Equine Colic Relief

Equine Colic Relief

Kip is an authorized dealer of Equine Colic Relief.

Colic is still the one thing horse owner’s fear the most. Owners with Equine Colic Relief in their bag don’t have that fear anymore. They know they can just reach into their bag and pull out a bottle that can stop a bout of colic in an average of only 90 minutes. Of course, nothing but surgery can save a horse with a twisted or telescoping gut or for stones and gravel for that matter. But it works great for the most common forms of colic such as Impaction, Gas, Spasmodic, and Sand Colic without trauma, side effects, duress, or further pain. If you only had one single health product to keep available for your horse, this should be it. 

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Smart Lena Boon

Testimonials

Testimonials

My name is Dr. Carol and I'm a licensed DVM,EP. The owner, of the clinic where I work, buy your medicine from a distributor and we use it to successfully treat patients, presenting with simple colic at the clinic and on a farm call.

We're located in the heart of horse country so as a 24 HR clinic, taking care of over 5,000 horses a year, with only 6 Vets, 15 Assistants and 2 mobiles, I hardly have time to eat, thus keeping up with news, is hard. I want to discuss the genetic information, posted on your web site and declare this was NEWS TO ME, since you assume every Vet, already knows it! I read both extensive articles on Autosomal Recessive genes and Mitochondrial DNA research. These 2 research studies could as you suggest, be a genetic link to impactions as a viable possibility, in labeling certain forms of colic. In simple terms, while reading both articles 2 cases of un-related mares, 11 years apart, that died from a ruptured bowel, came to mind. I discovered these cases 7 years ago, while studying for my EP.

In each case the mare was euthanized, an exam was performed postmortem and notes from each exam, revealed each mare had impacted bowels and a similar abnormality of the Longitudinal Muscle layer within the Coli Wall, had caused a rupture. These cases pointed to the article on Mitochondrial DNA Mutations, like a beacon! This of course meant in theory these mares, became symptomatic of an inherited Mitochondrial DNA Mutation, formed an impaction at the site where the muscle had ceased motility, ingesta built up behind it and the bowel ruptured. This remains a theory, for the evidence in each case, is long gone. Still, a genetic link to some impactions as well as ruptures may put this type of Genetic Mutation as a cause for Colic, eventually in the game! The death of these 2 mares, after reading your articles, are no longer an enigma. It's my belief as it is yours, that soon our one theory, may someday become a proven fact! Dr. Carol