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Immunomic Therapeutics Executives and Board Members of WhyWeVax Discuss COVID-19 Vaccine Issues with Fox News and CDC’s ACIP Committee – Business Wire

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

ROCKVILLE, Md.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Immunomic Therapeutics, Inc., (ITI), a privately-held clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering the study of nucleic acid immunotherapy platforms, and WhyWeVax (WWV), a non-profit organization dedicated to building vaccine confidence, workforce security and countering vaccine misinformation, announced that executives from both organizations recently made public comments discussing the science of COVID-19 vaccines and the challenges of vaccine hesitancy and distribution.

Sia Anagnostou, Senior Director of Corporate Development for ITI and WWV Board Secretary, recently made public comments during the ACIP emergency meeting in support of the CDCs recommendation to allocate the initial COVID vaccine doses expected late Dec 2020 - Jan 2021 to health care workers and people living in long-term care facilities. In addition to the ACIP discussion, Dr. William Hearl, CEO of ITI and Chairman of WWV, was interviewed on Fox News 29 in Philadelphia to amplify the commentary on these topics.

It is important that leaders in the biotechnology community speak out wherever possible to effectively communicate the value, safety and efficacy of vaccines for COVID-19 and other infectious diseases, said Dr. Hearl. Participation in immunization education and support of Public Health efforts is of the utmost importance as we face the global challenge of this pandemic.

The public comments at ACIP and on Fox News are available here:

https://www.fox29.com/video/876822.amp

About Immunomic Therapeutics, Inc.

Immunomic Therapeutics, Inc. (ITI) is a privately-held, clinical stage biotechnology company pioneering the development of vaccines through its investigational proprietary technology platform, UNiversal Intracellular Targeted Expression (UNITE), which is designed to utilize the bodys natural biochemistry to develop vaccines that have the potential to generate broad immune responses. The UNITE platform has a robust history of applications in various therapeutic areas, including infectious diseases, oncology, allergy and autoimmune diseases. ITI is primarily focused on applying the UNITE platform to oncology, where it could potentially have broad applications, including targeting viral antigens, cancer antigens, neoantigens and producing antigen-derived antibodies as biologics. In early 2020, an investment of over $60M by HLB Co., LTD, a global pharmaceutical company, enabled ITI to accelerate application of its immuno-oncology platform, in particular to glioblastoma multiforme, and rapidly advance other key candidates in the pipeline, including the most recent initiative into infectious diseases with development of its vaccine candidate for COVID-19. The Company has built a large pipeline from UNITE with eight oncology programs, multiple animal health programs and a SARS-CoV-2 program to prevent and treat COVID-19. ITI has entered into a significant allergy partnership with Astellas Pharma and has formed several academic collaborations with leading Immuno-oncology researchers at Duke University and the University of Florida. ITI maintains its headquarters in Rockville, Maryland. For more information, please visit http://www.immunomix.com.

About Why We Vaccinate, Inc.

WhyWeVax - http://www.whywevax.org - is a 501(3)(c) educational organization dedicated to provide a credible and trusted source for honest and factual information on vaccines, their efficacy, safety and importance to public health. WhyWeVax works to counter the misinformation, anti-science rhetoric and virulent fake news dissemination that question the safety and efficacy of vaccines for preventable infectious diseases. The development of a safe and effective vaccine for COVID-19 and its ultimate manufacture and distribution through the healthcare system will require a concerted effort by the biotechnology, academic, medical and scientific communities to meet the challenge of vaccine hesitancy and refusal. WhyWeVax will support educate the population to the value of vaccines to protect the health and safety of their families, their friends, their communities and our way of life.

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Immunomic Therapeutics Executives and Board Members of WhyWeVax Discuss COVID-19 Vaccine Issues with Fox News and CDC's ACIP Committee - Business Wire

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Is Galectin Therapeutics Inc. Common Stock (GALT) The Right Choice in Biotechnology? – InvestorsObserver

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

Galectin Therapeutics Inc. Common Stock (GALT) is near the top in its industry group according to InvestorsObserver. GALT gets an overall rating of 60. That means it scores higher than 60 percent of stocks. Galectin Therapeutics Inc. Common Stock gets a 75 rank in the Biotechnology industry. Biotechnology is number 34 out of 148 industries.

Searching for the best stocks to invest in can be difficult. There are thousands of options and it can be confusing on what actually constitutes a great value. Investors Observer allows you to choose from eight unique metrics to view the top industries and the best performing stocks in that industry. A score of 60 would rank higher than 60 percent of all stocks.

These scores are not only easy to understand, but it is easy to compare stocks to each other. You can find the best stock in an industry, or look for the sector that has the highest average score. The overall score is a combination of technical and fundamental factors that serves as a good starting point when analyzing a stock. Traders and investors with different goals may have different goals and will want to consider other factors than just the headline number before making any investment decisions.

Galectin Therapeutics Inc. Common Stock (GALT) stock is trading at $2.67 as of 10:41 AM on Tuesday, Dec 8, a loss of -$0.08, or -2.91% from the previous closing price of $2.75. The stock has traded between $2.62 and $2.71 so far today. Volume today is light. So far 75,489 shares have traded compared to average volume of 172,918 shares.

Click Here to get the full Stock Score Report on Galectin Therapeutics Inc. Common Stock (GALT) Stock.

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Is Galectin Therapeutics Inc. Common Stock (GALT) The Right Choice in Biotechnology? - InvestorsObserver

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Protests erupt in Kerala over the Central governments decision to name the second campus of the Rajiv Gandhi Centre for Biotechnology in…

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

The Narendra Modi-led Central government has announced that the second campus of the Rajiv Gandhi Centre for Biotechnology (RGCBT) in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, a premier molecular biology and biotechnology research centre now under the Ministry of Science and Technology, will be named after M.S. Golwalkar, the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) ideologue.

The announcement, made by Union Minister for Science and Technology Dr Harsh Vardhan on December 4 during his online address to the pre-inaugural session of the sixth edition of the International Science Festival, has taken Kerala by surprise.

The RGCBT had earlier announced that its second campus would be named the Centre for Complex Diseases in Cancer and Viral Infections.

Harsh Vardhans statement that the new campus is to be named "Shri Guruji Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar National Centre for Complex Diseases in Cancer and Viral Infections", apparently as decided by the RGCBT governing body, has come without notice to or prior consultation with the State government, which originally established the RGCBT as a research & development centre. The State had subsequently handed over the centre to the Government of India for developing it as a centre of international standards in research and development.

Protests are mounting by the day in the State on the propriety of choosing to name the campus after a person whose abiding role has not been in science but in providing Hindutva forces an ideological base and an organisational structure to achieve a Hindu Rashtra.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) political leadership has come up with rather strange arguments to justify the move: (a) Golwalkar has an M.Sc. in Zoology and he left his studies while doing a Ph.D. in Marine Biology to become an active member of the RSS; (b) that he had a great vision about the scientific development of the country and his teachings and ideas are relevant in the present time; (c) the Left has given the names of several communist leaders jailed in 1947 and 1962 for anti-national activities to several institutions; (d) the Communist Party of India (Marxist) should explain the basis for naming a football stadium in Kozhikode after E.M.S. Namboodiripad; and (e) why is the renowned annual Nehru Trophy Boat Race in Kerala named after Jawaharlal Nehru? (the last question was raised as a justification by V. Muraleedharan, the Union Minister of State for External Affairs and Parliamentary Affairs).

The ruling and opposition parties in Kerala find themselves united as an offshoot of the controversy. Almost all political parties except the BJP have condemned the announcement to name the new campus after the RSS ideologue.

While Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, in a letter to Union Minister Harsh Vardhan, suggested that the new campus should be named after some eminent Indian scientist of international repute, Opposition Leader Ramesh Chennithala said in a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi that the new campus should continue to function under the name of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

Sashi Tharoor, MP from Thiruvananthapuram, said in a series of tweets on Twitter: What is MSGs [M.S. Golwalkar] contribution to science other than promoting the disease of communalism?; I suggest a local hero: Dr. P. Palpu, renowned bacteriologist and social reformer, born in Thiruvananthapuram in the year 1863. Expert in serum therapy and tropical medicine from Cambridge, Director of the Vaccine Institute and Fellow of the Royal Institute of Public Health. This forward-looking scientist and medical practitioner would be far more appropriate than an obscurantist ideologue of no scientific achievement and no discernible contribution to public health. Its a BJP insult to Thiruvananthapuram and should be resisted.

The Modi governments move cannot be seen in isolation, coming as it does after similar controversies over pleas for rewriting history from an Indian standpoint, the unveiling of the V.D. Sarvarkar portrait at the Central Hall of Parliament and the eulogisation in school textbooks and through the naming or renaming of airports, railway stations, bridges, streets and flyovers after Hindutvas other heroes such as K.B. Hedgewar and Deen Dayal Upadhyaya.

Moreover, if statements by V. Muraleedharan and other BJP leaders are any indication, the name Shri Guruji Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar National Centre for Complex Diseases in Cancer and Viral Infections has been presented as a fait accompli and, significantly, as a strong political message in Left Front-ruled Kerala where the BJP has so far been unable to make much gains. It is also significant that the RGCBTs prestigious new campus also is in Thiruvananthapuram, where the BJP is hoping to make some significant gains in the ongoing local body elections and in the Assembly elections that is to follow soon.

For more on Golwalkar, read: What is Hindu Rashtra?

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Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Size, Share, Growth, Trends, Outlook, Scope and Forecast to 2027 – The Haitian-Caribbean…

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

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Food Biotechnology Industry Market Growth Projection from 2020 to 2026 – Cheshire Media

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

Market Study Report, LLC adds latest research report on Food Biotechnology Industry Market, which delivers a comprehensive study on current industry trends. The outcome also includes revenue forecasts, statistics, market valuations which illustrates its growth trends and competitive landscape as well as the key players in the business.

This Food Biotechnology Industry market research study is a collection of insights that translate into a gist of this industry. It is explained in terms of a plethora of factors, some of which include the present scenario of this marketplace in tandem with the industry scenario over the forecast timeframe.

Request a sample Report of Food Biotechnology Industry Market at:https://www.marketstudyreport.com/request-a-sample/2727907?utm_source=cheshire.media&utm_medium=Ram

The report is also inclusive of some of the major development trends that characterize the Food Biotechnology Industry market. A comprehensive document in itself, the Food Biotechnology Industry market research study also contains numerous other pointers such as the current industry policies in conjunction with the topographical industry layout characteristics. Also, the Food Biotechnology Industry market study is comprised of parameters such as the impact of the current market scenario on investors.

The pros and cons of the enterprise products, a detailed scientific analysis pertaining to the raw material as well as industry downstream buyers, in conjunction with a gist of the enterprise competition trends are some of the other aspects included in this report.

How has the competitive landscape of this industry been categorized?

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Vaccines and Approved Antibodies Could Dim Vir Biotechnologys Covid Opportunity – Barron’s

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

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The tiny Vir Biotechnology was vaulted from obscurity this year, when it said it was developing treatments for Covid-19. Its stock (ticker: VIR) shot from $12 to a March peak of $75, before settling back to the mid-30swhere GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) bought a $250 million stake.

Vir started clinical trials in August for its antibody treatment against Covid-19. But the train has left the station, says Baird analyst Madhu Kumar, and Vir may have missed its Covid business opportunity. Antibodies from Eli Lilly (LLY) and Regeneron Pharmaceutical (REGN) have already gotten emergency use authorizations from regulators and booked orders. Demand for any Covid-19 treatment will start to shrink with the imminent authorization of vaccines from Pfizer (PFE), BioNTech (BNTX) and Moderna (MRNA).

In a Thursday note, Kumar reiterated his Underperform rating for Vir stock, whose shares he thinks should fall to $24 from their recent level near $32.

The Baird analyst went to a sell rating after Virs initial jump in February, and has maintained steady criticism since, in nearly 40 notes. Vir could find success with another treatment it is testing against hepatitis B, says Kumar, but future sales of such a product would only be worth $14 in current value. Ascribing $3.50 in value for Virs other pipeline programs, and counting its $6.50 a share in cash, brings Kumar to his $24 fair value.

Antibodies from Regeneron were among the treatments given to President Donald Trump in October, when he got Covid.

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Virs securities filings say that its Covid-19 antibody trial could produce interim results in January 2021, and a final readout later in that years first quarter. The Baird analyst doesnt expect an authorization and product launch until the springby which point vaccines should be getting into wide supply.

Meanwhile, the bridging opportunity for anti-Covid antibodies is being snapped up by Lilly and Regeneron. The U.S. government arranged to buy 950,000 doses of Lillys treatment, including a deal for 650,000 doses announced Wednesday that will bring $850 million to Lilly.

Write to Bill Alpert at william.alpert@barrons.com

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Department Of Biotechnology’s Expert Committee Tracking Developments Related To COVID-19 Vaccine: Official | News – Swachh India NDTV

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

Maharashtra

DistrictCases

Mumbai45,478

Thane13,660

Pune9,920

Mumbai Suburban5,363

Aurangabad1,974

Nashik1,575

Raigad1,462

Palghar1,421

Solapur1,291

Jalgaon1,039

Akola757

Nagpur692

Kolhapur646

Satara629

Ratnagiri350

Amravati291

Dhule228

Hingoli208

Jalna201

Ahmednagar190

Nanded176

Yavatmal150

Sangli145

Latur139

Osmanabad125

Sindhudurg114

Buldhana88

Parbhani78

gondia69

Beed54

Nandurbar42

Gadchiroli42

Bhandara41

Chandrapur32

Washim13

Wardha11

18,64,348 4,981

74,315 145

17,42,131 5,051

47,902 75

DistrictCases

Udupi1,176

Kalaburagi669

Yadgir538

Bengaluru Urban529

Raichur369

Mandya346

Belagavi337

Bidar219

Hassan205

Davangere204

Vijayapura201

Dakshina Kannada179

Chikkaballapura149

Mysuru107

Bagalkote103

Uttara Kannada95

Shivamogga67

Dharwad61

Ballari60

Gadag45

Bengaluru Rural40

Tumakuru36

Kolar29

Haveri24

Chikkamagaluru19

Chitradurga14

Koppal5

Kodagu4

Ramanagara3

Chamarajanagara0

8,96,563 1,279

23,075 1,959

8,61,588 3,218

11,900 20

DistrictCases

Kurnool795

Krishna557

Guntur511

Anantapur428

East Godavari356

Chittoor319

Sri Potti Sriramulu Nell*296

Y.S.R.205

West Godavari199

Srikakulam183

Prakasam104

Visakhapatnam103

Vizianagaram23

8,73,457 618

5,259 170

8,61,153 785

7,045 3

DistrictCases

Chennai23,324

Chengalpattu1,314

Thiruvallur774

Villupuram509

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Analyst Rating: Will PDS Biotechnology Corp (PDSB) Stock Outperform the Market? – InvestorsObserver

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

Analysts who follow PDS Biotechnology Corp (PDSB) on average expect it to increase 209.68% over the next twelve months. Those same analysts give the stock an average rating of Strong Buy.

That average rating earns PDSB an Analyst Ranking of 79, which means it ranks higher than 79 of stocks, based on data compiled by InvestorsObserver.

Analytical research by professionals can be extremely useful when making investment decisions in the stock market. Analysts are able to observe industries in detail and learn how geographical impacts can affect a company's balance sheet. This information allows investors to make decisions ahead of the curve.

InvestorsObserver combines the ratings from these analysts and proceeds to percentile rank them. This grants you the ability to compare stocks in a comprehensive fashion as oppossed to a standard buy/hold/sell rating.

PDS Biotechnology Corp (PDSB) stock is trading at $2.17 as of 1:08 PM on Wednesday, Dec 9, a loss of -$0.26, or -10.7% from the previous closing price of $2.43. The stock has traded between $2.15 and $2.40 so far today. Volume today is 585,089 compared to average volume of 614,574.

Click Here to get the full report on PDS Biotechnology Corp (PDSB) Stock.

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Analyst Rating: Will PDS Biotechnology Corp (PDSB) Stock Outperform the Market? - InvestorsObserver

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Where Does Crispr Therapeutics AG (CRSP) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field? – InvestorsObserver

December 10th, 2020 4:55 am

A rating of 80 puts Crispr Therapeutics AG (CRSP) near the top of the Biotechnology industry according to InvestorsObserver. Crispr Therapeutics AG's score of 80 means it scores higher than 80% of stocks in the industry. Crispr Therapeutics AG also received an overall rating of 64, putting it above 64% of all stocks. Biotechnology is ranked 36 out of the 148 industries.

Analyzing stocks can be hard. There are tons of numbers and ratios, and it can be hard to remember what they all mean and what counts as good for a given value. InvestorsObserver ranks stocks on eight different metrics. We percentile rank most of our scores to make it easy for investors to understand. A score of 64 means the stock is more attractive than 64 percent of stocks.

This ranking system incorporates numerous factors used by analysts to compare stocks in greater detail. This allows you to find the best stocks available in any industry with relative ease. These percentile-ranked scores using both fundamental and technical analysis give investors an easy way to view the attractiveness of specific stocks. Stocks with the highest scores have the best evaluations by analysts working on Wall Street.

Crispr Therapeutics AG (CRSP) stock is higher by 4.47% while the S&P 500 has fallen -0.3% as of 1:19 PM on Monday, Dec 7. CRSP is higher by $6.60 from the previous closing price of $147.54 on volume of 2,324,656 shares. Over the past year the S&P 500 has gained 17.61% while CRSP is higher by 128.52%. CRSP lost -$3.25 per share the over the last 12 months.

Click Here to get the full Stock Score Report on Crispr Therapeutics AG (CRSP) Stock.

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Where Does Crispr Therapeutics AG (CRSP) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field? - InvestorsObserver

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Tuskegee University College of Veterinary Medicine treats social media famous patient Brisket the Bull – Tuskegee University

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

December 04, 2020

Contact: Anissa Riley, College of Veterinary Medicine

Tuskegee University College of Veterinary Medicine students recently had the opportunity to assist veterinary large animal clinicians and surgeons in the medical treatment of a social media famous patient who goes by the name, Brisket the Bull. Brisket was given a clean bill of health on December 1 from the veterinary medical teaching hospital and then released to his owner.

The eight-year old Brahman bull is owned by Judy Presley, formerly from Tennessee but now a resident of Luverne, Alabama. Presley bought Brisket at a sale barn when he was just two years old. Over the years, she has raised and trained him to accept a halter, saddle and to be ridden. Brisket has a very gentle temperament and is nationally recognized for his owner's ability to trail ride and show jump with him.

Brisket had a two-month history of an abscessed prepuce in which the abscess was treated by a private practice before being brought to the veterinary hospital for a sheath resection, which was a surgery successfully performed by Dr. Jeannine Bellamy, veterinary medical teaching hospital director, and myself providing the anesthesia, said Dr. David McKenzie, professor and large animal clinician in the Large Animal Clinical Sciences Department.

The students assisted in the medical aftercare in which Briskets healing progressed well and led to a recent successful discharge. Briskets owner Judy was very pleased with the services of the college in treating Brisket and offered to have the students take pictures with him and be shared on Briskets Facebook and fan social media pages.

We are proud of our students and thankful to our large animal veterinary medical clinicians for providing quality healthcare for our bovine clients. Being exceptional is what we are striving to be here at Tuskegee and have our clients be pleased with the veterinary services provided to our patients while preparing our students to be career-ready veterinarians upon completing the veterinary curriculum, said Dr. Ruby L. Perry, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine.

To learn more about the College and the Tuskegee Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, visit http://www.tuskegee.edu/vetmed and http://www.tuskegee.edu/vetcare.

2020 Tuskegee University

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Medicine expert joins faculty of Texas Tech School of Veterinary Medicine – KLBK | KAMC | EverythingLubbock.com

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

AMARILLO and LUBBOCK, Texas (NEWS RELEASE) The following is a news release from Texas Tech University:

Say the words New York and most people will think of the large, metropolitan area that is the financial and shopping center of the U.S. Few, if any, say agriculture.

Yet if you get outside of the main city, the state of New York is an important contributor of agricultural products in the country. The state has a $3.6 billion agricultural industry with more than 35,000 farms producing products from apples and cabbage to milk and cheese, grapes, maple syrup and cauliflower.

It is here where Emily Sundman was raised and saw firsthand the critical role agriculture has on the state and the importance of those who care for farm animals. This became the foundation for a career supporting animal health.

That career now brings her to West Texas as the latest member to join the faculty of the newTexas Tech School of Veterinary Medicine in Amarilloas an assistant professor of medicine. She began her duties on Tuesday (Dec. 1).

I am thrilled to join the Texas Tech School of Veterinary Medicine in time to welcome the inaugural class, Sundman said. Working at the School of Veterinary Medicine is a career dream realized in order to further veterinary care for our large animals.

Sundman has spent much of her career involved in agricultural industry research and development, inventing ways to directly and positively impact animal health and assisting practicing veterinarians who seek to do the same.

Since December 2013, Sundman has served a role in clinical development for Kindred Biosciences, which takes strategies that are safely used for human therapeutics and applies them to the development of animal biologics, such as monoclonal antibodies and recombinant proteins.

From 2013 to 2017, she oversaw the clinical development phase, including efficacy and safety, of new animal pharmaceuticals for approval by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Committee for Medicinal Products for Veterinary Use (CVMP). She also designed and executed clinical studies and was primarily responsible for pharmaceuticals for use in horses, dogs and cats.

She was promoted to Senior Clinical Development Manager in 2017, where she was responsible for the approval of Zimeta IV for use in controlling fever in horses in the U.S. She served in this role until September, when she was promoted to Associate Director of Clinical Development, increasing the responsibilities for early phase strategy and development of products for USDA and CVMP approval.

Sundman also has been co-owner and veterinarian at Picolino Ranch since 2015. The ranch, located in Lipan, Texas, specializes in the breeding and development of Aberdeen cattle, raising them to become accustomed to the pastureland and climate associated with North Texas. Since 2013, she has served as an emergency equine ambulatory veterinarian serving in Davis, California, and later the Lipan areas.

2020 has shown us the importance of innovation, saidGuy Loneragan, dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine. To help with and prevent COVID-19, the call went out for new therapies and for new vaccines. Innovative products are now arriving, and society has benefited from this research and discovery. Veterinary medicine is no different. Our animals large and small benefit from new therapies and new preventatives. Dr. Sundman will add to our schools vibrant research and discovery efforts. She also serves an important role helping our researchers design the best possible trials to test new discoveries. We are so lucky Dr. Sundman has joined our school. We will benefit so very much from what she contributes.

Sundman earned bachelors degrees in history and biology from Syracuse University and her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from Cornell University in 2012. At Cornell, she was influenced greatly working by professor and veterinarian Lisa Fortier. Thats where Sundman said she got a good look at what true veterinary research was like.

Sundman has been a Diplomat of the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners (Equine Practice) since 2019.

Dr. Sundman brings a unique background to our program from industry and research, which will help guide our faculty in their programs, saidJohn Dascanio, senior associate dean for academic and student affairs. Combining that experience with her clinical background allows for application toward clinical practice, enabling her to serve as a great mentor to the school and to the faculty. We welcome her to her new role with the school.

Sundman joins a growing and vibrant team of faculty and staff at the School of Veterinary Medicine. Additional team members will continue to be added over the next few months as the school prepares to welcome its inaugural class in the fall of 2021.

Thanks to the generosity of Amarillo and communities across Texas, and the commitment of legislators from around the state, the Texas Tech University School of Veterinary Medicine in Amarillo was established in 2018. In September 2020, the school was granted a Letter of Reasonable Assurance, from the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) Council on Education and has begun the admissions process in preparation for classes to begin in August of 2021.

The School of Veterinary Medicine will recruit and select students with a passion to serve rural and regional communities. Its curriculum is focused on the competencies and skills necessary for success in practice types that support these communities. Texas Techs innovative and cost-efficient model partners with the wider community of veterinary practices across the state to provide clinical, real-world experiential learning.

(News release from Texas Tech University)

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What to know about cherry eye in dogs – New Castle News

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

Spotting a red bump in the corner of a pets eye is a concerning but not uncommon experience for many dog owners. Colloquially called cherry eye, this bump may be a prolapsed gland of the nictitans, also known as the third eyelid.

Dr. Sean Collins, a clinical assistant professor at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, says that ophthalmologists dont entirely understand why the gland of the nictating membrane sometimes protrudes from its original position but it is believed to be a result of a weakness in the connective tissue responsible for holding the gland in the correct position.

This condition can happen to any breed of dog but is seen most commonly in certain breeds, including the American cocker spaniel, English bulldog, Lhasa apso, and the Pekingese, Collins said.

Pet owners who spot a red swollen mass in the inner corner of their pets eye, large or small, should bring it to their veterinarians attention promptly. In addition to causing irritation to the dog, this condition can have lasting consequences when left untreated.

Without correction, chronic prolapse can lead to conjunctivitis (pink eye) and ocular discharge (liquid coming from the eye), Collins said. It has also been shown that with correction, dogs are less likely to develop low tear production later in life.

Low tear production can result in multiple problems if left untreated. In addition to pain and decreased vision, corneal ulceration may also develop, which can become infected and result in a ruptured eye. This condition responds well to tear stimulant therapy in most cases, but lifelong medication is usually required.

Story continues below video

Your veterinarian will be able to confirm whether your pet has cherry eye and can develop a treatment plan that works best to resolve cherry eye and reduce the potential for ocular issues as your dog ages.

Initial therapy may consist of topical anti-inflammatory therapy if local inflammation may be contributing to prolapse of the gland, he said. If a short course of medical therapy does not work or re-prolapse develops, surgical repositioning is indicated. There are numerous surgical techniques to reposition the gland with overall high success rates.

If surgical treatment is required, Collins stresses that this treatment will benefit your pet in both the short- and long-term.

Surgical repositioning is very important if initial medical therapy fails, as the gland is responsible for about 30-50% of the aqueous tear production in the dog, he said. We commonly see low tear production in the same breeds that develop a prolapsed gland of the nictitans. It has been shown that dogs with surgical repositioning of the gland have a lower chance of developing low tear production later on in life compared to those where the gland has been excised or remains chronically prolapsed.

Unfortunately, there are no known preventative measures to protect against cherry eye in dogs, Collins says. This condition can develop in both eyes, usually before the age of 2. The best way pet owners can protect their furry friend is to remain vigilant in monitoring their pets health and to bring concerns to their veterinarian promptly in case an issue does arise.

Pet Talk is a service of the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. Stories can be viewed on the web at vetmed.tamu.edu/news/pet-talk. Suggestions for future topics may be directed to editor@cvm.tamu.edu.

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Veterinarians at OSU develop vaccine technology that could protect against COVID-19 and measles at the same time – 10TV

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

Two veterinarians from OSU's College of Veterinary Medicine took a measles vaccine and added the COVID-19 spike protein as a response to the global pandemic.

COLUMBUS, Ohio Ohio doctors are working to develop vaccine technology to protect us from COVID-19.

Dr. Jianrong Liand Dr. Stefan Niewiesk from Ohio State University's College of Veterinary Medicine took a measles vaccine and added the COVID-19 spike protein as a response to the global pandemic.

The resultwas a vaccine that is shown to protect against both measles and COVID-19 in at least animals.

The next step is testing humans.

The vaccine could be particularly helpful in developing countries, as it does not require the same refrigeration as the mRNA vaccines.

"We think the measles virus is a very good vaccine because it has a long-standing safety record. It has been instrumental in reducing the measles virus worldwide," Niewiesk said. "We think that given all the data it makes a very effective vaccine. Also, given the fact, it protects life-long against measles virus infections so ideally (and we do not know this yet) it would also protect for a very long time against COVID-19."

Biological E. Limited and the Ohio State Innovation Foundation announced an exclusive license agreement on Tuesday for the vaccine technology.

The company will be responsible for the evaluation and further development, including the commercialization of the vaccine candidate(s).

Translating this vaccine platform into the hands of a global vaccine company for further evaluation and development is a critical step and we are excited that Biological E has taken on this role, said Dr. Patrick Green, Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies, Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine.

Mahima Datla, Managing Director of Biological. E. Limited added, "BE has been working to develop a safe and effective vaccine for the COVID-19. BE is very happy to help further this innovation and expand that effort."

To read more about the technology, click here.

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Veterinarians at OSU develop vaccine technology that could protect against COVID-19 and measles at the same time - 10TV

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USDA Awards Grant To Texas A&M To Develop AI-Based Wildlife Monitoring – Texas A&M University Today

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

Purple martins on one of the new nesting box systems.

Doug Bonham, Field Data Technologies

A research team led by the Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVMBS) has been awarded a nearly $700,000 Conservation Innovation Grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to develop a new artificial intelligence-based wildlife monitoring system.

The Conservation Innovation Grant program, under the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, supports the development of new tools, approaches, practices and technologies to further natural resource conservation on private lands.

The grant will be used by principal investigator and CVMBS associate professor Dr. Donald Brightsmith and his team to integrate camera, image and sensor data to create a tool to monitor wildlife that are typically difficult to observe, including pollinators, reptiles, amphibians and nesting birds.

Currently, landowners do not have many options for measuring their wildlife conservation efforts, such as setting up nesting boxes for birds or preserving areas of natural land, besides bringing in teams of scientists for hand surveys, a costly and lengthy process. Since private land makes up so much of the U.S., landowners efforts play a key role in the countrys overall wildlife management and conservation.

Brightsmiths team, in conjunction with colleagues from the University of California, Santa Barbara, the University of Hawaii and private industry, is working to develop a low-cost and easy-to-use system that will allow producers to monitor wildlife on their land and understand how their actions directly affect the local environment.

Part of our grant is to make it so a typical landowner can easily use a laptop or phone app to see the information that came in from a specific camera, such as where that camera is on a map; the weather, temperature, light, and humidity there; and the critters that were at that camera, Brightsmith said.

Commercial wildlife cameras already allow landowners to monitor wildlife on a small scale, but by using artificial intelligence to aggregate and analyze data from a number of cameras and locations, landowners will be able to see a much more complete picture.

The camera system will photograph the scene and, whenever there is a significant change, forward images to a central computer that will use artificial intelligence to identify species, behaviors and trends. According to Connie Woodman, a member of Brightsmiths team and graduate student in the CVMBS Department of Veterinary Pathobiology (VTPB,) this process would traditionally take scientists dozens of hours to conduct surveys and sort through photos.

Baby chickadees inside a nesting box.

Doug Bonham, Field Data Technologies

If this sort of technology could be available at low cost or free to farmers, it could really impact the ability to see if conserving farmland and private land is working, Woodman said. Its just too expensive to have a hands-on survey for every property owner who wants to apply for government support to maintain wild lands and wildlife populations.

The camera system will be used in three different setups a ground setup to monitor reptiles and amphibians, a veil trap setup for insects and a bird nesting box setup. In all three uses, the animals photographed will be free from any harm or human interference.

One of the other objectives within this is if landowners are doing land management activities like cutting, spraying, or planting, they will be able to look at the data coming in to immediately see how those changes in the ecosystem have impacted key reptiles, amphibians, birds and bees, Brightsmith said.

An early version of the nest box setup has already been deployed in the Pacific Northwest by collaborators within Field Data Technologies and is providing invaluable data on chickadee and purple martin nesting behaviors.

Its doing more than just taking photos; its spitting out data. How many eggs? When was there a change? How many times is the nest being visited? How many times does a chickadee investigate a nest box before it decides that its good enough? Woodman said. With that data we can tell a land manager, The chickadee started visiting the nest boxes X weeks before it used them. So if you wait until June to hang up the box, you wont get any use this year.'

While the grant will directly support the technologys creation and use in supporting landowners, Brightsmith hopes that the technology will one day also be adapted to create systems that could survey for invasive species and agricultural pests, monitor wildlife recovery after natural disasters, and more.

If we build a technology thats fairly straightforward to train the AI, someone else can take our platform and tweak it, he said. Our objective is to create a system that has unlimited potential.

The system will initially be tested in Arizona, California, Texas and Montana to see how it works in different environments. The team has already partnered with producers and other landowners near Austin, San Antonio and southern California to see how the technology holds up around large animals like cattle.

Along with Brightsmith and Woodman, collaborators on this grant include Drs. Chris Evelyn and Katja Seltmann, from the University of California, Santa Barbara, Cheadle Center for Biodiversity and Ecological Restoration; Dr. Ethel Villalobos, from the University of Hawaii at Manoa; and Doug Bonham, senior electronics engineer at Microsoft and the founder and president of Field Data Technologies of Essex, Montana.

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Research resuming on campuses – American Veterinary Medical Association

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

Chris Cramer, PhD, said in early November the University of Minnesota had reached about 80% of its research output prior to the pandemic.

Dr. Cramer is vice president for research and leader of a research group in the Department of Chemistry. He said the university is keeping lower numbers of people in laboratories and other research sites as well as restricting work involving human participants in uncontrolled environments, such as grade schools.

Otherwise, weve been pretty successful in bringing back most of the stuff that would require someone to come to campus, go to a field site, whatever it might be, he said.

Early this year, university research leaders described how their institutions delayed the start of new research, reduced staffing in research facilities, and added safety measures to ongoing studies.

By late spring, universities were publishing and implementing phased plans for resuming research, each with their own plans on how to protect investigators, participants, and the public.

Texas A&M Universitys Division of Research, for example, published in June plans for how investigators could resume research involving human participants and other clinical studies, as well as published overall research plans including an update as the fall semester began.

Johns Hopkins University officials published their JHU Return to Research Guidance on June 12, with limits on the time and activities allowed on campus, reduced capacity in laboratories, and added responsibilities for reducing transmission risks. The guidance states that some projects may proceed at a slower pace, and some studies may be lower priorities.

Isaac Pessah, PhD, associate dean and professor of molecular biosciences at the University of California-Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, said the university had been ramping up research after a substantial reduction early in the pandemic. The university maintained studies deemed essential, continued breeding irreplaceable animal lines, and maintained other animal populations while pausing new studies unrelated to COVID-19.

Starting June 1, UC-Davis officials allowed up to 33% of research personnel on-site for time-sensitive studies, with distancing and personal protective equipment requirements. Starting Oct. 30, the allowances expanded to all studies that need on-site access.

The next phase, whenever that may come, would allow two-thirds of research personnel on-site, resumption of field research, and expansion of all research activities.

Dr. Douglas K. Taylor is senior veterinarian in the Emory University School of Medicine Division of Animal Resources and a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine. He said in late October that Emorys research-use mouse populationthe bulk of the institutions research animal populationwas down about 15% from early March, when it was at an all-time high. The volume of research at the institution also was down about 15%.

We are certainly not back where we were in the beginning of the year, he said.

Dr. Joyce Cohen, associate director of animal resources at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center and associate professor in the Emory University School of Medicine Division of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, said the primate research facility, in contrast, remained insanely busy.

We never really slowed down much during COVID, she said. We stopped doing new projects, but we didnt stop any ongoing projects with nonhuman primates.

Dr. Cohen said that, as the pause on new projects ended, more investigators started studies amid a torrent of ongoing research. The primate research center closed the fiscal year with more than $88 million in grant income, a record high.

Were having problems because of monkey shortages, she said.

In a typical year, Yerkes officials would be able to supplement their rhesus macaque population by buying more. But pharmaceutical companies are competing for all domestic sources of rhesus macaques because importation channels closed during the pandemic.

The Atlantic reported Aug. 31 that China provided 60% of the 35,000 monkeys imported to the U.S. in 2019 but halted those exports early this year.

Dr. Cohen said the center expanded its breeding colony, but each macaque can give birth only each spring, following a six-month gestation period. They become viable for research at 3 years old and optimal for studies at 5.

Dr. Taylor said the physical distancing rules at Emoryand most research institutions he knows oflimit the number of researchers in a procedure room. Dr. Cohen said all of Yerkes animal resource staff had returned with staggered shifts, and researchers have adjusted with unusual schedules to reduce laboratory occupancy.

We still have constraints with PPE, she said. Its still challenging. Weve been OK. Weve been able to get things, but its never a guarantee that well have enough face shields or enough masks.

Dr. Cramer said the pandemic also continues to hinder research among people whose work depends on travel, such as investigators in the humanities, social sciences, and geology. The university removed a previous restriction on domestic travel but continues to restrict international travel.

Veterinary researchers, in particular, struggled this year with deciding how to continue clinical trials involving pets and how they should protect pet owners, Dr. Cramer said. A Missouri resident might own a dog with cancer and travel to Minnesota to participate in a clinical trial, he said.

Should we have them do that, given the challenges associated with it for the individual? he said. And then, of course, how do you protect your staff and people in the veterinary clinic?

By early November, the volume of clinical trials in the veterinary clinic almost met the volume from before the pandemic, in part because travel is less uncertain, Dr. Cramer said.

In the spring, researchers and spokespeople at several universities indicated in interviews with JAVMA News they had reduced breeding of research animals, and a few depopulated mice in efforts to reduce the risks to human health. One institution sent livestock used in teaching laboratories to market earlier than planned.

Some news reports published at that time gave the impression research institutions were implementing widespread euthanasia of research rodents. Dr. Cohen said that, while some institutions euthanized research animals early in the pandemic, she thinks that was rare and institutions more often paused rodent breeding during the uncertain early months.

Dr. Pessah said research scientists across the UC-Davis campus, including the veterinary school, wonder whether the campus administration had been responsive to concerns about delays in studies unrelated to COVID-19.

But we are also very cognizant of safety as we move forward to ramp up, he said. So there are mitigating programs that have been put in place, especially for more junior faculty thatif your research has been delayed to the point where it has an impact on your ability to fulfill the missions in your grantsyou can apply for bridge funding to try to mitigate those delays.

The Office of Research leads that effort in cooperation with the deans, Dr. Pessah said. The amount available will depend on demand.

Most of the studies out of the School of Veterinary Medicine, though, met the definition of essential research because they deal with topics such as food animal health and food safety or require ongoing data collection to avoid massive losses, Dr. Pessah said.

Weve had a very open line of communication with all researcherswhether they use animals, cell lines, or a combinationto make sure that their essential research continues and their safety is maintained, he said.

As theoreticians, Dr. Cramer and the members of his research group work from home, in doing so following an order from Gov. Tim Walz that all people can work from home when possible. For other teams, the most challenging aspect tended to be deciding how to schedule workspace in ways that give people appropriate distance from one another while considering the space usually needed for their work.

When the fall semester began, though, new researchers needed training on laboratory techniques.

Sometimes, you need to be standing side by side with somebody, Dr. Cramer said. So, weve had to think about what things should be delayed in terms of training new people. Can we come up with techniques to deliver training without requiring folks to be too close to one another for too long a period?

For now, some of the trainers have relied on video-based training, whereas in-person instructors simply stood further away during their lessons and added plexiglass barriers, he said.

Though some researchers at the University of Minnesota developed COVID-19, none of those infections were traced to their workplaces or co-workers, Dr. Cramer said.

As for the research animal population, the University of Minnesotas mouse population was about 80% of its pre-pandemic total and climbing, Dr. Cramer said. Activity in the vivariums remained down to provide distance between researchers.

Dr. Taylor said that, for research institutions, business was returning to normal. He said researchers at Emory remained dedicated to their work and know it is important.

The work goes on, he said. The animals need to be taken care of. The research needs to move forward.

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Study: Bartonella Infection Associated With Psychiatric Symptoms and Skin Lesions – NC State News

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

Bartonella bacteria are increasingly recognized as an emerging infectious disease threat. A new study by North Carolina State University researchers has found additional instances of Bartonella infection in humans who exhibited neuropsychiatric symptoms, a subset of whom also had skin lesions. This research adds to the body of evidence that not only can Bartonella infection mimic a spectrum of chronic illnesses including mental illness but also that dermatological symptoms may accompany infection.

Bartonella henselae is a bacterium historically associated with cat-scratch disease, which until recently was thought to be a short-lived (or self-limiting) infection. There are at least 30 different known Bartonella species, of which 13 have been found to infect humans. Improved methods for detecting Bartonella infection in animals and humans it is notorious for hiding in the linings of blood vessels and potentially the skin has led to the diagnosis of bartonelloses in patients with a host of chronic illnesses.

In 2019, Dr. Edward Breitschwerdt, Melanie S. Steele Distinguished Professor of Internal Medicine at NCState, published a case study involving an adolescent boy diagnosed with rapid onset schizophrenia, who had accompanying skin lesions. After Breitschwerdts research group documented Bartonella henselae infection, the patient received antimicrobial therapy and all neuropsychiatric symptoms resolved.

The new study is a follow-up to the 2019 work and is published in the journal Pathogens. Thirty-three participants suffering from neuropsychiatric symptoms ranging from sleep disorders and migraines to depression and anxiety enrolled in the study. Twenty-nine of 33 participants were found to have Bartonella infections based upon serology and enrichment blood culture polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing. Twenty-four of the 29 Bartonella-positive participants (83%) reported the appearance of skin lesions during their illness.

Skin lesions ranged from cutaneous eruptions to red, irregular linear lesions randomly located on various parts of the patients body. Many of these lesions resembled striae distensae (stretch marks); however, typical risk factors for striae distensae, such as body building activities, obesity, pregnancy, prednisone treatment and other known disease associations, were either infrequently or not reported by study participants.

This research, a follow-up to our initial case report of Pediatric Acute-Onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS), was initiated to further investigate a possible association between neuropsychiatric illness, skin lesions and a bacterial infection of emerging biomedical importance, Breitschwerdt says. We hope that this research will enable physicians to suspect connections between disparate symptoms involving the nervous system and skin that could be associated with an underlying bacterial cause.

Breitschwerdt is the first and corresponding author of the research, which was supported by the Bartonella/Vector-Borne Diseases Research Fund at NCStates College of Veterinary Medicine. NCState research technician Julie Bradley, postdoctoral researcher Erin Lashnits, and research professor Ricardo Maggi, as well as dermatologist Paul Reicherter of the University of Missouri Kansas City Truman Medical Center, contributed to the work.

-peake-

Note to editors: An abstract follows.

Bartonella Associated Cutaneous Lesions (BACL) in People with Neuropsychiatric Symptoms

DOI: 10.3390/pathogens9121023

Authors: Ed Breitschwerdt, Julie Bradley, Ricardo Maggi, Erin Lashnits, North Carolina State University; Paul Reicherter, University of Missouri Kansas CityPublished: Online Dec. 7, 2020 in Pathogens

Abstract:Bartonella species are globally important emerging pathogens that were not known to infect animals or humans in North America prior to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic. Ongoing improvements in diagnostic testing modalities have allowed for the discovery of Bartonella species (spp.) DNA in blood; cerebrospinal fluid; and the skin of patients with cutaneous lesions, fatigue, myalgia, and neurological symptoms. We describe Bartonella spp. test results for participants reporting neuropsychiatric symptoms, the majority of whom reported the concurrent development of cutaneous lesions. Study participants completed a medical history, a risk factor questionnaire, and provided cutaneous lesion photographs. Bartonella spp. serology and Bartonella alpha proteobacteria enrichment blood culture/PCR were assessed. Within a 14-month period, 33 participants enrolled; 29/33 had serological and/or PCR evidence supporting Bartonella spp. infection, of whom 24 reported concurrent cutaneous lesions since neuropsychiatric symptom onset. We conclude that cutaneous lesions were common among people reporting neuropsychiatric symptoms and Bartonella spp. infection or exposure. Additional studies, using sensitive microbiological and imaging techniques, are needed to determine if, or to what extent, Bartonella spp. might contribute to cutaneous lesions and neuropsychiatric symptoms in patients.

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New research marketing campaign part of CSU progress report to Board of Governors – Source

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

CSU System CFO Henry Sobanet provided an update on Gov. Jared Polis budget request including a $494 million general fund increase to public higher education to restore operating support for colleges and universities to the $825 million funding level of fiscal year 2020. If approved, the CSU System would receive $101.6 million. The governors request also allows up to a 3% increase in resident, undergraduate tuition rates.

Budget Each spring, typically in May, the Board finalizes the budget for the coming year. During the bimonthly meetings leading up to budget approval, the Board receives financial updates which model multiple scenarios reflecting updated projections of factors such as enrollment trends and the anticipated funding for higher education from the legislature.

The Board reviewed models for the Education and General Budget which assume state funding at the level of fiscal year 2020, a slightly greater than typical enrollment decline from fall to spring, and tuition increases of 0% or 3%. Given ongoing financial challenges, including those from COVID-19, the CSU models project a fiscal shortfall in the range of $19.7 million to $28.6 million. Consistent with the Governors budget request, there are no salary increases included in the current CSU budget modeling for FY2021. The Board continues to implement its multi-year strategy of managing the shortfall created by COVID-19. At the February meeting the Board will further discuss how to resolve a shortfall if those revenue projections hold steady after updates to enrollment figures and new state revenue projections.

Faculty Representative Report Professor Stephanie Clemons discussed CSUs nation-leading sustainability ranking and the successful in-person fall semester. Clemons is retiring, and Faculty Council will designate a new representative who will fill the role starting at the Boards February meeting.

Student Representative Report ASCSU President Hannah Taylor shared priorities that Associated Students of CSU are focusing on including: a petition drive for a ballot initiative to change the citys You+2 policy to ME+3; health initiatives including mass ordering of thermometers for students, mental health support, flu shot promotion; and support for Rams Against Hunger. Taylor also discussed ASCSUs mentor program for academics and a partnership with Rocky Mountain Student Media to do monthly fireside chats shared online on the CTV YouTube channel.

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How to talk to pet owners about preventive care – Jill Lopez

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

Disease prevention is integral to practicing high-quality veterinary medicine. We aim to maintain pet health, yet we are often faced with sick animals whose owners were unaware of the importance of ongoingpreventive and wellness care. We need to focus on educating clients about the importance of disease prevention at every wellness appointment, but especially with new clients and at new pet appointments.

Improving Health and Quality of Life

Keeping pets happy and healthy is the ultimate goal of the veterinarian and pet owners partnership. Talk to the owner about how preventive care improves their pets longevity and quality of life. Consistently remind owners that preventive wellness checks are essential to meeting this goal. Communicate that unremarkable wellness exams are a sign of success, not wasted time or money.

Emphasize to clients that proactive disease screening is an important part of preventive care. Early diagnosis can simplify the treatment of many types of diseases, reducing costs and the long-term morbidity of many diseases. Overall, early intervention improves prognosis and the patients quality of life.

Preventive Care Benefits

Another important point of discussion is that disease prevention saves money. Even simple health issues can quickly become expensive if treatment has been delayed or postponed. Meanwhile, more serious health issues and emergencies are often a major financial burden to many clients. With wellness care, we can avoid some of these emergencies.

Reducing Zoonotic Risks

Furthermore, good preventive care that includes parasite control and vaccinations such as rabies and leptospirosis can reduce the incidence of zoonosis, avoiding the associated health impacts and healthcare costs.

Using Examples To Support the Benefits

Choosing an example to contrast the consequences of the disease with the simplicity of prevention or early intervention is a powerful way to educate the client on the benefits of preventive care. Some good examples include parvovirus, heartworm disease, leptospirosis, chronic kidney disease, or tumors.Picking ones that are most relevant to the individual patient create the most impact in the discussion.

If we can emphatically communicate the importance of disease prevention, we can see many more patients for regular wellness visits. This will provide us with better business, happy clients, and improved pet health.

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PET TALK: Seeing the signs: What to know about cherry eye in dogs – Houston Chronicle

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

Spotting a red bump in the corner of a pets eye is a concerning but not uncommon experience for many dog owners. Colloquially called cherry eye, this bump may be a prolapsed gland of the nictitans, also known as the third eyelid.

Dr. Sean Collins, a clinical assistant professor at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine, says that ophthalmologists dont entirely understand why the gland of the nictating membrane sometimes protrudes from its original position but it is believed to be a result of a weakness in the connective tissue responsible for holding the gland in the correct position.

This condition can happen to any breed of dog but is seen most commonly in certain breeds, including the American cocker spaniel, English bulldog, Lhasa apso, and the Pekinese, Collins said.

Pet owners who spot a red swollen mass in the inner corner of their pets eye, large or small, should bring it to their veterinarians attention promptly. In addition to causing irritation to the dog, this condition can have lasting consequences when left untreated.

Without correction, chronic prolapse can lead to conjunctivitis (pink eye) and ocular discharge (liquid coming from the eye), Collins said. It has also been shown that with correction, dogs are less likely to develop low tear production later in life.

Low tear production can result in multiple problems if left untreated. In addition to pain and decreased vision, corneal ulceration may also develop, which can become infected and result in a ruptured eye. This condition responds well to tear stimulant therapy in most cases, but lifelong medication is usually required.

Your veterinarian will be able to confirm whether your pet has cherry eye and can develop a treatment plan that works best to resolve cherry eye and reduce the potential for ocular issues as your dog ages.

Initial therapy may consist of topical anti-inflammatory therapy if local inflammation may be contributing to prolapse of the gland, he said. If a short course of medical therapy does not work or re-prolapse develops, surgical repositioning is indicated. There are numerous surgical techniques to reposition the gland with overall high success rates.

If surgical treatment is required, Collins stresses that this treatment will benefit your pet in both the short- and long-term.

Surgical repositioning is very important if initial medical therapy fails, as the gland is responsible for about 30-50% of the aqueous tear production in the dog, he said. We commonly see low tear production in the same breeds that develop a prolapsed gland of the nictitans. It has been shown that dogs with surgical repositioning of the gland have a lower chance of developing low tear production later on in life compared to those where the gland has been excised or remains chronically prolapsed.

Unfortunately, there are no known preventative measures to protect against cherry eye, Collins says. This condition can develop in both eyes, usually before the age of 2. The best way pet owners can protect their furry friend is to remain vigilant in monitoring their pets health and to bring concerns to their veterinarian promptly in case an issue does arise.

Pet Talk is a service of the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. Stories can be viewed on the web at vetmed.tamu.edu/news/pet-talk. Suggestions for future topics may be directed to editor@cvm.tamu.edu.

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PET TALK: Seeing the signs: What to know about cherry eye in dogs - Houston Chronicle

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Pet talk: Seeing the signs: What to know about cherry eye In dogs – Marshall News Messenger

December 8th, 2020 8:00 pm

BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION Spotting a red bump in the corner of a pets eye is a concerning but not uncommon experience for many dog owners. Colloquially called cherry eye, this bump may be a prolapsed gland of the nictitans, also known as the third eyelid.

Dr. Sean Collins, a clinical assistant professor at the Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, says that ophthalmologists dont entirely understand why the gland of the nictating membrane sometimes protrudes from its original position, but it is believed to be a result of a weakness in the connective tissue responsible for holding the gland in the correct position.

This condition can happen to any breed of dog but is seen most commonly in certain breeds, including the American cocker spaniel, English bulldog, Lhasa apso, and the Pekinese, Collins said.

Pet owners who spot a red swollen mass in the inner corner of their pets eye, large or small, should bring it to their veterinarians attention promptly. In addition to causing irritation to the dog, this condition can have lasting consequences when left untreated.

Without correction, chronic prolapse can lead to conjunctivitis (pink eye) and ocular discharge (liquid coming from the eye), Collins said. It has also been shown that with correction, dogs are less likely to develop low tear production later in life.

Low tear production can result in multiple problems if left untreated. In addition to pain and decreased vision, corneal ulceration may also develop, which can become infected and result in a ruptured eye. This condition responds well to tear stimulant therapy in most cases, but lifelong medication is usually required.

Your veterinarian will be able to confirm whether your pet has cherry eye and can develop a treatment plan that works best to resolve the issue and reduce the potential for ocular issues as your dog ages.

Initial therapy may consist of topical anti-inflammatory therapy if local inflammation may be contributing to prolapse of the gland, he said. If a short course of medical therapy does not work or re-prolapse develops, surgical repositioning is indicated. There are numerous surgical techniques to reposition the gland with overall high success rates.

If surgical treatment is required, Collins stresses that this treatment will benefit your pet in both the short- and long-term.

Surgical repositioning is very important if initial medical therapy fails, as the gland is responsible for about 30-50% of the aqueous tear production in the dog, he said. We commonly see low tear production in the same breeds that develop a prolapsed gland of the nictitans. It has been shown that dogs with surgical repositioning of the gland have a lower chance of developing low tear production later on in life compared to those where the gland has been excised or remains chronically prolapsed.

Unfortunately, there are no known preventative measures to protect against cherry eye, Collins said. This condition can develop in both eyes, usually before the age of two. The best way owners can protect their furry friend is to remain vigilant in monitoring their pets health and to bring concerns to their veterinarian promptly in case an issue does arise.

Pet Talk is a service of the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. Stories can be found on the Pet Talk website. Suggestions for future topics may be directed to editor@cvm.tamu.edu.

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Pet talk: Seeing the signs: What to know about cherry eye In dogs - Marshall News Messenger

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