because you know what, we have dogs. Y’all got dogs. Everybody has dogs. Do we have dogs? Yeah, some people have dogs. Okay, so you know dogs make us feel like we’re so important and special because they just love us unconditionally. Yes. However, they are what grounds us because they let us know that we’re here to serve them not the opposite. Oh, do I? Okay, here we finally got it. So in the world that I live in. There’s so much polarization. I think you guys are experiencing it as well, where you have to either be all Western medicine or you have to be all Eastern medicine. And I really think there’s a difference here that we shouldn’t have an either or but it really shouldn’t be an end. And it’s how can we blend the best of both worlds to give us the best possible outcome. So whatever toolkit I need to expand to that’s what I’m looking for. Now a lot of people don’t know how old are animals should be living to so I just wanted to throw this in. This is cream puff cream puff was recorded in the world Guinness Book a record in 2010 for being 38 years and three days. She was owned by a farmer in Texas and he had another cat that was recorded to be 34 years of age. They are not the Enigma Maggie lives in Australia was clocked in at 30 years young. And there’s now been another dog. I don’t think he’s in my slide presentation. That is 30 Yep, there’s Bobo, Bobby. Bobby is now 31 years old. So we should not be accepting the fact that our animals are dying as early as they are. And this is my cat. This is the same guy that you’re looking at right here. And he’s 22 he was a feral cat when I got up and he’s been eating raw for over 10 years as a diet, no vaccines, etc, etc. And he is thriving. So if you see other people that have cats that are in their late teens, they’re really skinny, they’re emaciated their culture bad, their eyes are dull. He has none of that. So despite the fact in veterinary medicine that we have pill for every ill and a diet for every disease. We are seeing the highest rates of chronic disease that we’ve ever seen in our industry. Five years ago the statistic was that cancer was in dogs one out of 1.65 right now I would say it’s almost 100% Because we see so much cancer in dogs. Cats, they said was one out of three statistically I think that’s highly underreported, but if we include obesity, autoimmune disease, arthritis, allergies and gastrointestinal diseases. We see nearly 100% of our animals having some form of disease, in just gastrointestinal issues has in the past five years gone up over 50% And the worst part of it all is that the life expectancy of these pets are going down by seven years compared to 20 years ago. So something is not working and we need to do something different. Last but not least, the antibiotic resistance. I’m sure you guys are seeing it as much as we are. But we’re seeing so many conditions where you do a culture and there’s nothing that’s going to touch it. So I was seeing this come on and I realized that we really needed to have something that was safer and more effective as an alternative and that’s when I got into doing photodynamic therapy. Well, the KISS principle we didn’t know it’s keep it simple, stupid, but nature does nothing stupid. Nature’s pretty intelligent. So nature does things that are sustainable. So that’s what I try to model is keep it simple, sustainable so that we can be successful. This is the six keys to health and healing that I use for every single patient and this is what I model in my own life. So step number one, we just have to stop doing the things that are causing the diseases. And it’s a little easier with animals because we can get people to do things for their pets that they won’t do for themselves. So it’s so interesting. But we we look at pollution in food, water environment, what they’re eating, their breathing, what they’re touching to their skin, the EMF so we cover and teach all of that, how can they reduce that? And then number two is making sure that they have all the essential nutrients and you guys know that the essential nutrients are those that body can’t produce in sufficient quantities. Third, we work on healing the leaky gut, which is really a huge problem for our pets because so many of them are not eating a species. appropriate diet, they get a lot of gut inflammation. Number four, we detoxify all six organs of elimination. So we focus on kidney, colon, lungs, liver, skin and lymphatics with a special attention in my practice for the liver and the lymphatics. I just think they do the most hard lifting and so I really work on paying attention to them. Then we work on mitochondria, making sure we have good mitochondrial biogenesis that these mitochondria are functioning well. They’re communicating well with the microbiome. And number six is we clear trapped emotions. So as I present the cases I want you to be aware that all six of these principles are applied to every case. On the left is our traditional toolkit, but you know, they say that if the only thing you have is a hammer, then everything starts to look like a nail. Well today we have so much more complexity to the diseases that we’re seeing that we have to have something passed the standard CBC chemistry thyroid for animals, we do heartworm testing leukemia aids, your analysis digital extra work should always be done. Ultrasound is a pretty standard modality in veterinary medicine now and doing echoes but when we get into doing integrative work, I think I’m being blocked by our pictures. So let me move that over. Okay. And so we’ve got thermography we do cancer markers, CRP, vitamin D, B 12. Magnesium, we look for, okay, now that I’ve moved that it’s, that’s an up my screen, okay, heavy metals. I do live blood analysis in my practice, not nutritional blood analysis, but I’m looking at the fourth phase of water. And then I do bioenergetic scanning. Use a lot of intuition. Some muscle testing.

 

19:30

And then in the western treatments, we have the non steroidal anti inflammatory steroids, antibiotics and then that’s their big guns, and then surgery, chemo and radiation. But in the integrative world, we have so much more we do photo bio modulation we do ozone, would you lymphatic therapy, acupuncture, pulsed electromagnetic frequencies, therapeutic lasers, chiropractic, molecular hydrogen. We use these crystals that go through full spectrum light. And then salt therapy high. Hyperbaric Oxygen, we use Photo activators with PRP and prolotherapy, infrared saunas, herbs, oils, homelet, toxicology, energy, we’re clear emotions, of course food, water and essential nutrients. And detoxification is a big component of my practice. So that’s a smattering. There’s actually more but you get the gist of it. So this is the reason why I’m doing integrative medicine. So that is Demi Marie, my youngest daughter and Lily lucru. One of our show horses. These two were not just horse and rider. They were best friends. They were also almost undefeated at the local, regional and national levels. And then there was the show where something went ghastly wrong. This is not a picture of my daughter in real life, but this is what happened in the arena. Lily reared in the air. No one had taught my daughter that if your horse rears you just bail off, get get out of the way. The number one cause of a riders death when a horse riggers like this is being pulled over backwards and crushing the writer. So we had a 50 pound child and a 2000 pound horse and because my daughter was literally hanging and dangling from the reins, she was pulling her horse over backwards and she was going to land on her in the midst of being pulled over backwards. This horse had the presence of mind to feel where my daughter was falling. My daughter was falling to hurt the horses left and she squatted on her left hind leg and push yourself as hard as she could in the opposite direction. However, when she hit the ground, you could not see space between my daughter in the horse. I’m already jumping over the railing and I’m running towards my daughter truly not knowing what I was going to find. Well in that couple of seconds literally caught her breath and she got up but my daughter wasn’t moving. She was still lying on the ground rather motionless. I got there and thank God by the grace of God, she was not hurt, just knock the wind out of her and she was really embarrassed. So she was fine. But that didn’t end the story back home. We had several more episodes where this happened. I had equine veterinarians come out and take a look at her. And they said Dr. Siegel. We don’t know what’s wrong with her. But she’s not safe to ride she’ll never be shown again. And here are your choices. You can put her out to a pasture and retire her or you could put her down Well, aside from the fact that this was a seven year old bear who was a United States National Open champion and she was a US Canadian National Open champion. She took my daughter around the arena safely for a long, long time. And she saved my daughter’s life. So those words were not acceptable to me. And I started then looking for other things and I wasn’t blaming the veterinarians for not knowing what else to do. That was the anti glare toolkit. And so as I started adding more things into what I was doing to fix Lilly, I started incorporating those things into my practice and that’s why today I have the most robust integrative practice of anywhere in the entire world. And that was my commitment to my clients. I said I would never ever utter those words, that there’s nothing more that can be done. And I’ve held that promise for over 25 years now. And the end of the story was this dynamic duo five months after I was told she would never be safe to ride won the United States youth reserve national championship and Lily is still alive and lovely in my backyard. So, in veterinary medicine, it’s a little different because our patients aren’t always talking to us. They do talk to us in their own way. We just have to be more attentive, but we have to be really diligent to do good workups because they don’t always present for what their problem is. So this was Delilah. She came in limping on her back leg. The owners had no other complaints but when we did the X rays, we saw something in her abdomen and she had these two huge tumors that were growing in her abdomen. The owners chose in this particular case to not to do anything, and this dog was euthanized in less than two weeks. This is wiser. She was also a 2016 model came in for limping on the front leg. These dogs are eating processed foods this dog had had chronic ear infections chronic skin disease. We did the X Ray and I didn’t even realize the owner came up behind me and I looked at that x ray and it was basically a snowglobe and I went oh geez. And then she said what’s wrong? I didn’t realize she was standing behind me. But she was a very different owner. She chose to go in and start making changes lifestyle. Changes and doing therapy. So here she is in the salt booth with her dog. That’s why he’s there on the floor. And this dog with the therapies that we did lived over a year with 100% quality of life. And then there was that day when the owner just knew it was time to say goodbye. And we did it with gracefulness. This is ruffian. She has an eight year old intact female dog that presented to an emergency clinic for acute vomiting and anorexia and ADR and if you guys use ADR, it’s ain’t doing right. And that’s a lot of what we hear from the owners that they chose not right doc. And so the emergency clinic did not do a workup on this dog. And they sent her home with some anti vomit medicine. So we did three days later she comes in to see me and she’s not doing any better. So we did a full workup and we found that her white blood cell count was horrifically high normal white count for an animal is going to be around 6000. She was 47,000 and she was an intact female dog. So infected uterus is are probably the number one differential. And that was my number one differential until I did the ultrasound and I found that it was not a Pio Maitreya what this dog had was a yearling. That had gotten stuck in her urine her and it was causing that kidney to die. So I did send her to the University of Florida in hopes that they could remove the stone and save the kidney but 48 hours later they said that wasn’t going to work. So they quoted this owner something like $18,000 to take the kidney out and they didn’t have that kind of money. So she came back to me on a Saturday night and my daughter and I went and did the surgery. I will tell you that surgery was worth every bit of $18,000 But I didn’t charge that. It was the hardest surgery I’ve ever done because this dog’s kidney had been dying for probably a couple of weeks. And everything was full of pause. The kidney was literally spewing out pus and there was so much adhesions and nothing was normal anatomy in there. But we were able to do the surgery successfully and she lived a great life after that. So most of our diseases in my opinion, and this is what I try to keep it simple for my clients is defining disease as dis ease. It just means the body is not imbalanced. I don’t think there really is disease. And it’s either because of a deficiency of essential nutrients, or it’s an overabundance of toxicity that the body can’t deal with. And on top of that we have mitochondrial dysfunction. So with that being said it helps owners to define a little bit more about what may be happening and what we can do about it. So we do thorough workup like I explained before, we got the full CVC chemistry UA T four I don’t scrimp on anything goes I’m not going to miss anything and make a mistake. We do X rays we do. I can’t see my screen because my thing is in the way know how I can move that again. So we got X rays ultrasound if appropriate. We do heavy metals and nutrient panels are a panel that we run a TK one is what we use a lot. I know it used to be used in humans. It’s not used a lot but that’s one of our cancer markers, CRP and dogs. haptoglobin is what we measure for cats. And then we look for vitamin D, magnesium and B 12. It’s really interesting there was a university study that looked at dogs eating processed foods, and 85% of dogs that were eating processed foods were vitamin D insufficient and that’s because carnivores which is what our dogs cats are, only get vitamin D from their protein source. They do not get it from the sun. So if whatever they were eating was not grass fed grass finished, and it came from a feedlot. That animal is going to be vitamin D deficient. And consequently whoever eats that animal is going to be vitamin D deficient. So it’s a really big problem in our industry. And sadly most veterinarians aren’t even looking for that. And as you guys know vitamin D and magnesium are on the innate immune system. So you can imagine these guys are eating all this toxic food and then their vitamin D deficient and it’s a wonder that they make it as far as they do. I mentioned earlier that I do live blood analysis which is for evaluating the fourth phase of water bioenergetic testing, and then thermography and CT is also available in my practice.

 

28:55

All right, now we’re gonna go into some of the therapies that we do and then give you some examples. So we know we don’t heal unless we’re in a parasympathetic state and that applies to our animals as well. And since they’re living around, they’re stressed out pet parents. Most of these animals are in very high sympathetic tone. So we use a machine called a magnetosphere and that’s what the machine is in the picture there. And we can control all we can do full sympathetic we can do full parasympathetic, we have ability to create a lot of different frequencies. But the first thing that I’m using it for is to get these animals into a parasympathetic state. And then this is an example it’s this is really fun. I want to show you this video. And as I’m playing Alright, this is part three, this bird is trying to bite his daddy. Let’s see what he does. takes about a minute and I’m playing a frequency music that will help to calm the bird down. And he’s mad. So this bird is rambunctious he’s 22 years old. And if you notice in the picture on the left, his beak is super super long. And what happened when he was a baby is gotten his beat caught on a wire and it was in the cage and it split the beak and half the lower beak. So they went to a couple of doctors and they were told to put the birds asleep that they never survive. Well, 24 years later, is when the bird finally left us. But he would come in every three to four months for me to file down the beak that was growing extra long. And he was mad. He was just not a happy bird. So now I’m going to show you this. He allowed me to cut his beak off one handed I did everything just holding myself and because of the music, allowing him to relax. He’s now letting me pat him and not trying to bite me. Really cool. All right, that was chirp. This is just another example of a dog that I did with that same frequency music. Lucas came in because he was very ADR and he’s only six months old. So we did X rays, we saw that he needed a spinal alignment I’ll show you his X rays in a minute. But the odor could not hold them. This dog is so hyper and he’s really strong and she just wasn’t able to hold him still. So we started playing the music and I want you to watch his eyes. They start getting really heavy. He’s blinking. She’s not holding him any longer. He’s just laying on the table he laid down by himself. We’re about three minutes into the video. And then about another minute or so he’s going to take a big yawn and now he’s just going to lay his head down. This is just using frequency music without having to give him any drugs. Boom. Now, the question is can I adjust him? So here we are still playing the music? No, me I’m handling he’s not trying to leave and I’m able to adjust them. So this was his before x ray on the left. If you were to look at this top line, it didn’t really look like he was out of alignment. But when you look at the radiograph is back looks like he has a tea in it. And then after we adjusted him his back is nice and straight and his ADR went away and he was absolutely normal after that. This is Sookie she went to an emergency clinic for severe diarrhea in the emergency clinic did bloodwork on her. They did not check her for pancreatitis, which they should have. And her hlt was over 9000 Which is super high. You know they should be under 90 for dogs. And so they treated her for the high liver enzymes. And then a month later liver enzymes were normal but the dog still wasn’t quite right. So she came to me a few months later, and we did a workup on her and this is her live blood so you can see she has a lot of Reuleaux and in the background is all that fat and I asked the owner when was the last time they met her and she hadn’t eaten in over seven hours. So I had a I had an idea that we were gonna have a problem with triglycerides. And sure enough, her drag glycerides when it came back was super, super high. So we started her on a change of diet and we put it on some enzymes and we put her on our magnetosphere, and she only had a couple of doses of enzymes and she wasn’t even fully transitioned on to a raw diet. But we had her in our magnetosphere and this was literally 24 hours later. So all the Reuleaux is gone. Half the fat is gone from the background. And this is 72 hours later all the fats gone. And the cells are gorgeous. They’re moving, they’re flowing. The dog is feeling fantastic. Here we have the before and the after. And triglycerides seven days later, I really would have tested earlier but it was over the weekend. So when I retested her her triglycerides were down to 125 which is normal and that was using no drugs. Pretty cool. All right little burger. He was a 2010 model when he came to me he was just going to the University of Florida to remove a light Poma but the owners wanted to be more proactive and do more things to make sure he was healthy. So we did a full workup and we did his live blood. We we were actually doing a study with that music. So we just played around with it. And we were playing the music for him after we did his initial pre blood where he had all the Reuleaux and then on the right hand side, that was literally five minutes after we started frequency music on him. So that music has a frequency that changes the fourth phase of water, expanding it and helping that blood to be more functional. And this was his pre chiropractic on the left. He had a big curve in his back. And the reason I’m showing this is because many times veterinarians assume that that’s positional, but we know it’s not positional my practice because they’re in a trough. We’re positioning them with the person at the front of the person at the tail and the plumb line is going right down the center of this animal’s body so we know what it looks like from the outside. But on the inside, we can see that there’s a problem. And then on the right hand side you can see him immediately following an adjustment. Crystal fusion light therapy is another one of the things that we do it’s basically different kinds of gemstones that passes through full spectrum light. And another way that we use light is as a topical method. So we have a laser that is more for just surface things. It’s red light and red and infrared light and it also has blue light. That’s the laser on the left and on the right is our endo laser. This is a Weber laser that we can use intravenous into articular intralesional and I’m getting a therapy with my daughter in Mexico. On the left hand side and the middle picture, I’m doing a dog that had a ruptured cruciate ligament and instead of taking surgery, the owners wanted to do pro low and PRP and then we photo activate the products with our endo laser. And these dogs typically walk as soon as they come out of surgery. And then on the right hand side it has a little showerhead off the same machine so we can do topical application as well. I’m sure you guys are familiar with photodynamic therapy, but I just wanted to make the emphasis that when we’re using antibiotics, we’re really limited to the bacterial population. But with photodynamic therapy, we’re covering the spectrum and we have no down side of it and no deleterious effects and no resistance. Another tool that we use is full spectrum infrared therapy. I like to model after nature and so I figure if the sun produces full spectrum, then that must be what we should be doing. So we have a technology that has very, very low EMF and we have it in the form of a mat which is really nice for the cats and dogs. They prefer being on a mat then being inside of a sauna. And but we do have a sauna for them as well. And then on the right hand side, those are the individual saunas where if somebody wants to go in with their pet they can but it’s kind of nasty. They’d be sweating. That much and have an animal on your lap. Assisted lymphatic therapy. I told you in the beginning, the lymph system is my love. And so we do a lot for lymphatic therapy. This is a machine that we use that creates a microcurrent negative ions and inert gases. It’s extremely well tolerated by the patients even for cats and very effective for helping to decongest the lymph open drainage sites and then be able to sweep the live into those drainage points. boosts the immune system aids and detoxification. I’m just doing a little lymphatic I was being cute that day. So I’ll go past that. And give you an example of how it actually works. Because a lot of times we don’t get to see what the actual physical effect is. This is popcorn. Beautiful show dog and he’s also a service dog for his mom. He’s trained to let her know when her blood sugar drops. So his presenting complaint was chronic intermittent vomiting. He would go for days not eating, always having diarrhea. We ended up diagnosing him with irritable bowel, irritable bowel syndrome. And here I am doing part of his lymphatic therapy. So we’re just working on the neck area. But we do the whole body. But this is what I wanted to show you. So on the left was his live blood before I did the lymphatic therapy. And on the right is his blood after so not only is the Reuleaux gone but look at the motility the movement of the cells. It is so dramatic and I think that part of that may be from the ozone that is infused through the skin.

 

38:48

So an example of this is hope she was actually one of the earlier pictures. Her owner lit her on fire and obviously severe burns and abuse so she was rescued by a rescue in Sarasota. And they treated her she was able to recover but about three years later she developed an immune mediated rheumatoid arthritis after spiking a very high fever, so when she came to me she was unable to walk she hadn’t eaten in days and she just felt terrible. The only two things I did on day one was a chiropractic adjustment and lymphatic therapy, and I no sooner got done. Then she got up off the trouth started walking around the office. I offered her some freeze dried raw food and she gobbled it up. So she continued to do well we did a lot of other modalities on her over the next few months but she ended up recovering fantastic. And there we go. So lymphatic therapy is a very well tolerated modality in the animal kingdom. And in my opinion, it really should be part of a wellness program. I passionately feel that we should not be waiting until these animals present with illnesses to start doing these modalities. We really should be incorporating them into a program where we’re being preventative. Then after they get their lymphatic therapy, they go into the foot bath and this is popcorn again, of course it has to be a brave knee that puts a white dog into a footpath but it does wash off so no worries. This is another way that we do our foot baths. If it’s a really big dog. We’ll just like the dog on the left hand side she has an osteosarcoma. You can see the big area of swelling on a right front leg so we just put her on a matte layers of cushions and then we just put her front feet in and then if they’re small, we just put them in the whole tub and they just do fantastic Even cats are extremely tolerant. This is one of my favorite technologies. It’s a vibration plate with sound frequency and again, it’s like a rice machine with a vibration plate. So very well tolerated the animals like it, and this little dog was the first dog I treated when I got that technology so she had been to her veterinarian because the dog couldn’t pee, and the veterinarian correctly diagnosed her with a transitional cell carcinoma in the bladder. However, the veterinarian said there was nothing more they could do and they needed to put the dog to sleep and the owner wasn’t willing to do that. So she went to another veterinarian. She got the same answer and the same opinion that she should put the dog to sleep. She still didn’t like that answer. She went to a referral center and they said, not only do you need to put this dog to sleep, but if you don’t do that and you leave with this dog, you are a cruel and inhumane pet owner. Well, she was really pissed at that comment so they drain the bladder for her and she came to me and I put this dog on my machine there was an actual setting for transitional cell carcinoma, which was pretty cool. And I treated her that night I first I drained the bladder put her on some medications, which she didn’t even have time to start. And then I did a 45 minute therapy on her bladder. And I called her the next day she goes oh yeah, she’s paying fine. Like the owner didn’t get the significance of what just happened. And a year later, this is the bladder tumor. We just had it on a picture for you to see it. These were just some of the things that we did in her therapy. But the cool part is 12 months later, she’s still alive, doing great and being cancer still there, but she’s living with it and doing fantastic. So animals are much more intuitive than the average person. And so these two snakes came in and they were ADR, the owner had just purchased them and he just felt like they weren’t quite right. On physical exam. I didn’t see anything abnormal. And I said you know, let’s put them on the vibration plate with some frequency. And let’s just see what happens. And what was so cool about this is both snakes crawled up underneath the cell exciter which is where the concentration of the frequencies is, and they both wanted to be under there. They could have moved elsewhere in the cage but they didn’t. I thought that was pretty cool. And there’s echo again, he’s on my lap right now as you can see, and he loves getting on that plate halotherapy we do a lot of dry salt therapy, where it acts sort of like a toothbrush when you’re breathing in this dry salt. It’s a medical grade sodium chloride. It scrubs the sinuses down into the trachea and down into the lungs. So we use it for any of our cases that have upper respiratory tract infections, cancer, and it’s also wonderful for skin diseases. So we use our booth a lot it’s a little guy on the right he came in as a kitten he had an upper respiratory tract infection. In cats these typically turn into be chronic long term shatters and chronically just relapsing time and time again, and they’re really hard to clear up but they have watery eyes. They’re squinting, they have a lot of contact table edema and they have runny noses. We put him in the salt room. We had three treatments in a row gave him rectal ozone, change them to a raw diet. That’s what some of the things that we did and then 24 hours later the nasal discharge is getting less his eyes are clearing up. One more day later. He is perfectly normal. All symptoms gone. And he never relapsed. After that. Is bam bam bam bam was outside and the owner said all of a sudden she started having severe respiratory distress. She didn’t know what had happened. Well it turns out that she had inhaled something in the yard. We don’t know what it was. But on the left you can see her right lung lobe is got some a demon consolidation in there. We did salt therapy and rectal ozone and vibration and sound frequency no antibiotics. Three days later, her lungs were perfectly clear. She was symptomatic free in 24 hours but radiographically it took three days. This is little Cannella she was four months old. She had a Bronco pneumonia. She was taken to the emergency clinic and they put her on antibiotics. And she just continued to get worse and worse and worse. So when she came to me we stopped the antibiotics. You can see on the left her lung fields you can even see her heart. It is just one consolidated gross area and we started her with a similar therapies vibration frequency, salt, Rue, no antibiotics, a lot of ozone. And then that was the ventral dorsal view the left is presentation the right is three days later and her also symptomatic wise she was breathing and starting to play and eat in just 24 hours. This is Daisy Daisy was a partial drowning she’d fallen in the pool. And before the owner realized it, Daisy had splashed around and finally made it over to the steps. So at first the owner didn’t think there was any problem because she looked okay, and then about a half an hour later. She started vomiting up Frank blood so on presentation. She was hurling Frank blood. We started her our therapies radiographically of course her lungs look terrible. We started doing our therapies on her and by that night, all of the vomiting and coughing up a blood had stopped she was breathing better her lungs didn’t look better on radiographs yet, but clinically she was doing better. We treated her for three days in a row here she’s getting her vibration and sound frequency and lymphatic and kind of blend things together sometimes to maximize our time. And then her radiographs in three days started clearing up beautifully and that coincided with her feeling a lot better. So there she is all recovered and doing wonderful. This was Ellie and the reason I wanted to show this case to you is because she was 14 years old and she developed collapsing trachea so she was diagnosed at elsewhere clinic and was taken to a referral center. And they said there was nothing more they could do that she had no quality of life. She had no ability to even go on walks. She was coughing nonstop. She couldn’t catch her breath. And the owners just really didn’t feel like they had done enough for her and they wanted to try something else. So when I started seeing her I did my full workup. She was vitamin D magnesium and B 12. deficient. She had high TK one she had high CRP. She had a heart murmur which was only the one so no medication needed. She was hypothyroid had a high white count she had tons of struvite crystals in her urine, high urine pH and she really had a hard time breathing. So we started our therapies. We saw her four days a week in the initial month and then we went down to two days a week as she was getting better for another two months. She had some chiropractic work. We did our similar therapies and lymphatic and within the end of her third month, she had no more coughing and she had 100% quality live, eating, playing and acting like a young dog again. ISIS was also one of these chronic seborrhea chronic ear infections. Chronic pneumonia she was sick all the time. We do her on a regular basis. She goes at least once or twice a month she comes in she gets salt room therapy, rectal ozone hyperbaric oxygen, we do sound vibration frequency lymphatic therapy, and she is now pretty much symptomatic free. She’s maintained herself doing great. That’s her in LA on the vibration play together. ISIS didn’t care to coincide.

 

48:27

Alright, so this is Bodhi. He was 17 years old when he came to me he had jumped off the couch and he was all stoked. He literally looked like a caterpillar. He could not straighten his back out. So we took the X rays and we did our therapies on him and then we did a post X ray after we did our treatments on him and his back was all straightened out and I think he lived to be almost 20 This is a different dog. This was Casey Casey came in ADR and when we did the X rays of course we see a spine that looks like an S curve. We did thermography to show that there was a lot of inflammation along the spine. We did his adjustments did some ozone repeated the X ray and the thermography and you can see his back history and all the inflammation has gone. Ozone, I don’t know if you guys do a lot of ozone we do a massive amount of ozone. Nobody leaves my office without ozone. Even if they’re doing well. We can always use a little bit of a hormetic stressor. So we do it intravenously. We do minor auto chemotherapy where we mix it not only with blood but we sometimes put Homeopathics in it. rectally is probably the most common way we use it. We can bubble it through oil and use it to breathe the ozonized but we typically don’t do that when a lot subcutaneous we can inject it either in fluids or just gas by itself. We do topical lavage is oral rinsing after our dentistry and also as acupuncture. Again, a lot of times we don’t get to see what is the effect of these therapies. So on the left hand side, you can see it’s not even Reuleaux this is what I call aggregation. And then 10 minutes after rectal ozone. All those cells are now separated. So ozone must have some really profound effect on the fourth phase of water and it happens really rapidly. I like to show people because sometimes you know you don’t see ozone it’s a gas it goes up the but didn’t really do anything. And this is one way we can prove that it has a massive effect on the body. So this is Max Max, we get this phone call from a person we’ve never met before because my dog has a skin infection and it really smells bad and we can’t seem to clear it up. They were trying to do home remedies. So Max comes in and I start to rinse his back off and the skin starts to slough and all the hair starts to slough smelled horrible. He had a Pseudomonas infection. We ended up culturing and got that back a week later. So didn’t have any history. All he said was the dog just happened to have a skin infection. Well after biopsy seeing this dog, it turns out that the owner had a girlfriend and the girlfriend left the dog out in the Florida sun with no shade in the middle of summer and he suffered third degree sunburn. So it was really really infected. We thought we were almost going to be able to save his back in the skin but then it started to crack and it literally looked like a turtle with his skin starting to crack off but the whole time we were treating this dog happy wagging its tail eating seemed to be pain free even though we were giving him some pain management some CBD okay, it’s gonna get a little gross guys. So if you want to close your eyes for a minute, but I thought this was pretty amazing. And it’s today’s date August 27. So that’s the whole that area feeling just lifted off. Look at that beautiful granulator wet underneath How cool is that? Actually doesn’t look too bad. Yeah, really look great. And when we put ozone on it for the last time it bubbled up so we quit doing the ozone. So here he is, on August 31. You can see it was a large part of his back I mean, a lot of times with as much surface area that was damaged that could have been fatal. And then one week later we were doing collagen wraps with this dog. We got about 50% More closure. And then a couple months later we have almost total closure and then finally it fully closed. I did not have hyperbaric oxygen at the time I did this particular case but you can see he has fully healed and we have the State of the United States is on his back and there’s Florida right there on the bottom. Now that we have hyperbaric oxygen we get much faster wound healing. On the left, I’m doing a die with two of my cancer patients. And on the right it’s just showing a dog that’s in the hyperbaric with me and just how roomy it is do lots of space in there. So this was Dottie, she went into her veterinarian for a C section and she ended up having a heating pad on her belly and got third degree burns from the heating pad. So she was transferred to an emergency clinic who immediately transferred her to me because they aren’t able to do all the modalities we do to try to save the skin. So you can see everywhere that it’s really kind of dark gray brown. That was all tissue that was starting to die. So we did our therapies on her and my number one concern was that it was going to encroach all the way over into her surgery sight line as afraid that we’re gonna hit that whole site, but fortunately we were able to get all the all the damage to stop and then we started to get contracture the dead skin fell off in about two weeks and she was getting hyperbaric every day. And from the two week point three days 50% More closure, three more days, almost 100% closure, and then it finally healed in So her total process from the time that I saw to the time that she was fully healed was only three weeks, or Max was several months. So the I think the difference was the hyperbaric oxygen. This is dazzle we see little chickens to this chicken came in as she’s owned by a friend of mine and she was going to put her to sleep because she didn’t think anything could be done. little basil had a little closer that full of maggots and it really stunk bad but maggots we know are good. So I ended up flushing this with ozone and lasering it there’s a lot of maggots on the periodontal area. He laid an egg this morning. So I’m just friends with ozone. And that actually killed the magnets they have started dropping off and then we did red light therapy and then we did blue light therapy there and the blue light was really cool because the magnets shine up with this really bizarre anti bacterial, but you know that’s like that kind of stuff. Here’s the Mic drop. This chicken was fully recovered all tissue healed in 48 hours. This is Holly are allergic skin disease is probably the number one thing we see in our practices as veterinarians but right up there is cancer. So this dog had been to three different veterinarians, multiple rounds of antibiotics and steroids, nonsteroidals and APPIC. Well, and all these drugs are coming out to treat allergic skin disease and dogs. So when she came to me I wanted to make sure I had an accurate diagnosis. And I did a full workup including biopsies, cultures and histopathology. diagnosis came back she had allergic skin disease so we changed her diet got her on some therapies and this is her three weeks later, her itching which is reason the owner Broderick because she was incessantly itching that was gone in three days. And then her skin was fully healed in three weeks. This is little reds, 14 and a half year old presented for a sudden ataxia and circling. So number one differential in his age category is of course a brain tumor. But he also had a really bad ear infection. So I opted with let’s treat the ear infection see how he does and we use a combination of laser in his ear along with ozone rectally and topically. So here he is getting lasered. This is him 24 hours later boozed and he lived another few years. That’s pretty cool snake bites, we see a lot of snake bites in Florida and the swelling on the dog on the on the face of the left side you can see is pretty profound. Typically snake bites swelling will continue to get bigger and bigger and go up over the eyes. And it takes literally days and weeks for that swelling to go away. But with laser therapy and Oza we were able to resolve all that swelling in 36 hours. This is what the blood looks like. So we get a lot of kind of sites which is our hallmark for knowing it’s a snake bite and then 18 hours after our treatment her blood all the kind of sites are gone and her bloods back to normal. And she did great. This is Oreo he came in because his owner thought he had a foreign body she saw nibbling on one of our plastic plants, but he didn’t have a foreign body. He was actually in kidney failure. I don’t know exactly why or what happened to cause that he was only seven years of age. But these are pretty high numbers getting a B one a 76 and a crap Nina 6.4. The SDMA is a marker of long term kidney damage. And that was 46 So I’m thinking something that was going on in this cat long before he presented phosphors was high at 8.2. So we started doing our therapies here he’s getting lymphatic therapy done and ozone and all the everything’s listed on the left. I won’t go through it all. But in there he is getting laser and we laser right over the kidneys. We use five hertz and 50 hertz and it really gets down into those kidneys and helps. So 24 hours later, he’s also on IV fluids now is being increased and you know, almost back to normal. We continued for another 24 hours. His live blood he had quite a bit of Reuleaux when we started and then in 24 hours all the Reuleaux was gone and that seems to be one of our hallmarks to know how well these animals are going to do is when the blood is able to separate. And then his blood work at the end of 72 hours was totally back to normal started eating and he never had a relapse.

 

58:25

Little Abby one of my favorite patients ever came to me when she was about two years of age and the owners adopted her from an other a different person that they knew because the dog was always sick and not thriving and wasn’t eating it was skinny and losing way and the original owners couldn’t take care of her so these other people adopted her and they brought her to me we did a lecture right now um, it was a pretty arduous process to get a diagnosis but we ultimately diagnosed her with hepatic shunt, and I sent her to the University of Florida to see if it was a surgical correction but sadly she had no portal vein well the University of Florida said to the owner as well she doesn’t have a portal thing we can’t do surgery, she’s never going to do well. She’s always going to have troubles and you might want to consider a humane euthanasia, but these owners did not want to do that. So they brought her back to me. We did our therapies which are listed on the screen the magnetosphere for photo for her parasympathetic and being able to basal dilate the laser ozone lymphatic therapy, change your diet had her on some special supplements. And three years later, she was still doing fantastic. So here she is. She’s gonna give us some money shot here in a second. Every time she came in. She always did that. And then gave me that belly shot. So that was my money shot cutest thing ever. So she had three more phenomenal years feeling that good before she developed an immune mediated thrombocytopenia, and she passed away in just a matter of hours. But on the left is how she presented on the right is how she spent most of her life. This was cookie she’s a little dachshund that was diagnosed by a referral center with IBD four years earlier. So for four years, this dog every couple of days with suffer with a grumbly Tombi diarrhea, abdominal pain, vomiting and just feeling horrible. And they couldn’t offer her anything everything that they tried to do nothing worked. So she came to me we did four days of therapy with chiropractic work some a vibration and sound therapy lymphatic assisted lymphatic therapy we did rectal ozone put her on a raw diet. Got her on digestive enzymes can fear for some pre and probiotics. We did a fecal matter transplant which made a big difference in this dog. And four days later, she had a normal bowel movement than she has been normal ever since. This dog came to us because it had presented to their veterinarian for nystagmus and ataxia. So they went to the veterinarian. The veterinarian tried to do some stuff that didn’t get better. They went to a referral center where they gave this dog gobs and gobs of drugs but the dog continued to get worse and worse. So she came over to me this dog also had chronic skin disease from the time the dog was adopted. He had ear infections he had chronic skin problems, and then of course developing this head tilt. So here’s a video of him walking. He’s actually looking better walking than he really was. He was very splay legged and not able to walk a straight line. So I talked to the owner about taking a different approach and my approach was to try and reduce inflammation. So I wasn’t really targeting the head tilt or whatever skin problems he had. I really was just targeting the inflammation systemically. So chiropractic really adjusted and we did this system lymphatic therapy, did a foot detox we did major auto chemotherapy with ozone and then he had IV vitamin C poly and VA curcumin we did the rainbow colors with the laser got him on a different diet and some supplements and this is immediately post his first treatment and it’s a little hard to appreciate but his head starts to straighten out and he’s not as crooked as he was. We did two full treatments with all the intensity and then one little partial tune up and in 10 days he was totally symptomatic free but the part that the owner was most excited about was his entire skin was cleared up for the first time in his life. So reducing the inflammation cleared up his skin as well. Who did the first acupuncture you know, doesn’t it make you wonder? Does somebody take a sharp Stick and poke it in themselves or poke it in their friend you know where did that all come from? But of course this mammoth is showing that maybe the first acupuncture was really the hunter shooting him in the butt, but his neck felt better. So this is Sammy Sammy came to me at 15 years of age, acutely paralyzed she had been to her regular veterinarian who didn’t have anything that they could offer. So then Sammy went to a referral center and the referral center said Sammy probably had lymphoma in the spine and there was really not much they could do so they should consider euthanasia. But the owners weren’t willing to do that. So they came to me we made a pact that we’re going to go for two weeks and if we didn’t see any improvement in two weeks, we would put her down. Well this is her in four days. If she never got past the crab walk they would have been thrilled because she could use the litter box and that was one of their biggest concerns. But she continued to get better and this was her at four weeks. She continued to do fantastic. We tuned her up every once in a while and she lived to be almost 20 Here she is getting Eastern acupuncture. What I didn’t tell you was this cat was meaner than sin so when she would come in and our carrier, she would be hissing, biting attackee lunging like she couldn’t touch this cat. So every time we worked on her we had to put her under anesthesia. But we finally got to the point where she actually started being a little nicer and she let me put needles in her. This is Ireland, only three years of age presented with acute paralysis. Just like CME This is a degenerative disc disease, probably from all the processed foods and inflammation. And, you know, we know that inflammation comes out in the weakest link of the body which in these cases it happens to be the spine. So the older broader he’s a nurse and he brought her in to put her to sleep because he didn’t think anything could be done. That doesn’t happen on my watch. This is her three weeks later that she stayed with me for the full three weeks as he was a nurse and his schedule was so crazy couldn’t bring her back on a regular basis is that not the cutest thing in the world? Adorable? This is Bama bear. We went to their house to do a house call euthanasia. The crematory got there before me and was talking to these owners and realize that they were just told that there was nothing they really could do for this dog. He couldn’t get up. He’s big dog. He weighed over 100 pounds. And the people couldn’t pick them up. He was painful. So if they tried to move him he would bite them. And so they thought there was nothing else that could be done. But after getting there and assessing him they were thrilled that we offered to try and see if we could help them so it turns out he had bilateral ACL tears and that’s why he couldn’t get up and bear any weight. So we have to put a muzzle on him because he would bite the snot out of us. And here we are carrying him to the crematory truck and she transported them to our office and then we this is doing the PRP prolotherapy, we’re using endohedral needles, so that after I do the injections of his PRP and then we do our polo and then we do the ozone. And I do two needles just so that I can do two lights at the same time and I’m able to get things moving a little bit quicker and not have them under anesthesia for as long.

 

1:06:24

So there’s his

 

1:06:27

Pirlo mixture we have a really amazing cocktail that we put together and then that was my prolozone. Can you just run upstairs and ask for an answer that will call them back in about three or four CC and then I can then show it and so that’s how we do that. And then we do the laser lights. This is a video of him. Of course this is under anesthesia and so it was bilateral. We had to do both knees at the same time. And then here he is immediately post off. Remember this dog hadn’t been able to walk for a week. And that was just immediately post off. He’s walking all over my office. trucking along and he continued to do fantastic and he’s still doing great. So that was a good story. This is KitKat male neutered cat they had real chronic problems with these cats getting urinary blockages. He was on processed food. Well after the third time he blocked the owner thought that she could express his bladder and when she tried to do that she actually ruptured it. So on the right hand side, you can see that big space that was weary, he ruptured his bladder. Well fortunately, he ruptured it at the apex and not the base. And so we just open the abdomen and here is the rupture. So we can see where there’s a lot of necrosis. We’re going to culture this but fortunately it’s in the body of the so it wasn’t exotic. Another area here we have to resect all of that. And what was left was this little bladder. So we kept a urinary catheter in so we could keep his bladder nice and empty while it was healing has amazing ability to restructure itself. And here he is, well, we did a workup on and we didn’t get these results right away but the TK one was so high because of all that tissue necrosis that was happening in the bladder. He was vitamin D insufficient he was low on B 12. He had almost no liver enzymes have a high white count we cultured Ecoli out of that bladder. So here he is literally post op he’s getting his frequency therapy and some vibration you can see the urinary catheter is taped in there. And then after 10 days, we did a surgery to convert him into our her so that we didn’t have that problem with him blocking again and he’s done fantastic ever since. We’re almost done, guys. This is Tinkerbell. Tinkerbell went to their veterinarian because she was vomiting and not eating. And the veterinarian did some blood work saw that she had a lot of abnormalities and she had some jaundice going on. So they referred her to a referral center. The referral center did an ultrasound and said that she had liver disease and that she should be put to sleep and the owner didn’t want to do that. So they went to pick her up. And then the owner called me from the exam room where she was there with the cert with the veterinarian from the referral center. And the referral doctor said to me if you take this dog out of this hospital, it’s going to die and like really tried to make the owner feel bad. Well, we took the dog in and those numbers were really bad. We started out with a white count of 75,000 That’s super high. And you can see on consecutive days the dog is getting better and better. So from seven seven to seven, nine white counts improving Neutrophils are getting better. Her liver enzymes didn’t even register on our in house machines but then finally came down to where we can register them. Her ALC FOSS was over, didn’t even register day one then we got it down to in the close 10,000 Mark and then it continued to drop Billy Rubin was off the charts got better, better better. And so the dog stayed with me for literally 24 hours a day for two full days. So she slept at my house where I have a little hospital ward and on the left is all the different things that we were doing from our IV therapies to all the medications we were getting in. I did every tool I could think of on this dog. And here she is David this one handed. She loves this. Oh hold on. You’re getting my finger. And this is for eating are absolutely brand new just came out of the oven freeze dried. So she went home and continued getting outpatient therapy and continue to do very well. This is my favorite case to present because this was this year’s case actually, last year’s case. This is Bentley. He’s a yellow lab just turned five years of age. He developed some blisters on his nose so the owners took them to their vet. The vet gave them a steroid cream the bumps got worse. They did a biopsy and he was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma. They went to a referral Veterinary Oncologist who told them that the only cure for this dog was going to be to cut his nose off literally. And they ran out of there and found me so here we started our process and though I’m not going to read everything, I want you to know that this dog was vitamin D deficient. He was also low in zinc, selenium, copper and magnesium. He was very high and strontium, antimony, mercury and lead. Of course we didn’t have that back right away but as our workup came in, we did all kinds of diagnostics on him. This was what the owners gave us supplements. That is a amazingly dedicated family to get all this in. So we’ve changed to a raw diet. He was on our essential vitamins and minerals, fatty acids aminos. He was on pancreatic enzymes with and without meals. He wasn’t on our eight mushroom blend. These are all products that we carry. He was on a humic extract to repair the leaky gut. He was getting kind of like an essiac tea with cat’s claw Salvestrol he was on kefir. He was on dimethyl glycine, magdeleine low dose now. low dose naltrexone, black seed oil topically and orally kava oil and vitamin C orally. We did bioenergetic scanning and he was on all the imprints and he was on vitamin D supplementation. And there was probably a few more things that I didn’t list but you get the idea. This was his therapies. He came in twice a week. And then they also bought a Weber watch for home use. So at home they were doing other therapies, but I had him twice a week. So again, tremendous amount of work went into this dog. He was doing very well at one point we ended up adding five ala topically and we also did

 

1:13:16

ICG both intralesional and IV and I’ll show you those as we move along. So that was his IV therapies that we did twice a week. And then in March that’s what his nose look like the lesions went not only around the front of his face, but also up the side and over the top. And it was like Whack a Mole with this dog. Every week there would be another new lesion that would show up so you can see the one on the right hand side that got a black arrow going to it. That one shows up and then another one would show up and if you look at the picture on the left, you can see on the upper left nostril there’s a little round bump. So another one was coming up but we got rid of the first one. We started out using something called the O placing topically it’s a derivative of bloodroot and I was just trying to get trying to get some of these lesions down. He had a lesion in his oral cavity as well that one went away with no problem at all. And then we get into July and the lesion is starting to coalesce and we’re getting a lot of erosion, but not a lot of new growth except on the outer edges of the right side of his muscle and also on the inside of the left nostril. So you can see starting to really have quite a response. And then on 727 The following week we did all of his IV therapies but we didn’t do anything topically and then a week later he comes in and that’s what I get presented. It was really nasty. So I lit under surgery, I lasered all of this extraneous tissue went down pretty deep. And then I ended up doing new plays and again, this is how we have to treat this dog because one it was it was painful to he’s a lab so he’s gonna lick lick lick lick lick. So we have to do all these treatments were done under general anesthesia. The neoplasia didn’t have to stay on for an hour. We had to bandage on to keep it there was just a lot it was really hard on him and it was really hard on us. But he’s such a great dog. So here he is getting a sonic treatment. And then he knows everywhere he’s supposed to be it was time for hyperbaric he just jumps right in. It was the best dog he’s still doing fantastic. And we really enjoy him. So here we put five ala on and we have to do this under tranquil isation because the product has to stay on for three and a half hours. And then we photo activated at the end of three and a half hours. So then we see what his most is most looks like on the right. This was the following week we changed to ICG we did the ICG intravenously and intralesional and then we photo activated with infrared light and that was him at the end of his ICG and again the most of the lip is looking good except for the left nostril and the outer edge of the right lip. Happy dog always such a good patient. Here he is getting ala so we did ala ICG and back to Ala but we’re really seeing some awesome changes in the tissue. And that was just a video showing where we could see the two areas that still needed to have some work. And then we started seeing something magical. All of a sudden we weren’t seeing any more of the cancerous tissue. And we started to see some scar tissue starting to contract in. Here he is in October, and then November and the end of November. He’s looking better and better, but there’s still a little lesion in the left nostril. Now it’s starting to really contract down and if you were to see this dog now you would not even know that anything happened. There’s almost no pink left. And then on the left nostril you can see there’s still a little bit of a lesion which we’re working with. So in February we decided to do methylene blue and photo activate that and then we did cryo, and we did another neoplasia and so we kept playing around with different things. Here I’m going to be crying it we’ve done on this particular visit we did you know placing and then we after we rinsed it off, we froze it and that’s what it looked like right after the cryo. So I was thinking well, we really did really good. This is a graph for those that really liked the science part. We were following his vitamin C plasma concentrations along with his TK one and his CRP. And the graph demonstrated that as we were killing the cancer, the TK one would go up with the therapy that we were giving and then it would drop down and each week that we were testing we were seeing less and less to wear masks so there was less and less TK one. And this is just showing again a little bit further out that we went and the two gray spikes that are in the background are the T k one. And that was when we did the ALA and the ICG we got a really good kill effect. So here he is getting his methylene blue on the left is is pre methylene blue, then the methylene blue and then post photodynamic therapy on the third treatment of methylene blue so it was looking really good. And he was actually in the office today. And I still can’t decide what’s going on in that left nostril but there’s doesn’t seem to be any tissue reaction. So he did really good and this is Ratchett eight year old male neutered believe that came in looking just like that he had been to his veterinarian because he broke a tooth. They took the tooth out and he kept bleeding and bleeding and bleeding. So they sent him to the referral center and the referral center did an ultrasound work the dog up and they found that he had splenic lymphoma. So in this ultrasound that was done by the referral center, they did a Fine Needle Aspirate, and that’s how they came out with their splenic lymphoma diagnosis. So the spleens really enlarge, looks nice and Motley and very nasty. So we started doing our treatments with him on the left is what his life looked like when he came in. It was sludge. And then he did one hour in the PMF device and we actually had some aggregation it was starting to break down and move better. We continued our therapies and this was him at the three week mark getting therapies. And at this time is when we saw his clinical improvement as well. So it makes sense you know, now he’s able to oxygenate bring oxygen to the tissues, get rid of waste products, and so he was really functioning much better. And then the owners wanted to see where we were at at the 10 week mark. So we re ultrasound at him and it’s all of our ultrasounds are read by a Board Certified radiologist, even though we do the ultrasound in the office and the radiologist said he was cancer free. He thought we had a misdiagnosis in the beginning because we couldn’t see anything in there. So I sent him the original films and he goes oh, wow, that was pretty awesome. Did you do chemo? And I laughed and said no. So there he was cancer free after 10 weeks of therapy. This is Moon she also presented with a transitional cell carcinoma. She could still pee but she was getting very symptomatic. We treated her for five weeks and she was cancer free and has remained so for years. This is Tucker a four year old male neutered Great Pyrenees came in from another veterinarian because he was limping. They took an x ray he was diagnosed with an osteosarcoma. Here you can see the periosteal reaction the swelling the lytic lesion inside the bone he was presented limping but after only two weeks of therapy was already using his leg again. So this is two months of the therapy here. He he was the first dog in the United States to get photodynamic therapy. So he’s got a catheter and he got the rainbow along with all of his IVs and at the 10th month of doing his therapies. He was also confirmed with the resolution of the osteosarcoma. This is little he presented with this eye tumor. He had had this thing removed two times prior to coming to me but they didn’t treat the underlying cause. So it grew back quickly and with a vengeance. So we went in surgically to remove this. We get to be you know all hats on. So this was really quite fun and very stressful. But as I was able to dissect the tumor out where I have it, the the letters say where area where the tumor was. That’s where the base of it was. And I did actually use Neo placing on the inside of the eye which was careful not to get it on the eye globe. And here he was post up the tumor was so large underneath the lids and it caused this massive amount of stretching to the lids and you sit there and go man, how is that ever going to get back to normal? So there it was post up and he looked pretty miserable. That’s him five months later. He’s visual, all that tissue contracted down, and he never had a return of his cancer. So we are almost out of time but I’ve got a couple little things I still want to share. You know a lot of times we’ll have veterinarians and owners go well why would somebody spend all that money and time you know, they’re gonna die anyway. And what I want all of us to do is take a moment and think about somebody that has transitioned in our lives. It could be two legged or four legged. And as you bring their memory forward, I want to ask you, what would it mean to you if you could have that individual one more day? What would you say? How would you spend that day? It would be super valuable. And that’s what our owners are asking us for one more day. They just don’t want to give up too soon.

 

1:22:57

Which brings us to little bits and little bit presented on emergency in full blown Status Epilepticus. So we were able to stop the seizures. And this is what she looked like when we got the seizure stopped so she still has severe nystagmus you can’t stand up. And it’s my job to go out and talk to the parents and decide as a 15 year old. This dog probably had a brain tumor, which we later diagnosed she did have a brain tumor. We also diagnosed her later on with Cushing’s disease. She had all kinds of deficiencies. She had severe pancreatitis, blah, blah, blah. She just had a litany of things and so I gave them a poor prognosis. And I said, Do you want us to continue and try or do you want to say goodbye and her words to me will forever live in my heart. She said, we had a dog years ago, that we gave up too soon. We never tried. And we’ve never forgiven ourselves for not at least trying. So they said, do whatever you can. So we treated her that night. And this is her the next day, going home. Now she did not live forever. Of course she had all kinds of problems. And about seven days later she had another seizure which was severe and at that point, the owners were more prepared to say goodbye doesn’t make it any easier. But they now knew that they had done everything they could and we had a lot of our test results back so they knew the severity of some of our condition, so they were more comfortable with making that decision. And our last case is Prowler she is a female spayed American Eskimo, very much a family member to these people. They owned a gym so she spent all of her days in the gym with the family. She had developed a liver cancer and it was huge and engulf the entire liver. She went to their regular veterinarian who finally said there was nothing more that they could do. And they suggested euthanasia, but they just weren’t ready to do that. So when she came to me she looked really really sick. She wasn’t eating she had no energy. We started doing our therapies and they didn’t have a lot of money they had literally $500 A month was their budget. So we only treated this dog one day a month. Now I also threw a lot of extra free things in there but they were able to spend a little extra money on her supplements. And this was her on her 12th birthday one year later. celebrating her cancer free status. We read ultrasounded her after a year of therapy and the radiologist said there was no evidence of cancer in her liver. So you know, what does that leave us? All of us are in a position to do things that no one else has done. And they talk about the difference between a master and a beginner you know the master has failed more times than beginner has ever tried. And all of us that are out there forging a new path and trying to find remedies that are safer and more effective. Kudos to all of us, because we’re making the difference in the world. And then Tony Robbins saying if you can, you must and if you must, you can, but he also says the number one reason for failure is a lack of resourcefulness and I think that most describes how I’ve embraced my journey is that I never want to be without something I can do so I become more and more resourceful so that I can offer my patients something even if it’s quality of life, and a better transition. I think that’s really important. And look who came in for the finale. This is Echo who is about to turn 23 So there you have it. I really appreciate you allowing me to share my passion with you. This is all the ways you can connect with me. The holistic healing vet.com is a free ebook that outlines those steps that I just went over with you in the beginning. I have transforming that medicine is my site for my online training courses. I trained pet parents and hold on a second Ellis like can you write my charger down really quick? I’m about to head next to my bed. And so transforming vet medicine is my site where we have educational courses for pet parents and I trained veterinarians as well. Evil love Ra is my food and supplements because we couldn’t find good things that we could use for our pets. So I had to create my own spas, family wellness centers, our detox centers where pets and parents come in for the detoxification of the six organs of elimination and that will be open at the end of this year. We’re doing it now in my office but it’s going to be its own independent franchise. And then we also make essential oils and the last icon is my veterinary hospitals. So yay, we made it without losing my battery. And that’s the end. So thank you so much.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:28:04

Thank you Wow, that was great. You know, most of us this is foreign territory to us. So I’m hoping some of our regulars who I don’t see you on here tonight. Didn’t side well veterinarian, whatever, you know, I’m not interested in it because this was unbelievable. And one of the one of the questions that as you’re going through all of your cases and whatnot is you have a lot of expensive equipment, don’t you?

 

1:28:38

Multi millions.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:28:39

I’m just gonna say it does cost a lot of money to set up all of reality.

 

1:28:44

But you know, Doc when I made that commitment that I was never going to say to somebody, there’s nothing more I can do. That meant I have to back that up with something now. Honestly, between all of us. From a quantum physics perspective, we can heal with just our mind. Yes, I accept that as truth. But to really put that into practice when you’re dealing with somebody else’s mind. You know, when you’re dealing with a pet parent who may not have that level of belief, it makes it more challenging and so I love my choice. They really helped me to make my practice much more believable. And it’s proof of concept. So, you know, I’m really what I do from you guys, and just make work in the pet world.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:29:32

So there’s some questions in the chat and some of them were from like, right at the beginning and I don’t know if you remember this, but one question is what did you find with Lily so I don’t know if you remember what Lily was.

 

1:29:43

That was my horse. Lilly. arthritis in her neck. So in a training barn horses teeth grow and they get little points on the either medial or lateral side of the of the teeth. Well in the barn, they were not using a good dentist and so she wasn’t getting her teeth filed properly. So they were uneven and she had a lot of points. Well her job was to tuck her neck and she had to break at the pole which is C one. She had to be able to break at the pole tuck her neck and and then stride out with her front legs. Well because she couldn’t unlock her jaw because the those little bone spurs were holding her job place. She couldn’t break at the jaw. So for years, she was having to strain her neck and she developed severe arthritis. And it was my first chiropractic class in veterinary medicine where one of my teachers does a lot of horses and she goes Oh, I know exactly what’s wrong with your horse. And so she went out with me and sure enough, that’s what it was. So we got her teeth properly filed, but the arthritis had already set in.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:30:48

Introduce you to Dennis Hardy. He does see one balancing. He gave us a lecture on that. That’s all he does and see what some sort of some sort of device that he has. So absolutely. What is evaluating fourth phase water?

 

1:31:06

Wow, I could spend two hours talking about that and if you’d like I would love to do a presentation on fourth phase water. But Gerald Pollack is a professor I think in Washington State and most of his research is what has brought that there’s a few other people that talk about fourth phase water but when we went to high school at all we were taught in science that there’s three phases of water there’s actually a fourth phase, it’s a gel phase. And that’s all the interests the matrix that holds all the cells together. That’s actually a gel phase. And so inside the cell is structured water. That’s where all the communication occurs. And when we things like eat toxins were exposed to EMF, we have a variety of different things that causes a collapse of that fourth phase of water. And when that happens, the cells collapse on each other they lose their polarity. When you expand the fourth phase of water, you get a negative charge around the cell and then all of the positive ions are pushed out into the bulk water. And so you get this polarity change and that’s actually what they now believe is what drives the blood to circulate. It’s not the heart you know physically there’s it’s the heart could not pump blood through that kind of a system effectively. So what they really think is happening now is it’s the fourth phase of water that when it’s properly expanded, and it’s expanded by things like infrared light will cause it to expand certain enzymes, lymphatic therapy, ozone all these different things. are able to structure the water expand the fourth phase and allow it to work better.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:32:47

Okay, yeah, we

 

1:32:49

can lecture on that. We will have

 

1:32:52

a interject real quick. What was the last chiropractor you’re talking about? What was his name? Dennis Hardy. Yeah, just did his heart. He’s a Apex chiropractor. And Dr. Dan Halsey, who’s on this. Tonight. He now has a Apex machine, and he’s seen some very high level results. There’s only four centers in America right now that have the same net Apex machine, and it’s a 3d Apex machine. And it’s the top bone in your spinal cord where the two blood fluid centers go to the brain. So they’re seeing absolute massive results. So hopefully we get them on.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:33:35

Dr. Halsey for April 18. Awesome, awesome. And we’ve had done a song before so yeah, hi, Jack. I’m again so you bet. How many sessions for lymphatic therapy?

 

1:33:48

It depends on the case. As a preventative, I recommend that once every month or a couple of months or every quarter it they’re eating a species appropriate diet and they’re getting movement. So the problem is a lot of these animals aren’t moving so they just like people, they’re getting stagnant and then they have surgery. You cut through lymphatic areas, you know, so there’s a lot of toxins. So depending on the case, what their health challenges are. We could be doing lymphatic twice a week for our cancer patients if we need to, or once we get them on to maintenance, it could be once a week and then drops down to once a month and then kind of a I don’t do as needed. I really think that they need to have three or four times a year. They need to have really good lymphatic therapy done.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:34:32

Okay, where do you get freeze dried raw food?

 

1:34:36

I make it it’s our it’s our own company. So we have a commercial freeze dryers so yeah, we the food is processed through manufacturer that were that does it for me by my standards and then we freeze dry it at my office.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:34:54

Amazing. Do you recommend cod liver oil

 

1:35:00

for vitamin D, or we don’t typically we don’t use oil. A lot of those cod liver oils are rancid. In fact, a short quick story is I was taking cod liver oil from a company Blue Mountain actually. And I was using their cinnamon flavor and it was rancid and I didn’t know it. And I started having heart arrhythmias like to the point where I was having PVCs out the wazoo and went to several cardiologists This is back 20 plus years ago, and they said that I had right ventricular outflow tract disease and they were going to do an ablation on me so right before the surgery I was feeling so bad I was on medications I had no energy I could hardly lift my legs out of bed in the morning. So I just said chuck it I’m gonna go off all these drugs beyond anything, but I also stopped my supplements at the same time. And by the time I wanted to go for surgery, all the PVCs were gone. And it wasn’t till years later that I had found out about the story of this Blue Mountain cinnamon flavored cod liver oil that was rancid. But we use for our fatty acids we use a plant based parent essential fat. That is the Omega three and Omega six that make up the cell membrane and that’s what we use and our animals do really, really well on that.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:36:19

There’s a question and then somebody else answered it. What is Reuleaux?

 

1:36:24

It’s when the cells stick together. And interestingly, when we were in veterinary school we were told that cats and horses normally have Rouleau it is a total lie. They’ve just never seen these animals with the cell separated I can separate it with energy with enzymes with ozone and make the entire Reuleaux go away and the animals function better.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:36:48

Actually the next the next question is didn’t the sound therapy have the same effect? On the live cell analysis and why use ozone?

 

1:36:56

Well, ozone, I’m not using ozone just to cause cell separation. I’m using it as a hormetic stressor. I’m using it to produce more glutathione to oxygenate the tissue to do vasodilation it’s a redox signaling molecule. So it has a gazillion different effects.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:37:17

I hope that Dr. Smith if you’re still one of the hope that answers the question, what do you think of? Have you used noni and oh, and I

 

1:37:28

noni I know what noni is. I haven’t used the it’s an antioxidant. I believe it’s a fruit. And there’s a company that’s an MLM company that has Noni Juice is that if I’m on the right track,

 

Bill Clearfield  1:37:44

Dr. Stone, are you still here? Yeah,

 

1:37:46

yep. Yep. Um, yes, they, I use that and you can get it from a Samoan Island. It’s where they started using that. Like medicine men, you know, started using that and in the seven and you can get the juice I found out about it, you know, many years ago, and right about when I had found my Beagle had a really invasive, fast growing sarcoma. You know, she had a surgery to remove these huge tumors. That were grown so fast. And they’re like halfway through treatment, I found out about the noni juice. So I started giving that and started seeing those tumors not only stopped growing but starting to shrink. Unfortunately, enough damage had already been done to her liver that she didn’t make it. But I think had I known about the noni juice in the beginning. You know, I think I would have been able to save her. So yeah, it’s got a lot of you know, it helps the CD four cells count go up. It has it helps with pain, it’s really good pain. It helps. It’s like, I know, a lot of veterinarians have replaced like steroids and pain meds with that. So um, so I just want to say, ask you about that.

 

1:39:14

Yeah. Thank you for sharing. Yeah, I was familiar with at the time I, the company that approached me when they had it. The only portion was great, but then they had other additives in there that were no no’s for me so and it was an MLM company, which I’m not against MLM. It’s just the way they were pushing it. It wasn’t congruent, you know, there’s, there’s just no magic bullet. It’s, as you saw from the complexity of things that we do we have complex disease and it requires a equally complex comeback, you know, so we we have to stop doing the things that are causing it. We have to make sure essential nutrients are on board. We have to make sure that we’ve healed their leaky gut, detoxify detoxification is huge. With the last little case that I showed, we tried to do her treatment too fast. And we made her sick because she couldn’t detoxify. So we had to back up and do a few days of detoxification to get her to where she felt better than could actually get rid of some of the junk and then we were able to start doing her therapies. And then not only the mitochondria, but all of our biochemical pathways. We I really target those pathways. So Salvestrol is target, the CIP one b one pathway, which I think is fascinating that we have in our bodies Polly’s cancer pathways, anti cancer pathways, but we’re just not eating the nutrients that trigger them. So if we can turn them back on by supplementing them with the products that will actually turn them on something as simple as b 17, or apricot seeds and then sell best drawls it’s amazing what the body can regenerate and do.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:40:51

Do you use

 

1:40:53

Yep, thanks for your

 

Bill Clearfield  1:40:54

question. Do you use sterile methylene blue to apply to the wounds or non sterile?

 

1:41:01

Well is our pharmacist here? I don’t like

 

Bill Clearfield  1:41:06

beamer was on for a while. Yeah, he’s

 

1:41:08

on the phone guys. I’m here. Yeah. Hi, Dr. Siegel.

 

1:41:11

Hey, Mike, is amazing. Let me tell you, he works. All my methylene blue cases with me. He helps me I’m the one that’s getting the gray hair he’s not but I have no hair. We did a cat the other day that came in with a cancerous lesion on the face and I’m looking at cats getting that hemoglobin EMIA and they get Heinz body anemia. So I was really nervous about doing the methylene blue, but I thought you know I’m gonna go for it. And then I called Mike and I go I just kill my cat. He’s gonna No no, you’re so the captain Great. Yeah.

 

1:41:47

What you’re using is, is I don’t know if you guys know about Quicksilver. But Quicksilver is a company that makes liposomal products and nano sawmill products. And so they have a new topical product. They’re we’re working with them to help develop and what we sent to Dr. Siegel is methylene blue in that vehicle and it has 40 nanometer micro spheres or whatever you want to call them in it. So it’s really quick sort of his creation is the vehicle but we’re putting the methylene blue in there and and that’s what you’re testing.

 

1:42:26

Yeah, so it’s not sterile, per se. No, I’m not using it intravenously. I’m using it topically

 

1:42:33

and you’re gonna do PDT over the top of it. Which is probably going to take care of any residual potential problem plus it’s pretty clean.

 

1:42:42

Yeah, we’ve so far we’ve done two cases with that and so far really successful. Well, thanks for

 

1:42:51

everything. Thanks for you. You’re a master.

 

1:42:54

Thank you, Mike. I appreciate your time.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:42:57

Something probably a lot of us were thinking about it seems kind of cost prohibitive with a lot of these treatments. I mean, some of those things that some of those protocols have to cost 10s of 1000s of dollars. It’s

 

1:43:09

so I think my most expensive cases have been around 80,000 for a cure, but I think the average is can be anywhere from 10 to 30. And it’s not uncommon for chemotherapy in pets to be 1520 $25,000. So it’s really not that far off, but our patients have quality of life the entire time.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:43:33

Okay, well, Dr. Anderson, DVM says Nice work let you join. Glad you’re still here. Thank you for being with us. I know we’re just medical doctors for the most part. So but don’t look down on us.

 

1:43:49

got most of my training from you guys. So thank you.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:43:51

And this is kind of a just a statement from from my my college, my my my sidekick Joel here. This has been one of the toughest classes I’ve been through. He had to put down his Border Collie last year who became a service dog last year and he was the mascot at our office. He didn’t want to go through that again. But now he knows there are vets like you and he’s been invited to get a new service dog and and there’s also an equine center I guess in town here so it’s thank you for that. I got a lot of thank yous fascinating. Thanks for coming. Happy that you shared your work with us. Thanks for one of the best lectures ever. Wow. That’s not bad. You’re doing such wonderful work for our beloved four legged friends. It’s great to know that they’re fabulous vets like yourself. Medical question, how long do you read? Do you read test live cells?

 

1:44:50

It depends if I’m wanting to see an effect. I can do it as little as five minutes if I want to see a profound effect and how quickly but when I was doing studies if I didn’t see an effect in five minutes, then I would do 15 Then I would do 30 Then I would do an hour and then maybe it was 24 hours so really dependent on what I was looking at some things reacted extremely fast.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:45:14

How big a staff do you have? You can’t do all this only by yourself?

 

1:45:18

My daughter’s but my main key person and I have another full time technician and one other staff member so it’s really just four of us.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:45:26

Wow. Okay. Do you always do live cells after any intervention?

 

1:45:32

Not always.

 

1:45:34

But because I teach a lot. I try to do more in the way of documentation. So we got tons of videos our phones are just blown up with gross things. So so a lot of times the client but if I want to have more data points I’m working with a company right now that infuses frequencies into material like T shirts and vest. And so I’ll do thermography X rays and live blood before and then I’ll put the shirt on and then I’ll test them again 30 minutes later take their X rays and repeat the lifeblood and just see what are the clinical changes that occur.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:46:16

You ever deal with like frequency specific microcurrent Have you ever dealt with that? Explain that.

 

1:46:24

Be more specific with the question

 

Bill Clearfield  1:46:26

the microcurrent machine that will specific currents for specific organs.

 

1:46:34

Yes, so I have a sonic machine where I can actually dial in the specific frequency I can go from increments of one hertz and change and and then also target specific specific tissues as well. Yes.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:46:52

Okay, that’s that’s exactly what it is. So in the in the two legged world the Carol McMahon who’s who will be on with us. When I can twist her arm again. She was on last year. She runs an outfit with like 5000 followers that do that for again, two legged folks. You do telemedicine?

 

1:47:16

I do. Okay.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:47:19

It’s Quicksilver methylene blue available. commercially. Mike, Mike.

 

1:47:25

Hi. Hi, Bill. Yeah, yes, it is. It’s you know, yeah, it’s just a vehicle so yes, you can order it. I think just me in college pharmacy habit right now because I it is kind of interesting, but it’s a vehicle that they’ve used in their business in the past and cGMP you know, and all that. So it’s very good stuff. But yes, I do have it and you’re welcome to it. They’re actually working on developing it for hormone replacement therapy as a sublingual vehicle, but it works fine topically and you know, the nanospheres are so small that they’re probably pretty well taken up. So, but we have it in other forms if you needed to, but yeah, it’s definitely available.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:48:06

I hope because we use their a NPK and it really tastes awful. I’ve told that to them to their face.

 

1:48:15

Yeah, if you take the NPK and you dilute it with some water, it’s not bad. You just can’t take it straight.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:48:24

Well, we’re actually using it as part of our weight loss program and it actually works quite well because after you take a teaspoon of that stuff you’re good for. Quite well. Thank you for wonderful work for those. I work this is Joel, do you have a discount for veterans and responders?

 

1:48:46

Sure, we’ll work it out for you.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:48:49

Outstanding thank you for this great lecture. This is really, really you no different for us. And we’re really happy to have you with us. I know you’ve been with us for a few weeks. And Dr. Lowe Patton, and that’s a new name to us. If you’re we can get your contact information so we can tell you about all our events. Those of you don’t know we’re here every Tuesday night 5pm Pacific 8pm Eastern. And Dr. Siegel. I can’t thank you enough. This has been really truly terrific

 

1:49:23

by the meat into the group so thank you Mike for that and love working with him and really very honored to be a part of your group.

 

1:49:31

I just wanted to chime in real quick. You say this is different for us. But in actuality, the similarities are absolutely mind blowing. Yeah,

 

1:49:41

I agree totally. Because most of what you’ve gone through as what we as doctors try to we want to and because of our incompetence, either economically, financially, or whatever, politically legal, we’re not able to do all of these things. With the training like Joel said the training we’ve had, is very similar to what you’re actually doing, but you’re doing it we’re thinking about it. So congratulations on putting it all together. Thank you.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:50:14

Thank you. Here’s our website here in the chat. Aos er d.org/webinars i Sorry, I didn’t get Dr. Patel’s. Video up. It’s been a little crazy around my place in the last week. I do have it. It’ll be up there. And this one, usually we haven’t up within 24 to 48 hours. And so it’s there. All of our videos. We’ve been here for over two and a half years now. So we have quite a quite a library of information, pretty much in almost any topic now that you can think of in the functional medicine world. Dr. Siegel, thank you again so much. Next week we have John Cummings, who runs body sight which is a a software program that automates things like a diet programs so you can you can program and just about any type of diet you can think of and if he doesn’t have one on there that you like, you can actually write your own and they will deliver nightly for anywhere from 28 days to 90 days and continuously recipes, menus and all sorts of I’ve been using it I’ve been with him actually since he started almost 10 years and it saves me a lot of time. And effort and having to pay a nutritionist, because I mean, it’s all right. It’s all spelled out right there. There’s all sorts of videos on there. There’s exercise programs, and it’s really a terrific site. It’s $199 a month and it’s more than pays for itself. You can even sell sell your own diet programs and exercise programs on there. So he’s going to be on next week. He’ll be talking about that. Like it’s a Dr. Halsey that Joel mentioned will be on April 18. April 4, Dr. Brad Watts who’s quite prolific speaker will be doing something on thyroid I’m not sure what and Dr. McMahon from the frequency specific microcurrent. She has a little bit of a conflict on Tuesday, but we’re going to work it out. It’s going to be a bit of a video for an hour and then questions and answers. Anybody who wants to present anything, please let me know. I have endless Tuesdays to fill up. And if there’s any topics that you want any speakers that you want, please let me know. You know, you know words kind of out there that we’re doing some progressive things, and some some really good stuff. And we’re affiliated with Dr. Philosophers group on Monday, Dr. Fortune on Wednesday. So, you know, there’s, there’s a whole plethora of education out there. You know, and like I mentioned at the beginning I’m trying to find a way to get registration. So we get, you know, all of our whoever’s here, we get at least a contact for them and to do it automatically. If anybody knows how to do that, either on Zoom or on another platform, please let me know because I’m a little bit not savvy when that when those things. So if you know how to do that, please get in contact with me. I’ll get you my email. It’s Dr. Bill nine at Gmail,

 

1:53:37

by the way, Stephen already had Stephen already has that an hour, neurosurgeon whose name I just forgot. Yeah, Avery Avery Jackson. I think he’s got it all together and he can do everything you’re asking. Okay.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:53:50

All right. Yeah. So you know, I keep things I keep threatening to get in touch with him and things keep getting in the way. Oh, one more thing. Dr. Siegel, before you go. Bio energetic scan. What is that

 

1:54:05

we use a quest for. It’s very similar to the IRA. It’s one of those woowoo things where you’re looking at the DNA of the animal. They do want people to, but you’re looking at the DNA and it’s looking at the homeostasis of the entire body organ systems and all your all your metabolism. Okay.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:54:35

I mean, there’s some scans where you put your hand on this thing, and it’s supposed to read all sorts of things.

 

1:54:39

Yes, it’s very similar to that. And it sounds crazy. However, it is so accurate. After all the years I’ve done it, I can’t deny it anymore. It’s really good. So I use it as another ancillary tool. But we’re seeing a lot of Lyme disease that is not being able to be picked up in the traditional testing, you know, once it goes intracellular, but really helps me to identify where we have either lines or a co infection.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:55:09

Okay, anybody else have any comments or questions? Or if you have any complaints, keep it to yourself, but John, you got anything for us.

 

1:55:17

Oh, fantastic. Thank you, doctor. Thank you.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:55:21

Thank you so much,

 

1:55:22

guys. Thank you so much.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:55:24

Okay, one last thing. I will be at AMG on April 26 to the 30th in Miami at the Doral national, and I’m doing they gave me to do thyroid and cortisol. They gave me 45 minutes to do both. So they’ll be getting the cliffnotes version. And also we’re doing the new face of weight loss which I’ve already done here. So am mg if you’re if you’re gonna go to that, you know, don’t be a stranger. And other than that, everybody have a great night, and I will make sure that we will get the videos up as soon as we can. Okay, thank you so much. Thank you.

 

1:56:03

You’re welcome. Thank you.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:56:05

Please come again. You said you have a whole nother lecture. We will get in touch with you.

 

1:56:09

And we will do water. Great.

 

Bill Clearfield  1:56:11

Thank you. Bye