Ozone therapy to clear the existing microbiome and biofilms before FMT | with veterinary Dr. Margo Roman Enhancing 

Enhancing the outcomes of FMT

Michael Harrop

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A 5-year-old video. She seems knowledgeable. She does FMT for/with animals. She stresses the importance of donor quality.

I can't recall seeing any studies testing ozone therapy prior to FMT. Maybe because of the quote below where the FDA says it's only toxic and has no benefit.

It doesn't appear that she's tested, much less documented, the impact of FMT "with vs without" ozone. So I don't see any evidence that ozone enhances FMT.

At 1:00:00 she says she only puts in the ozone rectally, 3-4 inches.


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Cqlg_AO3tg

Margo Roman, DVM has pioneered ozone therapy as well as MBRT (a.k.a. Fecal Transplants) in veterinary medicine here in the USA. In this webinar, she lets the cat out of the bag on why ozone therapy is so critical to the success of fecal transplants. Reducing biofilm with ozone therapy may be the answer to increasing the success rate of fecal transplants.

https://www.mbrt.life
https://www.mashvet.com/dr-margo-roman.html

After latest battle with state, MASH veterinarian Roman has license suspended (Jan 2024) https://hopkintonindependent.com/after-latest-battle-with-state-mash-veterinarian-roman-has-license-suspended/

Roman, who already was on a lengthy probation, came under fire most recently for emails she sent to veterinary clients in March and April of 2020, at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the emails, Roman strongly promoted the use of ozone therapy to fight COVID-19 and included a link to a website where clients could purchase an ozone generator and/or other ozone products. The board punished Roman for advising clients on human medical treatment, which is outside the scope of her veterinary practice.

The prosecuting counsel noted that Roman did not identify herself as having a COT in the emails, adding: “She provided this medical advice to people who were employing her to provide veterinary services, and she sent this from veterinary platforms, email. She was holding herself out as a veterinarian, as able [sic] to provide veterinary services to these people, and in that email, she provides medical advice.”

Federal authorities at the time defined ozone as a toxic gas with no known useful medical application in specific, adjunctive or preventative therapy. For ozone to be effective as a germicide, it must be present in a concentration far greater than that which can be safely tolerated by man and animals.”
 
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