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Vet Gazette

Oregon State University College of Veterinary Medicine eNewsletter

Alumna Rides Into Reality Television

October 24th, 2011
Marla riding Lucy

Alumna Marla Van Dyke Competing with Lucy

When Marla Van Dyke was a vet med student doing her externship at a practice near Eugene, she adopted a two-week-old Paint Horse named Lucy who had been rejected by her mother. Raising a new foal was a big job for a busy vet student so Marla’s sister Jill took on the constant feeding schedule. But once Marla graduated with her DVM, she and Lucy became inseparable. Little did they know that ten years later their special bond would lead them into the bright lights of reality television.

Marla grew up on a farm in Gaston, Oregon where her family raised registered Polled Herefords, hay, and row crops. And they always had horses. Marla was active in 4-H and FFA and received many awards for her horse and beef projects. From the time she was little, she wanted to be a veterinarian. “If you have animals, sooner or later something is going to happen that needs veterinary attention,” she says. “I can’t remember a time when the vet was called out and I wasn’t there watching.”

Her dream came true when she enrolled in the OSU College of Veterinary Medicine in 1996. She remembers those years fondly. “I still think that OSU has one of the most beautiful campuses I’ve seen,” she says. “I met some lifelong friends there, played in the marching band for four years, and got to attend one the best veterinary schools in the country.”

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VDL Joins Fight Against Food Contamination

October 24th, 2011

EggLast year the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced a massive egg recall when a salmonella outbreak at two major egg producers sickened 1,700 people. Contaminated chicken feed was the culprit.

The FDA relies on a network of government agencies and laboratories to investigate and diagnose food contamination outbreaks and they have their hands full. Salmonella alone accounts for food emergencies that affect an estimated 400,000 people each year. Listeria, e. coli and other food-borne pathogens affect hundreds of thousands more. If a contamination incident is related to animal feed, the testing needed to identify the cause is done by veterinary diagnostic laboratories.

In March of 2011 the FDA created the Veterinary Laboratory Response Network to expedite their ability to respond to food emergencies. The OSU Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory (VDL) was recently asked to join that network. “We have agreed to provide surge capacity to other member labs in the event of an animal feed contamination event,” says VDL director Jerry Heidel.  This will primarily involve the bacteriology section of the VDL but the FDA’s future objectives for the network include sharing and coordination of facilities and data.

Really Big Horses Inspire Student

October 24th, 2011

Student Laura Meadows with her draft horse Tiny Tim

For most people, the closest they will ever come to a draft horse is through a television screen. Most of us are familiar with the perfectly matched and perfectly groomed Clydesdales in a Budweiser commercial but draft horses were originally bred for ploughing and other hard labor. There are still a few farmers and loggers who use them to pull heavy loads but their huge size makes them expensive to feed and expensive to shoe so even horse lovers rarely own them for fun.

Veterinary medical student Laura Meadows has a passion for draft horses. Growing up on a ranch in Wyoming, she spent her childhood pursuing horse-related activities of all kinds: trail riding, dressage, light horse driving . . . you name it. But draft horses have a special place in her heart because they allowed her to spend time with her rancher dad. “We drove using horses my whole life,” says Meadows. “We have always done it as a way to feed our cows and horses in the winter. Imagine a farmer in the 1900s out there feeding his livestock with a sleigh full of hay; that’s how we feed our cows.”

It’s not surprising that Meadows has always dreamt of becoming a veterinarian. Now in her second year at the College of Veterinary Medicine (CVM), she chose OSU because of small class size and the opportunity to experience a new environment. “New rivers, new trails, new everything,” she says. She didn’t know at the time that OSU also has a draft horse.

“When I was down in the barn doing a palpation lab, I saw a draft horse,” says Meadows, “and I asked Lionel if we could teach her to pull.” The horse in question is a new addition to the CVM herd and her name is Taffy. Farm manager Lionel Snyder encouraged Meadows to pursue the goal of training Taffy by starting a student draft horse club.

There once was a very active draft horse club at CVM. They worked with a draft horse named Andy and even used him to give buggy rides at the yearly Pet Day event. But when Andy died, and all the DHC members graduated and moved on, the club disappeared.  Meadows hopes to resurrect it.

“Lionel told me they have this amazing wagon but don’t know how to teach Taffy to pull,” says Meadows. “I have a lot of experience teaching horses to pull but I’m also interested in giving students who haven’t had a lot of horse experience an opportunity to work with large horses.“

The three objectives of the newly formed club are learning to handle large horses, learning to drive, and promoting the college.

“It would be great to eventually teach Taffy to pull the OSU wagon,” says Meadows. “It’s a really beautiful wagon but whether or not it is feasible for us to take it out in public remains to be seen. There are insurance issues and Taffy will need years of training.”

In the meantime, Meadows hopes club members can get hands-on time with Taffy; handling a one-ton horse is the ultimate in safety training. “You build really good safety practices around a draft horse. You know you have to stay out from under any horse’s feet but with a light horse you aren’t as conscious about it. If you build good safety practices with a draft horse, you will be safer with any horse,” says Meadows. “It’s all about making us better equine vets.

Third World Experience Benefits People and Animals

October 10th, 2011
Christina Lackey

CVM student Christina Lackey treats a pet at the free clinic in Ometepe Nicaragua.

Ometepe Island is a tropical jewel in the middle of Lake Nicaragua with miles of sandy beaches and stunning scenery but it is largely undeveloped. Reached only by ferry over notoriously rough water, the villages of Ometepe have few modern amenities and, despite an economy based largely on livestock and agriculture, Ometepe has no resident veterinarian.

Once a year, the OSU student chapter of the International Veterinary Students Association (IVSA) organizes a trip to Ometepe to provide a week of free clinics. This September, thirty students and eight faculty from the OSU College of Veterinary Medicine (CVM) plus four Oregon veterinarians, volunteered their time to treat more than 400 sick animals. In addition, they performed 78 spay and neuters, eleven equine castrations, and 24 equine dental procedures.

Each morning volunteers walked down a dirt road from their hotel to a makeshift clinic and found a line of people waiting with their animals. “Some of these people would wait all day just so we could examine their pet,” says CVM student, Sara Livesay. “There were a few very long days where we ended up doing surgery with headlamps for light, and after the procedure the owner was still there waiting for their dog to recover so they could take them home.” And when they weren’t working at the clinic, team members made dozens of farm calls often travelling by mountain bike to rural areas.

The mission of the IVSA trip is to provide optimal care to the animals, education to the people of Ometepe, and maximum learning experiences for the student volunteers. This was CVM’s seventh visit to Nicaragua and students who made the trip last year had the satisfaction of seeing 120 returning patients.

In addition to veterinary care, the OSU team offered a public health seminar on infectious and zoonotic diseases. Companion animals suffer from malnourishment and diseases, many of which are transmissible to their human families. By addressing these issues, IVSA hopes to improve the health of both pets and people while also reducing disease transmission by encouraging appropriate sanitation and health practices. This year’s presentation also incorporated flea and tick control education. The seminar was well received, and all attendees received flea and tick preventative for their pets as a bonus.

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CVM Students Stand Out at National Conference

October 10th, 2011
Elisha Adkins

Student Elisha Adkins doing research on Holstein serum protein in Jersey calves. Adkins and fellow students Kim Noyes and Justin Ward, wrote an abstract about their research that earned them a place in this year's AABP national student competition.

OSU College of Veterinary Medicine students stood out at this year’s AABP (American Association of Bovine Practitioners) national conference in St. Louis. Students Kim Noyes, Tessa Maggiulli and Elisha Adkins presented three of the nine research and case studies accepted for the Student Abstract Competition. Participation in the competition required selection from a large pool of applicants from both Unites States and Canada. “Each presented well and stimulated a great deal of conversation in the calf management and small ruminant worlds,” says student advisor Dr. Aurora Villarroel, “They all did a great job and I am very proud of them.”

The 2011 AABP conference integrated dairy and beef medicine, as well as small ruminant medicine in parallel sessions held by the AASRP (American Association of Small Ruminant Practitioners). It also offered a full day of leadership exercises and group discussions. On the faculty side, Dr. Villarroel presented a poster on “Paste Dehorning Young Calves.”  The poster, printed and laminated courtesy of Dr. H. W. Naylor Co., Inc. (one of the manufacturers of dehorning paste), is available in English and Spanish through the Extension Service at OSU. Dr. Villarroel is the chair of the Information Management Committee of the AABP, one of 17 committees that embrace all aspects of bovine medicine needs. You can find more information on the AABP website. Next year’s conference is in Montreal, Canada, September 20-22, 2012.

Dr. Villaroel encourages the Class of 2015 to join the student chapter of the AABP by December 31, 2011 in order to get their membership dues waived.

Veterinarians and Faculty Join Students in Learning Experience

October 10th, 2011

The halls of Magruder witnessed some unusual behavior a few weeks ago: blindfolded students being led around by their colleagues, small circles of people laughing, and professors acting like elephants. Did Halloween come early? No, it was the first annual Oregon Leadership and Dedicated Service (OLEADS) event. Hosted by the OSU College of VeterinaryMedicine (CVM), the event was organized by the Student Chapter of the American Veterinary Medical Association (SCAVMA) with a goal of providing interactive learning experiences to promote successful servant leadership through awareness, persuasion, conceptualization, foresight, personal growth, and community building.

The opening session of the event was kicked off with introductory remarks from Dean Clarke, who participated in many of the weekend activities. “These activities are examples of the initiative and drive demonstrated by our veterinary students as they create and take advantage of opportunities to extend their education beyond the limits of formal curriculum,” he says.

The OLEADS program is a condensed version of the AVMA Veterinary Leadership Experience (VLE) and consists of a series of lecture presentations, group activities, and peer-peer collaboration that emphasizes servant leadership, emotional intelligence, teamwork, and communication. Dr. Rick DeBowes, one of the founders of the VLE and a faculty member at Washington State University CVM, presented the program. Dr. DeBowes shared his contagious excitement and enthusiasm as he encouraged everyone to step outside their comfort zones with group dance routines and other challenging small-group workshops.

CVM faculty, local veterinarians, representatives of the AVMA, and a Banfield representative joined the students in the activities. It was a great opportunity for participants to get know each other and SCAVMA plans to encourage even more particiaption next year. “Everyone involved had a great time and felt it was a weekend well spent,” says student Steen Smith. “We all owe a debt of gratitude to Giovanna Coto of the class of 2014 for her hard work in organizing this exciting and enlightening event.”

OLEADS thanks the following sponsors: SCAVMA, Purina, Live Oak Bank, IAMS, Banfield, Bayer, PLIT, OVMA, Novartis, AVMA GHLIT, Oregon Beef Council, Dairy Farmers of Oregon, Oregon Dairy Council, Oregon Potato Commission, and the College of Veterinary Medicine.

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