Treating Aspirated Pneumonia and Respiratory Issues
stephanie schenk • February 15, 2021
My Treatment For Aspirated Pneumonia

Treating viral issue like Kennel Cough
Fill Nebulizer cup with Bronchial Rescue and run 40 minutes holding on lap and pointing mist to nose or using mask.
My Treatment For Aspirated Pneumonia
I've been using this for over ten years with no fatalities. Frenchies and all short nosed breeds are much more susceptible to getting aspirated pneumonia. Aspirated pneumonia can happen at any time in their lives and at any age. It quickly becomes life threatening and can kill in a matter of days. You won't have time to get this last minute, you either have the cure on hand or you don't. Risking their lives leaving their treatment in the hands of vets who use IV antibiotics and then just wait to see if there's enough time for them them to be effective. If not, your bully dies and they're "Sorry, but pneumonia was too advanced". Vets and people doctors all treat aspirated pneumonia with antibiotics through IV. It is a completely ineffective way to treat a bacterial infection in the lungs. They supply fluids and just wait to see if your system can fight it off on its own. If it's a bad case of pneumonia, there's no way for the antibiotics to circulate through whole system fast enough to kill off the bacteria in lungs enough to save life. A vet will tell you your dog probably won't make it. Take them home and treat them with this and they will. In twenty years, I have a 100% cure rate with this treatment. You can bring a dog back from certain death with very first treatment.
Nebulizer Mixture
Linc100 use needle syringe for 1cc + 10cc Saline (two pink ampules)= 11cc volume
can add ONE drop of bronchial dilator in tiny dropper bottle in kit. (Caution in using straight Eucalyptus oil as it ruins the nebulizing cup!)
NEBULIZER aspirated pneumonia and Kennel Cough treatment
If your Frenchie ever gets Aspirated Pneumonia, this can save their life. Vets have a VERY low cure rate using IV antibiotics. This puts antibiotics directly into lungs. Helps with kennel cough too. Can’t get antibiotics to CA, will have to ship to friend and have them send to you. If your Frenchie gets Pneumonia, you can’t get this stuff last minute, you either have on hand to save their life, or you don’t. They can get at ANY age and immediately life threatening. A simple Xray will confirm Pneumonia. Rapid shallow breathing, loss of appetite and lethargy are a good sign to do a nebulizer treatment. Place in crate and cover well to keep mist in. I always run for forty minutes.
How Long to Treat
It's most effective if you just hold dog and point vapor to nose if tiny pup, if larger use mask, to be sure breathing as much as possible. Run unit for 20 minutes. You can setup with dog in a covered crate and run for twenty minutes, then shut it off and leave in the crate for an additional 20 minutes. If not well contained, run for forty minutes and remove from crate. You will see improvement after very first treatment if bacterial infection. If not use colloidal mix for viral infection.
First day, you may do this twice, then once a day for five to seven days. Most are normal by the third day, but do not discontinue at this point or the puppy may relapse. It is important to go two to three days past normal.
If you don't see immediate and noticeable improvement with antibiotics and don't have a vet confirmation of pneumonia from an Xray, then the infection is viral and Colloidal Silver mix in nebulizer is effective. Always start with treatment for pneumonia if any chance of having. It's easiest and quickest to resolve, but very quickly deadly. Viral infection should always go hand in hand with doses of olive leaf.
History-
Vaporized opium was used as a treatment for cough. Anticholinergic properties of inhaled herbal preparations were used to treat asthma and inhaled epinephrine was first used around 1910. Aerosolized therapy is used for many therapies now including bronchodilators and corticosteroids, with a particular interest in antibiotic administration re-emerging recently. Although there are references to the use of inhaled penicillin as early as 1946, the first randomized controlled trial of inhaled antibiotics was first reported in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients in 1981. In critical care, endotracheal antibiotic administration was first reported in the 1970s, when Klastersky et al. reported that endotracheal (by way of trachea) polymyxins (antibiotics) effective for prevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia in tracheostomized patients. *www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/