Sentences with phrase «veterinary studies at»

She continued her veterinary studies at Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine, with a year of clinical training at Colorado State University College of Veterinary Medicine.
Dr. Eliza Sundahl completed her veterinary studies at Kansas State University in 1978 after graduating from Boston University.
After obtaining her undergraduate degree at Suffolk University in Boston, Dr. Cara Reville Sweet completed her veterinary studies at Tufts University in North Grafton, MA.
She then attended the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Immediately after graduating, she began her veterinary studies at Kansas State University and earned her doctorate in 2016.
Dr. Fanucchi began her veterinary studies at Tuiuti University in 2001 in her home country, Brazil.

Not exact matches

I spoke with Dr. Sandi Lefebvre, a Canadian trained at the Ontario Veterinary College in Guelph who helped compile the study, about the improvements.
In an animal study done by the Faculty of Veterinary Science at the University of Sydney, adding goji to the diet supplied antioxidant activity that offered significant protection against skin disorders and lipid peroxidation of UV light damage.
The study was conducted by researchers at UCL, Rockefeller University, the Royal Free Hospital, the Francis Crick Institute, the Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Singapore, and the Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh.
A new study at the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine (VCOM) and the Virginia - Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech has found a connection between common household chemicals and birth defects.
Maria Esteve - Gassent, a Spanish - born microbiologist at the Texas A&M School of Veterinary Science, has been studying Lyme disease since 2004.
Combing the genetic data from a transmission study in ferrets, a team led by Thomas Friedrich, a professor of pathobiological sciences at the University of Wisconsin - Madison School of Veterinary Medicine, found that during transmission, when one animal is infected by another through sneezing or coughing, the process of natural selection acts strongly on hemagglutinin, the structure the virus uses to attach to and infect host cells.
To take the pulse of pig flu, we spoke with Chris Olsen, a professor of public health and head of the Olsen Laboratory, which studies influenza A viruses, at the University of Wisconsin — Madison School of Veterinary Medicine.
The new work drew on transmission studies conducted last year in the lab of Yoshihiro Kawaoka, a co-author of the new study and also a professor of pathobiological sciences at the UW - Madison School of Veterinary Medicine.
Research for the study was conducted by first co-authors Dr. Ranit Kedmi and Nuphar Veiga and colleagues at Prof. Peer's TAU Laboratory, in collaboration with Prof. Itai Benhar of TAU's School of Molecular Cell Biology and Biotechnology, Dr. Michael Harlev of TAU's Veterinary Service Center, Dr. Mark Belkhe of Integrated DNA Technologies (IDT) and Prof. Judy Lieberman of Boston Chidren's Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
The study, published in open - access journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science, also shows that the dogs did not suffer from a buildup of electrolytes from the drink, suggesting that electrolyte drinks are a safe hydration alternative for sniffer dogs, who are at risk of heat stroke in hot weather.
The study, published online in Developmental Psychobiology, was conducted by Marguerite O'Haire, Ph.D., from the Center for the Human - Animal Bond in the College of Veterinary Medicine of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, and colleagues in the School of Psychology at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.
A new study by Martina Ondrovics and colleagues at the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna describes a rational approach to identifying proteins that might be involved in the larval development of a particular worm that infects pigs.
The new study's lead author, Barbara Wallner, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna, paired these old, yet meticulously kept data with modern DNA sequencing techniques to investigate the origins of today's horse breeds.
But studies at the U.K.'s Veterinary Laboratories Agency (VLA) revealed telltale brain lesions of a viral infection.
In a study published online ahead of print in PLoS Pathogens, researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine found evidence that the cytokine, Interleukin 27 (IL - 27), may be the key to fighting and treating these infections.
The study is the first to collect data from free - flying birds and was made possible by the logging devices custom - built at the Structure and Motion Laboratory at the Royal Veterinary College.
Among those is canine compulsive disorder (CCD), the counterpart to human obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD),» says the study's first and corresponding author Nicholas Dodman, BVMS, DACVA, DACVB, professor in clinical sciences and section head and program director of animal behavior at Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University.
But when the two scientists at the Messerli Research Institute at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna studied lab - raised dog and wolf packs, they found that wolves were the tolerant, cooperative ones.
In a new study, Frank Booth, a professor in the MU College of Veterinary Medicine, has found a potential link between the genetic pre-disposition for high levels of exercise motivation and the speed at which mental maturation occurs.
The findings could allow clinicians to prioritize the scarce treatment resources available and provide them to the sickest patients, said the senior author of the study, Yoshihiro Kawaoka, a virology professor at the UW - Madison School of Veterinary Medicine.
The research group «Viral infections in cattle» at the Norwegian School of Veterinary Science, which carried out this study, is currently engaged in projects that seek to identify the most effective ways of preventing new infections in herds.
«Just sequencing the gut flora gives you an inventory of the bacteria, but does not tell you how they are perceived by the host immune system,» said co-author Dr. Kenneth Simpson, professor of small animal medicine at Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine whose laboratory characterized the E. coli identified in the study.
«Our study demonstrates that dogs can distinguish angry and happy expressions in humans, they can tell that these two expressions have different meanings, and they can do this not only for people they know well, but even for faces they have never seen before,» says Ludwig Huber, senior author and head of the group at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna's Messerli Research Institute.
The method was used effectively in a preliminary case study at the Royal Veterinary College in London.
«Our study explored the associations between dog ownership and pet bonding with walking behavior and health outcomes in older adults,» said Rebecca Johnson, a professor at the MU College of Veterinary Medicine, and the Millsap Professor of Gerontological Nursing in the Sinclair School of Nursing.
The new study provides «fascinating insight into life immediately after the bite, as the bloodsuckers make their escape,» says Richard Bomphrey, a biomechanist at the Royal Veterinary College of the University of London, who was not involved in the research.
The scientist Prof. Rupert Palme of the Institute of Medical Biochemistry at the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, was responsible for the biochemical analysis of the faecal samples in the study.
«This study importantly shows the disconnect between tracking diseases in animals and in people,» writes Craig Stephen, a veterinary epidemiologist at the Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative in Saskatoon who was not involved in the work, in an e-mail.
«It's a new way to rationally develop antiviral drugs,» says veterinary microbiologist Jürgen Richt at Kansas State University, Manhattan, who was not involved in the study.
Professor Eric Fèvre, Chair of Veterinary Infectious Diseases at the University's Institute of Infection and Global Health said: «Although Laikipia County camel density is low relative to more northern regions of Kenya, our study suggests the population is sufficient to maintain high rates of viral transmission and that camels may be constantly re-infected and serve as long term carriers of the virus.
Almost every animal behavior studied in the lab, from the effectiveness of experimental drugs to the ability of monkeys to do math, is affected by stress, notes Paul Flecknell, a veterinary anesthesiologist at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom who researches ways to alleviate pain in animals.
During this study researchers from the School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Surrey in collaboration with the University of Sao Paulo examined the impact of a low protein diet on the liver.
P. Jeremy Wang, a professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at Penn's School of Veterinary Medicine, was the senior author on the study.
Eight past studies looked at whether the sweetener causes cancer in lab animals, says veterinary pathologist James Swenberg of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The study's co-authors are Dr. Jörg Habersetzer, also of the Senckenberg Research Institute, and Dr. Christine Aurich of the University of Veterinary Medicine at Vienna and head of the Graf Lehndorff Institute of Equine Sciences.
However, my interest in reproductive behaviors and fishes can be blamed on George Barlow, my undergraduate advisor whose excitement about science, teaching and mentorship shifted my plans from veterinary school to graduate study in evolutionary biology at the University of California Santa Barbara with Robert Warner (bringing me even closer to the ocean!).
Matt Boersma»04 Honors student with Seth Ramus, now at Johns Hopkins University, graduate student in Neuroscience Scott Herrick»04 Honors student with Seth Ramus, now at Rockefeller University, technician in the lab of Bruce McEwen Emily Thompkins»03 Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine Alexis Goldstein»03 Independent Study Research with Seth Ramus, now at The Pacific College of Oriental Medicine, graduate student Christopher Johnson»03 Laboratory technician at Brandeis University Kirsten George»03 Laboratory technician at Bowdoin (in professor thompson's lab) Kelly Dakin»02 Currently in the neuroscience grad program at Harvard Tyler Dunphee»02 Currently in medical school at U. Minnesota Lauren Axelrod»02 Currently in medical school at University Wisconsin Yen Wing Chu»01 Currently in the neuroscience grad program at Johns Hopkins Channing Paller»01 Currently an MD / PhD student at Harvard Shiva Gupta»01 Currently in Med School at New York Medical College Andrew Evans»01 Currently in the neuroscience grad program at U. Bristol in England Shawn Pelletier»01 Currently in pharmacology grad program at University Connecticut
«What we've shown in the monkey model matches a lot of what people have observed in epidemiological studies of humans,» says Emma Mohr, a pediatric infectious disease fellow at UW — Madison and first author on the study with Matthew Aliota and Dawn Dudley, research scientists in UW — Madison's schools of Veterinary Medicine and Medicine and Public Health, respectively.
More than 30 percent of Americans live with at least one cat, and they re probably getting the same stress relief and happy - hormone release from their pet of choice that dog - owners get; there are simply fewer studies to prove it, says judge Alan Beck, ScD, director of the Center for Human - Animal Bond at the Purdue University School of Veterinary Medicine.
Because of the tightly packed starchstructure of einkorn, the amylose is more slowly digested than amylopectin, thus lowering glucose and insulin levels in the blood after meals and maintaining satiety longer.J Sci Food Agric 2014; 94: 601 — 612In a 2003 study, researchers at the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, in Frederiksberg, Denmark, compared three different loaves: einkorn bread made with honey - salt leavening; naturally - leavened einkorn bread made with crushed whole grains; and commercial yeast bread made with modern wheat.
Although she enjoyed her experiences in the United States, Maathai decided to return to Kenya, where, in 1971 she completed her doctoral studies in veterinary anatomy at the University of Nairobi.
The Wangari Maathai Institute for Peace and Environmental Studies (WMI) is part of the College of Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences (CAVS) at the University of Nairobi.
The Wangari Maathai Institute for Peace and Environmental Studies (WMI), established in honor of the 2004 Peace Nobel Laurette Prof. Wangari Maathai, is located at College of Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences (CAVS) of the University of Nairobi.
The Wangari Maathai Institute for Peace and Environmental Studies was honored to award the certificates to six participants who successfully completed the short course in Integrated Environmental Impact Assessment and Environmental Audit in a ceremony held today the 15th May 2015 at 10:00 am at the Wangari Maathai Institute, College of Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences, University of Nairobi, Upper Kabete Campus.
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