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June 17, 2022 Dr. Plechner A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two Lecture Two
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A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Mar 17, 2016

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A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two. Lecture Two. A modern day animal with an EI imbalance. Demodectic mange is a common disease. Inflammatory Bowel syndrome. After hormone supplementation and immune regulation. Irish setter with EI imbalance. Irish setter with EI imbalance. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

April 24, 2023 Dr. Plechner

A.J. Plechner DVMLecture Two

Lecture Two

Page 2: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

A modern day animal with an EI imbalance.

Demodectic mange is a common disease.

Page 3: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two
Page 4: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two
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Inflammatory Bowel syndrome

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Page 7: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

After hormone supplementation and immune regulation

Page 8: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Irish setter with EI imbalance

Page 9: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Irish setter with EI imbalance

Page 10: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Two weeks after adrenal-thyroid supplementation and nomallizing IgA, IgG and IgM.

Page 11: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Genetic EI imbalance passed from mother to son

SonMother

Page 12: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

3 weeks after correction of adrenal-thyroid immune system. (mother)

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In 1971, clinical studies show an 8 week old golden retriever male puppy with a severe, generalized pyoderma.

Page 14: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Blood tests indicated a low cortisol, low T3T4, deregulated IgA, IgG, IgM

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In one week.

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In two weeks, T3T4 and IgA,IgG & IgM were remeasured. All had increased and the puppy looked better.

Page 17: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

What happened? Why would a steroid increase the IgG, IgA, IgM?

Page 18: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

After researching endocrine cycles, a biochemist friend was asked to develop a total estrogen test.

Page 19: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Upon developing this test it demonstrated that high adrenal estrogen, causes deregulation of IgA, IgG & IgM with the case studies tested.

Page 20: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

After adrenal thyroid immune regulation, the puppy appeared like this!

Page 21: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Lecture One showed this basset hound puppy with an EI imbalance

Page 22: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

This is the puppy after adrenal-thyroid-immune regulation

Page 23: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Animal cancer patients have an EI imbalance with loss of control of the immune system.

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A cancer patient

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Splenic mass

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Splenic mass – 5 days later.

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Excised mass – Hemangiosarcoma

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As with the hemangiosarcoma patient, a patient with a typical cancer EI makeup has:

Deficient or bound cortisol. High adrenal estrogen. Deficient or bound T3T4 Deregulated IgA, IgG & IgM

Page 29: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Three other related canines developed Hemangiocarsomas.

The lesions were excised and EI replacement done.

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All three are still alive three years later which has never happened before.

One to six month of life before death usually occurs.

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Six of their offspring had the exact same EI imbalance.

They were corrected with EI therapy to help avoid the same cancer.

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Replacement EI therapy usually avoids cancer development or at least slows down its development until very late in life.

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Can you predict an EI imbalance?Yes! A six to eight week old animal

can be tested for Cortisol, T3T4 and total estrogen! The IgG, IgA & IgM will vary due to vaccination procedures.

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At this time, a new owner may decide to either not take the animal or fund its EI imbalance for life.

Page 35: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

Can you prevent the EI imbalance?

Yes!

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It is not to say that you cannot breed two animals, it only says they may not have an EI compatibility.

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You can mix and match and breed parents with different EI imbalances and produce an average without an imbalance.

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Example – a female Brittany spaniel, a national field trial champion named CeCe, had low cortisol, high adrenal estrogen, suppressed T3T4 and deregulated B & T cells, not only did she stop running and could not become pregnant, she developed “Valley Fever” due to her suppressed T cells.

Page 39: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

EI therapy corrected the above.

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CeCe was good enough as a national field trial champion that the owners decided to breed her.

The male that was picked was “Sundance”, he had a high cortisol, more normal adrenal estrogen, and a normal thyroid.

Page 41: A.J. Plechner DVM Lecture Two

CeCe had a litter – the offspring appeared normal, I was given one of the puppies and chose to name her Murphy’s law!

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At 7 months her EI levels and littermates levels were normal.

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If you identify the EI imbalance in parents you can breed it out. The imbalance is in their off-spring.

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We need to have healthy animals so that young people like this can become Veterinarians.