Amino Acids: The SuperNutrient for Pets
Animals such as dogs, cats, ferrets, and small rodents are no different
from humans in that they need systemic protein in order to function optimally
and protect themselves from disease. But pet food has protein in it, right,
so what's the problem?
Most pet foods contain protein of low biological value
(this means that the animal's system cannot absorb it fully) and a lot
of high carbohydrate filler grains such as wheat, corn, and soy. In order
for animals to change dietary protein into systemic protein, their digestive
systems must produce the proper kind and amount of digestive enzymes in
order to break the food down into its most basic units, amino acids (AA).
The body uses AAs to make the many different kinds of systemic proteins
needed to keep your pet healthy and disease free. One group of important
systemic proteins is the digestive enzymes. Without these, food cannot
be broken down completely into AAs for the manufacture of important systemic
proteins (such as repair proteins that circulate in the blood & immune
system, and proteins that fight off infection).
AAs also come together to form special transport proteins that carry
vitamins and other nutrients to the cells, enabling the system to maintain
a healthy coat, teeth, skin, muscle and nervous tissue.
Amino acids are an important part of animals' ability to produce energy.
SuperNutrient Corp. developed Platinum
Plus Essential Amino Acids in order to overcome protein deficiency
in humans. The company's owner, Brice Vickery DC (retired), found that
all his patients with degenerating spinal disks were also protein and
sulfur deficient, no matter how much protein they ate.
After developing and testing Platinum
Plus Essential Amino Acids, he found that not only were his patients'
spines healing, but many other disease conditions were also disappearing.
Several people have given it to their pets with the same amazing results
(read Emma's
Story and Starchie's
Story).
Symptoms such as dull coat, itching, allergies and sore joints begin
to disappear as systemic protein becomes available to your dog's system
for maintenance, repair, and protection from infection.
Live Enzymes in Pet Food
In ancient times carnivores such as dogs and cats, used to have live
enzymes available in their diet with the ingestion of raw meat. Small
rodents such as hamsters ate insects. Modern pets survive on a diet of
cooked food. This means that the pancreas is asked to supply 100% of the
needed digestive enzymes. This factor combined with a diet high in grain
filler (dry pet food, pet biscuits, even canned pet food) leads to an
overworked pancreas that cannot produce the enzymes needed to break food
down into the amino acids needed to produce the thousands of proteins
these animals need to function in a healthy manner.
Protein Deficiency
As your pet's system begins to malfunction from lack of systemic protein,
you may notice that he has a difficult time getting up and down because
of sore joints, he may develop a poor appetite, skin conditions, a thinning,
dull coat, he may have loose stools, seem irritable, depressed, develop
allergies or a host of other symptoms that don't seem connected to anything.
They are all connected to a growing protein deficiency.
Pathogenic changes
As in humans, the resulting shift in pH further effects the efficiency
of the enzymes being produced by the animal, reducing their efficiency
or rendering them completely ineffective. Pathogenic and semi-pathogenic
organisms take over and can damage the intestinal lining to the point
that nutrients are only absorbed with great difficulty. This condition
worsens with age.
Dilated Cardiomyopathy (DCM)
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a disease increasingly found in dogs.
This heart condition (an enlargement similar to goiter, which is also
an attempt to compensate for a nutritional deficiency) used to be found
almost exclusively in cats. Cats cannot create the sulfur-containing amino
acid, taurine and so it must be supplied in their diets from fish, eggs,
meat and poultry, if not they run a high risk of ending up with DCM. Dogs
can synthesize taurine from the sulfur-containing amino acids methionine
and cysteine, Complete proteins of high biological value such as beef,
poultry, eggs and fish contain these important sulfur-containing amino
acids. But if the digestive system is weakened to the point where it cannot
break these foods down, then the animals will be unable to have available
systemic taurine. With the resulting sulfur and protein deficiency, the
risk for DCM rises. Dogs and cats that are protein deficient also run
the risk of other diseases, such as cancer, bursitis, arthritis, diabetes,
viral and bacterial infections and degenerative disk disease. Dogs, cats,
rodents, and ferrets need adequate systemic protein in order to live happy
healthy lives.
Another risk of low-quality protein/high grain diets may also be adrenal
cancer, which in the USA is a leading cause of hamsters and ferrets dying
well before their usual life span. Symptoms of this cancer include, thirst,
large appetite, hair loss, dry itching skin, and listlessness.
Human Foods for Pets
SuperNutrient Corp. developed Platinum
Plus Essential Amino Acids (PLAA) in order to overcome protein deficiency
in humans. The company's owner, Brice Vickery DC (retired), found that
all his patients with degenerating spinal disks were also protein and
sulfur deficient, no matter how much protein they ate. After developing
and testing PLAA, he found that not only were his patients' spines healing,
but many other disease conditions were also disappearing. Several people
have given it to their pets with the same amazing results (read Emma's
Story and Starchie's
Story)
Cancer Prevention
While Platinum
Plus Essential Amino Acids cannot cure cancer, clinical statistics
prove it may well prevent it, especially adrenal cancer. It will help
boost a pet's immune system and make them more comfortable.
Platinum
Plus Essential Amino Acids placed daily in your pet's food gives their
system a very particular blend of essential amino acids. This blend, fortified
with extra sulfur, gives their pancreas everything it needs to manufacture
adequate amounts of digestive enzymes. Symptoms such as dull coat, itching,
allergies and sore joints begin to disappear as systemic protein becomes
available to your dog's system for maintenance, repair, and protection
from infection.
Small pets such as mice and hamsters need only 1/3 capsule daily. Small
and medium dogs, cats and ferrets need only 1 capsule/day. Large dogs
need 1- 2 capsules/day and very large dogs may need up to 4/day. Platinum
Plus will help your younger pet stay healthy & vibrant, and your older
pet live out his life in comfort.
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