Entries in TVG winners (13)

Friday
Jun262020

SAVMA Chapter Award

A big congratulations is in order to Cornell University... they have been the winners of the SAVMA Chapter Award for the last two issues of the Vet Gazette! WAY TO GO! For those of you who are not familiar, the SAVMA Chapter Award is awarded to the school's chapter with the most submissions to an issue of the Vet Gazette (EXCLUDING TRIVIA). They receive a check for $300 to be used towards SAVMA events all throughout the year, and your school could be next! Make sure you promote the submission window for Volume 55 Issue 4 so YOUR school can be the next winner!

Saturday
Jan172015

"Dairying Ant", "Upside Down", and "WesternU Sees Rain"

Andrew Tsai, Western University

Creative Corner, Winner


"Dairying Ant" - "Some species of ants 'farm' aphids, protecting them on the plants they eat, eating the honeydew the aphids release from the terminations of their alimentary canals... These 'dairying ants' 'milk' the aphids by stroking them with their antennae." -A. Tsai

"Upside Down" - This picture is intentionally inverted. Please rotate the monitor/phone for maximum mind blowing. -A. Tsai

"WesternU Sees Rain" - If you've seen WesternU's campus, you know it doesn't look like this. One of my favorite parts about rain is how it transforms the ordinary: even though we look at the same scene, we see something different. -A.Tsai

Monday
Sep222014

An Equine Emergency

Mindy Nelson, UC Davis

Cases/Abstracts, Winner


Das Hit presented at 2237 on 8/12/14 for an emergency visit to the Large Animal Equine Medicine service at the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital at the University of California, Davis. She is a 7 year-old Oldenburg mare used for dressage riding (Fig. 1) and is insured for major medical. She presented for a history of fever, neck swelling, and red-brown urine. The history of this mare’s present illness began on August 6, when her owner noted swelling and pain in the left side of the neck and called her veterinarian. Bloodwork on that day showed an elevated WBC count. The owner’s mother reported that no intramuscular injections had been given and that no respiratory, pigeon fever or strangles-like symptoms were present in any of the other horses at the farm. The treatment course from 8/6/14 to 8/12/14 included uniprim (trimethoprim sulfadiazine) reported as 2 scoops PO BID, banamine (flunixin meglumine) 10 ml IV SID, and surpass (1% diclofenac sodium) applied topically to the swelling. A fever developed a few days into the treatment (ranging from 102°-104°F) and hydroxyzine (unknown dose) and baytril (enrofloxacin; reported as 2 scoops PO BID) were added to the regimen. On 8/12/14, the day of presentation, the mare developed a fever of 106°F and her urine was noted to be dark red-brown in color (Fig. 2), so she was referred to the VMTH.

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Sunday
Sep212014

Taped Shoes and Superpowers

Gabrielle Woo, Cornell University

Experiences, Winner

 

I landed in Pearson International Airport last night after a week of surgery and wellness clinics in Spirit Lake, North Dakota. The last time I was in Toronto, the temperature outside was well below zero and a good portion of the city’s residential blocks were still reeling from the Christmas ice storm. Now with summer approaching, I am glad to see buds on the trees and smell fresh mud on nearby running trails.

The past week with RAVS is already beginning to blur in my memory. It takes a certain level of exhaustion to enable fifty people to sleep soundly on a hard gymnasium floor through a nightly chorus of yelping dogs and angry meowling cats. It was a tiring, incredible, sometimes stressful but extremely rewarding six days of hard work and learning. As a team of students and veterinary professionals we shared knowledge and expertise as well as bathroom space, cars, meals and various external parasites (that last one occurred unintentionally). By Friday we had examined, vaccinated, medicated and sterilized 340 dogs and cats from the native American reservation.

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Saturday
Sep202014

My friend "Carmella"

Christina Scudder, University of Missouri

Foot In Mouth Disease, Winner

 

I have a dear friend--I'll call her Carmella--who is an endless source of amusement. Despite being an intelligent individual and a dedicated student, Carmella has a bit of difficulty with, well, words. Thus, the medical terminology of veterinary school has proven to be problematic for her. 

Once, Carmella announced to us that a friend of hers had scabies and was suffering badly. We questioned her friend's hygiene, whereupon she corrected herself and said that her friend actually had scrapie. This was hardly a relief! Before we could contact the CDC, however, Carmella--seeing the bafflement on our faces--finally admitted that her friend's affliction was actually shingles. 

On another occasion, we were dissecting horses in Large Animal Anatomy, and happened to uncover the superficial thoracic vein, otherwise known as the spur vein (for its propensity towards being damaged when kicked by a rider). Carmella referenced a story told earlier by the professor about how hematomas have been known to form alongside this vein following trauma from vigorous spurring. "Can you believe that?" she asked, sincerely. "Have you ever kicked your horse so hard you gave him hemorrhoids?" 

Perhaps my favorite Carmella story relates to the time a group of us were discussing a case in the hospital: an animal with an extreme inflammatory response that had resulted in massive thrombosis, resulting in the death of extremities from ischemia, subsequently followed by unchecked bleeding. Know what it is yet? Carmella did, too, and pulled out the three-letter acronym for the condition: "COD!" No, we explained--this was DIC, or disseminated intravascular coagulation. This did not satisfy Carmella, who wanted more information. "All over the body?" she asked. Exasperated, another friend clarified: "DISSEMINATED." 

(submitted with permission of the story's real protagonist)