Digestive System – Small Drainage Circuit
Digestive tract
After intestinal stabilization (spring 2025), a safe food was discovered by chance – moist, highly digestible, and free from irritating ingredients. It significantly helped regulate stool, but its name is intentionally omitted to avoid promotional bias.
It became clear that the dog experienced bloating even after certain probiotics – the extreme flatulence subsided only after discontinuation. Even supplements recommended by veterinarians can burden a hypersensitive organism.
Before the systemic collapse (May 2025), digestion was the only system that remained in relative balance. I recognized the severity of the issue when Chicco started vomiting – something he had never done before. After the collapse, his body was so weakened it was unclear which system would fail next. The condition was close to sepsis, although no definitive diagnosis was given.
Stool normalized only after three days of reactivation of the paws using CBD oil, confirming the interconnectedness of the musculoskeletal system, nervous system, lymphatics, and digestion.
Digestive System – Small Drainage Circuit (cont.)
I monitored and logged each defecation based on:
- consistency,
- volume,
- timing (e.g., "follow-up stool" after a flush),
- odor (e.g., intestinal discharge with a garlic-like smell – lymphatic detox),
- additives in the stool (water, clear mucus, cloudy mucus, firm physiological matter, blood).
Within the digestive system's small drainage loop, a recurring phenomenon was "empty salivating-burping" – a sudden onset of salivation accompanied by a mild burp, with no food or odor involved. This was mostly observed during periods of increased nervous tension or just before transitioning into the next drainage phase.
It was interpreted as a residual discharge – the body prepared the digestive tract for an activity (e.g., release), but the action didn't occur (due to environmental or emotional factors).
In hypersensitive dogs, this kind of discharge is understood as a regulatory signal, not a pathological symptom – evidence of the body's subtle real-time adjustment process.
In a standard patient, this behavior would likely go unnoticed or be dismissed as irrelevant. But in the context of hypersensitivity, it's a fine but crucial expression of the body's regulatory efforts – often preceding a release that might otherwise appear sudden or "unexpected."