Veterinarian training courses library : Cat / Expert
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Dr. Magda GEROU-FERRIANIVideo time : 21 min + MCQDipl. ECVIM-CAInternal medicine Laboratory analysis
Teaching goals
- The candidates can familiarize themselves with the most commonly used coagulation tests to assess primary haemostasis
Teaching goals
- Definition of chronic enteropathy
- Old concepts vs new concepts
- Most common chronic gastroenteropathies in dogs and cats
- What’s new regarding treatment
Teaching goals
- Nasotracheal tube: Indications, Technique, Side effects, contrindications
- Endotracheal intubation: Indications, Technique, Side effects, contrindications
Teaching goals
- Understand what FCU is.
- Be able to express the limitations of the FCU.
- Recognize the views used in the FCU.
Teaching goals
- Know the possible causes of hypocalcaemia
- Know the clinical signs of hypocalcaemia
- Understand the indications of treatment of hypocalcaemia
- Understand the different therapeutic options for the treatment of hypocalcaemia
Teaching goals
- Type of transfusion reactions
- How to recognize and prevent them
- How to deal with a transfusion reaction
- How to monitor a blood transfusion
Dr. Robert TRUJANOVICVideo time : 27 min + MCQDipl. ECVAATheriogenology Anesthesiology and analgesiaTeaching goals
- Infuse the patient as soon as possible.
- Pre-oxygenate the patient before induction.
- Avoid aortocaval compression for as long as possible.
- Use local anesthesia.
Dr. Robert TRUJANOVICVideo time : 26 min + MCQDipl. ECVAANephrology/Urology Anesthesiology and analgesiaTeaching goals
- Risk vs benefits of performing general anesthesia on patients with AKI need to be assessed (poor prognosis, 50-60%)
- A balanced anaesthetic protocol should be chosen to reduce the required dose of each individual agent and minimize the potential side effects.
- Use loco-regional techniques whenever possible to reduce the amount of anesthetic drugs and anesthetic depth of the patient.
Teaching goals
- Define alopecia
- Diferentiate self-induced alopecia and non-induced alopecia
- Know the major challenges in the diagnosis of this clinical sign
- Provide the appropriate tools for a correct identification
Teaching goals
- Undestanding trigeminal anatomy
- Understand skull anatomy
- How to perform useful locoregional blocks
- When to use specific locoregional blocks
Teaching goals
- Being familiar with the most important clinical and examination features in spinal patients
- Being able to distinguish a lower motor neuron vs upper motor neuron spinal presentation
Teaching goals
- Patient assessement
- Classification
- Complications
- Surgical techniques
- Management tips
Teaching goals
- The liver is important as it is involved in the production of glucose,albumin,andcoagulation factors.
- The liver metabolizes anesthetic drugs and this can impact anesthetic recovery.
- Glucose is necessary for energy production,brain function and perioepartive stability.
- Anesthetic drugs that are used for patients with liver disease should be short-acting, reversible, or produce minimal cardiovascular and respiratory depression.
Teaching goals
- To know the function and some of the anatomic pathway of the glossopharyngeal, vagus, accessory and hypoglossal nerves, and the sympathetic innervation to the eye
- Having a glance at how we can visualise these nerves on advanced imaging.
- Knowing the most important pathologies that may affect these cranial nerves, and Horner, syndrome, their clinical presentation, their diagnosis, treatment and outcome.
- Examples of studies, case series and case reports of neuropathies of the IX, X, XI and XII, and Horner syndrome published in the veterinary literature.
Teaching goals
- Staging periodontal disease
- Understand applications of periodontal surgery
- When extraction is a necessity
- When extraction is not indicated
Teaching goals available soonDr. Robert TRUJANOVICVideo time : 21 min + MCQDipl. ECVAARespiratory Anesthesiology and analgesia Hematology biochemistryTeaching goals
- Hypoxia is a condition where either all (generalized hypoxia) or a specific part of the body (regional hypoxemia) does not receive or is not able to use adequate oxygen for aerobic metabolism.
- Hypoxemia is a reduction in the concentration of oxygen in arterial blood.
- A PaO2 of <80 mmHg is strictly classed as hypoxaemia, but some classify mild hypoxaemia as PaO2 80–90 mmHg; moderate as 60–80 mmHg; and severe as <60 mmHg.
Dr. Florent DUPLANVideo time : 24 min + MCQDipl. ECVIM-CAGeneral internal medicine Hematology biochemistryTeaching goals
- Understand magnesium homeostasis
- Understand the diagnostic approach and the management of hypomagnesaemia
- Understand the diagnostic approach and the management of hypermagnesaemia
Dr. Marta KANTYKAVideo time : 15 min + MCQDipl. ECVAAEmergency and critical care Anesthesiology and analgesiaTeaching goals
- what is pain? What are the components of acute pain?
- how can we score how painful the patient is
- therapies for acute pain in the ER, their safety and risks
Teaching goals
- the pathophysiology and the TBI patient assessment
- how to treat and manage these patients
Teaching goals
- the pathophysiology and the TBI patient assessment
- how to treat and manage these patients
Teaching goals
- Review of anatomy
- Diagnostics for bladder
- Surgical technique
- Common conditions
Dr. Robert TRUJANOVICVideo time : 18 min + MCQDipl. ECVAARespiratory Anesthesiology and analgesia Hematology biochemistryTeaching goals
- Arterial blood gas analysis helps determine: blood pH, blood oxygenation, and blood CO2 carriage
- Venous blood gas analysis can also tell about acid-base status.
- Regulation of pH is required because most biochemical (metabolic) reactions can only occur efficiently within a narrow pH range.