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One-year Results in 2 Given Gene Therapy at Low Dose Showing… – Parkinson’s News Today

January 17th, 2020 10:49 am

Two Parkinsonspatients treated with AXO-Lenti-PD, an investigative gene therapy, in an ongoing clinical trial continue to show improvement 12 months later, Axovant, the therapys developer, said in a release.

These findings at one year after treatment are important because this timepoint allows for a better assessment of therapy durability, and a more assured differentiation between placebo effects and therapeutic response, the company added.

AXO-Lenti-PD has shown encouraging results in these two people given a first low dose in the SUNRISE-PD (NCT03720418) Phase 1/2 clinical trial, which is now enrolling up to 30 patients at sites in France and England.

The treatment works by delivering three genes involved in dopamine production directly to the brain via a surgical procedure.

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter a molecule involved in transmitting information between neurons that is critical to coordinating movement. Dopamine-producing (dopaminergic) neurons are lost in Parkinsons, and the resulting drop in dopamine levels is the cause of many disease symptoms.

By infecting brain cells with the genetic instructions to increase dopamine production, AXO-Lenti-PD aims to turn other cells into dopaminergic neurons.

Current dopamine replacement therapies require continual oral doses of dopamine, whose effectiveness fades over time. The period between when one doses effectiveness wanes and the taking of a next dose can result in off periods, wherein patients report a return of symptoms such as poor motor control, stiffness, fatigue and mood changes.

Helping the brain to again produce adequate levels of dopamine would, in theory, eliminate the need for periodic oral doses, which could significantly limit off periods.

Previous studies in primate models of Parkinsons found AXO-Lenti-PD to be safe and effective, and SUNRISE-PD results at three months post-treatment found that a one-time delivery of the therapy significantly improved patient scores on theUnified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), a standard assessment of motor and non-motor symptoms associated with Parkinsons.

The trial consists of two parts. Part A is an open-label, dose-escalation phase in which patients receive one of potentially three escalating doses of the gene therapy. In part B, a new group of patients will be randomized to either the ideal part A dose or to a sham procedure as an untreated control group. SUNRISE-PDs goal is to test the safety, tolerability, and effectiveness of the potentialtreatment.

Both patients here, the first two enrolled, received the lowest dose (4.2106transducing units) of AXO-Lenti-PD.

One-year results showpositive changes of 24 points and 20 points (respectively for the two patients) on the UPDRS Part III Off score, representing a 37% improvement in off-period motor symptoms, Axovant reported. Improvement at six months was 29%, as measured on the same scale.

These patients also showed an average 13-point positive change from baseline (study start) representing a 44% improvement on the UPDRS Part II Off score, which assesses daily life activities. On the PDQ-39 score index, another quality-of-life measure in Parkinsons disease, these two showed an average 15-point positive change, or a 30% improvement from baseline to 12 months.

Both patients tolerated AXO-Lenti-PD well, and neither reported any serious side effects. One maintained a diary of on/off periods, which is useful in evaluating changes that might be due to therapy across time.

People being enrolled in SUNRISE-PD have had Parkinsons for at least five years, have motor fluctuations and dyskinesia (jerky, involuntary movements), and are between the ages of 48 and 70. More information can be found here.

The company expects to soon release six-month results on the first two patients given a second and higher dose of AXO-Lenti-PD. This dose is three times higher than that given the first cohort.

If dose-escalation results allow, Axovant expects to begin the randomized and placebo-controlled part B of the SUNRISE-PD as a Phase 2 study by the close of 2020.

Forest Ray received his PhD in systems biology from Columbia University, where he developed tools to match drug side effects to other diseases. He has since worked as a journalist and science writer, covering topics from rare diseases to the intersection between environmental science and social justice. He currently lives in Long Beach, California.

Total Posts: 208

Ana holds a PhD in Immunology from the University of Lisbon and worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Instituto de Medicina Molecular (iMM) in Lisbon, Portugal. She graduated with a BSc in Genetics from the University of Newcastle and received a Masters in Biomolecular Archaeology from the University of Manchester, England. After leaving the lab to pursue a career in Science Communication, she served as the Director of Science Communication at iMM.

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Global Gene Therapy Market 2019-2030: Promising Therapeutics Areas – Yahoo Finance

January 17th, 2020 10:49 am

Dublin, Jan. 13, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Gene Therapy Market (3rd Edition), 2019-2030" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The Gene Therapy Market, 2019-2030 report features an extensive study of the current market landscape of gene therapies, primarily focusing on gene augmentation-based therapies, oncolytic viral therapies, and genome editing therapies. The study also features an elaborate discussion on the future potential of this evolving market. Amongst other elements, the report features:

Key Topics Covered:

Some of the Companies Mentioned include:

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/nuaak0

About ResearchAndMarkets.comResearchAndMarkets.com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

CONTACT: ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.comFor E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

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Global Gene Therapy Market 2019-2030: Promising Therapeutics Areas - Yahoo Finance

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What has the most impact on longevity? – Harvard Health

January 17th, 2020 10:49 am

Published: February, 2020

Q. My family tends to be long-lived. I hear longevity is due to our DNA, and I also hear it's due to lifestyle. Which is it, and how do they make us live longer?

A. Both DNA and lifestyle can affect longevity, and they both do so in the same way: by altering our body chemistry. DNA controls the production of each of the natural chemicals in our body. It controls both the shape (and, hence, the effectiveness) of each chemical, and also controls how much of that chemical is made. So, it's not surprising that DNA could affect longevity. In the past 20 years, astonishing progress has been made in understanding the body chemistry that controls the aging process. And that knowledge has allowed scientists to extend the life of various animals through simple genetic manipulations.

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Frazier closes 12th fund in 30 years, with $617M to bet on cell/gene therapy, Big Pharma spinoffs and more – Endpoints News

January 17th, 2020 10:49 am

The team at Frazier Healthcare did a number of deals that exemplified its wide-ranging strategy in 2019: Tachi Yamada worked with gene therapy pioneer Jim Wilson to launch Passage Bio; Mike Gallatin sold Mavupharma and its STING-targeted small molecule to AbbVie; and Bhaskar Chaudhuri flipped Arcutis to an IPO just months after introducing it to the world via a crossover round close to $100 million. Theyre now kicking off 2020 with a new, bigger fund that will give them firepower to do more.

At $617 million, Fund X is fairly dramatically bigger than their last fund, said managing partner Patrick Heron.

Were increasingly going after new therapeutic modalities like gene therapy, cell therapy, neoantigens and because those need significant manufacturing and CMC investment or investing more dollars per company, he told Endpoints News.

He sees Frazier pouring around $40 million into each company supporting them through every stage, whether its helped with the launch or joined through a later syndicate though that could vary if, say, they sell a company right after Series A. By that estimate, the new fund could touch anywhere from 15 to 25 biotechs.

About a third of the portfolio is reserved for homegrown startups, another 15% to 25% for public securities, and the rest is in-between.

Heron is one of three leading the fund; hes joined by managing partner James Topper and Dan Estes, whos just been promoted to general partner. Also involved will be Jamie Brush, newly made partner after spearheading investments in public securities for the past three years.

Frazier is happy to both create and syndicate with its venture brethren, Heron added, citing OrbiMed as a friend.

The congregation has grown exponentially since Frazier first put its feet down three decades ago.

When I started at Frazier, there were probably 10 to 15 life sciences focused VC funds, said Heron, whos just celebrated his 20th year at the firm, and now theres probably 100.

It gives Frazier a lengthy track record to boast which can be particularly helpful when they pitch bigger players on biotech spinoffs such as Phathom Pharmaceuticals, now developing one of Takedas GI drugs.

Pharma companies have become more receptive to that when they see substantial value accrual to them, Heron said. And its public now: Takeda owns probably about $200 million worth of stock in Phathom, and so they are basically deriving a lot of economic value from the partnership, and what theyre also focused on is the quality of teams we can put around their asset such that the program will reach the clinic and benefit patients.

Two former Celgene execs from the global inflammation and immunology franchise have been recruited to the C-suite at Phathom, including CEO Terrie Curran and CCO Martin Gilligan.

Despite the lack of big check M&A at the beginning of the year and an election looming in November, Heron remains optimistic as their deal flow has been in line with the expectation of 2 to 3 sales per year. And the same goes for IPO.

I think you will see a lot of companies sort of backing up the truck and loading up with as much capital as they can, with probably less robust activity in the second half of the year, he said.

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4 health and wellness events worth seeking out in Austin this weekend – Hoodline

January 17th, 2020 10:48 am

Want to up your game when it comes to health and wellness?

From free barre class to seminar on human touch, there's plenty to do when it comes to holistic activities to enrich your weekend. Read on for a rundown.

Hoodline offers data-driven analysis of local happenings and trends across cities. Links included in this article may earn Hoodline a commission on clicks and transactions.

From the event description:

When: Saturday, Jan. 18, 9:30-10 a.m.Where: Adelante Austin, 1206 W. 38th St.Admission: Free

Click here for more details, and to get your tickets

From the event description:

When: Saturday, Jan. 18, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.Where: River City Wellness, 8708 S. Congress Ave., Suite 570Admission: $5 (Early Bird)

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From the event description:

When: Saturday, Jan. 18, 1-2:30 p.m.Where: Cancer Rehab and Integrative Medicine, 4130 Spicewood Springs RoadAdmission: Free

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From the event description:

When: Saturday, Jan. 18, 7-9 p.m.Where: Cenote - Windsor Park, 6214 Cameron RoadAdmission: Free

Click here for more details, and to get your tickets

This story was created automatically using local event data, then reviewed by an editor. Click here for more about what we're doing. Got thoughts? Go here to share your feedback.

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Robby Andrews Lyme Disease Recovery | Running With Lyme Disease – Runner’s World

January 17th, 2020 10:48 am

In early June of 2018 elite middle-distance runner Robby Andrews was on fire. Was, unquestionably, at the top of his running game. The then-27-year-old had just run one of his fastest races ever: 3:36 in the 1500 meters at the Oslo Diamond League Meet in Norway, beating out 18-year-old phenom Jakob Ingebrigtsen. Which is why, for Andrewswinner of the 800-meter national outdoor title in high school, holder of a national indoor record in the 800 meters as well as the 1000 meterswhat happened two weeks later was such a shock.

June 21. The USATF Championships in Des Moines, Iowa. Andrews felt confident going into the 1500 meters, but mid-race he completely ran out of steam. He placed a disappointing fifth in his heat, not even qualifying for the finals. I dont know what happened, a confused Andrews told reporters after the race.

Kevin Morris

A few days later he came down with flu-like symptoms. For the next month he battled nasty upper respiratory and sinus infections and 102-degree fevers. Training just sucked, says the Olympian. My paces were nearly 40 seconds slower than theyd been just a few weeks before. Andrews went to his doctor, who ran tests for everything from Lupus to Lyme, but they all came back negative. I was told, There is literally nothing wrong with you, recalls Andrews. But there had to be, he knew. This could not possibly be all in his head.

Still, he had a contract with Adidas to fulfill, so Andrews traveled to Europe, where he clocked disappointing times: 3:44 in the 1500 meters at the Lignano Meeting International in Italy; 1:52 in the 800 meters in Flanders Cup Kortrijk in Belgium. For the remainder of the summer, Andrews felt constantly wiped out. Normally he would be up at 7:30 to train; now, he couldnt pry himself out of bed until 10. The few days a week he forced himself to run, hed get so dizzy and breathless hed have to quit after 20 minutes. Every afternoon, he napped for up to four hours.

He kept thinking how closely his symptoms resembled those of people he knew whod had Lyme, including his older sister Kristin (also a runner who is a 2020 Olympic hopeful) and his former roommate, Donn Cabral (a 2012 and 2016 Olympian in the 3,000-meter steeplechase), so Andrews asked to have his Lyme test re-run in September. It came back positive. The doctor wanted to prescribe antibioticsthe standard treatment for Lymeimmediately, but Andrews was worried about the side effects. Instead, he decided to take the advice of a holistic doctor who had helped his sister during her bout with Lyme in 2016.

Once a week Andrews swallowed eight drops, an hour aparta concentration of herbs such as ashwagandha, rhodiola, turmeric, licorice root, and cordycep mushroomsthat the holistic doctor said would help strengthen his immune system. He soaked his feet in a proprietary blend of herbs that he was told would draw toxins out of his body. He spent more than $1,000 on treatment. He didnt care if anyone thought he was nuts. He just wanted to feel better.

And he did, for a few months. My energy went way up. I could run three miles without having to stop, says Andrews. Then, in February, it all fell apartan almost overnight, dramatic decline in his physical and emotional health. Fatigue weighed down his body. Headaches crackled through his brain. He was sweating so much at night that he had to change the sheets. And perhaps the worst? Really depressive thoughts. It was a dark couple of months, Andrews says. If it wasnt for my girlfriend and family, I would have gone days without talking to anyone or leaving the house. He raced at the U.S. Championships at the end of February on Staten Island, in the 1000 meters. I felt bad from the first step. Something was wrong. He clocked in at 2:26dead last.

Drew Reynolds

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Disillusioned with the holistic protocol, Andrews finally accepted a prescription for antibiotics in March. His doctor told him to take them until his symptoms were relieved for a full month. Andrewss concerns about side effects were valid; the antibiotic gave him severe fatigue and headaches, brain fog and GI issues.

Desperate to make the 2019 world championship team, he ran the 800 meters at the Adrian Martinez Classic in April, only to come in last, again. In June he set his sights on the Princeton Qualifier. I missed my college roommates wedding for it, that is how important this race was for me, he says. Midway through the 1500-meter race, he dropped out, wheezing and depleted.

Andrews felt like he was out of options. And although he didnt know it at the time, he had entered the Lyme Wars, a fiercely contested fight about why some Lyme patients develop chronic, relapsing symptoms even after treatmentand what to do about them.

A stealth pathogen. Thats what some researchers call the corkscrew-shaped bacteriaBorrelia burgdorferithat causes Lyme disease, now one of the fastest growing infectious diseases in America. More than 300,000 new cases are diagnosed every year, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Black-legged ticks pick up Borrelia from the birds and small mammals they feed on, then they pass the bacteria into our blood when they feed on us, usually from May to Septemberprime months for logging miles on wooded trails and grassy park paths.

Removing a tick quickly lowers your risk for infectionit takes an estimated 36 to 48 hours for the arthropod to transmit Borrelia. But once the bacteria enters your body, it is a master of evasion. The Borrelia can spread from the skin to other tissues, which can make it more challenging to treat. Your immune system takes days to a few weeks to recognize any infection, including Lyme. Thats why the standard Lyme testwhich checks for antibodies (not the bacteria itself)can more easily give a false negative test early on, like Andrewss did.

When your body finally detects Borrelias presence, it launches an immune response to fight it, which is what can bring on flu-like symptoms such as sluggishness, fatigue, muscle aches, and joint pain. Runnersespecially those who spend hours outside during the summer training for fall marathonscan attribute symptoms to overtraining.

The majority of Lyme cases are easy to treat and cure with a 10- to 28-day course of antibiotics, says Paul Auwaerter, M.D., the president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA). Ying Zhang, MD, Ph.D., a leading expert on the Lyme bacteria and a professor of molecular microbiology and immunology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, disagrees. Lyme can be a really terrible disease and a very complex one. Different patients have different responses, and the disease can manifest in different ways, says Zhang, who believes Lyme can indeed develop into a chronic form that resists the current antibiotic treatment.

Indeed, for around 20 percent of Lyme patients, a dose of antibiotics isnt the end of the story. Not by a long shot. They continue to suffer from a variety of symptoms that can last for months, even years: fatigue, headaches, muscle and joint pain, difficulty concentrating, and sleep disruptions. The frequently used medical term for these persistent problems is Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS). PTLDS means that we know that a patient has had Lyme, has gotten a course of antibiotics, and doesnt feel like theyve bounced back, says Auwaerter.

PTLDS is often referred to as chronic Lyme, a term Auwaerter disparages as a catchphrase for otherwise unexplained fatigue, pain, and neurologic symptoms in people who dont meet the diagnostic criteria for Lymeusually obtained by medical history, a positive blood test, and physical exam. But diagnosing Lyme can be tricky. In the first three weeks after infection, the test detects Lyme only 29 to 40 percent of the time and some 30 percent of all Lyme patients, like Andrews, dont get the telltale bullseye rash.

Drew Reynolds

Drew Reynolds

What really keeps the controversy alive is this: There isnt yet a sensitive and reliable test that can determine if ongoing symptoms after Lyme treatment are due to an ongoing active infection, says Brian Fallon, MD, director of the Lyme and Tick-Borne Diseases Research Center at Columbia University. Without one, some medical organizations, like the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS), believe chronic symptoms may be due to the persistence of the Lyme bacteria. They suggest that for some patients, the potential risks of treating with antibiotics for longer periods of time outweighs the consequences of an untreated persistent infection. Giving credence to this argument are several recent studies that found Lyme bacteria remained in animals even after they were treated with antibiotics. And in March, Zhang and his colleagues found that a slow-growing form of persister Lyme bacteria not only resisted standard single antibiotic treatment, but also caused more severe arthritis-like symptoms in mice. They found that a cocktail of three antibioticsdaptomycin, doxycycline, and ceftriaxonecompletely killed the bacteria, and they are now planning clinical trials to see if the result is the same in humans.

On the other hand, groups including the IDSA maintain that symptoms that linger after antibiotic therapy are not due to an ongoing active infection of the Lyme bacteria and therefore should not be treated with additional rounds of antibiotics because theyre unlikely to help. Six clinical trials have shown that long-term antibioticsbeyond the recommended 28 dayare not effective, says Auwaerter. Plus, long-term use of antibiotics can lead to serious side effects, such as blood clots and, even, in rare cases, death.

If chronic symptoms are not caused by an active infection, then what? It could be due to an autoimmune reaction, where a prior infection has triggered an immune reaction that is now acting independently, or it could be that the prior infection changed the brain activation patterns, Fallon says. Theres some evidence to support both of these processes.

While researchers debate, patients are left sick, with lots of questions, and no good answers. Its devastating for peoples lives and some are willing to try anything to get better, Fallon says. After his dismal race in Princeton, Andrews was one of them.

This June, after battling symptoms for nearly a year, Andrews visited Mark Sivieri, M.D., a board-certified family practice doctor in Maryland who is also board certified in integrative medicine (which pairs traditional medicine with complementary therapies). Andrewss cousin had been seeing him for her own ongoing Lyme symptoms. There was an instant connection: Sivieri had also been a professional runner; he and Andrews even shared a coach at one point. During the three-and-a-half-hour appointment, Sivieri studied Andrewss previous blood tests. He noticed that, in addition to Lyme, Andrews had tested positive for two other tick-borne infections (Andrews says the doctor who had ordered the test never mentioned them).

Ticks carry and transmit loads of other bacteria, parasites, and viruses beyond Borrelia burgdorferi. A single tick can make a person sick with several diseases at the same time, including Anaplasmosis (a bacterial infection that causes fever, aches, chills, and muscle aches), Babesiosis (a parasitic infection that attacks red blood cells), and Powassan virus (which can cause an infection in the brain and can even be deadly). And not all doctors check for these when they are focused on Lyme; those who do test for them may believe the antibiotics prescribed for Lyme will be enough to wipe out the co-infections. The estimates for co-infection rates with Lyme disease can widely range anywhere from about two to 40 percent. And not only are some, such as Powassan, more dangerous than Lyme, but simultaneous infection, some research suggests, may make Lyme harder to treat or recognize, and might affect how the immune system responds to Burgdorferi.

Sivieri put Andrews on a 60-day course of the two antibiotics hed previously been taking to kill the bacteria for Lyme; he also prescribed a medication to wipe out the co-infections. He said the night sweats and the shortness of breath, thats what the Babesia parasite does, it eats your red blood cells and prevents the oxygen from moving around your body. Thats obviously a big concern for runners. I couldnt breathe well when running, right from the start, says Andrews. And Im a trained athlete.

Sivieris tests showed that Andrews was also sensitive to gluten and dairy; he recommended avoiding them to help take pressure off his immune system. My stereotypical Italian grandma was aghast when I told her no more pasta and chicken parmesan, Andrews says. That was a big transition for me. But if thats whats was going to get me better, I didnt care at all.

Drew Reynolds

Sivieri then turned to natural remedies to help strengthen Andrewss immune system, putting him on adaptogenic herbssaid to help with all types of stresssuch as curcumin which can reduce the inflammatory response caused by Lyme.

Using alternative medicine to nuke hard-to-kill bugs might sound like folklore, but science is starting to back the theory: Zhang recently found that, in laboratory dish tests, 10 oilsincluding from garlic cloves, myrrh trees, thyme leaves, allspice berries, and cumin seedsshowed strong killing activity against the non-growing and slow-growing persister forms of the Lyme bacteria, even better than standard antibiotics. We need to do proper clinical trials, to see how to use them more effectively without being toxic but [in the future, I believe that] the more effective treatment is going to come from a combined approach of antibiotics with essential oils or natural products.

The combination of traditional and alternative medicine helped Andrews. The past year has been brutal, but he finally feels like his old self again. I wake up in the morning and I have energy all day, he says. Im not sweating at night, [there are] no headaches. The depressive thoughts are gone. Im training at full capacity. He plans to run the indoor season in 2020, still in hopes of achieving the Olympic qualifying time.

He stopped taking antibiotics in mid-August, now its complementary treatmentsincluding vitamin C for his adrenals and immune system and curcumin for inflammation. He still avoids gluten and dairy and is content to continue the regimen for the near future. The supplements could be pointless, but hes not going to chance it. It seriously feels like I have my life back, he says. This is me. Im back to me.

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Myths may worsen low back pain and promote ineffective treatments – Midwest Communication

January 17th, 2020 10:48 am

Thursday, January 16, 2020 4:38 p.m. EST

By Vishwadha Chander

(Reuters Health) - Common myths about low back pain could lead to more pain, ineffective care and unwarranted anxiety, researchers say.

Low back pain is the world's leading cause of disability, and it's often associated with costly care that can sometimes be harmful, Peter O'Sullivan and colleagues write in an editorial in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Myths about back pain are common and can be reinforced by the media and well-meaning clinicians, the authors note.

This misinformation "can lead people to fear back pain, respond to it in unhelpful ways and drive poor healthcare," O'Sullivan said in an email. "Myths often cause negative emotional responses such as fear, distress and loss of hope," he added, as well as behaviors like over-protecting the back and avoiding movement, activity and work.

O'Sullivan, a specialist physiotherapist with the School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science at Curtin University in Perth, Australia, told Reuters Health that almost daily, he comes across patients who hold unhelpful beliefs.

In their editorial, O'Sullivan and his colleagues identify 10 common myths about low back pain, and counter each of them with back pain facts that are supported by evidence.

Among the myths are the idea that low back pain will become persistent and will worsen with age, that pain is always a sign of tissue damage and requires rest, and that scans and invasive procedures are always needed to diagnose and treat low back pain.

In fact, the authors write, the evidence says persistent back pain can be scary, but it's rarely dangerous or life-threatening and it's unlikely to leave you in a wheelchair.

Getting older is not a cause of back pain, they add, and evidence-based treatments can help at any age. Persistent low back pain is rarely related to tissue damage and scans rarely show the cause of back pain.

Low back pain is not caused by poor posture while sitting, standing and bending, and it's also not caused by weak core muscles. Injections, surgery and strong drugs usually aren't effective for persistent back pain in the long term. Finding low-risk ways to control pain is key.

Dr. Houman Danesh, director of Integrative Pain Management at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, said it's common in his experience, too, to find patients holding beliefs like those in the list of myths.

"I usually have to spend a portion of my office visit untangling them, the most common being patients who say they have a herniated disc from 20 years ago and have chronic back pain. That is a rare occurrence," Danesh, who was not involved in the editorial, told Reuters Health in an email.

"It is sad and frustrating when patients take on a false identity based on a myth and lose a large part of their quality of life."

Danesh disagreed, however, with some of the authors' advice. For instance, there are cases when strong medications, injections or surgery can be used to treat low back pain, so that "is not entirely a myth," he said.

"There are times these treatments are necessary, and a medical evaluation is needed to determine the best course of treatment."

O'Sullivan said research into understanding back pain has increased, but societal beliefs and clinical practice were slow to catch up.

"Clinicians and doctors must spend time to ask patients what they understand about their back pain - its cause, consequences and how best to care for it - and then provide practical ways to manage it," he said.

SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2FuhlfI British Journal of Sports Medicine, online December 31, 2019.

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OVR Technology Is Creating Olfactory Virtual Reality for Health Care, Education and Training – Seven Days

January 17th, 2020 10:48 am

My first experience with olfactory virtual reality was truly trippy. Wearing a VR headset and holding a controller in each hand, I stood in a 3D room at OVR Technology in Burlington, gazing at a virtual table holding plates of tomato slices, garlic bulbs and basil leaves. As instructed by Jesse Stein, vice president of product and marketing, I used the controllers to pick up items with my white-gloved hands, bring them to my nose for a whiff and place them on the pizza beside me.

After I'd plunked down a few slices and bulbs, a lawn mower drove by, unattended, sounding just like a lawn mower and spewing grass in my general direction. As the four-wheeled interloper receded, I pushed a red button to slide the pizza into the oven.

The visual and auditory elements of this surreal experience were amazing. I felt like I'd been transported onto the Holodeck in a "Star Trek" show. But most remarkable were the scents provided by OVR Technology garlic, cut grass, hot Italian pie that wafted toward my nose at just the right moments.

The first time OVR Technology CEO Aaron Wisniewski tried VR, "It kind of blew my mind," he told Seven Days. "I immediately was like, 'This is the future. This is so cool. There is so much that can be done with this. But the thing that's missing, the thing that would make it feel like a real experience, is what I specialize in, which is scent.'"

Unbeknownst to many, "Our sense of smell is the only one of our senses with a direct link to the memory and emotions section of our brain, the limbic system," Wisniewski said in a TEDx Talk recorded in Stowe last May. "Every time you have an experience, it's inextricably linked to the smell of that moment and stored in the memory banks that make us who we are."

He believes that olfactory virtual reality could serve many purposes, from enjoyable to life changing. It could enhance a meditation practice, train employees in a task, teach first responders greater resilience to stress, diagnose anosmia (a loss or impairment of the sense of smell) and deepen exposure therapy for vets with posttraumatic stress disorder.

OVR Technology's mission, Wisniewski said in an interview, "is to have real-world positive impacts by enhancing the virtual world through scent. It's not just a cool thing or a gimmick. We want outcomes and impacts that are measurable."

The company aims to improve health care, education and training, and its first product is a three-component platform called Architecture of Scent. One component is the small ION device, which straps onto a VR headset, close to the wearer's nose. ION contains the second component, nine cartridges that store and emit highly realistic scents created by the company, or "scentware." The third component is software that interacts with VR software to cue delivery of scents in precisely measured doses timed to correspond to the headset wearer's behavior.

The scent of a rose should "be more intense the closer you get to it," Stein said. "Or, if there's a wind blowing" in the VR environment, the software calibrates "how the wind carries that scent."

Wisniewski cofounded OVR Technology in 2017 with his brother Sam Wisniewski, company COO and CFO; Matt Flego, CTO; and Erik Cooper, head of design. The four met at Generator maker space in Burlington. There, the Wisniewski brothers founded Alice & the Magician Cocktail Apothecary, which sells edible elixirs and aromatic mists; and Flego and Cooper founded M//E Design, an industrial design and prototyping company.

The Wisniewskis still own Alice & the Magician, now located on Pine Street, but spend most of their time at OVR Technology. "A really talented operations manager takes care of the day-to-day" at Alice & the Magician, Aaron Wisniewski said.

Last June, Flego and Cooper closed M//E Design, which had designed such products as the popular Core 360 active seating chair, to focus exclusively on the new business.

In 2015, the four founders learned about VR from Kip Steele, technical leader at Asure Software. Steele, who worked in information technology at the University of Vermont at the time, brought a headset to Generator.

About a year later, Champlain College started an experimental project to combine scents with VR. Faculty members invited Wisniewski to serve as a scent expert, and soon he and the other founders had created software, scentware and a prototype of the ION device.

"It looks like an elaborate mousetrap," Flego said of the prototype. At the proof of concept a successful demonstration of the olfactory virtual reality technology "we impressed some people, got a little bit of traction and a little bit of money," he recalled. Wisniewski was convinced that the product had huge potential, and soon his brother, Flego and Cooper joined him in creating OVR Technology.

A key collaborator who has helped guide development of the Architecture of Scent is Albert "Skip" Rizzo, a research professor at the University of Southern California and director for medical virtual reality at USC's Institute for Creative Technologies. He researches the use of VR to assess, treat, rehabilitate and increase resilience in psychology patients. Rizzo received the American Psychological Association's 2010 Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Treatment of Trauma for his work using virtual reality-based exposure therapy to treat PTSD.

Rizzo "has a deep understanding of how scents are an integral piece of the puzzle of PTSD," Wisniewski said. "We've been working closely with him and getting feedback from him on what types of scents to develop and how our technology can be effective with exposure therapy."

Rizzo is currently perfecting his Bravemind VR program for vets with PTSD and plans to distribute it to more than 100 VA hospitals around the country. OVR Technology is developing combat-related scents to enhance Bravemind.

Closer to home, OVR Technology is collaborating with David Lg Tomasi, who teaches and conducts research in the UVM Integrative Health program and Larner College of Medicine. He's also a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist at the UVM Medical Center.

"There is a lot of neuroscientific evidence of the role that sensory activation plays in our brain for general well-being," Tomasi said, "and by that I mean either in the stimulation of the olfactory bulb or the virtual-reality type of strategy."

Just as people can trick their brains into stimulating salivation by thinking about sucking on a lemon, he explained, VR can trick the brain into releasing neurotransmitters that are specifically focused on well-being.

"What is brand new is this combination" of olfactory stimulation and virtual reality, Tomasi emphasized.

"We've been doing integrative medicine for years on the patient psychiatry unit, mostly focusing on dietary examples, exercise, meditation, art therapy," he continued. But some patients can't participate due to medical issues, and Tomasi believes OVR Technology's product could help reduce their pain, stress and anxiety.

Not all olfactory virtual reality scenarios are as wacky or surreal as the pizza-with-lawn-mower demo I experienced. Tomasi found OVR Technology's woods-like demo so realistic that it was "really peaceful and nurturing. You could walk around, see the trees, see the landscape, the leaves and stones and rocks. You could pick up a marshmallow to roast, and you could have some water."

Sometimes, users forget that they're not in the real world. "Early on, we had a demo with a picnic table in it," Wisniewski recalled. "People would become so immersed in the environment that, within a minute or two, they would try to lean on the picnic table and fall over." After seeing a couple of people "hit the deck," the company adjusted the demo to keep people safe.

Within the next month or so, Tomasi and OVR Technology will launch a pilot study to collect qualitative and quantitative data from 12 volunteer UVM Medical Center inpatient subjects on the therapeutic value of olfactory virtual reality. A lot of research went into the study, which the team is confident is the first of its kind worldwide in a psychiatric setting. "It is groundbreaking research," Tomasi enthused.

A few other companies are also developing olfactory virtual reality, but OVR Technology's current challenges stem from more immediate concerns than competition. Because the VR industry is evolving quickly toward faster and smaller headsets, the company is already designing a smaller version of the ION device. It's also creating a "volume knob" to allow users to control the strength of scents delivered by the device.

Truth be told, I had a hard time smelling the tomato, basil and grass clippings in the demonstration. Though my brother's nose made him a successful New York City sommelier, my sniffer thinks Bayley Hazen Blue is a lot like Brie left in the fridge too long. I'd have welcomed a way to control the scent intensity, as would others who've experienced OVR Technology demos, Flego said.

"It's a lot like hearing: Different people hear different frequencies, and there are tons of factors that degrade over time," Stein noted.

But the company is determined to make its technology seamless. In the long term, "we envision that the relationship between smell and virtual reality will become as ubiquitous as sound and television," Wisniewski said.

His commitment to this goal stems in part from a cautionary concern. Culturally, we have deprioritized our sense of smell and sanitized our environment to include fewer scents, Wisniewski noted. He cited research showing that anosmia can lead to depression, anxiety and physical harm.

"If we continue down the path of being glued to screens and virtual reality, while ignoring this extremely important primal sense that has been refined over millions of years, the implications are kind of alarming," he said. "We don't have that many senses. You take away one, and I don't see it going well."

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Change Of Weather May Have Increased Congestion: Try These 4 Home Remedies For Immediate Relief – Doctor NDTV

January 17th, 2020 10:48 am

Congestion home remedies: From ginger to honey, carrots and cardamom, there are many remedies that can offer relief from cough, cold and increased congestion. Read here to know all about them. HIGHLIGHTS

Congestion home remedies: The rains have delayed the respite from cold weather that Delhiites may have been expecting this time around. Coughing, cold, congestion and sneezing may have increased for some of you. This is the right time to take some precautionary measures if you want to prevent your condition from getting worse. The most important thing to do is wear appropriate clothes and keep yourselves covered with warm clothes. Wear a muffler, cap, gloves, socks, jacket and everything else that will offer protection from the cold weather.

Besides, there are a few home remedies that can help in reducing congestion because of cold weather. Lifestyle coach Luke Coutinho shares a few of them on Instagram.

Ginger contains anti-inflammatory properties that can be beneficial for you in more ways than one. It can help in reducing congestion and clearing nasal passages. To make ginger tea, mash a piece of ginger (fresh ginger). Add 3 black pepper corns, a pinch of cinnamon, some cardamom, and 3 mashed garlic cloves. Boil all the ingredients well in a glass of water and reduce it to half. Add a tsp of honey to sweeten this infused tea. According to Luke, this tea "works the best" for reducing congestion, cold, cough, sneezing and other symptoms that worsen in the cold weather.

Ginger can offer relief from cough and cold during change of weatherPhoto Credit: iStock

Also read:Ginger For Congestion: Know How It Works And Ways To Use Ginger For Reducing Cough, Cold And Congestion

Carrots are a rich source of Vitamin C, the immunity-boosting vitamin which can help in fighting colds, allergies and sinus infections. Carrots also contain Vitamin A, which can help in keeping your mucous membranes healthy. Eating carrots, winter squash and sweet potatoes can provide you with beta carotene which your body converts into Vitamin A. Coconut oil, on the other hand, can help in dealing with irritated or sore nose, which often occurs after a few days of suffering from cold. Prepare carrot juice with fresh carrots and add 1 tbsp of raw coconut oil to deal with increased congestion because of change in weather.

Also read:Speed Up Your Weight Loss Process With Carrots This Winter; Know Other Health Benefits

Blocked nose, sinus infection and congestion can be effectively curbed with the help of steam inhalation. Luke suggests adding 1 tbsp of ajwain to the steam water. Inhale it for 5 minutes and it can help in breaking down of mucous, he says.

Honey can be helpful in offering relief from cold and congestion. You can prepare a lemon infused tea and add 2 tsp honey to it. Honey can soothe you while lemon juice in hot water can reduce congestion.

Honey can offer relief from cough and sore throatPhoto Credit: iStock

Also read:Surprising Benefits Of Honey For Weight Loss, Wound Healing And Much More

(Luke Coutinho, Holistic Lifestyle Coach - Integrative Medicine)

Disclaimer: This content including advice provides generic information only. It is in no way a substitute for qualified medical opinion. Always consult a specialist or your own doctor for more information. NDTV does not claim responsibility for this information.

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The Psychology of Alternative Medicine – Psychology Today

January 17th, 2020 10:48 am

"Pseudoscience is popular because it confirms what we believe; science is unpopular because it makes us question what we believe. Good science, like good art, often upsets our established ways of seeing the world." Carol Tavris, social psychologist

With Gwyneth Paltrows new Netflix docuseries, The Goop Lab, set to launch on January 24, 2020, the quasi-healthcare approach known as alternative medicine is similarly set to bask in the mainstream television streaming limelight. Topics for the six-episode show include energy healing, the use of psychedelic drugs, exorcisms, cold therapy, anti-aging, and female sexuality. More generally, Goop the brand has promoted other similar alternative medicine topics, such as past life regression therapyan unethical treatment in the case of mental health disordersand has provided a platform for the Medical Medium, a brand that promotes potentially dangerous treatments, such as celery juice for addiction.

The National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health defines alternative and complementary medicine (CAM) as health care approaches that are typically not part of conventional medical care. The term "alternative medicine"is preferred when a non-mainstream practice is used in lieu of conventional medicine, whereas the term "complementary medicine"is preferred when a non-mainstream practice is used together with conventional medicine.

While it has been argued that alternative medicine practices can berife with ethical difficulties and that proponents often promote a philosophy that is predicated on logical fallacies, it is important to develop an understanding of exactly what it is that compels many to seek these kinds of treatments.

One obvious and important driver towards CAM is the unfortunate reality that current conventional medicine treatments do not work for everyone. Indeed, conventional medicine operates using the scientific method as a mechanism of knowledge acquisition and there is simply more knowledge to be acquired. There is currently a range of treatments that boast varyinglevelsof both evidence and theoretical supportthat are classifiedunder the CAM umbrella.This means that some, but not all,current treatments that areunderstudied and considered to be CAM (e.g., some psychedelic-based treatments for some mental health disorders) might one day reach the somewhat arbitrary threshold where they can be considered to fall under the purview of evidence-based medicine. But not everyone who has failed to benefit from conventional medicine uses, finds benefits from, and ultimately believes in CAM. What other factors might be at play?

A study published in Personality and Individual Differences has offered an initial empirical glimpse into the psychology and attractiveness of CAM approaches.

This particular study administered self-report questionnaires to a sample of over 3,000 people (mostly university students) to assess attitudes towards CAM approaches, individual differences in thinking styles (intuitive versus rational), paranormal beliefs, magical beliefs about food and health, and values. The researchers discovered two main findings:

These results are interesting. First, they suggest that CAM believers differ from non-believers in terms of how they process information. Whereas CAM believers are more likely to rely on a style of intuitive thinkinga kind of unconscious, fast, and effortless style of thinking that makes use of personal experiences, feelings, and concrete images and narrativesCAM non-believers are more likely to rely on a style of rational thinking that employs conscious reasoning and mental effort, using objective information and a willingness to adjust conclusions in light of new facts.

Second, the results suggest that those who believe in CAM are also more likely to hold paranormal beliefs that would violate the laws of nature (e.g., clairvoyance, telepathy, and astrology), as well as magical food and health-related beliefs (e.g., that a persons health can be influenced from sources such as a stone or a hand via a kind of enigmatic essence such as an energy or vibration).

How Might These Findings Be Useful?

Thefindings suggest that there are particular psychological variables that can predict belief and possible utilization of CAM practices. Further, the researchers note a very astute point: that CAM practices are often promoted and marketed in a manner that is appealing to a non-rational, intuitive style of thinking, using oversimplified explanations of problems and solutions, familiar and concrete concepts, and with reference to personal experience, anecdotal evidence, and testimonials.

The findings from this study are synergistic with the work of Timothy Caulfield, Professor of Health Law and Science Policy, and author of Is Gwyneth Paltrow Wrong About Everything?Professor Caulfield recently called for the encouragement of critical thinking and the utilization of the power of story in order to win the fight against health-related misinformation. This is important given that manyCAM practices are underpinned by potentially harmful pseudoscientific ideasit is therefore in the service of health care promotion to correct CAM-related misinformation by appealing to both our rational and intuitive tendencies.

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PREVAC-UP to evaluate safety of three Ebola vaccines five years post-vaccination – Homeland Preparedness News

January 17th, 2020 10:48 am

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The Partnership for Research on Ebola Vaccination (PREVAC) recently launched a new project called PREVAC-UP, which will evaluate three Ebola vaccine regimens for five years after vaccination.

The study will assess several factors within these treatments: their long-term safety, the durability of immune responses to them, and the effect of other infections on the immune response to vaccination. Vaccines will be evaluated by integrative statistical analysis of the immune response.

This program is expected to significantly impact Ebola prevention and control in adults and children in Africa, Dr. Yazdan Yazdanpanah, PREVAC Principal Investigator, said. The study will also strengthen the capacity for science relevant to the development and evaluation of new vaccines in sub-Saharan Africa.

Such work has been emphasized for PREVAC with the onset of the two worst Ebola outbreaks in history in just the past decade. There is an ongoing outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which has killed 2,200 people and infected more than 3,300, and the West African outbreak of 2014-2016, which ended with 28,600 cases and 11,325 people who died, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The latter prompted drug trials which should see results from PREVAC later this year, focused on a World Health Organization (WHO) prequalified drug developed by Merck, Sharp & Dohme, Corp. and a two-dose vaccine regimen created by Janssen Vaccines & Prevention B.V. and Bavarian Nordic. Those studies tracked safety and immunogenicity over 12 months, using three different vaccination strategies built on the vaccines. In all, 2,802 participants were enrolled in the main phase.

PREVAC-UP is funded by the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trial Partnership, under the European Union, but is working together with host countries Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Mali. It has also received funding from Inserm, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, and the College of Medicine and Allied Health Sciences, University of Sierra Leone.

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LIU’s College Of Veterinary Medicine To Open This Fall – Long Island Weekly News

January 17th, 2020 10:47 am

A rendering of the College of Veterinary Medicine.

Long Island University announced today a $2 million gift from the 2007 Forbes Entrepreneur of the Year Clint Severson and Conni Ahart for the new College of Veterinary Medicine, opening fall 2020. The donation will establish the Veterinary Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Management Center, located within the College of Veterinary Medicine. The College of Veterinary Medicine will be one of only four veterinary programs in the Northeast, joining the University of Pennsylvania, Cornell University and Tufts University.

Conni and I are dedicated to the expansion of higher veterinary learning and medical advancement in the veterinary field, said Clint Severson. The Veterinary Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Management Center will enable LIUs College of Veterinary Medicine faculty to create new paths and fresh solutions in veterinary education, and provide students with real-world experience along with traditional classroom training.

As members of the Council of Advisors for the new College of Veterinary Medicine, Clint Severson and Conni Ahart are noted philanthropists dedicated to animals, and the entrepreneurship training that is much needed in veterinary medicine. Mr. Severson was the chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Northern California-based Abaxis, a cutting edge medical devices company that enablesphysicians and veterinarians to respond to the healthneeds of their clients at the point-of-care.

The Veterinary Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Management Center will focus on Entrepreneurship and Management, supporting LIU Doctor of Veterinary Medicine students who are interested in veterinary concept/product development and clinic management. The Center will engage students across multiple disciplines including management and business, and offer students Veterinary Entrepreneurship and Management scholarships and fellowships.

Clint Severson and Conni Aharts partnership with LIUs College of Veterinary Medicine exemplifies their deep commitment toward pioneering research and animal care, said Dr. Kimberly R. Cline, president of Long Island University. We are grateful for their generous gift that will give LIU the resources to be at the forefront of veterinary education.

The College has secured partnerships with more than 50 affiliates, including primary care and specialty clinics, zoos, research laboratories and shelters, where students will gain real world experience in surgery, diagnostic support, intensive care and other areas critical for successful veterinary practice. At full enrollment, the veterinary school will serve 400 students, with 100 in each graduating class.

Mr. Severson and Ms. Aharts support of LIUs College of Veterinary Medicine will allow students the opportunity to develop entrepreneurial initiatives designed to move concepts from theory to practice, as well as create partnerships with industry and venture capitalists, stated Dr. Randy Burd, Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs.

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo awarded LIU $12 million as part of New York States investment in transformational local health care initiatives, helping to establish Long Island as a biotechnology research corridor.

Clint Severson and Conni Aharts gift allows us the opportunity to expand on our commitment to prepare a globally competent, practice-ready, entrepreneurial veterinary workforce capable of addressing current and future needs of animal health, added Dr. Carmen Fuentealba, Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. Learning financial aspects connected to veterinary training is critical. LIU College of Veterinary Medicine students will correspondingly receive training in financial management and business practice in the curriculum, and through mentoring via the new center.

For more information, visit http://www.liu.edu/vetmed.

Submitted By LIU College of Veterinary Medicine

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Innovet Pet Joins The Ithaca Community In Supporting Future Veterinarians – PRNewswire

January 17th, 2020 10:47 am

GARDENA, Calif., Jan. 17, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --In November 2019, Innovet Pet joined hands with the Ithaca community in helping raise $12,220 for Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine's SAVMA Auction. Innovet Pet has garnered significant buzz in the pet world with their products that put personalized healthcare into pet owners' hands.

Cornell University says generous contributions such as Innovet's help ensure students are able to take part in important educational activities that give them the best chance for success in their veterinary careers. In particular, the university says they plan to use the $12,220 to pay for the overwhelming majority of the costs of attending this spring's national veterinary educational symposium, SAVMA Symposium. At the event, students are given the opportunity to experience veterinary medicine at the national level, meet and network with future colleagues, and share and learn ideas from some of the world-renowned veterinarians in the field.

"We are so honored to have worked with the Ithaca community, Cornell University, and their bright students," says Innovet's co-founder Dave Louvet. "We're dedicated to our mission in helping animals everywhere get the proper care they deserve. In doing so, we've created several innovative products, but it's important to know that at-home care can only go so far. This makes veterinarians a key part of our pets' lives. By ensuring our future veterinarians get the best college experience possible, we're taking another step in giving pets around the world a better life."

Cornell University couldn't agree more, saying events like SAVMA Symposium couldn't happen without contributions from those like Innovet Pet. That's why Innovet Pet says they hope that in leading by example, they can inspire and show other pet owners how they can get involved in their communities to help the pets out. 2019 was a big year for Innovet Pet, who made several donations to different animal causes, including The LA Dog Cafe, but the company says they're dedicated to making 2020 an even bigger and more generous year.

To learn more about Cornell's Veterinary program, visit https://www.vet.cornell.edu. For more information on Innovet Pet's involvement in different communities and to see their products visit innovetpet.com.

About Innovet Pet From tips to caring for your pet's health to products that improve it, Innovet Pet (innovetpet.com) has put personalized pet care in pet owners' hands for almost two decades. Since their inception, Innovet has made transparency, affordability, trust, and innovation the pillars of their company. This has made them the number 1 pet CBD company world-wide.

Media ContactCompany Name: Innovet PetPress: Gio Sy, PR + Marketing / Kacy Johnson, PR CoordinatorPhone:888-269-3154City, State: Gardena, Ca

http://www.innovetpet.comFacebook: @innovetpetproductsInstagram:@innovetpetproducts

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African, US veterinarians have meeting of minds | American Veterinary Medical Association – American Veterinary Medical Association

January 17th, 2020 10:47 am

Dr. Olatunji Nasir, medical director and CEO of Truthmiles Animal Hospital Ltd. in Ikeja, Nigeria, is his countrys ambassador for the African Small Companion Animal Network. Nigeria only has 9,000 veterinarians in a country with 190 million people. (Courtesy of Dr. Nasir)

Dr. Olatunji Nasir is an ambitious man. He dreams of having veterinary clinics in all the major cities in his country in the next five yearsall with the same standard of care. He is CEO and medical director of Truthmiles Animal Hospitals Ltd. in Ikeja, Nigeria, which has two locations. Hes been successful at tapping into the burgeoning dog ownership in southern Nigeria.

In the past, owners preferred dogs such as pit bulltype dogs, Mastiffs, and Doberman Pinschers, mostly for security purposes. But hes begun to see more small dogs in recent years.

This has to do with millennials. More younger people are owning pets, he said. These owners spend more, too. The older folks say, I dont even do this for my kids.

To help further elevate his practice, Dr. Nasir is taking part in a pilot clinic-to-clinic twinning program that connects select companion animal veterinary clinics in member countries of the African Small Companion Animal Network with clinics in the U.S. led by AVMA members. The program, coordinated by the World Small Animal Veterinary Association Foundation, began in 2018 with funding from Zoetis, thanks to Dr. Eileen Ball, the companys global associate medical director for commercial development and life cycle innovation.

Dr. Nasir and two other veterinarians from Nigeria, Drs. Abubakar Bala Muhammad and Kunle Abiade, have partnered with three practitioners from Caring Hands Animal Hospital Inc., which has eight clinics in Virginia.

What is happening in the U.S. is light years ahead. You look at the possibilities, and were limiting ourselves (in Nigeria). But the clients are not as rich where I am. People spend more on their pets in the U.S., but its still possible to raise the standard of care in practice, said Dr. Nasir, who is the ambassador for AFSCAN in Nigeria. It has brought hope to me to do better.

Dr. Kevin Stevens, who owns Ballito Animal Hospital on the east coast of South Africa, is coordinator of the pilot AVMA-AFSCAN Twinning Project and an AFSCAN board member. He said the project seeks to promote sustained relationships and mutual learning that will help veterinary professionals better understand one anothers perspectives, challenges, and needs and enhance companion animal health and welfare and understanding of disease surveillance and control.

Its a good mental exercise to think about a case without the tools we normally rely on, like an ultrasound that is immediately available to us on the ER (emergency room) floor. The biggest lesson Ive learned is focusing on the core of veterinary practice and not relying on the bells and whistles, when most of the information we can get through pretty low-tech means.

Dr. Shana OMarra, chief medical officer, DoveLewis Emergency Animal Hospital

He and a working group composed of representatives from each of the sponsoring organizations manage the pilot program, which in its first year also includes veterinarians at the nonprofit DoveLewis Emergency Animal Hospital in Portland, Oregon. DoveLewis veterinarians are partnering with a group of veterinarians from Kenya, Namibia, and South Africa.

The goal is for twinned practices to do virtual grand rounds monthly and connect informally between scheduled rounds to talk about anything practice related, be it business management or general case management questions, for example. Going forward, U.S. and AFSCAN veterinarians at all of the twinned clinics in the pilot program, plus Dr. Stevens and other members of the program management team, plan to come together four times a year to hold virtual grand rounds. Dr. Nasir even had a chance to meet his U.S. counterparts last year face-to-face at the AVMA Convention in Washington, D.C. The pilot program management group hopes to facilitate a first face-to-face meeting of all AFSCAN and AVMA member practitioners at AVMA Convention 2020 in San Diego.

The AVMA-AFSCAN Twinning Project not only helps make global connections and promotes the one-health concept but also develops a network among the African clinics to connect and share practical advice. This network helps enhance the clinics business practices and the veterinary profession overall in AFSCAN member countries.

Were starting to build by country to country and encourage individuals to engage with each other, Dr. Stevens said, adding that two practices in Zambia have started twinning with two clinics in the U.K. in a second pilot program being administered in partnership with the British Small Animal Veterinary Association.

Communication usually happens via GoToMeeting, WhatsApp, email, and DropBox, working around different time zones and schedules. Occasionally, issues crop up because of internet and electricity outages, which arent uncommon for parts of Africa.

Veterinary medicine varies widely from one AFSCAN member country to anotheror even from city to city. In Nigeria and Kenya, practices may have first-class medicine and all the equipment a typical U.S. practice may have, Dr. Steven said. But in countries such as Zambia, Namibia, Ghana, and Mozambique, clinicians might not even have a microscope. They also likely have to send blood to laboratories in South Africa and wait days for the results. Dr. Stevens, in South Africa, has a video endoscope and digital X-ray machine, but practices just miles away hardly have any equipment, let alone the latest technology.

You have to respect the different levels of practice, Dr. Stevens said.

Dr. Shana OMarra, chief medical officer at DoveLewis, recalls one of the first cases she presented to her twinning partners. It involved a CT scanner, which the African veterinarians didnt have in their clinics, forcing her to take a step back.

Its a good mental exercise to think about a case without the tools we normally rely on, like an ultrasound that is immediately available to us on the ER (emergency room) floor, Dr. OMarra said. The biggest lesson Ive learned is focusing on the core of veterinary practice and not relying on the bells and whistles, when most of the information we can get through pretty low-tech means, such as a comprehensive physical examination and repeated assessments.

She enjoys being exposed to different infectious disease processes or discussing how to approach an unknown toxicosis. In particular, Dr. OMarra is impressed at how skilled her African counterparts are at blood film evaluation. The discussions are a way for everyone to step outside their local pattern recognition and talk about the basics of medicine in a clinically applicable way.

Its not as if the American veterinarians have a leg up on the African vets. Its very much a meeting of the minds, Dr. OMarra said.

She quickly noticed similarities when she brought up professional wellness and how to foster that in a hospital setting. The African practitioners said they shared many of the same struggles, from difficulties in setting personal boundaries to burnout.

It was really interesting to hear from them that its all universal, Dr. OMarra said. Its not all about workplaces, because they are so different. We are veterinary providers, and we all have the same tendency to give of ourselves till were depleted.

Her goal is to meet with her counterparts at the AVMA Convention and host them at DoveLewis as soon as this year.

At AVMA Convention 2019 this past July in Washington, D.C., Drs Stevens and Nasir met with Dr. Beth Sabin, AVMA director of global outreach, and others on the pilot program management team to discuss how to measure the success of the AVMA-AFSCAN Twinning Pilot Program and how to proceed as it moves into its second year. In addition, Drs. Nasir and Stevens met with Drs. Brian Neumann, Jeff Newman, and Karen Murphy, the lead twinning program veterinarians at Caring Hands. They also had a chance to attend continuing education sessions. Zoetis and AFSCAN paid for the travel expenses, and the AVMA covered convention registration for Drs. Nasir and Stevens.

The big challenge nowadays is its a virtual world. It can bring a global veterinary perspective in vet practice, Dr. Stevens said. But to meet people face-to-face makes a huge difference. To participate in a procedure and see it yourself in practice is totally different from the virtual world. Were trying to do relationship building to where it becomes a face-to-face relationship, and there is interaction. It makes the experience that much more real.

Dr. Stevens hopes more participants can meet at AVMA Convention 2020 in August in San Diego. In the meantime, the twinning pilot program just kicked off its second year with a call for a limited number of additional U.S. clinics, led by AVMA member veterinarians, to twin with three practices in Tanzania.

The pilot program, as approved by the AVMA Board of Directors, will run at least through December 2021, with potential to continue two more years.

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Animal rights advocates, vets battle over whether to ban declawing cats – The Union Leader

January 17th, 2020 10:47 am

CONCORD New Hampshire would become the second state in the nation to ban the declawing of cats except for medical reasons, under legislation fiercely debated Thursday by animal rights advocates and seasoned veterinarians.

State Rep. Katherine Rogers, D-Concord, said she has received more encouragement on this bill than any she has worked on over seven terms in the Legislature.

Declawing is the equivalent of cutting off your fingers at the highest knuckle. It is painful, Rogers said.

The California-based Paw Project has urged lawmakers across their nation to bring their states in line with Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, New York state and 28 countries around the world that have banned the practice.

Dr. Jennifer Conrad, the organizations founder, estimates one in four cats is declawed as part of a $1 billion-a-year business.

I have had vets tell me it is their bread and butter, that they are making $75,000 to $80,000 a year and they arent going to stop doing it until its against the law, said Conrad, a trained veterinarian.

HB 1387 would make it illegal to declaw a cat unless the procedure was necessary in order to address the physical medical condition of the cat, such as an existing or recurring illness, infection, disease, injury, or abnormal condition in the claw that compromises the cats health.

Leaders of the New Hampshire Veterinary Medicine Association said such claims about the frequency and consequences of declawing are overblown, and the Legislature should be careful not to over-regulate animal care.

There are some instances where declawing is appropriate, but we try as veterinarians to not do the procedure as frequently as we did decades ago, said Dr. Jane Barlow Roy, past president of the group.

We think legislating veterinary medical practices is detrimental to our profession. This could become a slippery slope.

While Barlow Roy said she hasnt declawed a cat in five years, she said some clients insist their vets to do it.

My goal is to preserve the human-animal bond, so if they say, I am going to euthanize my cat as opposed to declawing it, then I will declaw it, Barlow Roy said.

We have been told if you arent going to do it, I will find somebody else.

Angela Ferrari, of Dog Owners of the Granite State, said most owners declaw their cat only in the case of serious medical issues, such as tumors on the paw or severe ingrown nails that endanger the health of the animal.

I havent met anybody in my experience who decides to get a cat declawed just for the sake of it, said Ferrari, whose group opposes the bill.

Dr. David Stowe, former owner of a seven-vet practice in Laconia, said he decided in the 1990s to use laser surgery for declawing because it caused the animal less pain.

The vast majority do not declaw, but the majority are in favor of leaving it up to veterinarians, Stowe said.

Clearly the number is going down; it is nowhere near what it used to be.

Julia Seeley, state director of the Humane Society of the United States, said her agency backed the bill.

It is an unnecessary surgery, most often performed to address convenience issues such as a problem scratching of household furniture, and it provides no medical benefit to the cat, Seeley said.

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Finding the missing links | News – Texas A&M The Battalion

January 17th, 2020 10:47 am

A new cooperative between students and faculty of Texas A&Ms College of Veterinary Medicine is educating the community on the connection between domestic violence and pet abuse.

Aggies Fostering Hope has three goals: foster animals who are victims of abuse in domestic violence situations, teach veterinary professionals about the link between domestic violence and pet abuse, and educate the general public through community outreach to raise overall awareness of this issue.

The organizations outreach chair Alyssa Felton, a third-year veterinary medicine student, said the organization teaches students about the scientific connection between pet abuse and domestic violence.

Eighty-five percent of women entering shelters reported their partner had threatened, injured or killed a family pet, Felton said. They stay in the situation because the one positive relationship they have is with that animal, and if they left that animal, they know something bad would happen to it.

The vet school fosters the animals while Aggies Fostering Hope works to connect the pets owners with them through social workers and Phoebes Home, a shelter for female victims of domestic violence based in Bryan-College Station. Women can visit their pets in a secure environment at the vet school, and anonymity is kept to ensure the victims security. The animals medical assistance is taken care of by various donors.

The idea for Aggies Fostering Hope was formed last year between Hunter Greer, a fourth-year veterinary science student, and Dr. Karen Cornell, the dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. Melodie Raese and Jamie Foster, third-year veterinary science students, took Greer and Cornells idea further while taking a community outreach elective course offered by the college. Raese and Foster developed a plan to help those in domestic violence situations while also educating veterinary professionals.

Vets are the first who see potential situations where a dog keeps coming in with problems, or they have a client that jumps from vet to vet, Felton said. When veterinarians can identify and address pet abuse is possibly happening in a home, they can make available opportunities for clients because most of the time the victim is who is bringing the pet into the vet.

The organization created brochures to give to visiting veterinary professionals that include several Texas-based resources for those experiencing domestic violence. The idea is for vets to take these brochures back to their clinics to make these resources available to clients who may be exhibiting signs of pet abuse or domestic violence.

Felton said raising awareness and donations for this issue is something close to her heart because it offers victims the opportunity to start over.

I would never leave my dog behind somewhere, and I can just imagine how hard that can be on someone else, Felton said. Being able to help an animal and the person who loves them to start a better life, thats what a vet really means to me: helping the animal and their person.

The College of Veterinary Medicine is always accepting donations for the fostered animals. Aggies Fostering Hope encourages everyone to learn more about the link between pet abuse and domestic violence, and asks the campus community to spread awareness of this issue by liking their Facebook page.

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Once more around the track | American Veterinary Medical Association – American Veterinary Medical Association

January 17th, 2020 10:46 am

A cluster of horse racing deaths in 2019 has led to increased calls for safety-related reforms and standardization in the industry.

Conversations among racetrack organizations, horse owners, the public, and equine veterinarians across the U.S. led to the creation of the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition as well as other efforts such as the Horse Integrity Act introduced in Congress.

The coalition comprises six racetrack organizations: The Breeders Cup, Churchill Downs, the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Keeneland, the New York Racing Association, and The Stronach Group. The TSC, which launched Nov. 19, 2019, aims to make operational, medical, and organizational changes to the racing industry.

As doctors of veterinary medicine, the AAEP (American Association of Equine Practitioners) commends the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition for its wide-ranging initiatives to ensure the safety of the sports equine and human athletes, said 2019 AAEP President Dr. Jeff Berk in a statement. Everyone in the horse racing industry shares responsibility for safety, from veterinarians and trainers to breeders, owners, racetracks and state regulators. The focused and collaborative effort of the coalition promises meaningful safety reforms in the years ahead.

The AVMA endorses the AAEP policy on therapeutic medications in racehorses, which includes a recommendation that all racing jurisdictions adopt the uniform medication guidelines set forth by the Racing and Medication Testing Consortium Inc. The AVMA and AAEP work closely on horse racing and other issues. Read the full policy.

The coalition has proposed some of the following reforms:

Dr. William Farmer, equine medical director of Churchill Downs, said the creation of the coalition is a big milestone.

Track management and track owners are coming together to help push this through, which is something very different, he said. Traditionally, it has been regulators trying to push medication reform, not the tracks themselves.

Dr. Farmer, who is also a racetrack veterinarian, worked with the coalition on its medical reforms while he was under contract with the Breeders Cup.

Dr. Stuart E. Brown II, a partner at Hagyard Equine Medical Institute in Lexington, Kentucky, said there has always been an emphasis on the need to control the atmosphere on the racetrack for the safety of horses and riders.

A lot of effort goes into making sure, especially from an integrity standpoint, that we make the sport as safe as possible, he said. We never want to take a horse death lightly.

According to data from the Equine Injury Registry, which is maintained by the Jockey Club, the number of fatalities per 1,000 starts has decreased in the last 10 years (see chart). But despite the overall decrease, the recent cluster of injuries has led to questions about safety.

The Equine Injury Registry isnt expected to release official numbers on fatalities per starts for 2019 until this spring. According to media reports, however, there were more than 400 racing-related deaths of horses across the U.S. in 2019.

Specifically, Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California, saw 40 deaths, including one during the Breeders Cup Classic. The majority of the fatalities at Santa Anita, a track operated by The Stronach Group, have been attributed to the weather in California. The state received an abnormally large amount of rain in early 2019.

In December, Santa Anita installed a positron emission tomography scanner to support diagnosis of preexisting conditions in horses that could contribute to breakdowns. It is the first to be installed in a horse racing facility.An official report from the California Horse Racing Board about the deaths at Santa Anita had yet to be released at press time in late December.

Dr. Farmer said the industry is united in its goal to make the sport safer, more open, and more transparent.

We have made a lot of changes, we still have a lot to make, and we are actively making them, in all tenses of the wordpast, present, and future, he said.

Horse racing dates back as far as 1665 in the U.S. and Canada, said Dr. Kathleen Anderson, AAEP past president. Historically, horse racing was seen as a local or state event, but it evolved into a national and international sport as transportation improved. Technology, more recently, has also changed the way the public can interact with the sport.

In an age where the individual matters, horse racing injuries have found increased scrutiny from a populace that sees the sport through a different lens, Dr. Anderson said. To address this, the racing industry has sought to improve the oversight of the sport. The implemented policies vary from state to state and from track to track, thus the conundrum we face with how to achieve uniformity of regulation and safety within the budgets of a wide spectrum of racing venues and racing ownership.

An earlier effort for self-regulation within horse racing came in 2013 from the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium, the industrys scientific advisory organization, and the Association of Racing Commissioners International, the association of state racing regulators, which develops model rules it encourages its members to adopt. The hope was for pari-mutuel regulators for the 38 U.S. horse racing commissions to adopt these uniform national reforms involving medication regulation and enforcement. Now known as the National Uniform Medication Progress, it introduced a controlled therapeutic medication list, the Multiple Medication Violations Penalty System, restrictions on the use and administration of furosemide, and the RMTC code of laboratory accreditation and minimum standards. Adoption by states hasnt been consistent. A map showing the states that have adopted the four facets of the NUMP can be found at the Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association website.

Race-day administration of medications is a key topic in horse racing safety conversations. Furosemide is the only medication that can be given on race day and is used to treat exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage. Although furosemide is widely used in the U.S., most countries have prohibited its use on race day because of its role as a potential performance enhancer.

Meanwhile, others in and out of the horse racing industry have proposed their preferred changes to the sport.

The Horseracing Integrity Act (HR 1754) was introduced in the 116th Congress. The legislation would establish the Horseracing Anti-Doping and Medication Control Authority as an independent, private, nonprofit organization that would develop and administer a program for Thoroughbred, Standardbred, and Quarter Horse racing. The Federal Trade Commission would have oversight. Similar bills have been introduced in previous Congresses over the past decade, but none have passed.

The Jockey Club, the Coalition for Horse Racing Integrity, and others have come out in support of this most recent iteration of the bill.

The Jockey Club believes that horses should race only when free from the effects of medication, and the Horseracing Integrity Act would achieve that goal, said Shannon Luce, the director of communications at The Jockey Club. We can significantly improve equine health and reduce fatalities, but to do so, we need one set of anti-doping and medication rules across the country, a system that the Horseracing Integrity Act will create.

Another recent effort is the 2019 Mid-Atlantic Strategic Plan to Reduce Equine Fatalities. It is the result of a collaboration among racing jurisdiction stakeholders in the mid-Atlantic region. They have produced a strategic plan with five defined goals that could serve as a template for other jurisdictions going forward. The goals include developing regional safety best practices, increasing awareness and understanding of conditions associated with injury, and developing improved methods to identify horses at increased risk of injury.

States have also started making their own reforms.

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission and racetracks in the state adopted new medication rules in December intended to reduce the use of pre-race medication. The plan would also eliminate race-day use of furosemide in 2-year-old horses. As of late December, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear had not approved the proposal.

The California Horse Racing Board also approved a series of reforms to be presented to Gov. Gavin Newsom in December.

Dr. Gregory Ferraro, the new CHRB chairman, said in a board meeting in November that there will be changes under his leadership.The days of permissive medication are over, he said during the meeting. We will gradually eliminate medications and keep them away from racing and training.

Dr. Anderson said that the loss of any horse in competition is of great concern to the racing industry and equine veterinarians.

The visionary goal is zero catastrophic injuries, hence the reforms that move us closer to the goal. Both the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition and the Horseracing Integrity Act are tackling this from different camps but using the same bottom line: Uniformity is paramount. It is the key to national safety and the general welfare of the horses.

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Safeguarding farms and food – Penn: Office of University Communications

January 17th, 2020 10:46 am

The Calving Corner is a popular attraction at the Pennsylvania Farm Show. Dairy cows on the verge of giving birth rest in a spacious pen while an audience seated on surrounding bleachers eagerly awaits. On a Saturday earlier this month, Karen, a cow from Meadow Spring Farm in Lititz, had been showing signs of readiness for hours: changing position frequently, nesting" in the bedding straw, and breathing rapidly, with occasional pauses for contractions.

While cows in the Corner are expected to deliver unassisted, as they would on their farms, Mike Pesato, a board-certified food animal veterinarian from Penns School of Veterinary Medicines Field Service, was on hand as a volunteer in case any of the moms needed help.

As Karens labor failed to advance, Pesato stepped in.

I was preparing to end my shift but I talked with the farmers and said, before I go, why dont we just check her, assess the situation, says Pesato. What he found was a large calf on the brink of birth, but stuck upside down, with its nose butting up against Karens pelvic bone. With the help of farmers Tom and Andy Bollinger, Pesato guided and pulled bull calf Sherman out into the world.

Veterinary expertise like Pesatos is a crucial aspect of Pennsylvanias thriving agriculture industry, and Penn Vets presence at the 104th Farm Show, held Jan. 4-11 in Harrisburg, highlighted that fact in many dimensions of the festivities, which attract half a million people annually.

Penn Vet has been a participant at the Farm Show for nearly half a century, and dozens of members of the school community took part this year. Whether offering formal veterinary assistance like Pesato, providing engaging informal education at the Penn Vet booth, or advocating for the school with legislators and other leaders in agriculture, as Penn Vet Dean Andrew Hoffman and other faculty did on multiple occasions through the week-long celebration, their involvement highlighted the fact that the school is not just part of the showits a true partner in the $135 billion agricultural industry statewide.

The numbers make it plain: About three-quarters of Pennsylvania veterinarians are Penn Vet graduates, practicing in 66 of the states 67 counties. The New Bolton Centers Field Service team cares for 23,000 large animal patients in the counties surrounding the Kennett Square facility, while New Boltons hospital sees thousands more patients annually. New Bolton Center is home to one of the three labs that compose the Pennsylvania Animal Diagnostic Laboratory System, or PADLS, which conduct disease surveillance and testing to rapidly detect potential threats. And research programs at both New Bolton and the main campus in Philadelphia work to enhance science that can make farms safer, more productive, and more sustainable, both environmentally and economically.

The show kicked off the morning of Jan. 4 with opening ceremonies, including remarks from Governor Tom Wolf, Secretary of Agriculture Russell Redding, U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, and U.S. Rep. Glenn G.T. Thompson, interspersed with the occasional emphatic moo from a cow in the arena. Its essential that we support our farms for today, but also for the future that we want to have in Pennsylvania, said Wolf.

Afterward, Hoffman, joined by Associate Dean Gary Althouse and Office of Government and Community Affairss Michael Smith, connected with the governor, secretary, and legislators including Thompson and State Sen. Judy Schwank, to discuss mutual priorities. During a tour of the facilitywhich includes a 1930s-era main hall, three arenas, conference facilities and more, totaling more than a million square feet, punctuated by the aroma of maple syrup and potato donuts in the food hallsthey also found opportunities to talk with representatives from the Pennsylvania Game Commission, Farm Bureau, PennAg Industries, as well as members of the public.

My job is to connect with people in agriculture, and share what were doing to support the industry, said Hoffman, whose clinical veterinary background includes work in equine respiratory medicine. Were educating people here about the profession and the necessity of veterinarians in sustainable agriculture.

Hoffmans ambitions for the school mirror what hes been hearing from industry and government leaders, farmers, clients, and members of the public: They want to know about accesshow are we going to make sure they can get the care their animals need, he says. But theyre also asking about infectious disease spread, zoonotic diseases that are being transmitted between domestic population and wildlife and vice versa or are even being brought in from different countries. Theres interest in every aspect of what we do.

With a growing number of dual-degree programs, and new ventures like the Pennsylvania Wildlife Futures Program, a partnership between the Vet School and the states Game Commission to address diseases that threaten wildlife as well as pets, livestock, and humans, Hoffman aims to train new veterinarians to meet the increasing demands placed on them, while anticipating and planning for new challanges that are coming down the pike.

Back at the Penn Vet booth in the Expo Hall, veterinary students lured in passersby with animal-themed hats and a yucky stuff table, which included a manatee skull, a horses hoof in a jar, and massive intestinal deposits that formed around a tiny stone ingested incidentally.

Second-year veterinary students Julia Weeder, Katie Newcamp, and Meagan Rodriguez were among two dozen students who volunteered part of their weekend to staff the booth.

Rodriguez, who worked an afternoon shift, said attending the Farm Show is a good learning experience, as coming from New York City she lacked the familiarity that some of her rural-dwelling peers had with livestock and farms. Newcamp enjoyed talking with the many children who approached the booth, including one little guy who was about 7 who was very clear that he wanted to be a vet when he grows up.

The students spoke to several older veterinarian-hopefuls as well, including Sophia Sigel, a middle schooler from Media, Pennsylvania, who was attending with her dad, Matt. A member of the Delaware Country 4H, Sigel breeds and shows sheep and has her eye on vet school.

On Monday, Jan. 6, at the Farm Show, members of the FFA, a leadership organization for young people interested in careers in agriculture, were invited to come by the Penn Vet booth to discuss opportunities in veterinary medicine. Roughly 75 came by, talking with representatives from the school, including several students interested in pursuing large animal medicine. The Pennsylvania FFA state officers, prestigious elected positions in the organization, joined Hoffman on Wednesday, Jan. 8, for a dynamic hour-long conversation covering everything from the academic requirements of a veterinary education, to issues in agribusiness, which veterinary students graduating from Penn Vet are increasing well-positioned to address.

Penn Vet offers an extraordinary training program for studentsparticularly those looking to pursue a career at the cross-section of agriculture and veterinary medicine, said Althouse, associate dean of sustainable agriculture and veterinary practices at the school. With 100 percent of our students being trained in large and food animal medicine, were preparing them to not only be exceptional clinicians in the field, but to also be visionary thinkers capable of providing solutions to some of the industrys most pressing challenges.

Fury and Ugo, two puppies in training for scent detection at the Penn Vet Working Dog Center, were among the attractions at the Show on Wednesday, prompting many visitors to stop to engage in discussions of how such working dogs may one day be deployed to detect odors such as chronic wasting disease, an insidious infection of deer, or spotted lanternfly, an emerging and highly destructive invasive insect in Pennsylvania.

Wednesday was also the Farm Shows Public Officials Day. More than a dozen legislators visited the Penn Vet booth that day, including House Speaker Mike Turzai and Senate Democratic Leader Jay Costa.

The theme that carried through each such interaction, whether with students or legislators, was that agriculture and world-class veterinary medicine must be inextricably linked. Speaking amid Saturdays crowds by the main entrance to the show, Joel Rotz, manager of government affairs and communications for the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau, had no trouble ticking off a number of reasons he and his organization deeply value Penn Vets expertise, noting in particular the schools efforts on food safety assurance and animal disease surveillance. Thats a real badge of honor, he says. Chris Herr, executive vice president of PennAg Industries echoed that point, saying, Pennsylvania is an animal agriculture state, and the work Penn Vet does is a real strength for us.

For Pesato, who enjoyed his third year volunteering in Calving Corner, bringing Sherman into the worldand sharing that with an audience of more than 100 peoplewas an honor in and of itself. For the public to get the chance to see the camaraderie between farmer and veterinarian, the communication there, he says, I think people really came away informed and pleased.

Homepage photo: Crowds gathered to watch cows give birth at Calving Corner, one of many popular attractions in the one million square foot facility in Harrisburg.

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Resolving to camp more in 2020? Should you take your dog along? – The Leader

January 17th, 2020 10:46 am

Dear Tabby,

We are planning to do some camping this winter with our dog. What should we consider before taking the dog camping with us?Craving a Campfire in The Heights

While camping with your furry friends can be fun, its not without some risk and better enjoyed if youve prepared well. Our friends at Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine have some advice on making the most out of camping with your canine.

Make sure campground allows pets

First of all, make sure that you choose a campground that will work for you and your dog.

Many campgrounds allow pets, with certain rules and regulations, said Dr. Mark Stickney, clinical associate professor at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences.

Often, the rules regarding pets can be seen posted on their website or answered over the phone.

Most rules will include things such as having your pet on a leash, making sure they are supervised at all times and requiring proof of vaccinations, Stickney said. Even if they dont require health records or vaccination certificates, its a good idea to bring them along just in case.

Pack essentials for your pup

Just as you need to pack food and other essentials for yourself, dont forget to pack necessities for your pets as well. Some items youll need to bring are plenty of food, a pet first-aid kit, a harness and a leash. Even if the campsite has natural water resources, such as streams or lakes, you must still bring plenty of water for your pet to drink throughout your stay.

Your pets will want to drink out of any pond and lake in sight, but there are many different diseases they can catch by doing that, Stickney said. So you dont want that to be their primary source of water.

Keep your pet close to camp and on leash

Coming into contact with wild animals is a definite risk when you are out in a national forest or grassland. Although most of the wildlife you run into want to keep away from you as well, you should have a way of containing your pet just in case.

If your pet does get into a tussle with a wild animal, you do not want to get into the middle of it, Stickney said. There is a very good chance you will be bitten or harmed.

Your best method of action is calling off your pet or to try scaring away the wild animal.

In order to prevent such situations in the first place, it is a good idea to keep your pets close to you throughout your camping expedition and to have a leash or harness available at all times.

Before setting off on your camping adventure, make sure your pets are up-to-date on all of their vaccinations, especially rabies. Depending on the campsites location, you may consult with your veterinarian about any other vaccinations that your pet may need as well as discuss appropriate flea and tick control.

Do you have a question for Tabby? If so, email her at deartabbyquestions@gmail.com.

Meet Carli. Much like Mary Poppins, this 2-year-old terrier/Black Mouth Cur mix is practically perfect in every way! Carli is about 43 pounds and gets along well with humans and other dogs. She knows commands, is crate trained, social and loves to cuddle. Seriously, though, Carli is the best girl! If youre looking to add a dog to your family, Carli would fit seamlessly into your home. To learn more, go to http://www.k-9angelsrescue.org.

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Rare baby rhino born after MSU vets assist with pregnancy – MSUToday

January 17th, 2020 10:46 am

Jan. 15, 2020

Christmas Eve 2019 brought a special gift to the world when a rare baby black rhino was born at 5:40 a.m. at Lansing's Potter Park Zoo.

Doppsee, the calfs mother, had been closely monitored during her 15-monthlong pregnancy by a dedicated team of animal scientists that included MSU veterinarians and students.

The baby calf a boy named Jaali, pronounced Jolly stood within the first few hours of being born and has since stayed close beside Mom in the protected pen at the zoo.

Caregivers report that Doppsee, unlike most of her breed, has a docile and gentle disposition that allows zookeepers to work closely with her, providing opportunities for MSUs veterinary medical students to observe physical exams, blood draws and ultrasound skills.

Collaborating with Potter Park Zoo is a wonderful educational experience, not only for our veterinarians, but also for our veterinary medical students, says Julie Strachota, clinical instructor for MSUs Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences and resident for the Large Animal Theriogenology Service. I never would have expected that I would be doing transrectal and transabdominal ultrasounds on a black rhino.

The veterinarians and zookeepers monitored Doppsee and her fetus weekly, providing opportunities for MSUs veterinary medical students to observe physical exams, blood draws and ultrasound skills. Most importantly, they ensured that she and her baby calf were kept safe, happy and healthy.

Being able to get this hands-on experience is invaluable to me, as Doppsee is a species I am not able to work with often, so this experience continues to help me learn more about what it means to be a veterinarian, says Bridget Walker, a third-year veterinary medical student.

Ronan Eustace, adjunct professor at MSUs School of Veterinary Medicine and director of animal health at Potter Park Zoo, mentored veterinary students during summer sessions and oversaw the regular visits.

Dr. Eustace always welcomes us to bring as many students as we can to work with the animals at Potter Park Zoo, says Strachota. During one of our ultrasound examinations, one of the senior students commented that it was the best day of veterinary school. What the zoo is doing for our veterinary curriculum is invaluable.

While important to the pregnancy, the ultrasounds and blood tests on Doppsee provided more than imaging of her baby. Black rhinoceroses are critically endangered with only 5,000 remaining in the wild and 60 in protected environments.

Doppsee carries valuable genetics in the captive population of eastern black rhinos. The more these genetics spread, the greater chance there is of preserving the global population of black rhinos.

With the help of Monica Stoops, lead scientist of Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium, zookeepers and veterinary staff were able to develop an understanding of Doppsees hormone levels, estrus cycle and behavior. Doppsee, and the valuable data gathered about her cycle and pregnancy, contributed to several research studies. These studies will provide valuable information on black rhino reproduction information that cannot be obtained from wildlife populations.

If we can maximize reproductive success in these captive populations, then they may become sustainable and thats the goal, says Eustace.

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