Quote:
Well, theory is nice and fun and all that, but a number of people (including some I know) have had collie-type dogs DIE from ivermectin sensitivity.
What mostly matters is what
actually happens (and what happens among large numbers of animals, not just "I did this once and nothing awful happened"), not what a person might *think* should happen.
In my opinion.
Regarding the original question on the thread, it depends how much you're willing to stake on your ability to perform careful accurate dilutions/measurements, and how you'd feel if something went wrong. Personally I'm with Doc Henry on it's not worth the small amount of money to be saved, but it's an individual choice.
Pat
Yes theory is fun, and what mostly matters is what actually Happened, I think I will believe the bible over people that think it was wormer that killed their herd dog, But if you have some conclusive proof that the make up of one k9 verses another is totally different I would really like to read it, Not somthing put out by other med. salesmen or someones friend, But scientific evidents that states a herd dog does not have the same genetic make of as all the other dogs on this earth
Huh?? Dog breeds differ considerably. A chihuaua is not a labrador retriever is not a greyhound. Just as there are differences among in *shape* among dogs, and in what diseases they are susceptable (as surely you've noticed?), there are also differences among dogs -- among dog BREEDS -- in the details of their physiology.
You want people with academic degrees telling you, fine, Google is your friend, the first few returns I got were things like:
http://www.marvistavet.com/html/body_ivermectin.html (vets' page for dog owners)
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1636591/ (article from the Canadian Veterinary Journal)
http://www.vetmed.wsu.edu/announcements/ivermectin/index.asp (vet school webpage with links to further information and ways to have your dog tested)
Good grief, the Bible did not mention iPods either yet I do not disbelieve in their existance
Pat