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Vitamin
C - Cures Hip Dysplasia
By Larry
Mueller, Hunting Dogs Editor, Outdoor Life. Reprinted from
Outdoor Life, January, 1996.
An acquaintance of mine,
B.J. Richardson, was calling from Texas, doubt and hope in
his voice. "My English Pointer isn't a year old, and he's
already lame in the rear end, especially the left hip," Richardson
said. "The X-rays show hip dysplasia. The veterinarian says
there are two choices: operate to alleviate the pain, or put
the dog down. I can't afford one and won't do the other. Is
it true that Vitamin C might help?"
I had to say that I'd
never heard of Vitamin C curing canine hip dysplasia, but
I was aware that veterinarian Wendell Belfield D.V.M of San
Jose, CA, did prevent CHD -- or least its symptoms -- in eight
litters of German shepherds, a breed that is prone to crippling
abnormal development of a dog's hip joints. In those instances,
all of the dogs' parents had CHD or had previously whelped
pups that became dysplastic. Belfield gave the bitches Vitamin
C throughout pregnancy and lactation. The pups received Vitamin
C from weaning until they were two years old. None of the
pups developed CHD during that entire period.
Though Belfield's work
wasn't scientific in the strict sense, it certainly indicated
that CHD could be prevented. Still I couldn't see how the
joint could be remodeled once it had grown improperly, at
least not without surgery. However, Vitamin C therapy seemed
to be Richardson's only hope, so I told him what I knew.
Many readers had written
and told me that their arthritic dogs normally were laid up
after a few hours in the field, but when given Vitamin C,
they could hunt several days in a row. None had said they
did it with dogs that had CHD, but maybe....
I also recalled reading
about the efforts of Dr. Bob Cathcart, a medical doctor in
California who championed the use of Vitamin C in curing a
wide variety of joint ailments and illnesses. Much of his
work centered around using the vitamin in large quantities,
increasing the doses until the body reaches "bowel tolerances."
Though Cathcart's work was with human patients, many veterinarians
adopted his method, saying that Vitamin C should be given
in increasing doses until the dog's stools loosen, at which
point the dose should be backed off a half a gram or a gram
at a time until the stools became firm again. At that point,
the dog's body receives the maximum Vitamin C that it can
utilize.
I also understood that
a superior form of the vitamin is Ester-C, which can be purchased
in health food stores. The vitamin in Ester-C is molecularly
locked to calcium, so it doesn't cause the acidity problems
normally associated with ascorbic acid (the common form of
Vitamin C), which can upset a dog's stomach. Ester-C also
has natural C metabolites that get it into the cells faster
and more effectively (common ascorbic acid is slower getting
out of the blood serum, so it passes through the kidneys,
where much of it is rapidly lost in the urine).
Pinto's Rebound
A month or two later, I heard that Pinto, Richardson's dog,
had begun improving less than a week after receiving maximum
doses of Ester-C. Pinto, the grandson of Miller's Chief --
an 11-time champion in horseback-style bird-dog trials --
was now running like the wind. I was as surprised as I was
delighted.
Two years later, I was
in Texas and dropped in to see Pinto. Richardson had kept
him on a maintenance dose of Ester-C. The dog was moving with
a fluid grace and power in the hips. Twice, for a step or
two, I saw a bunny hop, suggesting that not everything was
100 percent correct. But both times, Pinto immediately shifted
back to a normal gait.
I still couldn't understand
how Ester-C could remodel a defective joint, but I was hopeful.
Nobody I knew whose debilitated dog had improved clinically
on Ester-C had ever taken X-rays of the joints, so I asked
Richardson to have X-rays taken.
He did and mailed me the
original X-ray taken two years before and a new one. I showed
both to Dianna K. Stuckey, a board certified radiologist in
St. Louis, who looked at the original and pointed out the
hip dysplasia with the left hip most severe. The second? "Arthritis
that customarily follows hip dysplasia," she said. I explained
Pinto's quick and lasting response to Ester-C. "How could
this dog go from lame to moving freely, and apparently without
pain, in a few days -- and stay that way without something
improving in the joints?"
"We occasionally see this,"
Stuckey said. "A dog is arthritic yet moves as if it feels
no pain. We don't know why. Great 'heart' maybe, or high pain
tolerance."
Mystery Unfolds
I'm sure that
veterinarians do see this. But the answer to my question,
Pinto's improvement was not because of great heart or high
pain tolerance. He had been hurting and he had been limping
badly. If his response to such pain improved in just a few
days, something caused that change.
Dr. Chuck Noonam of Weston,
CT also compared the X-rays. He noticed slight improvement
in the severity of the dysplasia but said the hip joint had
clearly succumbed to degenerate arthritis from the dysplastic
hip joint banging around in and out of the socket.
"Eighty-three percent
of dysplastic dogs either show an improvement in their hip
dysplasia or they learn to deal with the problem as they grow
older," Noonan said. "The second X-ray shows that the dysplasia
is slightly less severe, but because of the arthritis, the
joint is worse overall than in the earlier X-ray. It is possible
that the Vitamin C was helping to sort of lubricate the joint
so the dog felt less pain."
In my investigations,
I had found that Pinto's results from Ester-C weren't unique.
Soon after Richardson first called, I received a letter from
Steve Dudley of Arizona. His young black Lab, who showed great
promise at hunting Gambel's quail, went lame with CHD. Dudley's
vet suggested that Dudley replace the hip -- or expect to
put the dog down by age four. Dudley tried Ester-C instead
and the dog promptly improved. Kept on Ester-C, the dog lived
until age 13 without showing signs of soreness, lameness,
or unwillingness to hunt, Dudley wrote.
Flood of Proof
My investigation also led to Charles Docktor, an Arizona veterinarian
who was the first to test Ester-C for its effectiveness in
healing joint problems. In 1983, he used Ester-C on a large
number of arthritic dogs, finding that 75 percent improved
in various degrees in a short period of time.
Independently, a continent
away, Dr. Geir Erick Berge, a veterinarian in Oslo, Norway,
performed a similar study, that was reported in the August-September
1990 issue of The Norwegian Veterinary Journal. Berge selected
100 dogs with a variety of joint ailments. His testing revealed
that 75 percent of the dogs rapidly improved on Ester-C, some
only slightly, some almost totally. Dr. Berge added that large
amounts of Vitamin C metabolites, substances essential to
a body's metabolic processes, are required in rebuilding diseased
joint tissue.
Corroborating data were
also reported by Dr. N. Lee Newman, who conducted 18 months
of clinical tests using Ester-C to combat degenerative joint
disease in performance horses. She reported a remarkable 90
percent success rate, ranging from good to excellent. Furthermore,
80 percent of the improved horses remained sound after Ester-C
was discontinued. Newman credited supplemental Ester-C with
maintaining the integrity of collagen and connective tissue
and with mobilizing white cells in the immune system, while
deactivating free radicals that damage cell membranes.
But other respected voices
were making contradictory statements. The Cornell University
College of Veterinary Medicine Animal Health newsletter in
May 1995 denied that Vitamin C was of any value for either
preventing or treating skeletal diseases in dogs. "There have
been absolutely no confirmed reports that Vitamin C is helpful
in any such instances," the newsletter stated. It went on
to theorize that supplemental Vitamin C has no value because
dogs produce adequate amounts of the vitamin in their livers.
But that reasoning is
questionable. Vitamin C production varies from dog to dog,
individual bodily needs vary, and circumstances -- health
and environment -- vary enormously. "Adequate" in human medicine
only means enough Vitamin C to prevent scurvy. What is adequate
for a strict carnivore like a dog? And in any case, "adequate"
should not be assumed to be a synonym for "optimum."
This is where a Vitamin
C standoff occurs, and getting people to change their scientific
opinion is like asking them to change their religion. In Cornell's
favor, the evidence that has existed supporting the use of
Vitamin C on dysplastic dogs is heavily anecdotal. Even the
various veterinarians' research that has been cited was actually
efficacy tests -- that is, all of the dogs tested were given
similar doses of the vitamin and no controlled comparisons
were made. Efficacy testing strongly suggests conclusive evidence,
but it does not provide scientific proof.
The Acid Test
But in 1994, veterinarian L. Philips Brown presented the results
of scientifically acceptable "double-blind crossover" study
on the effects of Vitamin C to a national conference on holistic
veterinary medicine. Brown, the owner of the largest veterinary
hospital on Cape Code for 22 years, tested Vitamin C on 50
dogs with serious joint problems. The dogs were among a population
of more than 500 canines at a large animal sanctuary in Utah.
It should be noted here that representatives of Inter-Cal,
makers of Ester-C, specifically asked Brown to study the vitamin
because they felt it could have a major role in the treatment
of joint abnormalities. Dave Stenmoe, one of the representatives
of the manufacturer, says "We told [Brown] not to take our
word for anything." Just to keep an open mind and conduct
a scientific comparison of Ester-C, ordinary Vitamin C, and
a placebo. He finally agreed to do it.
Brown, along with the
Utah sanctuary's resident veterinarian, hand-picked the dogs
with the worst cases of joint disease and placed them in five
groups.
After four weeks of testing,
the supplements were withdrawn for three weeks. Then, each
dog was crossed over to a different group and received another
supplement for another four weeks. After yet another three-week
layoff, 60 percent of the dogs were switched to a third supplement.
The remaining 40 percent went back to whatever they were given
during the first four weeks. At the end, mobility scores were
calculated to determine the average for each of the five groups.
The results were impressively
in favor of Ester-C therapy. Seventy-eight percent of the
dogs on 2,000mg of Ester-C experienced improved mobility within
four or five days. The average improvement score was 1.52.
About 60 percent of the improved dogs relapsed when Ester-C
was discontinued, but the group that returned to Ester-C in
the third phase then regained mobility. Handlers reported
no negative side effects.
On the low (850mg) dose
of Ester-C, only 52 percent of the dogs improved, with an
average score of 0.45. Obviously, size of dose was important.
Of dogs receiving 2,000mg of Ester-C with extra minerals,
62 percent improved by an average score of 0.87. Why Ester-C
without extra minerals had better results remains unknown.
Ordinary Vitamin C improved
44 percent of the dogs, with a score of 0.67. As expected,
no noticeable change occurred among dogs on the placebo.
Not even the most dyed-in-the-wool
skeptic can ignore the results of such a double-blind crossover
study. But the success of Vitamin C in treating CHD can still
be questioned, or even denied, because X-rays show that the
joints remain loose or arthritis remains. Even Brown confirms
that X-rays taken for his study reveal defective skeletal
structures even after the Ester-C treatment.
Soft Tissue Factor
But those who see improvement with Ester-C are looking primarily
at an animal's behavior -- they see an improved ability to
function. How can both proponents and skeptics consider themselves
correct? Perhaps by each being half right.
A joint is not bone alone.
Soft tissue -- cartilage and synovial membrane -- exist between
bones to permit movement. If such tissue deteriorates, movement
becomes more painful. Vitamin C is essential in the making
and rebuilding of soft tissue because it promotes the growth
of Collagen, a tough, stringy "mortar" that holds cells together.
At the same time, the soft tissue also holds water, which
maintains compression resistance to cushion the joint -- this
is the "lubrication" described by Noonan in his assessment
of Pinto's X-rays.
In healthy cartilage,
normal cell loss is balanced by the rebuilding of cells. Under
diseased or inflammatory conditions, cell loss is excessive.
In the case of a dog's hip joint, this can mean that adequate
cushioning no longer exists. The high demand for Vitamin C
may begin exceeding the amount made in the dog's liver, so
deterioration continues. Or supplemented Vitamin C may turn
the process around.
Field experience, although
still anecdotal, suggests that dogs on Ester-C lead full lives
without terrible pain and debilitation. Ester-C may prove
to be a wondrous holistic cure, but OUTDOOR LIFE cautions
that it's too early to state definitively that Vitamin C can
cure or rectify canine hip dysplasia. Some doctors contend
that the treatment is merely a Band-Aid on a far more serious
problem.
We should add one point.
Hip dysplasia is at least partially inheritable. And it is
not a simple, single-gene defect. There is now concern that
dysplastic dogs returned to mobility may also be returned
to reproduction, which would further spread the malady. It
is fair to say that there appears to be a great deal of hope
for the benefits of Vitamin C, but before administering the
vitamin to your dog, consult your veterinarian. And until
more is known, don't breed that dog.
Special
thanks to Garry Sicard, for introducing this article to Neapolitan
Worldi
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