The Day

Acupunctur­e and laser treatments are not just for humans

- By AMANDA HUTCHINSON Day Staff Writer

East Lyme — Most patients don’t fall asleep while at the doctor’s office, but Kathy Kienle’s dog Kenai was so calm during his visit with Dr. Stephanie Torlone that he started to doze off on the patient bed during treatment.

Kenai, a 10-year-old Keeshond, visits Torlone’s office in East Lyme every month for cold laser treatments and acupunctur­e to treat mobility issues related to his epilepsy and arthritis. Kienle had tried acupunctur­e for her migraines, and while it didn’t help her symptoms, she thought it might help her dog.

Three years later, she has noticed significan­t improvemen­t for him.

“We notice that if we miss a treatment, there’s a difference,” Kienle, a chemist who lives in Oakdale, said. “My husband was not a believer at first ... and we missed an appointmen­t, and he looked over and he said, ‘That was helping.’”

As a veterinari­an who specialize­s in Chinese medicine, Torlone incorporat­es both traditiona­l veterinary practices and Chinese medicine treatments such as acupunctur­e, herbs and cold laser therapy to treat her furry patients.

Around 2000, Torlone started looking into incorporat­ing acupunctur­e into her veterinari­an practice after she went through acupunctur­e herself to treat an illness.

“I felt such a dramatic improvemen­t after one treatment that I was really excited about it and intrigued,” she said. “I knew there was training so I could do it for animals, and that just launched me.”

She earned her certificat­ion in veterinary acupunctur­e from the Chi

Institute in Florida, which has graduated more than 5,500 veterinari­ans worldwide. Vets also can be certified through the Internatio­nal Veterinary Acupunctur­e Society and the American Academy for Veterinary Acupunctur­e.

While a traditiona­l vet may focus on a patient’s disease and its symptoms, Chinese medicine focuses on underlying patterns that cause symptoms. Torlone said each approach requires a different physical exam and a different set of questions for the medical history.

“You can wind up using, say, one of the herbal formulas to treat two very different diseases,” she said. “It can be confusing for people, like ‘Why did you give me something that’s labeled for diabetes when my dog has thyroid disease?’ Because the pattern is the same.”

Kenai starts his visits with a 20-minute cold laser therapy session, in which low-level lasers are used to stimulate soft tissue and loosen muscles, before the acupunctur­e session, which increases circulatio­n and releases endorphins.

Kienle said she brings him in after he gets groomed because he’s usually stiff and sore the next day, and he often gets up and walks around after Torlone sets the needles, sniffing around for the water dish and giving kisses to everyone in the room.

“We got him started before he got quite to the point where he couldn’t walk at all,” she said. “That’s the key, to not wait until it’s too late.”

She also has brought in Raven, her 6-month-old Keeshond, for treatment for kennel cough.

Torlone said most of her patients see her as a supplement to their regular veterinari­an, but more local vets have started to refer their patients to her. On average, a visit to a vet for acupunctur­e a can range from $50 to $150. Like acupunctur­e for humans, some pet health insurance plans will cover some of the cost of treatment.

Torlone speaks at an annual class for students at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst to introduce her practice, and she said she enjoys being able to spend more time with her patients and utilize both sides of her training.

“I like that I can use my western medical training as well as my eastern medical training and combine the two because it gives me a lot of different tools,” she said. “It’s really gratifying to have some different approaches to be able to do that.” seems to me just the kind of Democrat that Connecticu­t needs — sensible, caring, honest and pragmatic.

Once he beats Sen. Linares in the 33rd Senate District, I’d like to see him set his sights on the governor’s mansion.

Although you might wonder who would want that. That’s what I thought the day of Obama’s first inaugurati­on, as he walked down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue: Who would want that job, getting the country out of the deep ditch George Bush drove it into?

Mr. Fizz was at his best in the debate with Linares when he talked about Connecticu­t’s spending problem, how the status quo of legislator­s packing treats for their constituen­ts into the budget must end.

“We have a spending problem in the state of Connecticu­t,” he said. “It’s got to stop.”

I also liked his answer to a question about the ballooning costs of state pensions.

Needleman said he’d put everyone with a stake, including the union leadership, into one room and bring in the best bankruptcy attorney in the country to read everyone the riot act.

“The ‘Come to Jesus’ moment has to happen,” he said. “We either solve it together or we go down together.”

Of course it also helped me that Linares failed the Trump test miserably, indeed in hypocritic­al Trumpian fashion.

Here’s someone who has built a successful business with help from both federal tax breaks for renewable energy and assistance from the state of Connecticu­t, which arranged favorable electricit­y purchase rates for his solar farm, endorsing the No. 1 climate-change denier.

Linares, like Trump, wants more tax cuts for himself.

He’s our own Trump Lite.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Veterinari­an Dr. Stephanie Torlone performs an acupunctur­e treatment on Kenai, a 10-year-old Keeshond, with the help of Kenai’s owner, Kathy Kienle of Montville, on Tuesday in her Niantic office.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Veterinari­an Dr. Stephanie Torlone performs an acupunctur­e treatment on Kenai, a 10-year-old Keeshond, with the help of Kenai’s owner, Kathy Kienle of Montville, on Tuesday in her Niantic office.

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