Coloradoan: These formerly bald dogs had a reunion with the CSU vets who helped
Dr. Elena Contreras and Dr. Clarissa Souza organized a reunion for shelter dogs that were treated for demodex and later adopted.
Dr. Elena Contreras and Dr. Clarissa Souza organized a reunion for shelter dogs that were treated for demodex and later adopted.
Veterinary care and historic textiles don’t often intersect, but recently the staff at the Avenir Museum of Design and Merchandising and CSU’s James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital collaborated in an effort to solve a needlework mystery.
Dr. Mark Russak is past president of AAHA. He earned both his bachelor’s degree and DVM from Colorado State University
Hosted by CSU almuna Dr. Marge Chandler, the webinar will explore what is known about skin and GI reactions to food, and how to cut to the nutritional truth. Chandler is a consultant in small animal nutrition at VetsNow Referrals.
Wyoming wildlife researchers working at Fort Laramie National Historic Site in Goshen County have detected the fungus that causes white-nose syndrome in bats, the first such finding in the state. They sent samples to Colorado State University’s Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory and the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Wildlife Health Center for independent testing.
This month’s expert: Diana Hassel, DVM, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Equine Emergency Surgery and Critical Care and the Equine Section Chief at the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences at Colorado State University.
One of the biggest advancements in the equipment concerns minimally invasive procedures using endoscopy, according to David Twedt, DVM, DACVIM, a professor of clinical sciences at Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital.
“Communication in animal care is important, because you might be talking about where you give a cow an injection, and that location affects how long the medicine is in the cow’s system, and how well that medicine will work,” said Dr. Noa Roman-Muniz, a CSU veterinary alumna who is now as associate professor in the Department of Animal Sciences and a CSU Extension dairy specialist. “So it’s about human and animal health and safety, as well as food quality.”