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Some crank wrote an opinion letter to the NYT. You're falling for it. Good luck. You calling lasix, "drug them all" simply reveals that you remain completely ignorant about furosemide and it's long and successful in horses (and dogs, cats, people, tigers, bears, primates, etc) |
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At least Riot finally set me straight, so I paid the price in the end. |
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Dogs, cats, people, tigers, bears, and primates and even etc. aren't being given Lasix to race while people bet millions of dollars on them. In this case, we even found out California lies to us about which horses actually get Lasix and which don't. That will go a long way to establishing trust with bettors. Drug them all. |
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That knowledge and understanding separates those that are licensed to use and dispense legend drugs - doctors, pharmacists, veterinarians, etc. - and the guy at the end of the bar stool expounding upon how much he knows about lasix because he read a NYT opinion piece that confirmed what he's determined to think. |
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I always love when people accuse one side of an argument with being stubborn and then make statements like "I'll never agree with that". As for the welfare of horses I would think that those who profit off of the knowingly abused have blood on thier hands as well... But dont fret, using lasix isnt really abuse no matter how hard you neutrally rail against it. |
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You being unable to comprehend that just makes you "irrelevant". |
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Maybe check the NYT opinion page. |
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Don't be getting all acerbic on me now. Buffer your embarrasment some warm milk. |
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I'm sorry you don't know basic, high-school physiology (ever hear of lactic acid?) thus feel compelled to make fun of what you don't know. Once again, with feeling ... Lasix similar to effect of a milkshake? Ridiculous. Lasix has a minor adjustment to elevation of pH (we know that, because that has actually been measured multiple times) but nowhere near what a milkshake does (we know that, because it's been actually measured multiple times). In fact, our intimate knowledge of the difference in blood pH effects between heat, humidity, lasix, certain feeds, etc. and what a milkshake does is why testing TCO2 levels are set precisely where they are. Because we know what pH a shot of lasix gives. And we know what pH alkalynizing agents get. They are different. We have used furosemide internationally for 40 years in the horse, not to mention multiple other species. We know exactly what it does, and how, and why. This is simple, straightforward, basic medical science. I'm done sparring with the loony conspiracy theorists. |
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i think the fallout had to do with the fact that a lot of bettors lost out on betting a horse who should have been scratched. i know lasix was suggested as a possible reason for her lackluster performance. now, when i read the other day that there was an 80% reduction in visible bleeding by horses in NY once the lasix ban was lifted....well, what else is there to say? do we really want an 80% increase in bleeders? we already have negative attention because of breakdowns, what will happen if horses start coming by the grandstand with blood coming out of their nostrils? or horses collapsing because of a bad enough hemorrage? and that does happen. i firmly believe that it's better to prevent something than to take a risk-that it's a lesser 'evil' if you will. |
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and i see someone has reared their head, so i guess i'm done with this thread anway.... |
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You have been neutralized. I suggest going back to the basics. |
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