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Hobby Forum Index » Pets - Dogs » Enteric-coated Aspirin?
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| Gary |
Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 11:18 am |
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Hello: can someone tell me if I can safely give my Beagle enteric-coated
aspirin? I know buffered is Ok, but I'm wondering about the enteric-coated
variety. Thanks.
-Gary |
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| Dr. Richard Cranium |
Posted: Mon Jan 14, 2008 4:30 pm |
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"Gary" <gjcbuck@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:R8_Zi.3056$VB6.2982@trnddc06...
Quote: Hello: can someone tell me if I can safely give my Beagle enteric-coated
aspirin? I know buffered is Ok, but I'm wondering about the enteric-coated
variety. Thanks.
-Gary
Definition of Enteric-coated
Enteric-coated: Coated with a material that permits transit through the stomach to the small intestine before the medication is released.
The term "enteric" means "of or relating to the small intestine."
http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=3254
the contents of "SamE" needs to work in the small intestine.
I give my Brendled Lab/Retriever "baby aspirin" i.e. "buffered". Goes to work in the stomach.
So I don't think I need to give the benefits of aspirin to my dog clear down in the small intestine. However; I don't exactly know. I exactly know SamE is intended to help my dogs liver and that needs to make it through the stomach into the small intestine so the liver can get the benefit. I wouldn't give my dog enteric coated aspirin unless my Dr. Vet said to.
Hope this helps,
** No Fate **
dracman
Tomb Raider: Shotgun City
http://www.smokeypoint.com/tomb.htm
My game machines:
http://www.smokeypoint.com/My_PC.htm
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| Dr. Richard Cranium |
Posted: Wed Jan 16, 2008 4:58 am |
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interior for Larry to apply it. |
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| Dr. Richard Cranium |
Posted: Wed Jan 23, 2008 7:30 pm |
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whether they
were crystallized in religious sentiments, or in the laws of the land,
and according to whether they legislated for men or for women.
On May 2nd, 1856, Sir John Bowring, Governor of Hong Kong, wrote to
the Secretary of State for the Colonies at London submitting a draft
of an Ordinance which was desired at Hong Kong because of certain
conditions prevailing at Hong Kong which were described in the
enclosures in his despatch. Mr. Labouchere, the Secretary of State for
the Colonies at the time, replied to the Governor's representations
in the following language: "The Colonial Government has not, I think,
attached sufficient weight to the very grave fact that in a British
Colony large numbers of women should be held in practical slavery for
the purposes of prostitution, and allowed in some cases to perish
miserably of disease in the prosecution of their employment, and for
the gain of those to whom they suppose themselves to belong. A class
of persons who by no choice of their own are subjected to such
treatment have an urgent claim on the active protection of
Government."
Hong Kong, the British colony, had existed but fourteen years when
this was written. Only a handful of fishermen and c |
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| Dr. Richard Cranium |
Posted: Wed Jan 23, 2008 10:06 pm |
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only were keepers of unregistered houses to be fined or
sent to prison, but the women--"held in practical slavery for the
purposes of prostitution"--when found in unregistered houses were
also subject to fine and imprisonment.
2nd, The Registrar-General, otherwise the "Protector" of Chinese,
could break into any house suspected of being a brothel, and
arrest the keeper thereof without warrant. And he could authorize
his underlings to do the same.
3rd, The Registrar General could exercise both judicial and
executive powers in the prosecution of the duties of his office.
4th, All outdoor prostitutes could be arrested without warrant,
fined and imprisoned.
The new law possessed one virtue over the old. It frankly, and
more honestly, employed the word "licensed," where the old law
said "registered," brothels.
The report of the Commission says:
"Although the new Ordinance conferred such extensive and unusual
powers on the Registrar General and Superintendent of Police as to
breaking into and entering houses and arresting keepers without
warrant, no serious difficulty whatever, so far as the records
show,--and we have paid special attention to the point,--seems to
have been experienced under the previ |
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| Dr. Richard Cranium |
Posted: Wed Jan 23, 2008 10:09 pm |
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must make it good, or acknowledge, in dust
and ashes of repentance, that we are hypocrites. Idle words will not
do in place of deeds; we must make good our profession at any cost.
Everyone of these Chinese women should be removed from the brothels,
wherever these exist, consent or no consent, placed in houses of
detention, instructed as to the condition of liberty of the person in
which she _must_ live, and then, if she _prefers_ a slave's life,
he deported to China,--a land in which slavery is permitted. Every
Chinese man who attempts to interfere with this radical treatment of
the situation, should be imprisoned or driven from the country. These
"Watch-dogs," who are perfectly known to the police, both by name and
by face, should be put behind bars and in stripes, for a long time to
come. This is not prostitution, _merely_,--Oh, how tenderly men are
inclined to deal with the male harlot! but for once the libertine
has not a shadow of a shade of defense,--the patrons of _slaves_ are
something worse than fornicators; they are guilty of as many offenses
of criminal outrage as they are guilty of visits to the slave-pens
stocked with Chinese girls, and they deserve a prison sentence for
every such visit.
Girls are afraid to come out of Chinese brothels until they have
earned their freedom. This is because powerful Chinese societies have
been formed that will either kidnap such a girl or kill her. So she
declares in court that she consents freel |
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| Dr. Richard Cranium |
Posted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 3:11 pm |
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it is, in fact, the greatest
source of happiness in the condition of kings that men try incessantly to
divert them and to procure for them all kinds of pleasures.
The king is surrounded by persons whose only thought is to divert the king
and to prevent his thinking of self. For he is unhappy, king though he be,
if he think of himself.
This is all that men have been able to discover to make themselves happy.
And those who philosophise on the matter, and who think men unreasonable for
spending a whole day in chasing a hare which they would not have bought,
scarce know our nature. The hare in itself would not screen us from the
sight of death and calamities; but the chase, which turns away our attention
from these, does screen us.
The advice given to Pyrrhus, to take the rest which he was about to seek
with so much labour, was full of difficulties.
To bid a man live quietly is to bid him live happily. It is to advise him to
be in a state perfectly happy, in which he can think at leisure without
finding therein a cause of distress. This is to misunderstand nature.
As men who naturally understand their own condition avo |
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| Dr. Richard Cranium |
Posted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 4:30 pm |
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all idols and bring men into the worship of the true God.
That the temples of the idols would be cast down, and that among all nations
and in all places of the earth. He would be offered a pure sacrifice, not of
beasts.
That He would be king of the Jews and Gentiles. And we see this king of the
Jews and Gentiles oppressed by both, who conspire His death; and ruler of
both, destroying the worship of Moses in Jerusalem, which was its centre,
where He made His first Church; and also the worship of idols in Rome, the
centre of it, where He made His chief Church.
731. Prophecies.--That Jesus Christ will sit on the right hand, till God has
subdued His enemies.
Therefore He will not subdue them Himself.
732. "... Then they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, saying,
Here is the Lord, for God shall make Himself known to all."
"... Your sons shall prophesy." "I will put my spirit and my fear in your
heart."
All that is the same thing. To prophesy is to speak of God, not from outward
proofs, but from an inward and immediate feeling.
733. That He would teach men the perfect way.
And there has never come, before Him nor after Him, any man who has taught
anything divine approaching to this.
734.... That Jesus Christ would be small in His beginning, and would then
increase. The little stone of Daniel.
If I had in no wise heard of the Messiah, nevertheless, after such wonderful
predictions of the course of the world which I see fulfilled, I see that He
is divine. And, if I knew that these same books foretold a Messiah, I should
be sure that He would come; and seeing that they place His time before the
destruction of the second temple, I should say that He had come.
735. Prophecies.--That the Jews would reject Jesus Christ, and would be
rejected of God, for this reason, t |
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