Zoobiquity Colorado explores connections between human and animal health
Nearly 200 people attended Zoobiquity Colorado, a national meeting on regenerative medicine advances.
Nearly 200 people attended Zoobiquity Colorado, a national meeting on regenerative medicine advances.
At the 2018 Western Veterinary Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada, Michael Lappin, DVM, PhD, DACVIM, discussed the potential immunologic benefits of probiotics in veterinary medicine.
Mather found herself at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, boasting one of the nation's premier veterinary research hospitals. If she were to find an answer to Taz's illness, it would be at CSU.
Colorado State University’s veterinary campus will soon have more space to house dogs, cats and rodents needing care.
The clinic, held for the fifth year, brings in veterinarians and students from Colorado State University’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital in Fort Collins to help local owners who can’t afford high-cost pet care in an area with few local clinics.
CSU will honor College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences alumni Dr. Bill Lance, and Dr. Norm and Ann Jorgensen at the annual Distinguished Alumni Awards dinner, Oct. 11.
I emailed Ilan Frank, a third-year resident at the Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation service at Colorado State University’s veterinary teaching hospital. “Ice-melting salts, which usually contain chloride, can create acid that can harm the foot-pads,” he tells me. It’s not a conspiracy, after all.
According to Rodney Page, DVM, a veterinarian and director of the Flint Animal Cancer Center, the sorts of cancers that dogs get — skin cancer, breast cancer, lymphoma — mimic the cancers that humans develop.
The Colorado Veterinary Medical Association named Dr. Rebecca Ruch-Gallie the 2018 Veterinarian of the Year.
CSU’s Dr. Elena Contreras, DVM MS initiated the study after becoming inspired by her Tripawd Torpedo, who had a TPLO surgery for a torn CCL on his remaining rear limb when he was about 10 years old.