The relatively new practice of feeding garlic to horses in an attempt to help with respiratory health has come under fire in recent months. Because garlic has strong antibacterial aspects, some horse owners are hopeful that it is a miracle cure for many horse ailments. There are many in the horse world with doubts about the product, though. A line has been drawn in the proverbial sand as some see it as effective, while others call the herb a toxic horse killer.
For Swiss Rolex Copy horses that come down with respiratory illness, garlic has shown to be an effective remedy. It is used in a simple way. Horses ingest the herb and after a few days, they get better. The debate about garlic seems to exist over the long term effects. No one debates the fact that garlic is an effective short term remedy, but is the quick fix really the best fix? Could the horse contract a more serious illness later in life because of the garlic? These are questions that scientists are looking to answer.
Scientists are also looking to investigate this garlic fad for another reason. There is some evidence out there that suggests that garlic could be used for animals other than horses. Some folks have even mentioned the possibility of garlic being able to help with some common problems among humans. Some smaller nations have been experimenting with the herb as a cure, and the results are decidedly mixed.
Garlic contains an essential ingredient that has the ability to cure a host of ills. Allicin, which is the most active ingredient, is found in all garlic herbs. Detractors of the garlic cure have long argues that garlic based products have been ineffective in curing respiratory illness. Most of those products, however, do not have allicin. With that ingredient, it is thought that garlic might have some healing power.
The problem with garlic is that many folks believe that the antimicrobial properties within the herb can cause long term damage to a horse's digestive system. This is because there are certain microbial bugs within the horse's large
replica watch intestine that serve to break down the fiber in a horse's diet. Long term use of garlic could cause bacteria to thrive within the digestive tract, causing awful damage to the system and making the horse fatally ill.
Scientists are also concerned about the fact
audemars piguet replica that garlic has been linked to different types of anemia among dogs and sheep. That concern, coupled with the fact that fellow herb onion has caused problems with horses, Imitation Omega Watches combines to make a situation that scientists don't see as being favorable for horses.
At this point,

it appears that garlic, despite its possibilities, is still

a very raw product. There

are simply too many question marks that have to be addressed before the herb can be marketed as
fake bvlgari a cure among horses. Folks are, however, constantly doing research that may lend a more concrete answer within the next few months.