Our products use advanced technology to help keep
equine athletes competing, making us your point of contact for joint health.
This lecture will focus on joint injury and disease and how they are major causes of morbidity in
equine athletes and companions alike.
Serious tendon and ligament injuries to
equine athletes present what used to be a chasm in the treatment arsenal for even the best equine veterinarians.
While we specialize in
equine athletes, we have experience with all breeds and disciplines.
Improvement of health and well - being of
equine athletes through clinical research to advance diagnostic and therapeutics
The technology and techniques developed for human athletes is being increasingly adapted to assist
equine athletes.
Graduate research and education uses both basic and applied science to study diseases and causes of decreased performance in
equine athletes.
1992 — Dr. Miguel Valdes was selected as one of 25 veterinarians throughout the world to care for over 400
equine athletes at the summer Olympics.
And
equine athletes have a better chance of producing an athlete than those who were not athletic.
If you are interested in improving the muscular performance of
your equine athlete, and maintaining the overall health of your horse, then you should consider massage.
We are a 24 hr referral surgery hospital, as well as serving
the equine athlete in all aspects of sports medicine including rehabilitation.
As a massage practitioner, her goal is to prevent injury in
the equine athlete, assist in recovery from recent or past injuries and to keep the traditional practice of massage skills alive.
Her primary focus is regenerative medicine and its use in musculoskeletal repair of
the equine athlete.
The Clinical Difference RLT technology broadens the scope of what can be treated to the more severe pathologies, especially in the ligaments and tendons of
the equine athlete.
The Equine Sports Medicine Center is dedicated to the education and support of horsemen and veterinarians through the study of
the equine athlete.
▼ Regardless of age, breed, or discipline, the stress of everyday riding, training, and competition may result in wear and tear to joint cartilage, eventually affecting joint function and performance of
the equine athlete.
Not exact matches
Dr. Alan Nixon is the director of the Comparative Orthopaedics Laboratory at the Cornell University School of Veterinary Medicine, a laboratory dedicated to research into orthopedic diseases of animals and humans, with a particular interest in
equine and human
athletes.
Following the tragedy near the Del Mar racetrack during the Southern California fires, Dr. Rick Arthur,
equine medical director at the UC Davis Kenneth L. Maddy Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory and at the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), issued an advisory on behalf of the CHRB regarding those athletes returning to compet
equine medical director at the UC Davis Kenneth L. Maddy
Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory and at the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), issued an advisory on behalf of the CHRB regarding those athletes returning to compet
Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory and at the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), issued an advisory on behalf of the CHRB regarding those
athletes returning to competition.
The goal of her research is to develop new strategies to improve healing and prevent irreversible joint disease and chronic pain in
equine and human
athletes who suffer orthopedic injuries.
The primary species of interest are the
equine and human
athlete.