The American Kennel Club Gazette in the article “Homeopathy An Alternative” states:
Pugsly made his first visit to Dr. Khalsa and she looked at the X-ray my vet had taken. She concurred with the diagnosis, but not the prognosis. On the first visit I was afraid to ask to many questions. Her quiet, gentle manner, the little pills, and my own fascination with Pugsly’s reaction to the treatment drove all my questions out of mind.
Pugsly was noticeably better by the end of the visit, no doubt due to the therapeutic effects of the acupuncture. I left with instructions to give him the remedies three times a day; not to let him do any jumping or strenuous exercise for a week and to bring him back in two weeks.
I was shocked. She seemed to have treated him as though he had nothing more than the common cold. I decided to wait and see, yet by the end of the week he was fine. That sounds so simple, but to anyone who has lost one, let alone two Dachshunds to disc disease, it is a miracle. Without cortisone or surgery, he was fine.
On his third visit to Dr. Khalsa, she pronounced him well and assured me that with regular checkups and adjustments he would be just fine.
Living Proof
Less than six weeks after Dr. Khalsa first treated him, Pugsly won an Open-All-Age Dog Stake over 22 other dogs at a Dachshund field trial. As if to prove her right, Pugsly has blossomed into an all round performer. He completed his C.D. six months after his first visit to Dr. Khalsa and received a working certificated from the American Working Terrier Assn. the next day and regularly goes to ground on woodchuck, staying at the job until the hunt until it is finished. He then completed his field championship.
Pugsly and I have a wonderful bond that continues to grow stronger, perhaps because I realize how close I came to losing him. But thanks to Dr. Khalsa’s quiet, calm attitude I was able to open my mind to a “new” way of medicine. And through her homeopathic veterinary care, I have found a happy, healthy alternative to surgery, cortisone, and the heartbreak of disc disease.