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Eye and Ear Therapy

Using a dropper, pick up a small amount of urine collected earlier and place a few drops in the dog’s eye.  You should use fresh urine collected each time.  However, do not use urine if the dog has UTI or other infectious illnesses because having such illness may contaminate the urine with bacteria.  Avoid therapy while medicating as well.

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                                                                    Eye Therapy

 

As dogs get older, the surface of the eye becomes dry and can easily be injured.  The dryness or allergies can cause crusty eyes.  Drops of urine can keep the eyes from drying up or temper the effects of allergies.  You’ll see an improvement in crusty eyes.  Not sure if this method can affect senior eyesight loss in dogs, but if you continue the treatment, it seems to possibly thin out the whiteness in their cataracts.  It may also be good for eye illness prevention in general.  If combined with urine ingestion, you may see greater improvement.  Do not use or add propolis for the eye treatment.  Use tissue paper to absorb any splatter or excess running down from the eyes after application.  It is best to use a wet towel to clean the dog’s face afterwards to avoid the smell of urine afterwards.

                                                                    Ear Therapy

Also, if your dogs have itchy ears or if they have discharge in their outer ear or inside them, you can soak cotton with urine and wipe the inside of their ear.  If the discharge is particularly bad deep inside the ear, you can oversoak the cotton with urine and wipe as if you were washing the inside of their ears.  The itchiness should go down considerably.  Again, if the urine may contain infectious bacteria, you might want to refrain from using this treatment.

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