Saturday, November 7, 2020

Most up to date info

 Here's a link that will take you to where you can the answers to many of your questions:

https://savedistemperdogs.com/2020/11/05/resources-and-information/

You can also check out the book published earlier this year.


https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08CJR77TQ

Friday, March 25, 2011

What do we charge?

If you're wondering how much it costs to find out about the NDV treatments, the info is FREE! (We don't mind getting donations to cover costs of getting the message out. We are a nonprofit charity.)

But check with the vets on what they charge for their services. They do have a business to run, after all.If you need help finding a vet, e-mail ed.bond.new.york@gmail.com.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

There is hope for distemper dogs



Please read our report on the effectiveness of the NDV treatments.

If you have a dog with canine distemper, you should get to the website for Kind Hearts In Action where you will find the protocols explaining how to make the NDV-induced serum discovered by Dr. Al Sears of Lancaster, California, in the late 1960s.

Dr. Sears was unable to publish his discovery and he retired from veterinary medicine in 2006 after more than 40 years in practice. However, his protocols for the NDV-induced serum has been available on a website started by Ed Bond in May 2000. Since then, some vets have followed his treatments and theories with success. Today, the NDV treatments include the NDV-induced serum, the NDV as an IV injection to the body and the NDV spinal tap, which is for dogs in the neurologic stage of distemper.

The full protocols on these treatments is available in a PDF download here.

The materials on these websites are provided by Dr. Sears and meant to be used by other vets. Kind Hearts In Action does not offer veterinary treatments or medicine. If you need help finding a vet, please e-mail Ed Bond at ed.bond.new.york@gmail.com. Tell us where you are, what breed and how old a dog you have, whether you have a diagnosis of distemper, what symptoms you have seen and whether you have seen seizures or neurologic problems yet.

These treatments are not a miracle cure, but distemper dogs treated with the NDV-induced serum before going through the sixth day of symptoms have a high rate of survival. Dr. Sears reports that he saved dogs at a rate in the high 90s. A vet in Houston also reports saving 90 percent of 150 distemper dogs treated with NDV-serum in 2010 as part of Project Hope. But the serum does not save dogs who have reached the neurologic stage. For those dogs, the treatment is the NDV spinal tap, but the survival rate for those dogs is only about 50 percent. However, dogs in that stage usually die or are euthanized. More statistics on the effectiveness of the NDV treatments are available here. Unfortunately, not every dog makes it, but more dogs survive when their owners try.

How you can help Save Dogs From Canine Distemper

Save Dogs From Canine Distemper is a project of Kind Hearts In Action a 501c3, dog-oriented charity, and we gladly accept donations. We also offer a two-hour DVD of a lecture by Dr. Sears on his treatments for a $10 donation, plus shipping. But our ultimate goal is to help Dr. Sears achieve what he couldn't when he was a practicing vet: publication in a veterinary journal. Since December 2008, we have been compiling photos, videos and owner testimonials about dogs that have been saved with the NDV-induced serum, the NDV as IV injection and the NDV spinal tap. But we also recently learned that a study on the effectiveness of the NDV-induced serum was conducted in Korea in 2003 where 52 percent of distemper dogs had been saved, and Dr. Sears serum has been made available through the Korean Animal Blood Bank since 2004.

While we have numbers, we need more details. To continue to build the case for Dr. Sears' serum, we need to compile more reports on specific cases from vets who have used it. We need details from vets on dog breed, age, symptoms, diagnosis, outcomes and relevant dates. If you have a dog that has been treated with the NDV-induced serum and you want the results included in a proposed article for veterinary publication, please have your vet contact Ed Bond, the project director for canine distemper for Kind Hearts In Action. Any vet who submits information would be credited in the resulting article.

We also still post videos, photos and owner testimonials and if you would like to have a Web page about your dog on our site -- as a success story if it lived or as a memorial if it died -- please write to Ed Bond

For more news about the battle against canine distemper, follow Kind Hearts In Action through our main website, on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Ed Bond
project director on canine distemper
Kind Hearts In Action

Thursday, February 5, 2009

What you need to know/do

What you need to know

First, here's the FAQ. But read on.

Dr. Alson Sears, a retired veterinarian formerly of Lancaster, Calif., has developed a serum that can effectively treat and save a dog infected with canine distemper.

This serum is not considered a replacement for the distemper vaccine developed in 1950. But despite the widespread use of the vaccine, there are still cases of distemper in the United States and around the world. The distemper vaccine prevents the disease. Dr. Sears’ treatment is a way of effectively fighting the disease after the dog gets sick.

The key to the serum is the Newcastle virus vaccine, which was developed for chickens. However, in dogs the vaccine creates a response that can turn off the distemper virus. The serum is created by using a donor dog who is injected with the vaccine. The vaccine can be purchased at any agricultural store that deals with poultry.

Until very recently, this treatment had been considered only effective with dogs in the early stages of the disease – before the onset of neurological seizures. That is still the easiest and simplest way to defeat the disease, and it is still recommended that an infected dog be treated with the serum within six days of the onset of symptoms. However, a new procedure has been developed that by the end of 2008 has saved four dogs from the neurological phase of the disease.

Dr. Sears discovered this serum in the late 1960s by accident, trying out an experimental procedure. He made a mistake in following this other protocol and unintentionally created his serum. However, suddenly dogs with distemper were getting better because of this mistake. He doesn't know how or why the serum works, and to find out would cost money that he doesn't have.

I believe in this treatment because my dog, Galen, came down with canine distemper in 1997. Dr. Sears treated him before the seizures hit, and Galen was completely cured. He lived a full life for nine years until he died of liver disease in October 2006.

I also believe in this treatment because in the past nine years, since I first posted my Web site on this treatment, I have heard from pet owners from around the world whose dogs have been saved by Dr. Sears’ serum. So many more dogs could have been saved if only their owners would have heard of the treatment in time.

What you need to do

1) If you suspect your dog has canine distemper, you need to confirm that the dog has the disease.

From Dr. Sears:

“The best test for rapidly diagnosing ACUTE distemper is to do what is called a brush border smear of the cells of the lining of the bladder. These cells ALWAYS have inclusions if distemper is present. So, easy to collect, easy to stain (quick dip) and instantly diagnosed inclusions in these cells are carmine red and para nuclear. These inclusions will NOT be present in long term distemper cases.

“Any medical person can tell you how to get cells from the bladder. Urinary catheter. Empty bladder, flush with saline and collect some of the last saline. Spin down the saline and remove the cells. Place on slide and dry stain with diff-quick. Very common stain used by most medics or lab people who use medical microscopy. Everyone? I should hope so. Very fast, very cheap, very accurate for Dx of distemper. If present then Distemper. If negative, then either Kennel Cough or Respiratory Herpes. or Toxoplasmosis."

Don't wait. Procrastination can mean death.

2) If it is distemper, you should contact Dr. Sears at: antidistemper@aol.com

3) Because Dr. Sears is retired. You will need to find a vet willing to use Dr. Sears’ treatment. This will also include acquiring the Newcastle virus vaccine. If you have trouble finding a vet, please contact the Save Dogs From Canine Distemper group on Facebook. We may be able to help you, depending on where you are. We also can offer practical support while you are going through this ordeal.

4) You will also have to find a donor dog to create the serum. The ideal dog would be an 8-12 month old mixed breed dog 60-100 lbs, young and healthy. From Dr. Sears: "(This is) perfectly safe in donor dogs. However, I would advise a younger mixed breed so that you have the best of immune systems to function. What is amazing is that it can be collected in serum and stored for up to 5 years and maintain it's effectiveness. This is why we used serum." However, you may not have time to make the serum. Or it may be difficult to find a donor dog. Also serum cannot be legally shipped, so it would have to be made by a vet at a clinic and the sick dog would have to be treated there.

5) BUT, often using the straight vaccine may also be effective. Here's a page that explains that treatment. HOWEVER, the straight vaccine will not work for puppies 12 weeks old or younger or for any other dog with a immune system too weak to create the needed cytokines. The straight vaccine will not work if, for example, the dog has been fighting the disease for weeks. Early treatment is always best.
The dosage depends on the weight of the dog. From Dr. Sears: " Anything under 10 lb. gets 1/2 cc IV. UP to 20 lb. 1cc IV. for 20 to 40 lbs use 2 cc IV. Anything larger use 2.5 cc IV." Again, don't wait. Procrastination means death.

6) In battling the disease, you also must be very careful about preventing secondary infections. The dog's immune system is weakened, and so other diseases may strike. You will need to continue a regimen given by your vet to keep your dog’s immune system as strong as possible.

7) Even if the treatment is successful, the disease has probably done damage to the lungs, stomach, eyes, pads of the feet, etc. You will need to treat these symptoms as needed.

8) If your dog has gone in to the neurological phase, you will need to pursue the NDV spinal tap treatment, which involves an injection into the spinal canal. Here are Dr. Sears’ notes on this treatment. However, our statistics show that the survival rate of dogs that go through the NDV spinal tap is only about 50 percent. Still, this is better than doing nothing. Most dogs in the neurologic stage do not live.

9) Please document your case. Take photos, keep copies of records that show your dog’s progression into the disease and into recovery. Post your stories to the Facebook page. We need these records and your stories to establish a track record of successes.

How to help

If you want to help us further, please donate to our 501c3 charity, Kind Hearts In Action. Donations to our cause can be made here.

You can also join the Facebook group, invite your friends to join and if you have a Web site or blog, please add these links to your site:




This will help us improve our ranking on search engines to make it easier for owners of dogs with distemper to find us. Thanks.

Also, you could help us A LOT if you would be willing to use your dog as a serum donor.

Ed Bond

Another canine distemper Web site: SaveDistemperDogs.COM




Facebook group

Canine Distemper - Main Page
Report on effectiveness of NDV
Video gallery

How the serum is made