The Vetpodcast - Veterinary Podcast show

The Vetpodcast - Veterinary Podcast

Summary: The Vetpodcast. A mixture of interesting animal health related topics and some shake your head in disbelief stories discussed by animal health experts from around the world. Brought to you by veterinarian Dr Bryan Gregor from New Zealand, if you are a pet owner, an animal lover or in the veterinary industry there will sure to be something for you! Visit us at https://vetpodcast.weebly.com for links to topics discussed or contact us via https://vetpodcast.weebly.com/contact for topics you would like to discuss or just to say hi!!

Podcasts:

 Corneal Ulcers | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 519

Corneal ulcers are seen quite commonly in most veterinary practices. As common as they are, there is always the potential for them causing permanent eye damage, but with the correct treatment, usually there is a good outcome.

 Digging Dogs. Making a hole in the ground is what dogs do. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 344

Dogs dont dig holes in the ground to annoy you, it is simply in their nature. As frustrating as it is, there are ways this behaviour can be addressed.

 Fish Vets, Fish get sick too! | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1181

With more people living in apartments meaning less space for conventional pets, keeping an aquarium is a lot more common these days. Added to this, fish farming is also big business. There are now veterinarians who have taken their training to a new level. In this podcast I talk to Dr Fiona MacDonald, who is the secretary of the United Kingdom Fish Veterinary Society The link for the UK Fish Vet Society is www.fishvetsociety.org.uk The Link for Fionas' Fish Treatment Ltd website is www.fish-treatment.co.uk

 Anal glands: a fishy smelly vestige of a wild animal? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 557

That faintly fishy metallic smell from the back end of your dog is probably its Anal Glands. What are they there for and what can go wrong with them??

 Putting the plug back in the gene pool. Why rare breeds may be invaluable for the future of farming | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1444

Farm animals as we know them today have been selected for desirable traits or characteristics such as fast growth rate, heavy muscling, good fibre production, good milk production or perhaps temperament. Along the way, some breeds may have been discarded from main stream farming for a variety of reasons, and their numbers have dwindled, perhaps even to the point of extinction. Some domesticated breeds may have returned to the wild, and in doing so returned to a free living state. In New Zealand the guardians of these animals are The Rare Breeds Conservation Society, whose role is to conserve, record and promote these breeds with the particular aim of maintaining genetic diversity within our livestock species. In this interview, I talk with Mike Willis, a spokesman for this society, and himself, a custodian of a number of rare breeds. Have a look at the New Zealand Rare Breeds website at http://www.rarebreeds.co.nz/

 Shake, rattle and roll. Seizures in dogs | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 610

The trouble with seizures in dogs is that often the owner may miss them. They may be a very transient occurrence lasting perhaps only 30 seconds, and unless you see the event occurring how would you know? When you do see them, they can be a very scary thing. Today we have a look at symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of seizures.

 My house smells like cat pee! Why is my cat doing this? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 380

Have you ever walked into someone’s house and it absolutely stinks of cat urine. Worse still, have you noticed this in your own home. This is not necessarily a reflection of the cleanliness of the owner, but often caused by a behavioural problem in their cat we refer to as urine spraying.

 Racing Greyhounds. What makes them so fast? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1181

We have probably all seen pictures of Greyhounds racing around a track. What is the history of this sport, and more importantly for me, what sets Greyhounds apart from other dogs. I discuss this with Dave Matheson, a veterinarian in Christchurch, New Zealand, who has administered veterinary care to racing greyhounds for years

 Artificial limbs and braces. The science of orthotics and prosthetics for dogs. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1524

In a previous Vetpodcast on Physical Therapy, mention was made in passing of the use of braces and prosthetics in the treatment of animals. Just as is the case with physical rehabilitation, this is another area of treatment where the knowledge and techniques gained over the years from human medicine are being modified and applied to veterinary medicine. Ben Blecha works in this field at a company called AceOrthoSolutions in Nebraska and discusses his work in this field. For more information, Ben’s wbsite is www.aceorthosolutions.com

 Veterinarians Without Borders and World Rabies Day | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1189

Many people know of the work that Doctors without Borders do. A little less well known (but I stand to be corrected here) is an organization called Veterinarians without Borders. In this episode, I talk to Dr Enid Styles, the vice president of Veterinarians without Borders Canada about the work of this organization, and more specifically, about their contribution towards controlling rabies worldwide. Follow this link to their website: http://www.vwb-vsf.ca/english/index.shtml

 Can we have a sample please | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 507

Urine is usually seen as a waste product of the body, but as veterinarians we often use it as a simple window into what is going on in the rest of the body.

 What do you do with your pet when it passes away? Cremation is becoming a popular option. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1122

Unfortunately because the life expectancy of our pets is much shorter than our own, most pet owners have to deal with the death of a pet. There is a very practical problem here. What do you do with the body. There are several options. In New Zealand anyway, most veterinarians have, for the want of a better term, a disposal service. Many owners will take the pet home for home burial. Often though, this may not be an option, especially if the owner shifts houses regularly, lives in an apartment where burial is not an option or just doesn’t like the idea of their dead pet lying at the end of the garden. From our records, probably about 50% of the euthanased animals are cremated. In this podcast I talk to Andrea Guillemot from Fond Farewells pet cremation in Christchurch, New Zealand about Pet cremation. For more information on Fond Farewells go to: http://www.gribblesvets.co.nz/info/general/Document/get/465/documentId/

 Old cats are like old cars. Things wear out! | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 401

It is a fact that cats are living longer than they used to. The American Veterinary Medical Association in their 1996 survey of pets in the US found that when looking at the records of veterinarians, cats over the age of 6 years comprised 47% of the cat population on their records. 15 years ago, a 10 year old cat was doing well, now we are seeing cats in their late teens and early 20’s. Why has this happened, and what are the ramifications of this trend?

 Physical Rehabilitation. Not just for humans. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1328

Physical rehabilitation or physiotherapy has been the mainstay of injury management in humans for decades. Historically, as vets we have been reluctant to urge early mobility after surgery with the perhaps misguided thought that the animal will use the limb when it is good and ready. Along with the greater awareness of pain control taken from our medical colleagues, physical rehabilitation is being seen as a very useful, if not essential part of injury management. I discuss physical rehabilitation with Danielle Robbins, a Certified Canine Rehabilitation Therapist. For more information, check out Danielle's website at http://www.americandogrehab.com/

 Pills and potions. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 423

Where do you store your pets medication? Obviously out of the reach of the kids, but is it better in the refrigerator, in the kitchen or in a cool dark place? What do you do with it if any is left over?

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