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- From: njl@drutx.ATT.COM (LaRocheNJ)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets
- Subject: Re: Papaya tablets for bun.
- Summary: Amylase vs. mylase
- Message-ID: <23011@drutx.ATT.COM>
- Date: 28 Dec 92 20:00:08 GMT
- References: <1992Dec18.202356.3261@news.cs.indiana.edu> <22962@drutx.ATT.COM> <1992Dec23.145018.16614@vax5.cit.cornell.edu>
- Distribution: rec
- Organization: AT&T, Denver, CO
- Lines: 67
-
- In article <1992Dec23.145018.16614@vax5.cit.cornell.edu>, wd5j@vax5.cit.cornell.edu writes:
- >
- > Nancy, or anyone else who knows--is "mylase" another (wrong) way of
- > saying "amylase"? I got the CVS brand of papaya tabs last night, with
- > papain and mylase, though I forgot the mg conc. of each. Please let
- > me know. Also, why is amylase the preferred enzyme? For the mucus
- > binding the hairballs (is that what I've read?)? Thanks for your
- > reply.
-
- Well, I'm getting out of my league here. I've never heard of "mylase"
- but can't help wondering if its a typo... Can you find an 800 number
- so you can call the company to ask about it? Does it say that it is a
- starch-digesting enzyme?
-
- I frankly don't know if amylase works better than any other
- starch-digesting enzyme, only that it happens to be the enzyme in some
- brands of papaya tablets that does attack the mucous-like material that
- binds the hair into a hairball.
-
- Please keep in mind that this is NOT BASED ON ANY SCIENTIFIC STUDY, ONLY
- ON FIELD EXPERIENCE. It began when I had two angoras who both developed
- a severe hairball. One had already been through surgery to remove a
- tennisball-sized hairball. Instead of surgery, I opted to give each of
- them several papaya tablets morning and evening. Both were completely
- cured in seven days and my vets were beside themselves with amazement
- (they now use this technique regularly).
-
- After talking with both non-vet rabbit experts and vet rabbit-specialists
- around the country (some of whom conducted mini-experiments
- showing that the protein-digesting enzymes weren't digesting hair
- (pure protein) outside of a rabbit's stomach, and who also found that
- rabbits weren't responding to papaya tablets not containing amylase, it
- was tentatively concluded that it was the amylase breaking up the
- mucous-like material. (Of course, there could be something in the
- rabbit's stomach that reacts with the protein-digesting enzymes to make
- them more effective in digesting hair, but that doesn't explain why buns
- taking papaya tablets not containing amylase still get hairballs.)
-
- As a House Rabbit Society fosterer, rescuing rabbits from shelters when
- their time is up, I have had perhaps 60 rabbits during the past year
- ranging in age from a few weeks to around ten years. None of these buns
- get sufficient exercise--they spend most of their time in cages with
- weekly outdoor exercise when the weather allows it. (I do try to
- increase their exercise by adding shelves in tall cages, etc., so they
- have places to jump up and down, and most of the cages are large (4' by
- 2-1/2') or two-storied with a ramp.) None of these rabbits have had a
- single hairball, and most of those most likely to get them, I have
- had the longest (few people want a five- to ten-year old rabbit, no
- matter how sweet, gentle, friendly, or beautiful).
-
- In addition, I am an HRS educational representative, and get many calls
- from people about their rabbits. I always recommend a visit to a vet if
- the symptoms sound like a hairball, but have had many callers who were
- reluctant to go the route of surgery reccommended by the vet. Every one
- of these has successfully treated the hairball (in one case a carpet
- ball) with papaya tablets with amylase. And of hundreds of callers who
- now regularly give their bunnies these tablets, I have heard of none who
- have had a hairball to contend with.
-
- Do let me know what you find out (if you're able to call the company)
- about "mylase." Is it just a type? If not, how does it compare with
- amylase?
-
- Thanks!
-
- Nancy LaRoche (HRS)
- att!drutx!njl
-