You are visiting our UK site. Click here to view our US site
Chinese Herbal Medicine Treatment for Idiopathic Hepatic Lipidosis in a Cat

by Anthony Chu
Abstract
A two year-old neutered female Domestic Long Hair cat was examined after her owner reported weight loss and anorexia. Clinical examination revealed marked jaundice. Subsequent conventional diagnostic tests by a feline veterinary specialist confirmed the cat was suffering from idiopathic hepatic lipidosis (HL). Although HL is the most common type of liver disease of North American cats, it is much less common in Australia. The cat was placed on a Chinese herbal formula known as Wei Ling Tang (Calm the Stomach and Poria Decoction) and she responded within three days and started eating again. The treatment was continued for a total of eight weeks. Follow-up laboratory blood profile has revealed complete resolution of her hepatobiliary disease.TCM diagnosis poses new challenges. As vets, we are used to gathering information indirectly through asking questions of owners, through observation with our eyes, listening with a stethoscope, and even smelling greasy yeasty ears. We also routinely use palpation to feel enlarged or painful abdominal organs, to detect the heat of acute inflammation or pyrexia, or the soft fluctuant swelling of abscesses. However since beginning to learn TCM several years ago, I’ve had to modify my skills.
Save: £3.00
Saved: 66.67%!
Subscribe To CMT
Shopping Basket
Your basket is empty!
Change Language
Change Currency
Events Calendar
| Stephen Birch: Keiraku Chiryo - Japanese Meridian Therapy 24-26 May 2013 Keiraku Chiryo or Meridian Therapy, is a movement to "return to the classics" through modern clinical practice. The movement started in Japan in the 1920s reaching maturity by the early 1940s. Spring and Autumn Institute Schleiz Thuringen, 07907 Germany tel: 0049 3663 42 09 832 fax: 0049 3663 42 09 833 email: info@spring-and-autumn.de web: www.spring-and-autumn.de |

