Treatment Modalities
A holistic treatment plan will be formulated delivering the safest, most effective remedy options based on financial considerations and conventional therapies being incorporated.
The aim is to improve your pets general vitality and wellbeing. The thorough history and consultation process allows an understanding of the individual health patterns that have manifested over the life of your animal. The focus is not just on treating symptoms and disease but addressing underlying imbalances in your pets constitution such as immunity and gastrointestinal health.
An individualised treatment plan will be formulated for your pet. This may incorporate diet changes, Western Herbs, Homotoxicology, Nutraceuticals and Essential Oils.
Definitions:
Western Herbs: Western herbal medicine involves using plants and plant material to create medicines to help prevent or treat various illnesses. These materials may use some or all parts of a plant, such as flowers, roots, fruits, leaves, and bark. Herbal remedies are used for many suggested purposes, such as improvement or general support of digestive, respiratory, circulatory, immune, endocrine, and nervous system processes. Herbal medicine represents the synthesis of many fields, botany, history, ethnomedicine and pharmacology.
Nutraceutical/Therapeutic nutrition: is a pharmaceutical-grade and standardised nutrient. Broadly defined as the use of various nutrients, such as vitamins, minerals, amino acids, essential fatty acids, co-factors, enzymes, antioxidants, and phytonutrients, to support the body's immune and healing systems, thereby altering the course and outcome of a disease process.
Homotoxicology: is the most modern development in homeopathic medicine and is based on the integration of basic medical science with homeopathic principles. It represents a unique synthesis between the concepts of molecular biology, biochemistry, toxicology and patho-physiology, resulting in non-toxic biological therapies. This treatment modality uses combinations of homeopathic and herbal agents to drain, detoxify, and stimulate healing through natural means.
Essential Oils: Are the aromatic and volatile chemicals contained within certain aromatic plant species. Essential oils are often used for aromatherapy, a form of alternative medicine in which healing effects are ascribed to aromatic compounds.
Reference: Integrating Complementary Medicine into Veterinary Practice: P J Broadfoot, R E Palmquist, K Johnston, J J Wen, B Fougere
The aim is to improve your pets general vitality and wellbeing. The thorough history and consultation process allows an understanding of the individual health patterns that have manifested over the life of your animal. The focus is not just on treating symptoms and disease but addressing underlying imbalances in your pets constitution such as immunity and gastrointestinal health.
An individualised treatment plan will be formulated for your pet. This may incorporate diet changes, Western Herbs, Homotoxicology, Nutraceuticals and Essential Oils.
Definitions:
Western Herbs: Western herbal medicine involves using plants and plant material to create medicines to help prevent or treat various illnesses. These materials may use some or all parts of a plant, such as flowers, roots, fruits, leaves, and bark. Herbal remedies are used for many suggested purposes, such as improvement or general support of digestive, respiratory, circulatory, immune, endocrine, and nervous system processes. Herbal medicine represents the synthesis of many fields, botany, history, ethnomedicine and pharmacology.
Nutraceutical/Therapeutic nutrition: is a pharmaceutical-grade and standardised nutrient. Broadly defined as the use of various nutrients, such as vitamins, minerals, amino acids, essential fatty acids, co-factors, enzymes, antioxidants, and phytonutrients, to support the body's immune and healing systems, thereby altering the course and outcome of a disease process.
Homotoxicology: is the most modern development in homeopathic medicine and is based on the integration of basic medical science with homeopathic principles. It represents a unique synthesis between the concepts of molecular biology, biochemistry, toxicology and patho-physiology, resulting in non-toxic biological therapies. This treatment modality uses combinations of homeopathic and herbal agents to drain, detoxify, and stimulate healing through natural means.
Essential Oils: Are the aromatic and volatile chemicals contained within certain aromatic plant species. Essential oils are often used for aromatherapy, a form of alternative medicine in which healing effects are ascribed to aromatic compounds.
Reference: Integrating Complementary Medicine into Veterinary Practice: P J Broadfoot, R E Palmquist, K Johnston, J J Wen, B Fougere