Police Dog Back In Action After Laser Treatment

Newark, DE, April 27, 2010 – Local canine cop Paco got hurt in a tough training exercise and was limping so badly he couldn’t keep chasing the bad guys. So his partner, Officer Chris Jones, took him to a veterinarian.

At the New London Vet Center in Newark, the six year-old German Shepherd received deep-penetrating laser light on his hips. Paco had suffered a muscle sprain when he fell while attacking an officer wearing a “bite suit” and posing as a perpetrator.

Before the coming of therapy lasers injuries like this, according to Paco’s vet, were typically treated with pain medication and required cage rest for up to a month. But Jones reports, “These treatments worked so well he only missed two days at work. By the end of the second week he was dancing around like a puppy.” The FDA-approved lasers, manufactured by LiteCure at its plant in Newark, have been on the market three years. They are now used by 1,500 veterinarians, physicians, clinicians and team trainers around the country.

At present, two veterinary clinics in Delaware are offering laser treatments“ New London in Newark and Forrest Avenue Animal Hospital in Dover. Both facilities report LiteCure’s lasers are being used to treat joint pain from arthritis and torn ligaments and to promote healing of wounds.

“The laser promotes healing by increasing blood flow to the area, decreasing inflammation and helping produce fresh cells,” says senior technician Tina Jones at New London Vet Center. “You can actually see the healing happen.”

Jones says her own golden retriever Carlisle was one of the first to get a laser treatment for his neutering incision. When she checked on him at the end of the day, the dog had chewed out his sutures, but she says, “You could barely tell he’d had surgery. It started healing over within 24 hours.

The New London clinic has had a Companion Therapy Laser since last May and is using it to treat about a dozen animals a month.

“We use it for almost everything,” says Jones. “For hips, knees, backs, cysts, ear inflammation, to treat bladder leakage and incontinence problems, for dental work. We us it for every surgical procedure we do except for a mass.”

Despite the quick recoveries of Paco the police dog and her own pet, Carlisle, Jones has another patient she calls her “miracle case.”

That is a 12-year-old Shepherd-Sheltie mix named Clare that had had three major operations on her rear legs, including pins placed in her knees, before coming to New London Center for laser treatment.

“She was majorly arthritic,” Tina reports, “she couldn’t go up stairs when she started with us because her knees hurt so bad.”

This dog had laser therapy in July of last year and hasn’t needed any further treatments or medication since. Tina reports, “Now she’s walking a mile a day with the owner.”

The owner, Cricket Barazotto of Towson, Md., says, “I was desperate to get Clare out of pain. It was hard for her to walk through our neighborhood. But after the first week of laser therapy she started jumping back up on our bed. I’m getting ready right now to take her to the park where she does a mile without panting. I’ve got no reason to blow smoke, I’m just telling you, the treatment is that good.”

Source: Newark Post Online


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LiteCure: Lasers for LifeCompanion Therapy LaserPegasus Therapy Laser

Laser Therapy Helps Heal Sore Pups

Dover, DE – Nicky is an easygoing, friendly yellow Labrador retriever who loves to run big circles in her yard in Marydel, preparing for the days she spends hunting duck and geese with her owner, Bill Nickerson.

But just a few years ago, Nicky wasn’t feeling so spry. Arthritis was starting to take hold of her joints and she had a partially torn ligament in one of her knees.

Her hunting trips grew less frequent, and the pain kept her sitting in the grass instead of lapping around the yard.

Nicky, now 9 years old, owes her comeback to the team at Forrest Avenue Animal Hospital in Dover and a little piece of veterinary technology called the Companion Therapy Laser.

The therapy uses a concentrated beam of light to stimulate cell growth and promote blood flow in the part of the body it’s directed at, which makes it perfect for treating old dogs who, even though they’re hurting, still want to stick to their same tricks.

Dr. Kim Gaines, one of the vets at Forrest Avenue, said the laser helps decrease pain in a new way, often avoiding the need for powerful and expensive drugs used to treat arthritis or after surgery.

“We like to use it as alternative, drug-free pain management,” she said. “The overall goal is to get the dogs to feel as comfortable as they can. We use it a whole lot before and after surgeries. It really decreases the time for healing and also the pain level.”

Forrest Avenue is one of only two veterinary offices in Delaware that has a Companion laser, which is produced by the LiteCure company, based in Newark.

Originally developed for humans, low-level laser therapy is common in sports medicine, where it is used to treat athletes with muscle and joint soreness, or as part of a post-surgery recovery regimen.

Gaines knows first-hand how effective the therapy can be. She uses the Companion laser herself when the tendonitis in her elbow flares up.

“It puts energy into the area and it increases DNA stimulation and blood circulation,” Gaines said. “In doing so it helps remove some of the fluid, clean up the things that aren’t supposed to be there and bring in more blood for healing.”

Since laser therapy promotes cell activity, it can’t be used to fight cancer, but dogs with tumors still can receive laser treatments on other areas of their bodies, Gaines said.

Dogs like Nicky who are in the maintenance stage of their therapy come in approximately every three months for treatments, which are completely safe and painless.

“On the machine we have a lot of different settings, depending on the injury or the area. For Nicky we use the arthritic and chronic pain setting,” said veterinary technician Trish Goodlin. “Before we laser the area, we hit it with a little bit of water. This keeps the heat down, the end of the laser can get a little bit hot.”

During the therapy, the laser is held 1 or 2 inches from the area being treated as the technician gently moves it back and forth.

Treatments can take anywhere from one to five minutes and range in cost from approximately $20 for a post-surgery procedure to $240 for a six-session regimen.

Nickerson said the results of Nicky’s laser treatments speak for themselves.

“She likes to go out in the yard and play. She’ll run circles, just run and run,” he said. “Before she had this she couldn’t do it, when I saw her running like that I knew she was feeling a lot better.”

Source: www.doverpost.com
By: Doug Denison, Staff Writer – Dover Post


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Lancaster Pet Clinic Wins Companion Therapy Laser®

NEWARK, DE - Companion Therapy Laser® by LiteCure recently introduced the CTS, the market’s first comprehensive therapy laser system that incorporates revolutionary 3D animation and SmartCoat® technology to improve clinical outcomes and consistency of care. The Lancaster Pet Clinic in Lancaster, CA, will be receiving a CTSwhich Dr. Earmie Edwards won for the clinic at the Western Veterinary Conference in Las Vegas, in February.

On April 10, Dr. Brian Pryor, CEO of LiteCure, will deliver and complete an orientation of the laser with Drs. Edwards and Felder at the Lancaster Pet Clinic. Dr. Felder is the primary veterinarian in charge of the care of animals at the clinic and has an interest in skin and ear problems. He is also an experienced and efficient soft tissue surgeon. Both Dr. Felder and Dr. Edwards will be delivering laser treatments. Complete training on the laser will be provided by R.J. Poston, the local Companion Therapy Laser representative, and the team will treat several small animals that are experiencing lameness and have difficulty standing.

Dr. Edwards shares, “We are very excited to enter into a new realm of treatment that doesn’t require administering drugs with potentially harmful side effects. We are thrilled to learn a new treatment modality and look forward to learning all of the potential benefits of this powerful instrument.” In addition to its use on a variety of pet ailments, the laser will be used to help alleviate pain caused by arthritis and orthopedic conditions as well as for post-operative procedures.

The Companion Therapy CTSwith SmartCoat® technology allows veterinarians to provide accurate condition-specific treatment based on the animal’s type, weight, skin, and coat color. The CTSfeatures an industry-first animated and interactive touch screen which makes treatments simple with four easy steps. The area of the animal being treated appears on the screen and pre-set protocols designed by therapy laser experts insure the proper areas are being treated with the appropriate settings for each individual animal and condition. The SmartCoat® state-of-the-art touch screens with 3D animation allow the clinician to educate the client about their companion’s condition and show the benefits of deep tissue laser therapy.

Dr. Brian Pryor, the company’s founder and CEO is a leading scientist in the use of light and laser technology. His research and science determined the therapy laser’s dual wavelength output of 980 and 808 nm which is the right wavelength for absorption, the correct depth of penetration, and optimal outcomes. In addition, dosages and wavelengths are pre-set for optimal penetration to assure positive outcomes. Its advanced therapeutic modality is designed for ease of use, consistent treatments, and patient education.

With the introduction of the CTSwith SmartCoat® technology, LiteCure continues its commitment to manufacturing its products in the USA and providing the most innovative veterinary medical devices available. Companion Therapy Laser® experts provide in-office demonstrations of the product, clinical support, and the industry’s only therapy laser specific published materials. Veterinarians using Companion Therapy Laser® devices also receive in-office and online training, comprehensive marketing support, and customer-based materials explaining the science of laser therapy.


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