John Hickenlooper: Get to know Skye, our rescue from Fort Collins
She was brought in by Colorado State University veterinary school, and Dr. Michael Lappin put me together with Skye, and she's just amazing.
She was brought in by Colorado State University veterinary school, and Dr. Michael Lappin put me together with Skye, and she's just amazing.
VIDEO: Veterinary pathologist Dr. Amy MacNeill and her team are using the vaccinia virus to make a vaccine that might protect against coronavirus.
Dr. Nicole Ehrhart and Greg Ebel had their big "ah-ha" moment a few weeks into testing hundreds of skilled nursing facility workers for the coronavirus.
'Colorado’ is another song I really like, what’s the story to that? "I wrote this one about my dog believe it or not. There isn’t a cure for mitral valve disease in dogs. But, I wasn’t willing to accept that. So I did a bunch of research and found a veterinary cardiologist at CSU who was conducting clinical trials on a prosthetic mitral valve replacement."
Titled “Retrospective Multi-Center Analysis of Canine Socket Prostheses for Partial Limbs,” this retrospective study by Drs. Theresa Wendland, Felix Duerr and Bernard Seguin surveyed pet parents who purchased prosthetic devices for their dogs within the last ten years.
Dr. Robert Callan is a vet at Colorado State University, and he also has a PhD in virology. "They found that a couple of these antibodies do a very, very, very effective job of neutralizing the virus. There's a lot of things that won't work," Callan says of coronavirus research, "but hopefully we find a few gems in there, and this could be one of them."
Using a manufacturing platform developed to prevent the transmission of disease during blood transfusions, IDRC staffers are working with the faculty of several departments at CSU to test an internally developed vaccine candidate dubbed SolaVAX.
A Colorado State University veterinary pathologist, Dr. Amy MacNeill, and her team are using the vaccinia virus to make a vaccine that might protect against coronavirus.
Faculty and staff gathered to send off recent graduates of CSU's Doctor of Veterinary Medicine program Monday. The grads had a message of their own.
CSU will also partner with the Dumb Friends League at Vida to offer a donor-subsidized clinic for companion animals while providing hands-on education for veterinary students.