Semi-elemental diet Gut-cumin I is capable of switching fecal scoring to fabric settings to those of acceptable levels in dogs with inflammatory bowel disease: further evidence of proof for gut-brain axis

Authors

  • Kerem URAL
  • Hasan ERDOGAN
  • Serdar PASA
  • Songul ERDOGAN

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14754748

Keywords:

Dog, Fecal consistency, Nutraceutical, Inflamatory bowel disease

Abstract

 

 Polypharmacy without precise diagnosis cause harmless effects to those with gastrointestinal issues. Moreover unnecessary antibiotic usage might hasten dysbiosis, which could be detected in several dogs with gastroenteritis. Use of a novel and completely natural nutraceutical [Gut-cumin I Liquid Fomulation] against dogs with inflammatory bowel disease (ibD) whether if this natural trophic aminoacid and nutraceutical complex was capable of restoration for gastrointestinal health as detected by fecal scoring and clinical recovery/remission. A total of 59 dogs with ibD referred to the Intestinal Permeability Measurement Center (İPÖM) were entered into the study. All dogs participated, were completed the nutritional intervention protocole. Gut-cumin I was prescribed for each participant dog at a dose of 2 to 5ml/dogs based on weight of the animals for 1 week. Prior to treatment mean, median, quartile 1 (25%) and 3 (75%) fecal scoring values were deemed 2.9, 2.5, 2.0 whereas semi-elemental diet Gut-cumin I was capable of switching fecal scoring post-treatment values for mean, median, quartile 1 (25%) and 3 (75%) ranges as 3.5, 3.5, 3.,0 and 4.0, respectively. It should not be unwise to draw preliminary conclusion that semi-elemental diet Gut-cumin I was throughly altered gastrointestinal health conditions, as determined by limited access data throughly via inspeciton of fecal indices.

Additional Files

Published

28-01-2025

How to Cite

URAL, K., ERDOGAN, H., PASA, S. ., & ERDOGAN, S. (2025). Semi-elemental diet Gut-cumin I is capable of switching fecal scoring to fabric settings to those of acceptable levels in dogs with inflammatory bowel disease: further evidence of proof for gut-brain axis. Turkish Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 3(2), 46–57. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14754748

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