
List Price: $21.25
Sale Price: $11.60
Today's Bonus: 45% Off

I do fully recommend this product. My cat had both eyes healing very slowly with the very expensive drops and ointment from the animal optometist. He had ocular herpes severely. The poor guy even had to have an eye operation.
I started giving him Lysine from a pill's contents, but he could detect it in his food. With this powder, I don't even have to mix it in the moist food completely, he justs chows down as usual.
His eyes are clear now and the meds are for usage once a week only, for maintenance. There was a very distinguished improvement in his healing after the Lysine supplementation. I don't know why the vet didn't educate me about using L-Lysine to help stop the progression of the herpes virus. It worked very well, I will buy the big bottle next time!!!
Stay tuned, I have a feeling that I can discontinue the meds completely and rely on the Lysine to keep the herpes outbreaks at bay. When they run out, I will try the Lysine only and see if I am right.
Click Here to Read More Reviews >>
Our cat's Veterinarian recommended starting her on VET Viralys (L-Lysine)because it is believed that it boosts the cat's immune system to minimize the Feline Herpes Virus outbreaks and severity of them.The cat has had an outbreak since starting the product a little over a month ago but the episode was much milder and shorter in duration then the initial outbreak. Her eye teared only slightly and the shedding was limited and not difficult to control.
We believe the product is helping as it was intended. The only drawback is having to give the Cat 2 doses each day which requires hiding it in a small amount of moist cat food. Even then, it is well worth keeping it in her diet.
Buy Vetoquinol Viralys Powder 100 Gram Jar Now
i could only get this product from my vet. i am glad that i can now get it on line and for a good price.Read Best Reviews of Vetoquinol Viralys Powder 100 Gram Jar Here
I purchased this for an indoor/outdoor cat that adopted me. Kitty is FIV+ and tends to keep an upper resp. infection. I originally was purchasing the Lysine treats from my Vet which were 120 for $30. Considering I was giving Kitty 4/day (the max allowed) and his "owner" decided she suddenly wanted him, I wasn't comfortable leaving expensive treats outside hoping Kitty would get them (the birds started eating the food I was leaving out for him as well as other dogs/cats). So I found this poduct and purchased it.It's been almost a month, and although Kitty's eyes are clear, he is still raspy. The treats seemed to be more effective. But I also haven't compared the dosages to each other, so I probably need to adjust the powder to equal that of the 4 treats. Kitty also receives an oral immune booster prescribed by the vet administered whenever I can get to him.I have a cat who is a rescue kitty from a shelter and who had chronic weepy eyes, and also a history of eye infections. Right after I got her she got conjunctivitis and an eye infection, and I treated her with eye ointment prescribed by the vet (but also available on Amazon Terramycin Opthlamic Ointment), eyewash, and hot compresses. She had to stay quarantined and she was associating me with disagreeable things. When she seemed better except for weepy eyes, a shelter person recommended I try Lysine and that has cleared her eyes up almost completely, so that the vet said she is fine to be with the other cats. The vet also said she recommends giving it to all cats, so I don't have to isolate her feeding, and it is not very expensive. I mostly give it to her twice a day still, but sometimes she gets sick of having it mixed in her food so we skip it for a while, and her eyes still look good. The more palatable the food to start with, the less likely the cats will reject the addition of Lysine. As reasonable as the cost is, it would be nice if shelters could give it to their symptomatic cats.
0 comments:
Post a Comment