Most people use a syringe to squirt a dose down an animal's throat.
If you mix MMS1 with an antioxidant food, the chlorine dioxide (CLO2) will be reduced or eliminated.
An easy way to get CLO2 into your dog would be to use unactivated MMS (SCS). Stomach acid will activate the sodium chlorite. Dogs and cats have much more stomach acid than humans. See attached PDF file.
On Telegram group, someone wrote that MMS (unactivated) is not good for animals. That someone's cat had got a cough due to MMS and died of it, and that only MMS1 (activated MMS) or CDS should be used. Is that true?
My dog doesn't want to be close to MMS1 or CDS due to the smell. MMS goes fine on the other hand, and we have done protocols for animals using MMS. I only noticed that when the dose is too high but didn't improve nor got worse, she'd just get too tired. So I reduced the dose and even moved on to Sodium Chlorite protocol, there she gets 2 drops of MMS in 400ml water. Once she drinks that, other time she chooses clean water.
p.s. Is it "inactivated" or "unactivated"?