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Vet Gazette

Oregon State University College of Veterinary Medicine eNewsletter

SCAVMA Dinner at Oregon Vet Conference

February 5th, 2013

Come meet our fabulous students! The OSU Student Chapter of the American Veterinary Medical Association (SCAVMA) is hosting its annual dinner at the Oregon Veterinary Conference on Saturday, March 9th at 6 pm in the LaSells Stewart Center in Corvallis. This is a great opportunity for veterinarians, alumni, and friends to network with current students and faculty.

This come-as-you-are event, held in the Giustina Art Gallery, features entertainment and a no-host bar. Please purchase tickets in advance with your conference registration and consider sponsoring a veterinary student’s attendance as well. Tickets are $30 each.

Come and join us for what is always a fun event!

Do People Get Dogs Who Look Like Them?

February 5th, 2013

There are lots of websites with funny photos of people who look like their dogs. But, according to researchers at a British University, these are not isolated cases. When given photos of strangers, members of the public could predict which breed of dog a person would own almost twice as accurately as expected. Read more.

Humane Society Kitty Cam

February 5th, 2013

In the past two years, nearly 100,000 cat lovers from 120 countries have played with the cats in the Oregon Humane Society’s (OHS)  robotic cat playroom.

Did they hop on a plane for their yearly fix of feline fun? Nope, cat fans from all over the world can sit at home and use their computers to control the whiz-bang fuzzy tails and spinning gew-gaws that engage the cats in a glass-walled room at the OHS shelter in north Portland. Of course, cats being cats, they only play when they are in the mood.

One word of caution: The robotic cat playroom can be addictive. The average interactive time per viewer is 15 minutes and 85% of people who visit the site, return to play again. But the playroom is more than just frivolous fun for humans, it also serves a valuable purpose for the shelter: It helps socialize the cats and reduce boredom. And it has increased cat adoptions at the OHS by 16%.

 

It’s Time to Take Down Forestry!

January 24th, 2013

 

Eat Your Way to Victory!

The CVM Fun Committee has planned a whole month of great events to raise money for the OSU Food Drive. The goal: Set a record and beat the pesky College of Forestry! You can help us eat our way to victory . . .  Just show up and nosh!

  • Hot Dog Extravaganza: Wednesday, January 30th, Noon – 1 pm
  • Mmmm Good Soup Sale: Monday, February 4th, Noon – 1 pm
  • Get some sweets for your sweetheart at the CVM Bake Sale! February 12 – 14.
  • Hot! Hot! Hot! Chili cookoff on February 20th, Noon – 1 pm
  • Cupcake Wars!! Monday, February 25th

 

 

Vet Students From Brazil Enjoy OSU

January 15th, 2013

Veterinary medical school is hard work for anyone. Imagine taking Small Animal Medicine in Chinese.

That’s the kind of challenge Ana Berreta and Jacqueline Hanassaka are tackling as exchange students enrolled full-time in CVM classes. Although the two students from Brazil speak English well, processing large quantities of technical information in a foreign language can be exhausting. “It is a lot of stuff to learn and get into the English,” says Berreta. “You have to keep concentrated translating and putting it on the computer. It’s like you have to pay attention twice.”

The two women were selected to study at OSU by Science without Borders, an initiative of the Brazilian Government that provides scholarships for their best students to study abroad. The goal of the program is to strengthen and expand science and technology in Brazil.

Both women are enrolled in veterinary medical school in Brazil, Berreta at Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul in Porto Alegre, and Hanassake at the University of Sao Paolo. With a population of 17 million, Sao Paolo is Brazil’s largest city and Hanassaka takes a two hour bus-ride to get from home to university. Berreta also has a long bus-ride to school. They find the small town atmosphere of OSU to be a nice change. “You have a better quality of life living so close to the school. You don’t have to stay so long on the bus and sometimes the buses are full of people and you have to stand up. It is really complicated,” says Berreta. “You have more time to study,” adds Hanassaka.

In Brazil, the veterinary medicine curriculum includes more animal science. “We have a lot of food animal production [classes],” says Berreta. “Veterinarians are responsible for food inspection; everything that comes from animals, veterinarians have to take care of that in Brazil.” That is why veterinary college takes more than five years to complete. “Its been nice here because I want to work with equine medicine so for me it’s good to focus on one thing and not have to think about all the other stuff” she adds.

Berreta and Hanassaka will study at OSU through Spring term then return to Brazil to complete their degrees. Meanwhile, they are working hard to take advantage of their time here. “We want to keep up, have good grades and learn a lot,” says Berreta.

As a counterpart of Science without Borders, Brazil provides ‘Inbound Fellowships’ for researchers from around the world. The ‘Young Talent’ awards fully fund 1-3 year research stays in Brazil (round-trip tickets, relocation expenses, a tax-free highly competitive lecturer-level monthly allowance, a contribution toward research costs and funding for research assistantship). To learn more about this opportunity, visit  http://www.cienciasemfronteiras.gov.br/web/csf-eng/opportunities-for-individuals-from-abroad.

School Mascot Has Surgery at CVM

January 14th, 2013
Sparky Surgery

Drs. Jennifer Warnock and Milan Milovancev remove a squamous cell carcinoma from the wing of a bald eagle.

Sparky is a crowd favorite at the Chintimini Wildlife Center (CWC) near Corvallis where the bald eagle participates in education programs. Rescued as a juvenile, his congenital feather disease prevents him from flying so he is unable to hunt. In 2005, Sparky was adopted by Mountain View Elementary as their school mascot. They even wrote a book about his life that they published and now sell in the school office. All proceeds go to the CWC.

This year Sparky faced another big challenge in his unusual life: he was diagnosed with dermal squamous cell carcinoma, a form of skin cancer. It originated in his feather follicle and grew quickly into a large tumor surrounding one feather. It prevented him from folding his wing properly.

Last week, Drs. Jennifer Warnock and Milan Milovancev removed the tumor at the Lois Bates Acheson Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Little is known about avian squamous cell carcinoma but Milovancev says this type of cancer is “considered locally aggressive in dogs. It grows fast locally but usually does not metastasize. In dogs, if you remove the tumor entirely, it is usually curative.”

Now recovering in his aviary at CWC, the staff there will regularly check Sparky’s wings for signs of the cancer returning. Meanwhile, Sparky is doing great. “I have never seen him eat as much as he did after the surgery,” says  Education Program Director Kris Downing. “He is a pretty happy eagle anyway, and now to see him healthy again makes me happy. I can’t begin to tell how grateful I am for OSU’s role in helping Sparky,”

Related video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OBiVwUwzhw

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