Whiskey River Animal Health

Whiskey River Animal Health Animal Acupuncture | Animal Nutrition | Laser Therapy | Rehabilitation | Natural therapy and herbal supplements for horses & dogs

I’m gonna say it…. I’m sick of seeing families finally get to me months — sometimes years — too late, when their dog cou...
04/09/2025

I’m gonna say it…. I’m sick of seeing families finally get to me months — sometimes years — too late, when their dog could have had a longer, more comfortable life if we’d started sooner.

The number ONE thing I hear: ‘Our vet never mentioned acupuncture until the very end — try it as a LAST resort.’ What an insult, and how incredibly sad for the pet.

Here’s the reality:
🔹 Acupuncture is backed by hundreds of studies for arthritis, spinal disease, pain control, nausea, and recovery. And the anecdotal evidence? Endless. The number of dogs we’ve given quality of life back to when nothing else worked is staggering — even at end stage.

🔹 Laser therapy is supported by thousands of peer-reviewed studies showing it reduces inflammation, accelerates healing, and restores mobility.

🔹 Nutrition is medicine. We use real food to heal people — dogs deserve the same. On what planet are we still pretending processed, overcooked cardboard is nutritious food? For the love of dogs… wake up.

We work with vets, not against them. Acupuncture is a supportive therapy, it works in CONJUNCTION with vet medicine not outside of it or against it - with it. Our only priority is the comfort and wellbeing of the dog. Integrated medicine is long overdue in Australia, and our patients deserve more than just “managing decline.”

Acupuncture and integrative care should never be a last resort. They should be part of the plan from day one.

🐾 Why am I so passionate about this? Because every dog deserves healing, comfort, and more time with the people they love.

✨ Healing Backed by Science ✨At Whiskey River Animal Health, we’re proud to use Class 3B Laser Therapy — a treatment sup...
31/08/2025

✨ Healing Backed by Science ✨

At Whiskey River Animal Health, we’re proud to use Class 3B Laser Therapy — a treatment supported by more than 8,000 clinical studies worldwide.

🔬 Research shows benefits in:
✅ Wound healing
✅ Spinal cord injury recovery
✅ Musculoskeletal pain relief
✅ Reducing inflammation

With scientific backing from leading institutions like Harvard, MIT, and Massachusetts General Hospital, laser therapy offers a gentle, evidence-based way to support your pet’s recovery and overall well-being.

💡 Whether it’s helping your dog heal after surgery, manage arthritis, or bounce back from an injury — laser therapy is safe, effective, and non-invasive.

🐾 Because your pets deserve the very best.

📍 Available now at Whiskey River Animal Health $50 a session 🐾❤️‍🩹.

Fresh and in stock now! Collect from our clinic in Dulguigan when you order online.
25/08/2025

Fresh and in stock now! Collect from our clinic in Dulguigan when you order online.

Does your dog struggle with back pain, stiffness, or weakness in their legs?It could be IVDD (Intervertebral Disc Diseas...
24/08/2025

Does your dog struggle with back pain, stiffness, or weakness in their legs?
It could be IVDD (Intervertebral Disc Disease) – but there is hope. 🐾💚

With the right combination of rest, acupuncture, laser therapy, supplements, and diet, many dogs go on to live full, active lives again. ✨

In this carousel, we break down:
👉 What IVDD actually is
👉 What makes it worse
👉 Treatment options
👉 How acupuncture & laser help
👉 Supplements & diet that support recovery
👉 What the research really says

At Whiskey River Animal Health, we believe in combining science-backed therapies with natural healing to give your dog the best chance at comfort and mobility. With over 13 years of clinical experience and many successful IVDD cases we can help your pet recover quicker or improve their current quality of life.

💌 DM us to book a consult or learn more about our IVDD recovery plans.

To purchase supplements see below
Antinol https://whiskeyriverranch.com.au/products/antinol-rapid
Prancing pooch https://whiskeyriverranch.com.au/products/mcdowells-dancing-dog

20/08/2025

We all agree on the importance of preventing unwanted litters, but it may be time to rethink how it’s done. Hysterectomies and vasectomies can be performed safely as early as 8 weeks, providing sterilization without disrupting a dog’s natural hormones.

“Removal of the go**ds with surgical sterilization results in a loss of negative feedback to the hypothalamus and anterior pituitary. The sustained supraphysiologic luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations in g***dectomized dogs can significantly alter organ function and even induce neoplastic changes. For example, g***d removal has a profound effect on thyroid function and is reported to be the most significant cause for the development of hypothyroidism in dogs. Thirty percent more g***dectomized dogs develop hypothyroidism compared with intact dogs. Within the canine thyroid, LH receptors are co-localized with thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) receptors.

Continuous LH receptor activation in g***dectomized dogs may interfere TSH receptor function by consuming second messengers involved in G-protein receptor cell signaling, preventing the action of TSH when it binds to its receptor in the thyroid, resulting in hypothyroidism. The incidence of anterior cruciate ligament ruptures is significantly increased following g***d removal independent of breed, s*x, weight or body condition. Luteinizing hormone receptors are expressed in the cruciate ligament and continuous LH receptor activation may increase laxity in these ligaments, resulting in joint instability. Both male and female g***dectomized dogs are at a significantly increased risk for lymphoma and hemangiosarcoma. Luteinizing hormone receptors are also abundant in these tissues. Research in four canine hemangiosarcoma cell lines found that LH receptor activation induces cell proliferation. In addition, research in three canine T-cell lymphoma cell lines found that LH receptor activation induces cell proliferation, adhesion, and invasion as well as increases LH receptor expression. Research is needed to determine if LH reducing strategies using g***dotropin releasing hormone agonists will increase remission times in g***dectomized dogs with LH receptor-positive tumors. In conclusion, among the non-reproductive functions of go**ds, suppression of LH secretion and resulting LH receptor overexpression appear necessary in maintaining endocrine, musculoskeletal, and anti-neoplastic health.”

Bookings are open for Tork’s sessions on 27th August! He books out quickly and is only here for one day. Bookings can be...
19/08/2025

Bookings are open for Tork’s sessions on 27th August!

He books out quickly and is only here for one day.

Bookings can be made via our website.

10/05/2025

LIBRELA TRAGEDY
Can't stop thinking about the results of that Librela study by Farrell et al. (2025), published yesterday.

Ligament/tendon injury, polyarthritis, fracture, musculoskeletal neoplasia (new bone growth) and septic arthritis were reported NINE TIMES more frequently in Librela-treated dogs than the combined total of dogs treated with the comparator drugs for osteoarthritis.

Again, 9 times more than all the other drugs combined.

The 18-member expert panel unanimously concluded a strong suspicion of a causal association between Librela and accelerated joint destruction.

Many, like vet Josie Beug, have been warning us for a year to pay heed to the fact Librela managed to accumulate many times more adverse event reports since its release in the US in Oct 2023 (12,234 serious adverse event reports in just 18mths in America alone) than its nearest competitor, Rimadyl has EVER.

Bedinvetmab (Librela) was unleashed on the US pet market in October 2023 with an enormous budget from Zoetis and two small (highly questionable) studies (conducted by them). And that's all it took for, it seems, the worlds vets to start recommending it.

Because that's how it works, isn't it? A brand new, patented drug, shat out by the industry, accompanied by two little studies (run by them) and off we go to the races.

The first study, a safety and tolerance study, looked at varying doses of Librela (1mg/kg, 5mg/kg, 10mg/kg) in young, healthy, intact dogs aged 11-12 months. There was just 8 dogs in each group. After 6mths they did neurological tests, checked their vitals and that was that.

See, the manufacturers tested their drugs on young, robust dogs with no joint issues.

Farrell et al. (2025) were looking at side effects in older dogs with joint disease.

And they can do that little trial as often as they like AND they don't have to publish all the negative ones.

This was followed by, if you can believe it, a 6-month in-field study of 89 client-owned dogs WHO HAD PREVIOUSLY DEMONSTRATED A POSITIVE RESPONSE TO LIBRELA. After 6mths, the few adverse events noted were within predicted norms.

Veterinary Evidence took a look at these couple of studies prior to Librela's launch and concluded the supporting evidence was "weak", that any decision to use bedinvetmab "remains dependent on the judgement and experience of the clinician".
https://veterinaryevidence. org/index.php/ve/article/download/598/903?

See that? The onus is shifted to the clinician.

Do you know why? Because time and time again, once enough money is paid to the right people, dangerous drugs WILL get to market in the full knowledge that our doctors appear completely unable to notice / track side effects from the medications they are recommending.

Much like the absolute explosion in adverse events reported to VAERS following the introduction of mRNA gene therapies into the population five years ago, it's literally incredible how clinicians today will consistently ignore any and all adverse event reporting systems that we have put in place to FLAG ISSUES (since the Thalidomide scandal) until someone else tells them to stop.

Why is that?

In 2021, there was 717,577 adverse event reports submitted to VAERS for all COVID-19 vaccines combiines (nearly 300 million were administered to Americans that year), when typically VAERS receives between 30,000 and 50,000 adverse event reports annually for all other vaccines combined (150 million administered in the US in a given year).

And remember, studies show the figures that are reported to adverse event reporting systems are approximately 1-5% of the ACTUAL events that are going on.

So, for context, that 12,000 adverse events for librela in just 18mths in the US would become 240,000.

Folk say, but 25 million doses were given!! Yes, GLOBALLY. If we guess that maybe half those were sold in the US, it means potential ruin for a dog every 1 in 50 doses. Dogs are taking it monthly.

But worse, it was very predictable that this was going to happen. The drug couldn't pass human trials due to side effects.

Bedinvetmab, marketed as Librela, is a monoclonal antibody designed to alleviate osteoarthritis pain in dogs by targeting nerve growth factor (NGF).

While bedinvetmab itself was not developed for human use, its mechanism of action is similar-bordering-identical to other anti-NGF monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that have been investigated in human clinical trials, namely tanezumab, fasinumab, and fulranumab.

Exactly like mRNA gene therapies before they were forced through in 2021, ALL trials for NGF monoclonal antibodies revealed major safety concerns that blocked their prior release, mostly concerning patients developing rapidly progressive osteoarthritis and accelerated joint degeneration. Even when adjusting the dose down and placing restrictions on concurrent NSAID use, the risks persisted. The US FDA had no other choice but to halt all trials of all anti-NGF monoclonal antibody treatments in 2012.

As folk will inevitably point out, there's no doubt Librela works for some, yes, the same way the mRNA gene therapies MAY have been useful in the initial stages for older, at-risk folk, maybe (although, side effects aside, studies show the more you took the more likely you were to get Covid...) but when you look at the data overall, its clear there is gong to be a lot of dogs very negatively impacted for life by this one.

At a minimum, please ask your vet for any other options in the osteo-arthritic pain relief department.

There are a plethora of things you can do to help osteoarthritis, the first is by reducing inflammation in the body. This means no more kibble as, studies show, it's inflammatory. Raw dog food is full of fresh calcium, glucosamine, chondroitin, hyaluronic acid, etc, all of which joints NEED. Moreover, the higher protein diets will reduce obesity, shown to greatly aggravate OA. You can jack up the omega 3, add some muscles. And this is all before you consider antiinflammatory, pain-relieving herbs like boswelia, devils claw. There is nutraceuticals. There is red light therapy. There is acupuncture. Massage. Hydro.

Has your vet done all of this with you before reaching for the NSAIDs and pain meds?

I doubt it. It's not vindictive. They know little about all those "alternative" (cheap, effective) treatments.

If you want some more options for osteoarthritis pain, askbradi .com.

If you feel you have been harmed, you can fill in the adverse event report yourself, doesn't need a vet.

UK folk here www. gov. uk/report-veterinary-medicine-problem

US folk here www. fda. gov/animal-veterinary/report-problem/how-report-animal-drug-side-effects-and-product-problems

REF
www.frontiersin. org/journals/veterinary-science/articles/10.3389/fvets.2025.1581490/full

Please do not use this drug!
05/05/2025

Please do not use this drug!

Address

Dulguigan, NSW
2484

Opening Hours

Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 8am - 4pm
Saturday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+61434814076

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