Talk:Canine pancreatitis

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ImSAIDs

While I am seeing information on this company beginning in 2008 and that one of the principals of the company involved in its development is scheduled to speak at ACVIM's 2011 annual meeting and that the product is available from the company, what I don't see is information about its use from anyone other than those deeply involved with it. One of the links on the company's page is to this WP page: Immune-selective anti-inflammatory derivative.

This is an example of current treatment information: How I Diagnose/How I Treat--Chronic Pancreatitis in Dogs Jörg M. Steiner, (Texas A & M University-head of GI Department), World Small Animal Veterinary Association-2010

The basic current "take home" message from other references is as shown in the beginning portion of the Treatment section of the WP article-"There are no approved treatments for canine pancreatitis. Treatment for this disease is supportive, and may require hospitialization to attend to the dog's nutritional and fluid needs, pain management, and addressing any other disease processes (infection, diabetes, etc.) while letting the pancreas heal on its own.

Canine pancreatitis is complex, often limiting the ability to approach the disease."

Am proposing commenting-out this section on ImSAIDs on the basis that it does not appear to be considered a standard treatment for the disease at this time. While it's possible that this Texas A & M University study may be for this product: "This proprietary nutritional supplement used in this study has been found to significantly reduce the severity of pancreatitis in laboratory animals, thus holding promising results for both veterinary and human medicine.", it has yet to be considered standard treatment. We hope (talk) 20:46, 29 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Proposed deletion of recently moved talk page material

It seems this did not enter the market. Here we have a press release from 2011. The link shown for the company's website is only accessible via password and the link for LeukoSTAT is dead. I spent some time at the Food and Drug Administration website with the Green Book and found nothing there. Since LeukoSTAT makes medical claims, it would have to be approved as a drug. Another look at treatment recommendations indicates the "take-home" message is the same now as in 2011-supportive care. We hope (talk) 23:02, 14 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]

As proposed 2 months ago, I am deleting the commented-out material from this talk page. We hope (talk) 23:48, 15 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

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