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cmorioles Churchill Downs Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Moore, OK Posts: 1,959 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Quote: Originally Posted by Riot Here's your challenge: give any objective evidence at all to prove that lasix is harmful to horses. you, cm replied: Where have I ever said it was harmful? I am quite sure I have never said that. Feel free to keep making things up though. then there's this exchange: 05-10-2012, 09:11 PM cmorioles Churchill Downs Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Moore, OK Posts: 1,959 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Quote: Originally Posted by Danzig and i will ask for a third time, how can you know if a horse will bleed? or when? and thinking isn't a fact, it's an opinion. this was your reply cm: 'You can't.' but yeah, you're right on....i don't know what you've written. feel free to attack my writing skills rather than stick to the points. i've never claimed to be an english or writing major, so i'm sorry if i don't put things together too well. however, i do remember what i've read, and who wrote it. |
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again, what is best for the horse? |
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Cute. But anyone with a pulse sees right through it. Refute Dr. Hinchcliff's (you know, the guy who proved lasix was effective under actual race conditions) conclusions. Quote:
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But enough of that duck-and-dive tactic you're so good at. You're cherry-picking my last post. Why don't you comment on the mechanism of action of furosemide and how, according to your claim, it does not affect acid-base balance in a racing Thoroughbred? The lay people want to know. Quote:
Ironically, some states, such as New York have two thresholds for total CO2. 37 mmol/L and 39 mmol/L. Anyone know which horses are held to the higher (that's the 39 level for the non-mathematicians here) threshold? Yep, you guessed it. It's for horses that were administered lasix. Interesting that the rules of racing seem to suggest that lasix alters the acid-base status (specifically, has an alkalinizing effect) of a horse. No? Quote:
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Dr. Warwick Bayly: "...this review emphasizes issues that relate to the highly controversial subject of furosemide use in racehorses." (2000) Do we need those pesky lay people to voice their concern, too? Or are we good here? |
"However, you should probably come up with a reason why you oppose the direct and specific medical advice of the veterinary profession, who says that doing what you want is not best for the health and welfare of the horse. "
This part is easy. Given the current state of the game, why in the world should we trust vets? Many are associated with the "move up" trainers that are ruining the game. |
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One of the reasons behind the banning of "milkshaking" is that horsemen can alter the outercome of a race by employing an "on-and-off" regimen (one race given, one race not given) of bicarbonate. With lasix, most jurisdictions allow a range of lasix from 150mg to 500mg. Is there room there to alter a horse's performance? If I have a severe bleeder whose bleeding is controlled only with the higher dose of lasix, what happens if I up and decide to give him the bare minimum in his next race? |
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For example, you say this: Quote:
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:D Why don't you support your own crazy claim that it does? You made a weird claim, completely outside of known medical knowledge and experience, prove it. Cutting and pasting random quotes, while completely ignoring the basic physiology and misunderstanding what you are reading, is hilarious and sad. Start with chloride and the ascending loop of Henle. You see, you actually have to understand what you are going on about. Just googling and posting doesn't make you a lasix expert. Believe me - I am a lasix expert, and you've repeatedly demonstrated you are clueless. Please - stick to gambling. Leave medicine and veterinary advice to the experts. You are free to hold the completely opposite opinion than the entire medical veterinary medical community on this subject, but having you argue basic physiology and pharmacology from a level of zero obvious knowledge - by cutting and pasting - is simply uncomfortable to watch. But ... you are just repeating what some in this sport are doing, falsifying and ignoring all the relevant information, in an effort to further their own preconceived agenda. But when they step into our realm, the medical realm, and really start with the lies, we're calling bull.sh.i.at. on that stuff. The funny thing is that on the equine veterinarian private blogs, we are talking about this, too. Very different discussion, as you might guess. |
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i don't know, what will happen? one other question...what benefits do you anticipate if lasix is banned? |
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There's a reason for that. Bad science and bad logic is nothing more than that. Again, think Jenny McCarthy, vaccination, autuism. |
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If a drug benefits members of your competition more than it benefits you ... it brings you closer together and you lose a performance edge. |
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Do you think lasix is a therapeutic drug, or not? |
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i just wonder if this latest hot topic will be like poly a few years back in california? look where the synthetic mandate ended up. i can't help but think that if you start having hemorraging horses on the track they won't back-pedal in a hurry. and there have been instances where a horse bled so severely they went down in a race. |
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Again, refute the statement: "...we believe our results present clear and unequivocal evidence of an association between use of furosemide and superior performance in Thoroughbred racehorses." Quote:
You are completely trying to steer away from what was said. There are two separate threshold levels for total carbon dioxide used in New York to identify "milkshaked" horses, not a range. One for horses not receiving lasix. One for horses receiving lasix. The latter is allowed a higher threshold (ie more total carbon dioxide ergo more bicarbonate). Why is that? You trying to cover up this fact with a blanket of statistical nonsense is pathetic beyond belief. As to "other things" that affect total CO2 values, I never said lasix was the only thing that did. Why would I? The point of testing for total CO2 is to discover horses that have been "milkshaked", not administered lasix. Quote:
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The onus is on you. This is not hot potato. Quote:
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Obviously your bark is loud. Now put up and fucl<ing bite already. Quote:
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Is Madeleine Stowe leading the discussion? |
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See, quoting sentences in a vacuum, without understanding, isn't a very good debate tactic when you are ignorant of the subject matter. Quote:
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You don't have the first clue regarding what you are talking about. You don't have the knowledge of pharmacology or physiology. You are cutting and pasting words without meaning. Again: you are the guy sitting at the corner of the bar, pontificating on how to do open heart surgery. It's sad. Just stop. |
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I can show you a lot of old past performances of horses who never used lasix and fired big races everytime. Some of them from as recently as the 1990's. |
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on the latter-you don't have to use the stuff. i just would hate to see those who need it not be able to have it. |
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