calliecritturs
Posted : 1/13/2011 3:23:19 PM
There are lots of different things you can do --
1. Dr. Fox has several pet massage books out and all of them are darned good.
this is just one of his books: Healing Touch
2. I've used PetMassage.Com not only to learn but to FIND a good canine massage therapist. They have a set of how-to CD's you can get if you want to go more in-depth. It's fantastic for everything from arthritis to behavior problems.
3. T-Touch is awesome but the seminars are wickedly expensive. Linda Tellington-Jones has been around a LONG time -- some people just dismiss it as "just" massage but it's far more than that but usually it's used for behavior problems and chronic problems. Again -- investing in her basic set of CD's is a smart thing and man it comes in handy.
You will get much further in easing the arthritis with using some essential oils -- it's essential oil in things like Ben Gay that "help" but if you stick with just the basic oils you don't get all the gunky junk in the fur/coat. The more oil you use the more 'heat' you get, the more you rub the more heat you get. These aren't heavy oily-oils like mineral oil. These are light oils -- you almost can't tell they ARE oils and they don't mark furniture, etc. You DO have to be really careful to wash your hands super well or you'll transfer it somewhere like your eyes and you'll hate me. I love White Flower Oil and WoodLock oils -- but I get them mailorder. You can walk into most any health store (from Whole Foods to just mom & pop type little health stores) and get either peppermint oil or wintergreen oil -- both work great.
The other thing -- if you will give a small amount of a relaxant *with* the NSAID (Metacam is an NSAID -- like any nsaid it can cause liver damage or stomach bleeding) you can generally either accomplish more with that same amount of nsaid, OR you can wind up using less. In short -- when you hurt (particularly a joint) you tense up. The more you tense up the more it makes that joint/vertebrae grind against itself -- so the more pain you get AND the more destruction you get. Relaxing the muscles helps that nsaid to do *more* because it's not having to fight the tension of the pain-filled muscle/joint.
Most pharmaceutical relaxants (like valium) are habit-forming so vets don't use them. But herbal relaxants - like valerian, or passion-flower or St. John's Wort -- aren't habit-forming and can really help a lot. Giving a couple of valerian caps (or using the tincture in a bit of tahini or peanut butter) before you do the massage can really maxmize it.
I've had arthritis my whole life -- and as a result we tend to adopt animals that *have* arthritis so I've done this many times.
Some animals don't *like* massage -- it hurts, they hurt, they don't want any part of it. The oils REALLY help there (because they can relieve the inflammation even without rubbing much), especially when combined with the relaxant.
But some LOVE it. Real massage is more than just petting -- because you literally are trying to stretch out muscles and build them back up again.
If you will email me I have a bunch of arthritis stuff I can send you. Feel free to email me (don't pm -- this IS a document I'll send you as an attachment).