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Vet Gazette

Oregon State University College of Veterinary Medicine eNewsletter

Homecoming Chili Cook-Off at Magruder!

September 12th, 2012

Nothing tastes better than a hot bowl of chili on a crisp fall day at an OSU football game!

That is especially true when you chow down at a chili cookoff where 100% of the proceeds go to support OSU College of Vet Med scholarships . . .  and it’s Homecoming!

Make a note to stop by Magruder Hall two hours before Kickoff on Saturday, October 20th for CVM’s first annual Chili Cookoff sponsored by SCAVMA.  A suggested $5 donation will allow you to taste a variety of delicious chilis and vote for your favorite. Plus you will get a yummy bowl of Willamette Valley Animal Hospital’s chili with all the fixin’s!  Additional voting tickets can be purchased so chefs may encourage friends and families to come hungry and vote often!

Student chefs will compete as individuals for a $500 scholarship and as clubs for a $250 contribution.

In a separate section, non-student competitors (CVM staff, faculty, and alumni) will compete for bragging rights and a CVM prize package.

If you have a smokin’ chili recipe and want to compete, contact aarika.guerrero@oregonstate.edu (students) or lyn.smith-gloria@oregonstate.edu (non-students). CVM will set up the tables and provide drinks, condiments, and utensils — you bring a crockpot of your best chili!

Go Beavs (but don’t go hungry)!

 

 

Model Shows Complex Anatomy

September 11th, 2012

As a prey animal in the wild, horses developed the ability to sleep standing up via a “stay apparatus” that allows them to relax their muscles and doze without collapsing. In the front legs, the apparatus automatically engages when their muscles relax. In the hind legs, the horse engages it by shifting its hip position to lock the patella in place.

Dr. Terri Clark, assistant professor of anatomy, needed a good way to show students how the stay apparatus works. So she ordered a box of bones and put Annamaria Tadlock (Class of 2015) to work on a model.

Tadlock started with nothing but the bones from the left front leg of a horse. She went to a hardware store for screws and a specialty store for some leather. Clark provided epoxy and wire. Tadlock had to figure out where to go from there.

Most of the models in the CVM anatomy classroom have been glued together but that wouldn’t work here. Clark wanted a moveable model that would demonstrate how the ligaments and tendons prevent the fetlock from overextending. “The goal is for students to better understand the stay apparatus of the front limb of the horse,” she says.

Tadlock cut strips of leather to represent the ligaments and tendons and she used rubber tubing to represent the muscle bellies. “I watched a video of a similar stay apparatus that a professor built. It was a grainy old video that Dr. Clark had. I also used pictures from Dr. Clark’s lectures. I sized the leather strips by cutting them longer than I needed, placing them on the bones and then gradually cutting them down until it was right.”

The hardest part for Tadlock was working on all the small bones in the carpus. “It’s a double joint that needs to flex. The way I originally wired it together, it kept breaking so I had to change from two single loops to making a system of moveable wire chain that took the pressure off. I also used a heavier wire.”

In addition to the carpentry skills needed for this project, Tadlock’s leather-working experience came in handy. “The leather is not new to me because my husband and I make leather journals and bags.”

Having taken Clark’s class, Tadlock understands personally how useful this model will be.” I think it will be really helpful for students to be able to see some of the smaller ligaments and where they go because when you are dissecting, it’s hard to separate them out. With this you can unhook each individual “ligament” to see the ones underneath.”

Despite the challenge of constructing the carpus, Tadlock enjoyed this project. “It was really neat when I finally had it all together and it actually stood on its own,” she says.

 

CVM Student Wins National Award

September 10th, 2012

Ali McKayCVM student Alison McKay received this year’s scholarship from the Winn Feline Foundation and the American Veterinary Medical Foundation.

Long committed to volunteerism, McKay finds time in her busy academic schedule to work with local rescue organizations like the Feral Cat Coalition of Oregon, Salem Friends of Felines, and Pro-Bone-O of Eugene, Oregon. She is the secretary for the CVM Shelter Medicine club and  has organized several free wellness clinics for pets of senior citizens.

McKay will be starting her fourth year soon and plans to complete preceptorships at Corvallis Cat Care and West Vet, an internal medicine and emergency practice near Boise, Idaho. “I also plan to spend two weeks at Angell Animal Medical Center in Boston, spending
one week on cardiology and one week on internal medicine,” she says. “I am very interested in feline medicine, therefore my senior project will focus on CT imaging of cats with feline asthma.”

The Winn/AVMF scholarship came at a good time for McKay. Like many vet students, she has adopted homeless pets and when they get sick, the cost of veterinary care is added to the high cost of her education. “I plan to use the Winn money to pay off my cat’s vet bills,” she says.

New Vet Camp for High School Students

August 22nd, 2012

Development of a completely new program is a challenging puzzle. What will you need? How will it go together? Will anyone show up?

This summer, Luiz Bermudez, head of the CVM Department of Biomedical Sciences, and Sue Tornquist, Associate Dean for Student Services, put the pieces together and provided a Summer Veterinary Experience for ten high school students from around Oregon.

The OSU Summer Veterinary Experience is a hands-on learning opportunity for academically talented, low-income and minority high school students interested in veterinary medicine. The students were selected based on their science grades, the recommendation of a teacher, and an essay written by them about their interest in veterinary medicine. Each student got a full scholarship, including housing and meals for one week.

Read the rest of this entry »

New ‘One Health’ Graduate Program

August 22nd, 2012

Public health agencies are faced with a future of complex, global health challenges. The One Health Initiative is a worldwide movement to address those challenges by encouraging communication and collaboration between a variety of health science professionals – medical doctors, veterinarians, pharmacologists, behavioral scientists, and more. One of the major goals of the One Health Initiative is to encourage interdisciplinary biomedical research and help accelerate discoveries.

CVM is responding to this challenge with a new graduate program in Comparative Health Sciences, the first of its kind in Oregon. This program will be a cornerstone in CVM’s mission to build an integrative research program that investigates the causes, prevention, and treatment of chronic diseases which often result from complex interactions between infectious agents, people, animals, and the environment.

The Comparative Health Sciences graduate program will offer both M.S. and Ph.D. degrees and includes three laboratory rotations that provide opportunities for students to experience different research environments. Consistent with the interdisciplinary philosophy of the new program, faculty from other colleges will be invited to participate in instruction. In fact, the program is expected to become increasingly integrative as a community of scholars with common interests grows around it. To facilitate this further, the OSU Division of Health Sciences recently announced a set of interdisciplinary research grants.

For more information about requirements and admission to the Comparative Health Sciences graduate program, visit the CVM website.

 

Faculty Inspire Talented Kids

August 22nd, 2012

Dr. Wendy Baltzer explains how the underwater treadmill helps pets who are recovering from surgery or joint injuries.

Limited funding in public schools has gutted most district’s TAG (Talented and Gifted) programs but every summer, the OSU College of Veterinary Medicine picks up some of the slack with Adventures in Learning (AIL).

AIL provides an opportunity for twelve middle school students to spend an hour each day for ten days with CVM faculty learning about veterinary medicine. Coordinated by Dr. Dan Rockey, the program introduces the kids to diagnostic imaging, blood work, necropsy and surgery. They also spend an hour with Dr. Wendy Baltzer learning about pet rehabilitation and this year, rehab technician Sarah Smith let them try out the underwater treadmill themselves.

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