Why I Recommend Regular Wellness Visits

The Importance of Being Proactive in Identifying Health Issues in Pets

proactive vetAs a proactive wellness veterinarian, I prefer to see each of my healthy patients twice a year, and more frequently as necessary for older pets and those with chronic conditions. A dog’s or cat’s wellness and nutritional needs change yearly, and over the age of 8 can require fine-tuning every 4 to 6 months. I want to regularly review each patient’s weight, muscle tone, joint range of motion, diet, supplement protocol and exercise habits with the owner.

My goal is to help my clients avoid preventable disease in their pets. I don’t follow the traditional medical approach, which is to wait around until an animal is sick or debilitated and then attempt to fix the problem or simply treat the symptoms.

I view regularly scheduled wellness visits as opportunities to check the status of your pet’s health and take proactive steps to prevent serious disease from developing. Wellness exams are a perfect time for you and your vet to discuss any and all changes in your pet’s health, for example, if your pet’s endurance level has changed, if there is plaque or tartar on any teeth, if there have been changes in sleep or bathroom habits or water intake, or if your pet has had exposure to ticks or other infectious pathogens that may need to be addressed.

We want to keep your pet in the white zone of good health and out of the black zone of disease. In between those zones lies the grey zone, which is where dysfunction in the body begins and gradually moves the state of your pet’s health in the direction of full-blown disease.

To successfully reverse or stall dysfunction in the grey zone, we have to deal with it there, which means we must regularly check your pet’s health status. For pets over the age of 8, I almost always find a health related change occurring at every 6-month exam that we can address proactively. Most importantly, by making intentional, regular changes to a pet’s wellness protocol (via a supplement, diet, or therapeutic exercise routine), we can dramatically slow down aging and potentially slow the onset of degenerative disease.

Organ Function and Tissue Minerals Should Be Checked at Least Yearly

For middle-aged and older pets, I recommend that a complete blood work and/or a Fur Mineral Analysis be done annually to check for liver, kidney, and endocrine issues, protein levels, and mineral imbalances.

One of the best ways to keep on top of a patient’s health is by tracking blood work and tissue mineral changes over time. Let’s say your cat’s kidney enzymes (BUN and creatinine) are climbing, but are still within normal reference ranges. Many veterinarians will note the elevation but wait until the levels climb out of the normal range before taking action.  However, my approach is to view those slightly elevated levels as requiring attention, and long before your kitty is diagnosed with chronic kidney failure, I’ll make recommendations for supporting and enhancing kidney function so that we can prevent full-blown disease.

As another example, your dog’s blood Calcium and Magnesium levels may be in normal range along with all other measured serum values (because the body does everything it can to keep it that way – or death would ensue), but in his tissues (as assessed with a fur analysis) both are very low: bio-unavailable.  That could explain his nervous symptoms, hind end tremors, and muscle weakness that could then be addressed at the cellular level by correcting mineral imbalances with nutrition instead of just his symptoms with anti-anxiety and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

In addition to organ function and fur evaluations, I suggest completing a urinalysis and internal parasite analysis annually as well.  They really compliment each other well for a noninvasive and pretty comprehensive view of your pet’s health status.

proactive vet2Wellness Exams Should Be a Proactive Review of Your Pet’s Health

Being proactive means being focused on initiating change rather than simply reacting to events as they occur.  In my practice I use what I call the Three Pillars of Health as a proactive approach to wellness. These pillars form the foundation for your pet’s health, quality of life, and longevity.

  • Pillar #1 is species-appropriate nutrition. The diet you feed your cat or dog should be balanced and biologically appropriate for a carnivore. Over time there will be changes required to your pet’s diet which may include the reduction or increase of balanced fats (depending on your pet’s activity and metabolic health), an increase or change in protein sources, an increase in antioxidant or phytonutrient intake, and/or an increase in essential fatty acids, depending on your pet’s lifestyle and age.
  • Pillar #2 is a sound, resilient frame. This aspect of your pet’s health involves maintenance of the musculoskeletal system and organs. In addition to maintaining your pet’s weight, proactive vets will monitor changes in your pet’s muscle tone, range of motion, strength, balance, and brain-body connection, and suggest specific exercises or changes in your exercise routine to minimize atrophy and age related changes over time.
  • Pillar #3 is a balanced, functional immune system. The goal here is to keep your pet’s immune system in balance. It should protect against pathogens, but not be over-reactive to the point of creating allergies and other autoimmune conditions. Wellness veterinarians will replace vaccines with titers, offer detox protocols when necessary (if pets are exposed to heartworm, flea, or tick chemicals), and evaluate your pet’s immune health risks that change over time, including your pet’s risk of breed related cancers.

I wish more veterinarians would reject the traditional notion of preventive healthcare, which too often centers around overzealous re-vaccinations and chemical pesticides, and instead help their clients understand the value of a proactive approach to keeping their pets healthy.