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Manno-Max™ Veterinary D-Mannose Powder
Alternative Treatment/Prevention
for Equine Uterine Infections
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250 g. Jar: |
$95.95
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1 kg. Jar: |
$335.00
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International
and next-day delivery available PLEASE Call:
800-601-0688 or 508-252-5294 (USA)
Manno-Max for horses and pets is:
SAFE....
Manno-Max™ is a simple sugar, not a drug, and therefore
the possibility of side effects or an adverse
drug reaction is eliminated.
FAST
ACTING AND EFFECTIVE...
Administered
as a lavage, Manno-Max™ mechanically binds to
infection causing bacteria on contact. Mannose
bound bacteria are then flushed out in the lavage
solution.
RELIABLE...
Manno-Max™,
unlike antibiotics, is not susceptible to the
development of bacterial resistance over time.
ECONOMICAL...
Treatment
with Manno-Max™ is relatively inexpensive compared
to antibiotics which can cost hundreds of dollars
per day.
Manno-Max™ can also be added to semen extenders to prevent
infection from occurring during artificial insemination.
Numerous
clinical trials have demonstrated that D-mannose
can be used effectively to resolve equine reproductive
tract infections caused by three common types
of bacteria:
- Streptoccous zooepidemicus,
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
and
- Escherichia coli.
The
following excerpts are from an article entitled
Sweet Solution by award winning veterinary
writer Denise Steffanus, published in the February
2002 issue of Thoroughbred Times:
Reproductive
tract infections in the mare can be difficult
and expensive to cure with antibiotics.
More
tenacious infections, such as those caused by
pseudomonas bacteria, can be a challenge to
resolve because they have become resistant to
all but a few exotic antibiotics such as amikacin,
and in some cases even those expensive designer
druD do not work.
Sheryl King, Ph.D., professor and director of
the equine program at Southern Illinois University,
and her research associates have found a quicker,
safer, cheaper, and more effective way to cure
uterine infections using mannose, a naturally
occurring simple sugar. Closely related to glucose,
mannose is found in such plants as lentils,
peas, and jack beans.
"One of my Ph.D. veterinary students was looking
with an electron microscope at how bacteria
attached to the inside of the uterine lining," King explained.
"That led us to look into various modes of attachment,
and then we discovered that sugars were involved.
Basically, it is like a lock and key-a specific
kind of binding between the bacteria and a particular
sugar that is a part of the chemical makeup
of the lining of different tissues, such as
the uterine lining."
Overwhelm
Attachment
"Our
theory was this: If this is how the bacteria
makes its initial attachment, and it has to
attach in order to invade the tissue, if we
just introduce a bunch of that particular sugar,
we can overwhelm the bacteria's attachment and
they will just wash out," King continued. "And,
lo and behold, it works!"
Unlike antibiotic therapy, mannose does not
kill the bacteria. Instead, the bacteria bind
to the mannose solution infused into the uterus
and are flushed out with the solution.
Three types of common bacteria that cause uterine
infections bind to mannose - Streptococcus zooepidemicus,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Escherichia coli.
These bacteria can be present on the mare's
hindquarters and enter the uterus accidentally
during breeding. King urged owners to have laboratory
tests performed to identify the bacteria, but
she added, "I would go ahead and start the mannose
treatment while you wait for the lab tests to
come back rather than indiscriminately blasting
the mare with everything but the kitchen sink
[antibiotics].
"The worst one, and the one we were most interested
in because it is the most problematic, is Pseudomonas
aeruginosa. It is a particularly nasty bacteria,"
King said. "It is very hard to get rid of once
a mare is infected with it. Second of all, pseudomonas
species of bacteria, in particular, have become
resistant to a very large number of antibiotics.
So, you have to go to some very exotic, extremely
expensive antibiotic therapies to try to cure
them of this kind of infection."...
...An infected or dirty mare may go through
cycle after cycle of treatment before the infection
is cleared up. If the bacterium causing the
infection is resistant to antibiotics, some
infections may persist for years while the mare's
biological clock ticks away. During the process,
it is not unrealistic for the owner of a particularly
valuable broodmare to spend $1,000 per day to
restore her reproductive health.
...Treatment
regimen
As
the ultimate test of mannose therapy, King accepted
into her program three chronically infected
mares that had been unable to get in foal for
several years. After treating the mares with
mannose lavages for two cycles, they were bred
on the third cycle. "All three of those mares
have gotten pregnant; all three of them have
delivered at least one foal for us, and all
are back in foal," King reported.
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Telephone:
800-601-0688 (USA)
508-252-5294
Postal Address:
125 Tremont Street
Rehoboth, MA 02769
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