Zoo cure heals humans

One of the highlights of my trip to Tanzania in 2012 was visiting the Ngorongoro Crater and Conservation Area. They have the largest lions on the planet. I got very close as part of my invitation by the director of park services. Along with elephants, lions, gazelles and zebras, I got to see wildebeest, the almost-extinct black rhino and giraffes. I was lucky enough to photograph this giraffe on my trip to Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania. I am always awed when I see these magnificent creatures in their native environment. They thrive the same way they did thousands of years ago. But when these animals are taken from their natural habitat and locked up in a zoo, they start coming down with the same chronic diseases that affect us in the West. Let me explain… Recently, Mahali, a 14-year-old giraffe in Colorado’s Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, was suffering with terrible arthritis pain in his hoof. Zoo vets treated him with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and other pain meds. But nothing worked. Then vets from Colorado State University took over. They took 100,000 stem cells from Mahali’s blood and injected them into his inflamed leg. Six weeks later, Mahali was dramatically improved. Thermal images showed a huge drop in inflammation. This was the first time stem cell therapy had been used in a giraffe. But it’s already been used to successfully treat arthritis in horses, elephants, mountain lions, tigers, wolves and dogs. Stem cell the...
Source: Al Sears, MD Natural Remedies - Category: Complementary Medicine Authors: Tags: Anti-Aging Source Type: news