Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 Dear Moria, Try putting it on the back of her paws. Cats hate to have dirty paws, and they usually will lick it off. Best of health! Dr. Saul Pressman --------------------------------------------------------------------------------\ --------- ----Original Message Follows---- From: " moriamerri " <moriam@...> Reply-oxyplus oxyplus Subject: my cat's gum disease is healing using ooo Date: Wed, 31 Dec 2003 23:07:23 -0000 Hey list folks, I'm excited. I can't wait until it is " all better " to post this -- I'm too happy 1. My cat has VERY extreme gum problems. Like, big giant red areas above her upper teeth. (And I'm sure her lower teeth too, but these are harder to look at..) This is NOT subtle. (The vet tested for some possible causes and ruled them out, then wanted to do a biopsy, which I declined. That was probably a year ago or so....) So, no real DX on it, but it looks really bad. I've been worried about it a long time. 2. I've been (forcibily) putting some ozonated olive oil on my cats gums every day for about 22 days now. (That includes about 4 days I forgot to do it, and includes the first couple of days when I was happy to just get ANY ooo in her mouth). She hates the taste. In spite of that she has become resignedly cooperative--- well, at least she fights less. 3. Her gums are CLEARLY GETTING BETTER. I suspected it for a while, but today I'm sure. The front teeth have only a smaller area of red. AMAZING! Wonderful! Another month or two and her gums may just look normal. Like I said, I'm so excited, I can't wait a month to post the news Overall it is hard to say for certain what other effects the ooo is having. It seems to me she is sleeping much more than usual (although it is hard to tell with a cat, they sleep so much anyway.) She seems a little more solid to me somehow, but can't place it exactly. Other notes for cat lovers: ---I tried putting ooo on her fur (so she would have to lick it off) and this was " even worse " . She TOTALLY TOTALLY hated it. I don't think I could do that again. ---I also gave her every opportunity to eat ooo (e.g. mixed in small amount into favorite foods etc). She is not for it. It " ruins " perfectly good foods. (She won't eat it willingly). ---I am now mixing the ooo with tuna water (just a little bit, so that it is still gunky). Don't know if this really helps. ---I also considered ozonated water, and that also was impractical (water loses ozone quickly, and I can't get her to drink a lot when it is freshly ozonated, as I do.) Ozonated olive oil is also WONDERFUL on cat wounds that are not healing or are infected.... regards, Moria happy cat mom OxyPLUS is an unmoderated e-ring dealing with oxidative therapies, and other alternative self-help subjects. THERE IS NO MEDICAL ADVICE HERE! This list is the 1st Amendment in action. The things you will find here are for information and research purposes only. We are people sharing information we believe in. If you act on ideas found here, you do so at your own risk. Self-help requires intelligence, common sense, and the ability to take responsibility for your own actions. By joining the list you agree to hold yourself FULLY responsible FOR yourself. Do not use any ideas found here without consulting a medical professional, unless you are a researcher or health care provider. You can unsubscribe via e-mail by sending A NEW e-mail to the following address - NOT TO THE OXYPLUS LIST! - DO NOT USE REPLY BUTTON & DO NOT PUT THIS IN THE SUBJECT LINE or BODY of the message! : oxyplus-unsubscribeegroups oxyplus-normalonelist - switch your subscription to normal mode. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 > Dear Moria, > > Try putting it on the back of her paws. > Cats hate to have dirty paws, and they usually will lick it off. > > Best of health! > Dr. Saul Pressman > Saul, see my prior comment: > Other notes for cat lovers: > ---I tried putting ooo on her fur (so she would have to > lick it off) and this was " even worse " . She TOTALLY > TOTALLY hated it. I don't think I could do that again. It is also probably more effect on her gums, since this is a problem area. Moria Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 That's the best advert for ooo I've ever seen. Appeal to a pet lover's pet's health. I've been bypassing most of the ozonated email lately and jumping straight to any h202 news. I have to seriously consider this now. Soooo.. how do I get a hold of ooo.... or make my own? I have none of the ozonating equipment that I see being talked about on this newsgroup. How expensive is it to get the equipment? Thanks for any info. Jeanne > > Message: 2 > Date: Wed, 31 Dec 2003 23:07:23 -0000 > From: " moriamerri " <moriam@...> > Subject: my cat's gum disease is healing using ooo > > Hey list folks, > > I'm excited. I can't wait until it is " all better " to > post this -- I'm too happy > > 1. My cat has VERY extreme gum problems. Like, big giant red > areas above her upper teeth. (And I'm sure her lower teeth > too, but these are harder to look at..) This is NOT subtle. > (The vet tested for some possible causes and ruled > them out, then wanted to do a biopsy, which I declined. > That was probably a year ago or so....) So, no real > DX on it, but it looks really bad. I've been worried > about it a long time. > > 2. I've been (forcibily) putting some ozonated olive oil > on my cats gums every day for about 22 days now. (That > includes about 4 days I forgot to do it, and includes > the first couple of days when I was happy to just get > ANY ooo in her mouth). She hates the taste. In spite > of that she has become resignedly cooperative--- well, > at least she fights less. > > 3. Her gums are CLEARLY GETTING BETTER. I suspected > it for a while, but today I'm sure. The front teeth > have only a smaller area of red. AMAZING! Wonderful! > Another month or two and her gums may just look normal. > Like I said, I'm so excited, I can't wait a month to > post the news > > Overall it is hard to say for certain what other effects > the ooo is having. It seems to me she is sleeping much > more than usual (although it is hard to tell with a cat, > they sleep so much anyway.) She seems a little more > solid to me somehow, but can't place it exactly. > > Other notes for cat lovers: > ---I tried putting ooo on her fur (so she would have to > lick it off) and this was " even worse " . She TOTALLY > TOTALLY hated it. I don't think I could do that again. > > ---I also gave her every opportunity to eat ooo (e.g. mixed > in small amount into favorite foods etc). She is not for it. > It " ruins " perfectly good foods. (She won't eat it willingly). > > ---I am now mixing the ooo with tuna water (just a little > bit, so that it is still gunky). Don't know if this really > helps. > > ---I also considered ozonated water, and that also was > impractical (water loses ozone quickly, and I can't get > her to drink a lot when it is freshly ozonated, as I do.) > > Ozonated olive oil is also WONDERFUL on cat wounds that > are not healing or are infected.... > > regards, > Moria > happy cat mom > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 > That's the best advert for ooo I've ever seen. well, isn't that nice! But do remember I said that she HATES the stuff I've really thought long and hard about how to get ozone into her. I hope someday to come up with a better solution...... > Appeal to a pet lover's pet's > health. Indeed you must be a true pet lover---- as the PEOPLE health stores were not as good advertising as the cat story. (I've read some pretty remarkable people stories....) >I've been bypassing most of the ozonated email lately and jumping > straight to any h202 news. This same cat, at one time, used to lap at the 3% H202 (which sits on the kitchen sink in an open container.) (I don't know if she still does or not LOL! Have not seen her do so in a long time.) Putting H202 in her water was also on the list of " possibilities " . I'm not really comfortable with ingesting H202 myself though, so felt some reluctance. Although I'm sure I've fed her a bit of it sometime (in addition to the bits she has drunk on her own initiative!) >I have to seriously consider this now. Soooo.. > how do I get a hold of ooo.... you can buy it from Saul (www.plasmafire.com) I'm sure you can buy it other places too.... I also recently saw an ad (on a website) for ozonated coconut oil, but I don't think I have the URL any longer..... > or make my own? no, you buy it. Oddly, even folks who have an ozone machine don't make their own, at least as far as I've heard---- I think this is mostly because it takes weeks of constant ozonating before the oil is saturated fully. There may be other things I don't know about. But, ozonated oil is easy enough. About $15 for a small container. I bought $50 worth last time and I'm using it lots of ways and giving bits away as gifts and so forth. In the past I've always felt kind of " skimpy " with it, so this is a nice change. $15 worth will last you a while though, I expect. > I have none of the ozonating > equipment that I see being talked about on this newsgroup. How expensive is > it to get the equipment? Ballpark idea: ozone machine: $500 to $2000. good wishes, Moria Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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