Aesculapian - University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine

Transcription

Aesculapian - University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine
Aesculapian
The University of Georgia®
College of Veterinary Medicine
Fall 2014/Winter 2015
Vol. 15, No. 1
A
New
Era
Begins
Veterinary Medical Center
to open March 25!
Also: Pet Photo Contest Finalists
Arthur’s Story
A Beef Odyssey
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
1
Aesculapian
Fall 2014 / Winter 2015
Vol. 15, No. 1
EDITOR IN CHIEF
Kat Yancey Gilmore
MANAGING EDITOR AND DESIGNER
Lee Adcock
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Lee Adcock
Kat Yancey Gilmore
Rachel Morgan
Cindy Rice
PHOTOGRAPHY
Lee Adcock
Christopher B. Herron
Rick O’Quinn
Sue Myers Smith
ADMINISTRATION
Jere W. Morehead, President
Pamela S. Whitten, Provost
Sheila W. Allen, Dean
Harry W. Dickerson, Associate Dean for
Research and Graduate Affairs
Karen Cornell, Associate Dean for
Academic Affairs
Sean Rogers, Director of Finance
and Administration
Gary Baxter, Director,Veterinary
Teaching Hospital
EXTERNAL AFFAIRS
Kathy Bangle, Director,Veterinary
External Affairs
Molly Muschamp Thomas, Associate Director
of Development
Bridget Harden, Assistant Director
of Development
Marti Brick, Director, Alumni Relations
Cindy Rice, Communications Director,
Veterinary Teaching Hospital
Karen Aiken, Hospital Client Development Officer,
Veterinary Teaching Hospital
Kat Yancey Gilmore, Director, Public Relations
Sue Myers Smith, Web Manager
Smith Ellis, Web Developer
Aesculapian is published by the
UGA College of Veterinary Medicine’s
Office of Public Relations for alumni and friends.
Please send story ideas, class notes or letters to:
Editor, Aesculapian
The University of Georgia
College of Veterinary Medicine
Athens, GA 30602-7371
or email: kygilmor@uga.edu
Copyright 2015 the University of Georgia.
No part of this publication may be reproduced without
permission from the editor. The University of Georgia is
committed to principles
of equal opportunity and affirmative action.
UGA COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE ALUMNI
ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE BOARD
Chad Schmiedt, President
Flynn Nance, Immediate Past President
Marian Shuler Holladay, President-Elect
Doris Miller, Secretary-Treasurer
Jon Anderson
Eddie Crittendon Jr.
Rebecca Dixon
Karen Duncan
Jamie Fleming
Alan Herring
Pat Hill
Thomas Hutto
Brett Levitzke
Ginger Macaulay
Catherine McClelland
Bill Seanor
Sheila W. Allen, Ex Officio
2
facebook.com/ugavetmed
11
12
NIH grant will lead to better understanding of current therapeutics for
elephantiasis. Photo by Sue Myers Smith.
Cheetah reserve offers unique learning experiences for
budding veterinarians. Photo courtesy of Dr. MaryAnn
Radlinsky.
A Message from the Dean
4
StudentNews continued
CollegeNews
5
34
Alternate Routes to Better Beef
38
Student News Briefs
40
Remembering Sina
5 Professor of surgery named new Associate Dean for
Academic Affairs
6
Athens D-Lab now offers courier service
FacultyNews
7 PDRC developed isolates for new GA 08 IBV vaccine
42
Faculty Briefs
8
Tripp receives grant to combat norovirus
43
New Faculty
HospitalNews
14 New Hospital set to open March 25!
18
All About Arthur
14
StudentNews
27
Greetings from your Alumni Association!
46 Alumni Profile: Faculty Poultry Pathologist Dr. Monique Franca
48
Class Notes
28 Why I Give
DVM student helps Arizona tribe combat RMSF
50 twitter.com/ugavetmed
44
44 CVM welcomes 114 students to Class of 2018
instagram.com/facesofvetmed
42
AlumniNews
27 The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
20
Cartman loves fresh berries! His photo was among the finalists
selected from the 2014 Picture Your Pet Photo Contest. Photo
submitted by Wai Hung.
50
On the Cover:
It’s here! The new UGA
Veterinary Medical Center,
which includes a new
Veterinary Teaching Hospital
and the Veterinary Education
Center, opens on March 25!
Dr. Melissa A. Kling-Newberry
ugavetmed.smugmug.com
youtube.com/ugavetmed
flickr.com/ugavetmed
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
3
CollegeNews
Dear Alumni and Friends of the College,
By the time this issue of the Aesculapian arrives in your
mailbox, we will be within days of officially opening our new
UGA Veterinary Medical Center!
Meet our new Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
Professor of soft-tissue surgery to lead department
I am thrilled to share with you that we will officially open
our new UGA Veterinary Teaching Hospital, which is part
of our new Center, on March 25! You can read more about
this new facility, and some of the new technologies it will
include, in this issue of the Aesculapian.
Other items I encourage you to read:
• Meet our new associate dean for academic affairs! Dr.
Karen Cornell, a member of our small animal surgery
faculty, began her new role on Jan. 1.
• Our Poultry Diagnostic and Research Center developed
the isolates for Zoetis’s new vaccine to help reduce
disease caused by the Georgia 2008 Type infectious
bronchitis virus in poultry.
• The results of our 2014 Picture Your Pet Photo Contest
are in! This issue includes photos and stories about our
top finalists — some of which will be hung in our new
Veterinary Medical Center!
Dr. Allen with her Australian shepherds, Flint (left)
and Brandy. Photo by Sue Myers Smith.
• Enjoy reading about Rachel Morgan’s (DVM 2016) 3-week experience on an American Indian
reservation in Arizona, where she helped them with a project aimed at lowering the reservation’s rate
of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever infections.
• And don’t forget about our 52nd Annual Veterinary Conference & Alumni Weekend, which will be
held at the Georgia Center, March 27-28. I look forward to seeing many of you there.
As always, thank you for your generous support of our College. With you, all things are possible!
Sincerely,
Sheila W. Allen
Dean
4
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Dr. Karen Cornell, a board-certified veterinary
award presented to veterinary educators, the Carl
surgeon and a professor of soft tissue surgery in the
J. Norden Distinguished Teacher Award (now the
Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery,
Zoetis Distinguished Teacher Award), in 2001 and
began her new role, as Associate Dean for Academic
2006. In 2011, she received the highest teaching
Affairs for the UGA CVM, on Jan. 1.
award bestowed by the University of Georgia upon
its faculty, the Josiah Meigs
“It will be my honor to
Distinguished Teaching Professor.
work with my colleagues in
Other teaching accolades include
the tradition of excellence
participation in the UGA Lilly
in veterinary education at
Teaching Fellows Program (2001the University of Georgia
2003), and her selection as a
by providing a program
member of the UGA Teaching
utilizing progressive
Academy (2006). She also served
educational methodologies
as a mentor in both programs.
in a supportive environment,
so that veterinary
Ever popular with veterinary
students may develop the
students, Dr. Cornell has been
competencies necessary to
recognized by veterinary students
succeed in our ever-changing
with awards, as well as being
society,” said Dr. Cornell.
selected to “hood” their class on
graduation day, and to give the
Dr. Cornell joined
commencement address.
the College in 1998 as an
assistant professor of soft
Dr. Cornell co-founded
tissue surgery and by 2010
the College’s award-winning
had earned the rank of a
Vets for Pets and People
tenured professor. Through
program (www.vet.uga.edu/
the years, she has served
vetsforpetsandpeople/), which
the College on multiple
works to educate Georgia’s
Dr. Karen Cornell
committees and in four
veterinarians about the links
Photo by Christopher B. Herron.
significant leadership roles
between animal abuse and
as:
domestic violence, and provide foster care for pets
of victims of domestic violence who seek shelter
• Director of Continuing Education, since
through Project Safe (www.project-safe.org/).
January 2014;
An early proponent for strengthening the
• Assistant Department Head for Small Animal
communication training provided to veterinary
Medicine and Surgery, since 2011;
students, and to enhance their skills for
• Interim Director of the UGA Veterinary
communicating with future clients, Dr. Cornell
Teaching Hospital, 2009-2010;
was instrumental in bringing communication
• and as Chief of Staff for Surgery, 2002-2008.
training to interns, residents and DVM students
A gifted educator, Dr. Cornell has garnered
at UGA CVM through grants from the Bayer
multiple accolades for her educational efforts,
Animal Health Communication Project
including twice being awarded the highest teaching
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
5
(www.veterinarycommunication.org). Most
recently, she has co-collaborated with other UGA
CVM professors and a team at the College of
Education to create a web-based tutorial to help
veterinary students hone their critical thinking
skills prior to beginning their hospital rotations.
Dr. Cornell has been involved in the training
of dozens of interns and residents who became
board-certified veterinary surgeons. She has
authored or co-authored numerous chapters in
veterinary textbooks and manuscripts in peerreviewed journals. She is known worldwide
for her expertise in surgery, as well as for her
innovations in educational methodologies.
In 2009, Dr. Cornell received the
Distinguished Alumnus Award from Purdue
University School of Veterinary Medicine,
where she earned both her DVM, in 1988, and
her PhD, in 1998. She is an active volunteer for
her profession, serving in leadership roles for
the American College of Veterinary Surgeons,
the International Veterinary Communication
Institute, and the Veterinary Leadership Institute.
Web-based critical thinking tool
wins national award
The “Case-Based E-Learning Module to Enhance
Veterinary Students’ Diagnostic and Therapeutic
Decision Making” won the 2014 Division of Distance
Learning Crystal Award from the Association for
Educational Communications and Technology.
The interactive learning tool was developed over
the last four years by Ikseon “Ike” Choi, an associate
professor of learning, design and technology in the
College of Education, in collaboration with faculty from
the College of Veterinary Medicine: Karen Cornell,
a professor of soft tissue surgery; Kate E. Creevy, an
associate professor of internal medicine; and MaryAnn
Radlinsky and Chad Schmiedt, both associate professors
of soft tissue surgery.
The tool is populated with veterinary case studies
to help third-year veterinary students hone critical
thinking skills while also providing practice for making
difficult medical decisions.
Athens D-Lab now offers courier service
The Athens Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory has
partnered with the courier service Lab Express to
offer pick up and delivery services to roughly 18
counties in the Athens and Atlanta areas.
The service covers most of Barrow, Clarke, Cobb,
DeKalb, Fulton, Gwinnett, Jackson, Madison,
Oconee, Oglethorpe and Walton counties, as well
as parts of Clayton, Forsyth, Hall, Henry, Morgan,
Newton and Rockdale counties. The cost is $10 per
pickup, regardless of the number of samples in your
order (including small necropsy samples).
For more information on the courier service, contact
the Athens Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory at
706.542.5568, athndlab@uga.edu, or visit
ugavetlab.org
6
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Both the Athens lab and the Tifton Veterinary
Diagnostic and Investigational Laboratory will
continue to offer UPS Discounted Easy Ship. The
cost for this service starts at $3.50 for the first pound
and is based on the total weight of your shipment.
To request shipping labels for this service, call
706.542.5568 (Athens) or 229.386.3340 (Tifton).
Holly Sellers, MS, PhD, left, and Mark Jackwood, MS, PhD, co-developed the isolates used in the new GA 08 IBV vaccine. Photo by Sue Myers Smith.
PDRC developed isolates for new GA 08 IBV
vaccine licensed by Zoetis
Zoetis Inc. has obtained a full license from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture to sell Poulvac® Bron
GA 08, the first commercially available vaccine to
reduce disease caused by Georgia 2008 (GA 08) Type
infectious bronchitis virus in poultry. The vaccine
is based on viral isolates developed at the Poultry
Diagnostic and Research Center and is the result of an
industry-led task force created in 2013 to combat the
rise of IBV.
Poulvac® Bron GA 08, a live vaccine, is licensed
for vaccination of healthy chickens at one day of age
or older as an aid in the reduction of disease caused
by GA 08. First identified in Georgia in December
2007, GA 08 has since been isolated on farms in
Alabama, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee and Kentucky. Unlike other IBV strains,
which typically affect the upper respiratory tract, GA
08 primarily affects the lower tract, particularly the air
sacs.
The viral isolates were identified and vaccine
candidates were developed by Holly S. Sellers, MS,
PhD, a professor of avian medicine, and Mark W.
Jackwood, MS, PhD, a professor of avian medicine
who heads the Poultry Diagnostic and Research
Center. According to Sellers, GA 08 rarely makes its
presence known on the farm, but becomes a real issue
at the processing plant due to higher incidence of
airsacculitis. This results in increased condemnations,
reduced plant efficiency and ultimately economic loss
for producers.
“Outbreaks have taken a major economic toll on
producers and processors in the Southeast, so making
a vaccine available has been a top priority,” said Sellers.
“Based on UGA’s initial research, which included
isolation and characterization of the virus, Zoetis has
developed a new vaccine that has performed well in
areas hard hit by this costly virus, against which other
IBV vaccines offer little protection. We are grateful
for the support that Zoetis and the poultry industry
have provided in this productive collaboration, and
are confident that it will have a positive impact on
producers in Georgia and in other affected states.”
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
7
CollegeNews
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA®
Grant from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
will fund research to combat norovirus
Ralph A. Tripp, PhD, a professor of infectious
diseases, will lead a team in pursuit of an
innovative global health and development research
project, titled “Engineering Mammalian Cell
Lines to Support Human Norovirus and Related
Enteric Viruses.” Tripp’s
project is supported by a
$100,000 Grand Challenges
Explorations grant, an
initiative funded by the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation.
Tripp and his research
team will engineer
mammalian cell lines that
support norovirus and related
enteric virus replication by
silencing non-essential virus
resistance genes in vaccine
cell lines. Norovirus is
highly infectious and can be
transmitted from an infected
person, contaminated food
or water, or by touching
contaminated surfaces. The
illness can be serious for
young children and older
adults. While researchers
have made advances in
studying the virus and
identifying some control
Ralph A. Tripp, PhD.
measures, no efficient cell line Photo by Rick O’Quinn.
exists currently to support
studies for vaccine and therapeutic development.
Tripp’s study has the potential to provide
novel platform enabling tools, specifically
fully permissive mammalian cell lines that will
fundamentally change disease intervention
strategies for human norovirus and potentially
other enteric viruses
Norovirus is a common cause of acute
gastroenteritis in humans, with greater than
8
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
22 million cases occurring in the United States
annually. There are numerous challenges in
culturing human noroviruses, a feature that has
hindered vaccine and therapeutic development.
The Gates Foundation recognizes that norovirus
causes up to 200,000
deaths in children under 5
years of age in developing
countries, and that there
is an immediate need to
develop a reliable cell
culture system for human
norovirus,” said Tripp. “Our
research team has received
several Gates Foundation
grants to develop enhanced
vaccine cell lines to
facilitate the eradication of
polio virus, and to control
other vaccine-preventable
diseases — including
measles virus and rotavirus.
We have successfully
developed these enhanced
vaccine cell lines using
RNA interference platformenabling technology, and
are confident we can apply
this to meet the needs for
norovirus.”
The project team is
comprised of members
of the University of Georgia and the Murdoch
Childrens Research Institute in Victoria, Australia.
The co-investigator on the project is Carl
Kirkwood, an associate professor at the Murdoch
Childrens Research Institute. Dr. Kirkwood
leads the Enteric Virus Research Group, which is
internationally recognized for its contributions to
the understanding of enteric diseases, including
norovirus and rotavirus.
Veterinary Teaching Hospital
New state-of-the-art facility to open on March 25!
The University of Georgia’s new Veterinary Teaching Hospital will be the premier specialty animal care facility
in the region, allowing us to better support our referring veterinarians, clients, patients and students. Located on
College Station Road, about 2.5 miles from our current Hospital, the facility will feature:
» Cutting-edge technology
» Rehabilitation program
» Radiation therapy for all species
» Covered equine performance arena
» Enhanced minimally invasive techniques
» Updated food animal
treatment areas
» Top-of-the-line MRI and CT
diagnostics for all species
» Separate emergency entrances
» Numerous teaching spaces
» Improved client experience
» Outpatient equine facilities
» Intermediate care ward
» Improved isolation areas
Providing 24-hour emergency services and advanced animal healthcare
800.861.7456 (small animal referrals) • 800.861.7458 (large animal referrals) • www.vet.uga.edu/hospital
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
9
CollegeNews
NIH awards $1.1 million to study drug therapies
for elephantiasis
Researchers at the University of Georgia have
been awarded a three-year $1.1 million grant from the
National Institutes of Health to determine how two
commonly administered drug combinations work to
remove larvae from the bloodstream of people infected
with lymphatic filariasis, also known as elephantiasis.
Lymphatic filariasis is a serious human tropical
disease that is caused by several species of parasitic
roundworm. The parasites are transmitted to humans
by infected mosquitos. More than 1.3 billion people in
73 countries are at risk of the disease and 120 million
people are infected. Often, the disease is contracted
during childhood and the patient’s lymphatic system,
kidneys and immune system may be permanently
damaged long before physical symptoms manifest. As
the disease progresses, it can cause extreme swelling in
extremities and other body parts, resulting in severe
pain and, often, permanent disability. In addition,
the victims can suffer social and financial losses.
Worldwide, roughly 40 million people have been
disfigured or incapacitated by this disease.
In parts of the world where the disease is
endemic, it is controlled by annually giving a single
dose of two drug combinations to the entire at-risk
population: albendazole with diethylcarbamazine
citrate if this disease alone is present, and albendazole
with ivermectin if “river blindness,” which is caused
by a different parasite, is also present. This is part
of an ambitious project, led by the World Health
Organization, to eliminate the disease by 2020.
Adrian Wolstenholme, PhD.
Photo by Sue Myers Smith.
10
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
“Billions of doses of these drugs have
been distributed, yet we do not know how
diethylcarbamazine citrate works against the
parasites, and it is likely that our previous ideas
of how ivermectin works against these parasites
may be wrong,” said Adrian Wolstenholme, the
principal investigator on the project. Wolstenholme
is a professor of infectious diseases at the College of
Veterinary Medicine and a faculty member within
the UGA Center for Tropical and Emerging Global
Diseases.
The drug combinations eliminate larvae from
the patient’s bloodstream, which prevents the larvae
from being transmitted to mosquitos and thus to
other people. But, the drugs have a limited impact
on the adult worms, which can live up to eight years
inside the infected patient. This means that at least five
consecutive years of annual treatments are required
to prevent new infections before the existing adult
parasites die, which can be difficult to achieve in some
areas of the world.
“Understanding how our current drugs work,
especially if they allow the infected person’s own
immune system to eliminate the parasite, will help
us to use them in the most effective way possible. It
may also help us think of new ways in which to kill
the adult parasites, and to ensure that this horrible
disease is removed from the face of the earth as early
as possible,” said Wolstenholme.
The other researchers on the project, all from
the Department of Infectious Diseases, are: Ray
Kaplan, a parasitologist and a professor of infectious
diseases; Balazs Rada, an immunologist and assistant
professor of infectious diseases; Barbara Reaves, a cell
biologist and associate research scientist; and Andrew
Moorhead, a parasitologist and assistant research
scientist.
Walter Lorenz, an assistant research scientist at the
Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, is
also a member of the research team. As a member of
the Institute of Bioinformatics’ Quantitative Biology
Consulting Group, Lorenz will help the researchers
analyze the large amount of data that will be generated
by the project.
This research project is supported by the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the
National Institutes of Health under award number
R01AI103140.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
11
CollegeNews
A veterinary ophthalmologist performs an eye examination on a cheetah, with help from a pre-vet student volunteer from the International Student
Volunteers organization. The eye exam was part of an annual health checkup performed on cheetahs at the De Wildt Shingwedzi Cheetah and
Wildlife Ranch, in South Africa, during ISV’s two-week summer program at the Ranch, held in 2014.
Know a budding veterinarian? Suggest a summer
trip to Shingwedzi!
All photos courtesy of Dr. MaryAnn Radlinsky
If you know an undergraduate student who
is contemplating a career in veterinary medicine,
encourage him or her to consider spending part of the
summer in South Africa as a volunteer working with
wild animals on a cheetah reserve!
International Student Volunteers is accepting
applications for the 2015 Pre-Vet Program, which is
held at the Ann van Dyk Cheetah Centre’s De WildtShingwedzi Wildlife Ranch, located about four hours
from Johannesburg. Undergraduate students from
universities throughout the world are eligible for the
program, which is coordinated through ISV and co-led
by Dr. MaryAnn Radlinsky, an associate professor of
soft-tissue surgery at the UGA College of Veterinary
Medicine. The 2015 trip will mark the program’s third
consecutive year at the Ranch.
“This is an incredible opportunity for students
who will help us — hands-on — with annual
12
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
wellness examinations on cheetahs at the reserve,”
said Radlinsky, who is also the adviser to the PreVeterinary Medicine Club at UGA. “This includes
every step we take with each of these animals, from
anesthetizing them for the exams to recovering the
cheetahs and escorting them back to their enclosures.
We also work with wild dogs on the reserve, and, if the
occasion permits, other wild animals. And every hour
will count toward the volunteer hours that colleges
of veterinary medicine expect you to have when you
apply to school.”
In addition to assisting with veterinary care for the
wild animals on the Ranch, the student volunteers are
also tasked with feeding and socializing new cheetah
cubs that are born on the Ranch, which serves as
the breeding facility for the Ann van Dyk Cheetah
Centre. They also work alongside the Centre’s lead
veterinarian, Dr. Peter Caldwell, an expert in zoo and
wildlife medicine.
Caroline Hall Hawkins, who is currently pursuing
her bachelor’s of science degree at the UGA College
of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences and
plans to graduate in May, learned about the trip in
the fall of 2013 through UGA’s “Pre-Vet” club. “Just
the possibility of being able to interact with cubs
was enough to sign on for the trip,” said Hawkins,
who added that her “life-long dream is to become a
veterinarian.”
Hawkins, along with her sister Laura (who
graduated in 2014 from Eckerd College in Florida
and plans to pursue a career in animal behavior),
participated in the Shingwedzi program in 2014 and
found it to be a life-altering experience.
“I grew up in a very horsey family, and had always
dreamed of being an equine practitioner, yet after this
experience, I am considering working with exotics
in the future,” she said. “One of the highlights of the
trip was observing and assisting with endoscopies,
castrations, and orthopedic surgery with Dr. Caldwell.”
Hawkins’ mom, who is a certified veterinary
acupuncturist working with both equine and small
animals, earned her DVM (in 1986) as well as two
undergraduate science degrees — in biology, in
1981, and in animal science, in 1982 — at UGA. Her
daughter, Caroline, plans to apply to the CVM’s DVM
program later this year.
“There are very few opportunities, if any, in the
United States to be able to feed, touch, play with
and attend surgery on animals like these. Especially
for someone considering working with wildlife or
exotics, this would be a very valuable experience!” said
Caroline Hawkins.
The student volunteers spend two weeks at
Shingwedzi, but can spend an additional two weeks
on an ISV Southern Africa Adventure Tour. The
Shingwedzi program tuition includes accommodations
during the trip, meals, ground transportation fees in
the host country, fees charged by the host organization,
an ISV travel manual and resource documents. Tuition
does not cover airfare and other expenses, including
an extended stay. There is no application deadline,
but there are a limited number of spaces available for
the trip. Applicants accepted into the program are
confirmed on a first-come, first-served basis.
Each group of volunteers to visit the Ranch leaves
behind an indelible impression, noted Roy Johnston,
who manages the reserve along with his wife Anna.
“Each task carried out by volunteers is a priceless
mark left behind for the future,” Johnston said.
“The volunteers make it possible for us to finance
the necessary annual health checks on the animals,
which are carried out by the best animal medical
practitioners and the pre-vet students who assist with
this mammoth task. The volunteers arrive and revive
us with their enthusiasm, dedication, laughter and
love. Our gates will always be open to you!”
Caroline Hall Hawkins, who attended the 2014 Shingwedzi pre-vet
program with her sister, said that her experience at Shingwedzi led
her to contemplate a veterinary career working with exotic animals.
Hawkins plans to apply to the UGA CVM later this year.
For More Information
To inquire about the program:
Kim Vera Yang
info@isvolunteers.org
www.isvolunteers.org
The Ann van Dyk Cheetah Centre and the
De Wildt-Shingwedzi Wildlife Ranch
www.dewildt.co.za/
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
13
Brand New!
Our Veterinary Teaching Hospital
opens March 25
Story by Cindy H. Rice
Photos by Sue Myers Smith
The UGA Veterinary Teaching Hospital is
scheduled to open at its new location, near the
intersection of College Station and Barnett Shoals
roads, on March 25. This state-of-the-art facility will
allow the Hospital to better meet its current patient
care demands and the educational needs of the
College while ensuring a bright future for both the
CVM and the veterinary profession.
Highlights of the new facility include a separate
small animal emergency entrance; dedicated small
animal and large animal ICUs; a new small animal
intermediate care area; a designated rehabilitation
center for dogs; a covered equine performance
arena; an updated chute system for food animals;
and an updated linear accelerator with stereotactic
radiosurgery capabilities. Please see page 9 for more
details.
The College is still fundraising for new equipment
for this important project. If you would like to make a
gift, please contact the Office for Veterinary External
Affairs at give2vet@uga.edu or 706.542.1807.
Cutting-edge equine cardiology procedure
The Hospital is now one of only a handful of
places across the nation to offer an alternative
treatment option for equine patients suffering from
atrial fibrillation, a relatively common type of heart
14
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
arrhythmia in horses.
The procedure, called transvenous electrical
cardioversion, is more effective than the drugs that
have been traditionally used to treat this condition,
has fewer side effects and produces immediate
results. Spearheading this initiative for the Hospital
is Amanda Coleman, DVM, DACVIM (Cardiology),
and Steeve Giguère, DVM, PhD, DACVIM (Large
Animal). Dr. Giguère helped bring the technology to
the U.S. in 2005.
To conduct the procedure, two specialized
catheters are placed through a large vein in the horse’s
neck. The catheters are strategically positioned in
the heart with the help of an ultrasound machine.
An electrical impulse is then delivered through them
to the heart, converting the abnormal rhythm to a
normal one.
“The electrical pulse basically forces the heart to
reset,” said Dr. Giguère. “An electrocardiogram is done
immediately after the procedure to confirm that it was
successful.”
The horse is typically kept in the hospital
overnight for observation, and after one to two weeks
of rest it can go back to its normal activity level. While
the treatment does require placing the horse under
anesthesia, the procedure itself is relatively quick and
is considered low risk.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
15
HospitalNews
New Faculty
Five specialists have been added to our faculty in
recent months.
Lisa Bazzle, DVM, joins the Hospital
as a clinical instructor of emergency
and critical care for small animals. She
completed her residency in this area at
North Carolina State University.
The central courtyard allows natural light to reach the interior of the new facility and provides outdoor space that our visitors, students, staff and
faculty will enjoy.
The gabled entrance to the Small Animal Teaching Hospital allows
plenty of indirect natural light to flood the first floor lobby and
second floor conference rooms and offices.
New technology streamlines patient care
Clinical Trials
This spring, the Hospital launched a new electronic
medical record system (VetView) and new medical
image viewing and storage systems. These technologies
work together to pull all patient information into one
centralized database that can be easily accessed by
students, faculty and staff.
These new systems offer the ability not only to look
through current and past medical information of a
patient, but also to view color slides from pathology,
videos from an endoscopy or arthroscopy, photos
from dermatology, images from ophthalmology, MRIs,
radiographs and other diagnostic images with just the
click of a button within VetView.
“This change has really streamlined how we
approach patient care,” said Hospital Director Gary
Baxter, VMD, MS, DACVS. “Now you don’t have to
hunt in several different locations for the information
you need to make a diagnosis or to assess the patient.
It is all there at your fingertips.”
It has also enhanced student learning by providing
a more complete snapshot of what is going on with
a patient. Additionally, faculty members can export
information from the new data system, which will
allow them to better use Hospital cases for classroom
instruction.
The Hospital is currently conducting a study to
determine the safety and potential efficacy of the
AuroLase® system for the treatment of local tumors
in dogs and cats. Once accepted into the study, the
patient will be administered a one-time AuroLase®
Therapy treatment. This includes an IV infusion of
gold nanoshells, which are small particles specifically
designed to accumulate only in cancerous tissues. The
next day, a near-infrared laser treatment is delivered
to the tumor, causing the nanoshells to heat up and
thermally destroy the tumor. Follow-up visits are
required.
There are also two studies looking at treatment
options for dogs with naturally occurring arthritis of
the elbow or knee. One is evaluating the efficacy of
tramadol on pain and dysfunction. Medication (either
tramadol, carprofen or a placebo) will be prescribed
for 10 days. After that time, the dog’s overall condition
will be reassessed. It will then go seven days without
medication before starting the next treatment segment.
The other study is evaluating the effect of
meloxicam, an NSAID, on a possible biomarker for
joint pain in dogs with osteoarthritis. Each animal that
qualifies for the study will be prescribed meloxicam to
be administered orally once per day for 14 days. The
dog will then be re-evaluated to see if there was any
improvement.
Another ongoing study is evaluating the efficacy
of the novel angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB),
telmisartan, for the reduction of persistent renal
proteinuria in dogs. Once accepted into the study,
each dog will be randomized to receive telmisartan
or the current standard of care, enalapril, with the
opportunity to receive both drugs should proteinuria
persist after treatment with a single agent. Dogs will
then be rechecked at 1 week, 1 month and 4 months,
or more often if needed.
On the large animal side, the Hospital is
conducting a study that investigates a new technique
for the removal of cystic calculi (bladder stones) in
standing, sedated horses. Stones will be removed
through an incision into the urethra after being
fractured by a pneumatic lithotripsy instrument.
University
of Georgia
| College
of Veterinary
Medicine
16 ThisThe
panoramic
view
of the large
animal
hospital and
driveway shows the abundant green space and easy access our new facility provides.
FFor
or M
More
ore IInformation
nformation
For more information about our clinical trials,
contact 706.542.3221 or visit:
www.vet.uga.edu/research/clinical/current
Andrew Bugbee, DVM, DACVIM, is a clinical
assistant professor of small animal
internal medicine. He is board-certified
by the American College of Veterinary
Internal Medicine. Dr. Bugbee completed
his residency at UGA and returns to
Athens after having gained additional
experience at Purdue University.
Kathryn A. Diehl, DVM, MS, DACVO,
joins us as an assistant professor of
ophthalmology. Dr. Diehl completed
a combined residency in comparative
ophthalmology and fellowship in cellular
biology at the University of Wisconsin.
She is board-certified by the American
College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists.
María Ferrer, DVM, MS, DACT, comes to
the Hospital as an associate professor
of theriogenology. Dr. Ferrer did her
residency at Louisiana State University.
She is board-certified by the American
College of Theriogenologists. With the
addition of Dr. Ferrer, the Hospital is now
expanding its theriogenology services to
focus on both large and small animals.
Alison G. Meindl, DVM, joins the
Community Practice Clinic as a clinical
assistant professor. She comes to UGA
with nearly 10 years of private practice
experience, most recently at the Animal
Clinic del Rancho in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
17
HospitalNews
All About Arthur
Photo by Sue Myers Smith.
Feline gets new lease on life, thanks to dedicated
owners and an innovative surgeon
By Lee Adcock
The usage of stem cells in feline renal
transplantation is still an emerging technique in
veterinary medicine. But Chad Schmiedt (DVM ’00),
a board-certified surgeon and associate professor
of soft tissue surgery who directs the feline renal
transplant program at the UGA Veterinary Teaching
Hospital, has been utilizing adult stem cells in kidney
transplantations since 2013. Schmiedt’s second surgery
using this technique was performed last summer on
Arthur, a cat that may not have survived a transplant
with conventional medicine.
Only three veterinary teaching hospitals in the
United States have active feline renal transplant
programs: the University of Pennsylvania, the
University of Wisconsin, and the University of
Georgia. UGA’s is currently the only program that
offers to utilize the patient’s own stem cells to optimize
18
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
its recovery.
Arthur’s owners, Tony Lacaria and Fred Petrick,
were not newcomers to renal disease in cats, or to
helping a cat heal from renal transplantation. Both
had endured the experience before through their cat,
Teddy. But Arthur’s case was more complicated. He
had tested positive for corona virus, the vector that
leads to Feline Infectious Peritonitis, and was therefore
turned away by the University of Pennsylvania’s
transplant program. The veterinarians at Wisconsin
did not want to do Arthur’s surgery because their tests
showed his body experienced difficulty in absorbing
cyclosporine, an immune suppressant.
In any transplant procedure, the body’s immune
system will mount a defense against any foreign tissue
unless the doctor can suppress the response with
medication. Typically, cyclosporine is used to help
protect feline kidneys from this reaction — but stem
cells, Schmiedt said, can help, too.
Even in humans, using adult stem cells to aid organ
transplants is a very new practice. There is a growing
body of studies detailing the results, but as Schmiedt
points out: “No one knows yet whether the use of adult
stem cells in transplantation surgery equates to longer
overall survival.”
“A study published in 2012 found the use of
mesenchymal stem cells during renal transplant
surgery in humans lowered the risk of acute organ
rejection, decreased the risk of infection, and the
patients had better estimated renal function one
year after surgery,” Schmiedt said, regarding what
prompted him to try stem cell therapy in a feline
renal transplantation in 2013. (“Induction Therapy
With Autologous Mesenchymal Stem Cells in LivingRelated Kidney Transplants,” Jianming Tan, MD, PhD;
Weizhen Wu, MD, et. al.; published in the Journal of
the American Medical Association, Vol. 307, No. 11.)
That first cat was still doing well in late 2014, more
than 18 months after surgery.
By the time Petrick and Lacaria brought Arthur
to UGA in late April, they had already lost several
months trying to get him into the two other transplant
programs. And they were worried. A local veterinarian
had told them that Arthur had about two weeks to
live. He weighed only seven pounds, half of his regular
body weight.
During their first meeting, Schmiedt suggested
utilizing the adult stem cell treatments during Arthur’s
surgery and recovery, in addition to the cyclosporine.
The couple embraced the idea at once. “It’d be his only
chance for a normal life,” Petrick said.
Arthur was so weak, however, that his owners
feared he would not last through the two procedures —
as one surgery was required to harvest fat for growing
the stem cells, and the transplantation surgery would
follow seven to 10 days later. “Arthur first got sick at 2
years old and now he was 3,” said Lacaria. “He was very
lethargic when he arrived in Athens. This was his last
chance. We had a lot to be worried about.”
MSCs, or mesenchymal stem cells — the kind
used to treat Arthur — can be derived from fat, bone
marrow and neonatal tissues such as placenta or
umbilical cord. In Arthur’s case, the UGA Regenerative
Medicine Service used his harvested fat tissue to grow
the adult stem cells for use in his transplant surgery
and recovery. The service laboratory is managed
by research professionals Merrilee Thoresen, PhD,
and Jenny Mumaw, PhD (who is also enrolled in
the college’s doctor of veterinary medicine program
and will graduate in 2016). Dr. John Peroni, a boardcertified large animal surgeon and associate professor
whose research focus includes stem cell therapeutics,
heads the service.
“MSCs in veterinary species have been primarily
used to treat musculoskeletal injury — problems with
bones, tendons and joints — and those are our most
frequent uses here at the UGA College of Veterinary
Medicine,” said Peroni, who is also past-chairman
of the board for the North American Veterinary
Regenerative Medicine Association. “But there is good
evidence to support using stem cells to modulate the
immune system and regulate inflammation. So, the
transplant setting might be another optimal use for
these types of stem cells.”
To Lacaria and Petrick, it was evident early on that
Arthur was healing very quickly from the surgery.
Teddy, they said, spent three months in a cage while
he recuperated from the procedure. Arthur, however,
“was acting better than his old self the next day,”
according to Lacaria.
Cat owners who are contemplating a renal
transplantation for their sick feline should know
that the extra step of harvesting adult stem cells does
increase the price of an ordinary feline transplant.
In addition, a cat that receives a new kidney must be
given immune suppressants every 12 hours for the rest
of its life. And, at UGA, the transplant patient’s owners
are required to adopt the cat that donated the kidney.
For Lacaria and Petrick, that meant welcoming Joey
into their multi-feline family.
Arthur’s harvested fat yielded an abundance of
MSCs, which meant that he continued to receive
stem cell treatments throughout his recovery, until
his supply of adult stem cells was exhausted. Within
months of his surgery, he had regained the weight he
had lost and frolicked like a young cat, his owners said.
“We have Arthur back,” said Petrick.
Schmiedt and his colleagues are continuing their
work in this promising arena of transplant medicine.
All owners of cats who bring them to the UGA VTH
for renal transplantations are urged to consider stem
cell treatments as part of the surgery and recovery
process.
And as for Arthur and Joey: Both are said to be “at
home” amid their cadre of feline playmates.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
19
HospitalNews
Alpine: Did Someone Say Treat?
Submitted by Stephanie Bender of McDonough, Ga.
Alpine, our Rhodesian Ridgeback, was admitted to
the UGA Veterinary Teaching Hospital on Saturday,
Feb. 15, 2014. Two days later, we received a call
informing us that he had multiple myeloma (a type of
cancer). Alpine was only three. We were devastated!
Never in a million years would we have thought that
was the cause of the pain he had been experiencing for
the previous month.
We were also told that he had partial paralysis in
his hind legs. One of the tumors he had was pressing
on his spinal cord. Our options at this point were
radiation and chemotherapy, or he could be laid to
rest. We never hesitated on what we would do. Alpine
was such an important part of our family’s life and we
would do whatever it took to save him.
After receiving one round of radiation, Alpine was
able to sit up the next day without help. Gradually, he
gained back his strength and was able to stand, and
then walk with very little help. The Hospital’s team
2014 Picture Your Pet Photo Contest
Winning dogs, cats, horses, and more to hang in
new UGA Veterinary Medical Center
By Cindy H. Rice
When the new UGA Veterinary Medical Center
opens in late March, artwork hanging in some of
the public spaces will include enlargements of the
photographs from the 2014 Picture Your Pet Photo
Contest!
Hospital clients submitted more than 350 entries
to the contest. The entries were divided into four
categories (cats, dogs, horses and miscellaneous
pets) and critiqued by a panel of judges. The
finalists were chosen based on overall photo
quality, creativity, and the sense of emotion and/or
personality exhibited.
20
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
The contest was open to current and former
clients of the Hospital, the Field Services unit
and the UGA Community Practice Clinic. Each
client was invited to enter up to three pictures of
their pet(s), along with a brief description of their
experience at our Hospital or CPC.
We’ve highlighted a few winning entries on the
following pages.
To view a slide show of the 23 photos chosen as
this year’s winning entries, visit:
www.vet.uga.edu/photo-contest
called daily with updates. I could tell how happy they
were to give us good news.
Alpine had such a wonderful personality, and he
was winning over hearts at the Hospital. The day he
came home was an emotional one. We were happy to
have him back in our lives, but at the time we didn’t
know what the future would hold.
With very heavy hearts, we are sad to say Alpine
passed in July 2014. However, thanks to the UGA
Veterinary Teaching Hospital, we were able to enjoy
precious quality time with him before his cancer
became more aggressive. He was able to celebrate his
fourth birthday and go on several vacations with us.
We enjoyed every minute of it. We will forever be
grateful to all the doctors and Hospital staff. We knew
Alpine was very well taken care of during his time
there! Our life is not the same without him, but was
made better because of him.
Chewie: King of the Beach
Submitted by Gale Skipworth and
Andy Runton of Roswell, Ga.
We first came to the UGA Veterinary
Teaching Hospital in February, desperate
for help with our little Chewie, a 13-yearold Cairn Terrier. From the beginning,
we were greeted by the most attentive,
patient and knowledgeable staff, and
instantly felt at ease. We were confident
that everyone would do everything they
could to help our little guy, and we were not
disappointed. Every time we go in, there’s
a team of dedicated professionals waiting
to provide the best care. They take the time
to explain every procedure and answer all
of our questions. We have now had several
appointments, and the level of care has
never wavered. Our little guy is doing so
much better, and we are so grateful!
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
21
Tango: It Takes Two to “Tango”
Submitted by Samantha Barton of Colbert, Ga.
Tango is a 14-year-old Argentine
Warmblood gelding. In the spring of 2013, he
came up from his pasture severely lame. He
had torn the distal medial branch of his deep
digital flexor tendon, a devastating injury
that many horses do not recover from and
are therefore unable to return to their former
careers. Tango was admitted to the UGA
Veterinary Teaching Hospital for treatment.
Bone marrow was harvested from his
sternum, and from the marrow, stem cells
were isolated, matured and then injected
into the torn tendon. Then the intense
rehabilitation work began.
Tango loves his job and slow rehabilitation
was hard for him to understand. But almost
a year and a half later, Tango returned to the
hunter ring for his first competition and won!
There was an incredibly beautiful, calm and
confident style to his work. He truly seemed
the happiest we’ve seen him!
Leila: Winter Beauty
Submitted by Gina Greer of Aiken, S.C.
Photo by Meg Francoeur
Leila was an orphaned nurse mare foal,
rescued by Dream Equine Therapy Center
of York, S.C. She came to us at 9 months
old and has been part of the family ever
since.
She has been to the UGA Veterinary
Teaching Hospital twice in the past three
years, each time for colic. Her first trip
was in November 2011, and she was full of
sand in her in colon. The second episode
of colic was associated with a mild feed
impaction in her small intestine. Both
times we were able to resolve the issue
through medical management.
It appears that Leila is somewhat of a
“drama queen” and must go to the hospital
every time her belly hurts. I think she likes
UGA! Currently, she is so full of life and is
doing great.
22
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Harley: Harley and the Frog
Submitted by Larry McDermott of Rutherfordton, N.C.
Harley, our 5-year-old yellow Labrador Retriever, has
always been an inquisitive but gentle dog. When he spotted
this toad on the driveway, he laid down next to it for a long
time. When the toad hopped, he would rise, move closer to
it and lie down again. Harley came to the UGA Veterinary
Teaching Hospital in 2014 for surgery on his cranial cruciate
ligament. The care he received was the finest we have
ever seen! And the care both he and we were shown was
remarkable.
Truman: Truman Always Finds the Light
Submitted by Matt and Sue Smith of Athens, Ga.
I’ve been bringing my pets to the UGA Community
Practice Clinic for several years now, and I have always had
great experiences with the faculty and students. Truman, a
13-year-old medium-hair cat, is never on his best behavior
when he’s at the veterinarian’s office, but the students and
staff seem to be able to handle him just fine, which I really
appreciate.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
23
2014 Picture Your Pet Contest Finalists
Cats
Rylie
Truman: Truman Always Finds the Light
Peaches: Finally Peace and Quiet
Lucky
Aurelius: Everyday Moments
Dogs
Jäger: Jäger and his Frisbee
Finn: Finn and his siblings
Chewie: King of the Beach
Sophie: What We Always Knew
Harley: Harley and the Frog
Zoe: Zoe and her Red Monkey Enjoying the Outdoors Together
Riker: Play with Me
Zeiger: The Z Takes a Break
Webster: As Pretty on the Inside as on the Outside
Alpine: Did Someone Say Treat?
Gizmo: Having a Doggone Good Time
Horses
Ace: A Kiss for Ace
Tango: It Takes Two to “Tango”
Ayla’s Archimage
Leila: Winter Beauty
Roy: Dual Focus
Misc.
Birdy: Perched
Cartman: A Very Berry Summer
Brandie Brown
Matt and Sue Smith
JoAnn Griffin
Andy Mathis
Leo Sage
Winder, Ga.
Athens, Ga.
Bogart, Ga.
Elberton, Ga.
Athens, Ga.
Kyle and Amanda McClung
Terry and Claudia Marlar
Gale Skipworth and Andy Runton
Holly Downey
Larry McDermott
Terry and Claudia Marlar
Byron, Ga.
Loudon, Tenn.
Roswell, Ga.
Atlanta, Ga.
Rutherfordton, N.C.
Loudon, Tenn.
Justin and Shana Biggs
Paul Sinon
Art Sutton and Terry Carter
Athens, Ga.
Athens, Ga.
Toccoa, Ga.
Stephanie Bender
Tracey Schipper
McDonough, Ga.
Stockbridge, Ga.
Julie Barton
Samantha Barton
Alexa Burton
Gina Greer
Kaitlin Barton Colbert, Ga.
Colbert, Ga.
Athens, Ga.
Aiken, S.C.
Colbert, Ga.
Krystle Miller
Wai Hung
Murphy, N.C.
Athens, Ga.
Cartman:
A Very Berry Summer
Submitted by Wai Hung of
Athens, Ga.
When my two Russian tortoises
got into an accident with a dog,
three months after I moved to
Athens to work at the UGA
College of Pharmacy, I panicked.
But, then I remembered that
the UGA Veterinary Teaching
Hospital has a Zoological
Medicine service that sees exotic
animals. With tears streaming
down my face, I drove my
tortoises to the hospital. Once
there, the doctors assured me
that Cartman’s and Kenny’s injuries were common and that their wounds would heal — and they did! Five
years later, the tortoises have recovered amazingly and continue to be very active. They especially love a cool,
fresh summer salad and the occasional berry treat. I thank the faculty, staff and students at the UGA Veterinary
Teaching Hospital for promptly and calmly taking care of my tortoises! They have recovered wonderfully!
Rylie
Submitted by Brandie Brown of Winder, Ga.
In August, Rylie began coughing, sneezing and had the sniffles, so we took her to see our veterinarian, who
treated her with antibiotics for a possible respiratory infection. She continued getting worse.
When she began having trouble swallowing, we got a second opinion. Still baffled, we had her case referred
to UGA, where the veterinarians found a parasite — a larva of the Cuterebra fly — burrowed into her throat!
They recorded the removal of the worm so they could use the video to teach other veterinarians, including
students.
We are sincerely grateful to the UGA doctors and staff for saving Rylie’s life and for using the opportunity
to teach others! Thank you for taking such good care of her!
24
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
25
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA®
College of Veterinary Medicine
Annual Open House
Friday, April 3, 2015
Photo by Sue Myers Smith.
UGA welcomes 114 veterinary students
The University of Georgia College of Veterinary
Medicine welcomed the class of 2018 during its
annual White Coat Ceremony held Sunday, Aug.
17, 2014. Sponsored by the Georgia Veterinary
Medical Association (GVMA), this event officially
recognized 114 members of the incoming class by
donning them in lab coats to be worn during their
veterinary education.
The hour-long ceremony was held in the
Hodgson Concert Hall at the UGA Performing
Arts Center. It was followed by a reception with
the students’ families and members of the College’s
faculty and staff, held at the Veterinary College.
26
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
For more information or for directions
to the College, please visit:
www.vet.uga.edu/openhouse
This class features a wide variety of interests,
including:
• 19 percent interested in companion animal
medicine;
• 30 percent interested in mixed-animal
medicine;
• 10 percent interested in zoo animal and
wildlife medicine;
• 10 percent in food animal medicine;
• 8 percent in public health;
• 3 percent in equine medicine;
• 20 percent in pursuing a post-DVM
internship/residency.
“The white coat is a symbol of medical
professionalism and of acceptance of the
responsibilities, obligations and sacrifices that go
with the privilege to study and practice veterinary
medicine. Reciting the Veterinarian’s Oath for the
first time denotes the beginning of their official
journey in one of the most respected professions,”
said Dr. Scott A. Brown, the College’s acting
associate dean for academic affairs.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
27
DVM student helps Arizona tribe
combat Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Story and photos by Rachel Morgan, MS, (DVM 2016)
The first time I traveled to the Tohono O’odham
Nation in early June 2014, I was with Jennifer
McQuiston, DVM, MS, a Rickettsia expert from the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dr.
McQuiston was traveling to the Nation’s capital, in
Sells, Ariz., to present information to the tribal council
on Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, a life-threatening,
tick-borne disease that occurs throughout the United
States. The Nation wanted to implement a tick-control
program to help curb the rise in RMSF cases in
Arizona during the past decade, and Dr. McQuiston
traveled there to talk to the tribe as the program was
preparing to launch. I traveled there with her so that I
could stay for three weeks on the reservation and help
the tribe’s public health officer and epidemiologist, Eva
Ybarra, MS, set up and execute the RMSF project.
I’m a DVM student and I have an interest in
public health and infectious diseases. I wanted
to spend my summer working on a public health
project, so my adviser, Mary Hondalus, DVM, PhD,
an associate professor of infectious diseases, helped
me set up this experience. Since it was also a radically
different cultural experience, I used it to complete
the requirements for the CVM’s Certificate in
International Veterinary Medicine.
People are seven times more likely to die from
28
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
RMSF in eastern Arizona than in any other part of the
United States, and American Indians have the highest
RMSF incidence of any population. The Tohono
O’odham Nation is the second-largest reservation in
the United States, covering a combined area of more
than 2.8 million acres, roughly the size of Connecticut,
in the Sonoran Desert in southern Arizona.
Legally, non-residents have no right to be on
tribal lands, so I had to be officially invited by the
tribe. I spent a couple of months planning the trip. Dr.
Rodrigo Villar, a pediatrician and public health officer
who works with the Sells Indian Hospital, did all of the
arrangements and preparations for me — including
getting me invited by the tribe and picked up at the
airport — and we worked out the details via email.
The first thing I noticed when I stepped out of the
Tucson International Airport was the heat. Before I left
Athens, people told me that the dry heat of Arizona,
despite the triple digits, was preferable to the humidity
of Georgia. However, I don’t think any of those people
have ever spent time in a desert! It was a dry heat, but I
also felt like I had just stuck my head in an oven. When
I arrived, I was warned by a few people about the heat,
monsoons, wildlife, dust storms and potential dangers
of being so close to the U.S.-Mexican border.
While in Arizona, I had the chance
to visit the Grand Canyon. Here I am
sitting on a ledge on the southern rim
of the canyon.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
29
Baboquivari, a 7,730-foot stone peak, is the most sacred place to the Tohono O’odham. According to tribal legend, it is the home of I’itoi, their
Creator and Elder Brother, and he resides at the base of the mountain in a cave.
Dehydration is a real concern in that climate. The
first day I was out in the field, working with a team
from the Indian Health Services to drive to different
villages and give rabies shots to dogs (which was
unrelated to the RMSF project), I drank six bottles of
water.
Sells is a small town of about 3,000 people. It’s
home to one grocery store, a couple of small cafes, and
a recreation center. It’s also home to a small hospital
complex — the Sells Indian Hospital —where I stayed
in housing they provide for staff.
This project was an agreement between the IHS,
CDC and the tribe. For the project, I helped Ybarra
organize the teams that would be gathering household
information, spraying pesticide around homes, and
handing out flea-and-tick collars. I also helped her
gather supplies and separate them into boxes and bags
for the teams. There were three to four people per
team with five teams total. The project was approached
in three ways: We sprayed insecticide around the
homes, placed tick collars on dogs, and distributed
educational material to residents to alert them to be
on the look out for tick bites and early signs of RMSF.
The tick collars (Seresto® collars, which last up to
eight months) were covered with protective nylon
collars so owners couldn’t tie their dogs out with the
tick collars and so other dogs couldn’t pull the tick
collars off. Household information — the residents’
names, address, number of pets owned, as well as each
animal’s sex, age and number of ticks present — was
collected from each house, even if the residents didn’t
own dogs. Pesticide was sprayed around each home in
spots that were shady, cool and other places favorable
30
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
for tick habitation.
The project was started in only one of the
districts on the Tohono O’odham Nation, which had
the highest number of reported cases of RMSF. If
the project is successful, it will be expanded to the
remaining districts. After the initial spray/visit, each
home is revisited for three consecutive months to
re-spray the insecticide and confirm whether tick
collars are still on the dogs. The goal of the project is
to reduce the number of ticks present down to where
control can be done with just the collars alone.
This experience allowed me a look into a culture
that is thousands of years old and has to struggle
with a modern emerging infectious disease. This was
my first encounter with a Native American tribe and
I took away an appreciation and respect for their
way of life. I got to see how the tribe functions and
some of the difficulties that can arise when working
across cultural borders, especially given the history
of mistreatment of Native American populations
by the U.S. government. There is still some mistrust
between the native population and the U.S.
government, so when there is a need for a project like
this, full cooperation and trust of the tribe is a must.
Sometimes that can take a bit of patience.
In addition, I gained hands-on experience in
handling an emerging infectious disease and how
to communicate the dangers and prevention of the
disease to a people who may not have an extensive
science background. And finally, I got to see a part of
the country that is very beautiful, but very harsh and
wild.
Dogs lying in the shade of a house during the heat of the day.
The shady areas around the homes are cool and moist and
dogs enjoy spending the hot afternoons here. Unfortunately,
these areas also make for a good tick habitat. During the RMSF
program, pesticide was sprayed in these areas to try and combat
the tick population.
The Sonoran Desert is the hottest of the American deserts, but is
home to a tremendous amount of biological diversity. The largest
species of cacti, the Saguaro, is native to the Sonoran. It produces
a fruit on top of the cactus in spring. The Tohono O’odham
harvest the fruit in late June to make jams, jellies and wines. The
Saguaro can grow up to 40 feet tall and weigh up to 10 tons. While
returning back to Sells one day after collaring dogs, we stopped
and tried some of the fruit. It tasted a little bit like a fig.
The Tohono O’odham Nation
The Tohono O’odham (pronounced: tah-hoeno aut-um) Nation occupies four separate pieces of
land, a combined area of more than 2.8 million acres
(roughly the size of Connecticut), in the Sonoran
Desert in southern Arizona. It is the second-largest
reservation in the United States, and one of 22
federally recognized Indian tribes in Arizona.
The nation is organized into 11 districts. Nine
contiguous districts comprise the main reservation.
One, Gila River, is over the border in Mexico, and the
other, San Xavier (pronounced: san a-veer), is located
just south of Tucson. The nation has about 28,000
members, the majority of which live on reservation
lands. Once known as the “Papago,” which meant
“bean eaters,” the tribe rejected the name because it
was assigned to them by the conquistadores. They
changed their name in 1986 to Tohono O’odham,
which means “Desert People.”
Traditionally, the Tohono O’odham farmed
corn, beans, and cotton and gathered wild vegetable
products. Farming crops still remains the major
economic activity of the Tohono O’odham, but many
now are engaged in raising cattle, too. Much of the
land is open range for cattle, horses and wild donkey.
The O’odham women are well known for their basket
weaving.
The capital of the Tohono O’odham Nation and
the population center is Sells, Ariz., a town of about
3,000 people. The rest of the reservation is scattered
with small villages or communities, most of which
include a church, feast house and pavilion for special
occasions, and just a few houses.
The nation shares 74 miles of border with Mexico,
which has lead to numerous problems involving
the U.S. Border Patrol, drug running and human
trafficking. Thousands of immigrants try crossing the
border through the Nation’s land every year, but very
few make it. The ones who fail are arrested or die of
dehydration in the hot Sonoran sun. Smuggling has
impacted many families on the Nation, who have had
to deal with an increase in crime or theft/destruction
of property. The stricter border regulations also
impede movement of Tohono O’odham people,
whose migratory and historical paths have led them
across the border for thousands of years. Many tribal
members have been stopped from traveling to Mexico
and bringing back supplies needed for traditional
medicines or ceremonial purposes.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
31
We had to go to Tucson
to pick up some supplies
for the RMSF program.
While there, Eva
Ybarra showed me the
beautiful Mission San
Xavier del Bac in the San
Xavier district.
The mission was
founded in 1692 and the
church was completed
in 1797. The San Xavier
district draws most of
the non-native visitors
to the reservation lands.
There, the Tohono
O’odham has one of its
two Desert Diamond
Casinos, as well as the
historic San Xavier
mission.
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF) is a lifebecause half of patients with RMSF do not remember seeing
threatening, tick-borne disease that occurs throughout
a tick bite them. Misdiagnoses have been fatal.
the United States. It is caused by the bacterium Rickettsia
Before the rise of RMSF in the southwestern U.S., two
rickettsii, and it can be transmitted to a dog or a human
tick species, Dermacentor varibilis
through the bite of an infected tick.
(American dog tick), and D. andersoni
(Cats are rarely infected with RMSF.) (Rocky Mountain wood tick) were the
Once in the bloodstream, the
recognized vectors. The first case of
bacteria infect the endothelial cells,
RMSF in Arizona was confirmed in
which line the interior surface of the
2003. Before 2003, it was considered
blood vessels. These cells perform
unlikely that RMSF would be in
many functions, including preventing
Arizona since the Dermacentor
clotting of the blood. Symptoms
species are not commonly found in
appear two to 14 days after the bite.
the state. Since then, the number of
Early symptoms mimic typical flu
cases of RMSF reported in Arizona has
Rhipicephalus sanguineus, or the brown
symptoms: fever, headache, vomiting
dog tick. Photo courtesy of Mat Pound,
been on the rise. From 2003 to 2013
USDA
Agricultural
Research
Service,
and muscle pain. As the bacteria
the Arizona Department of Health
Bugwood.org.
spread and the patient experiences
services reported 297 cases, including
a full-body inflammatory response
20 fatalities. It was found that
and becomes septic, the vessels
Rhipicephalus sanguineus (the brown
become leaky and a spotty red rash may develop. RMSF is
dog tick) is the vector for RMSF for the southwestern U.S. It
often severe or fatal if not treated within the first few days
had never been previously reported that R. sanguineus was a
of symptoms. However, since the disease mimics other
natural vector for RMSF.
infectious diseases, it can be difficult to diagnose, especially
32
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Award recipients from the 2014 Science of Veterinary Medicine Symposium. Back row, left to right: Tiago Afonso, DVM, a resident in large animal
medicine; Jennifer Willingham-Lane, a graduate student in the Department of Infectious Diseases; Melanie Fratto (DVM 2017); Christian Lapp (DVM
2017). Third row, left to right: Erin McConachie, DVM, DACVIM (Large Animal), a clinical specialist for the UGA Veterinary Teaching Hospital;
Dr. Heidi Fishman (DVM ’12), a resident in theriogenology; Lindsay Wright, a graduate student in the Department of Infectious Diseases; Katy
Mayhew (DVM 2016); Wilson Yau, a graduate student in the Department of Pathology. Second row, left to right: Mary Maclean, a graduate research
assistant in the Department of Infectious Diseases; Teenema Kuriakose, a graduate research assistant in the Department of Infectious Diseases;
Melissa Miller, a graduate research assistant in the Department of Infectious Diseases; Claudia Baumann, a post doctoral student in the Department
of Physiology and Pharmacology; John Rossow (DVM 2017). First row, left to right: Ying Huang, a post doctoral student in the Department of
Pathology; Layla Shaikh, VMD, a resident in Diagnostic Imaging; Vanna Dickerson, a post doctoral research associate in the Department of Small
Animal Medicine and Surgery; Jenny Mumaw, PhD (DVM 2016); Mallory Little, an undergraduate student. Not pictured: Andrew Woolcock, DVM, a
resident in small animal internal medicine; Vijay Durairaj, a post doctoral research associate in the Department of Population Health; Eric Shepherd
(DVM 2016). Photo by Christopher B. Herron.
CVM hosts Science of Veterinary Medicine Symposium
The UGA College of Veterinary Medicine hosted
its annual Science of Veterinary Medicine Symposium
on Oct. 9, 2014.
This year’s keynote address was given by Jamie
Modiano, a professor of comparative oncology and
director of the Animal Cancer Care and Research
Program at the University of Minnesota College of
Veterinary Medicine. Modiano’s talk, titled “Curiosity
and finding a cure for cancer,” focused on what
motivates people to do biomedical research and how
evidence-based approaches fueled by curiosity drive
innovation and advances in medical science.
Other speakers included faculty from the UGA
CVM: Simon Platt, a professor of neurology and
neurosurgery, discussed his research on canine brain
tumors and how his work may also help humans;
John Peroni, an associate professor of large animal
surgery, discussed his studies on bone fracture repair.
In addition, Scott Brown, a professor of small animal
medicine, and James Moore, a professor of large
animal medicine, discussed their work on development
of novel electronic educational tools in veterinary
medicine
Christian Lapp (DVM 2017), won the Best Overall
Oral Presentation for his project, “Transmission of
Heterologous IBV Challenge after Bivalent Vaccination
in Broiler Chickens.”
This year’s event was supported by generous
donations from Boehringer-Ingelheim, Merck, Merial,
Nestlé-Purina, and Zoetis.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
33
StudentNews
De Soto, Kan.
Bartlesville
oma
h
a
l
Ok
Canton, Mo.
Starkville
oint
P
t
Wes
Alternate Routes to Better Beef
An Educational Odyssey though the Midwest
By Lee Adcock
Spotting disease in cattle has always been a concern
in the beef industry. Yet, monitoring the health of one
animal — let alone an entire herd — can be tedious,
time-consuming, and for ranchers with small herds,
potentially expensive. Practices for monitoring herd
health can vary in different regions of the United
States. In the Midwest, which is the heartland for cattle
feedlots and beef processing plants, ranchers typically
enlist veterinarians in the process of acquiring calves
for their lots and also for advice on monitoring herd
health.
To learn more about industry practices in the
Midwest, a small group of DVM students and a faculty
member from the Department of Infectious Diseases
took a road trip with Lee Jones, DVM, MS, an assistant
professor of beef production medicine in the College’s
Food Animal Health and Management Program.
Their six-day journey provided them with a behindthe-scenes look at beef operations in Mississippi,
Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri.
“Our profession is utilizing some leading-edge
technologies and other practices with the goal of
34
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
improving diagnostics, animal health programs
and management to reduce and relieve animal
disease, death and suffering while also improving
livestock production and increasing the efficiency of
production,” said Jones. “High-risk calves are common
in the Southeast. We know there are things we can do
on the farm to precondition these calves to improve
their health and increase resistance to disease.”
Beef calves are typically born on farms in the
Southeast, raised on that farm for several months,
then auctioned to ranchers who raise that calf until it
is ready to be sold, processed and shipped to grocers.
Most of the calves sold at auction have never been
vaccinated, said Jones. The roughly 30-day period that
begins when the calf is brought to auction is the period
when the calf is at greatest risk of illness because of its
exposure to potential disease. In addition to lacking
vaccinations, these high-risk calves also typically lack
anthelmintic treatments, have not been castrated,
and may have been abruptly weaned, he explained.
“Healthy calves grow better and produce better quality
beef. Cattle disease is the most common animal welfare
concern, and we can do a lot to prevent or reduce
diseases in beef herds,” said Jones.
REDI for the future?
On most beef ranches, simply keeping an eye on
your herd has historically been the best way to watch
for disease in individual members — but a recently
developed technological sentry offers us a glimpse of
what the future may hold.
In Canton, Mo., the last stop on the tour, the
travelers saw the prototype of the cattle-tracking
Remote Early Disease Identification (REDI) system.
Tags are attached to the cows, which monitor their
location and activity level, including the number of
times they visit the feed bunk and their vicinity to
other animals. The data is then sent from the tag to a
main computer server, where ranchers can read the
reports. Jones believes the REDI system could replace
the need for antimicrobials, which are given to highrisk calves to ward off disease.
In the United States, ranchers who want to
implement the REDI system in their cattle operations
must purchase it through Dan Goehl, DVM, and his
colleagues at Professional Beef Services, LLC, who own
the rights to market REDI in the U.S. Goehl met with
the group to show them how the REDI system is being
used on some area ranches. Studies conducted by PBS
found REDI identified almost 40 percent of bovine
respiratory disease cases in herds more than 48 hours
prior to a trained human observer.
“Early identification means we can treat earlier,
get better response to treatment and have fewer retreatments,” noted Jones. “Also, because of the accuracy
of the REDI system, healthy calves are not getting
unnecessary antibiotics.”
Stockering for a healthy herd
In Mississippi, their first stop, the group toured the
Mississippi State University CVM in Starkville and a
livestock buying company in West Point called Prairie
Livestock, or “PLI.”
PLI, established in 1964 to buy and resell stocker
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
35
The electronic ear tag placed on each cow (left) sends a signal that is picked up by a nearby transmitter (right) and then relayed to a main computer,
where the data can be reviewed by ranchers. The data collected includes the cow’s location, the number of times it visits the feed bunk, and its
vicinity to other animals — all indicators of its health. Known as the Remote Early Disease Identification — or REDI — system, it can detect signs of
illness in cattle more than 48 hours faster than a trained human observer. Photos provided by Dr. Lee Jones.
and feeder cattle, now sells about 350,000 cattle
per year, according to its website. It specializes
in processing the purchased cattle according to
a customer’s specific protocol, or by a protocol
recommended by PLI’s veterinarian (e.g., giving
vaccinations, antibiotics or anthelmintic treatments,
testing for diseases, etc.). The buyer even determines
how quickly PLI will deliver the new stock to the
buyer’s ranch.
There are lots of order-buying businesses like PLI,
explained Jones, but he wanted the students to see PLI
because of its size and efficiency. Most of the cattle
purchased by PLI are delivered to the buyer within
four to five days of being purchased at auction, he
said, but most of those animals are delivered to their
buyer without a health program. PLI has large enough
facilities that it can also hold new cattle for a full 30
to 45 days prior to delivery and implement a health
program.
“Many calves purchased by PLI have never had a
health program,” explained Jones.
PLI also wants to ensure that it continues to
implement the best health practices, so it routinely
taps the expertise of a veterinary epidemiologist, Bill
Epperson, DVM, MS, ACVPM (Epidemiology), a
professor and head of the Department of Pathobiology
and Population Medicine at MSU CVM. Dr. Epperson
36
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
collects and analyses all health data on cattle purchased
by PLI. “This helps PLI identify important risk factors
that need to be managed, and also helps determine
whether the treatments used are effective,” explained
Jones.
While in the area, the group also met with
the legendary Gordon “Doc” Hazard, DVM, who
hails from West Point, Miss. Doc Hazard is known
throughout the industry as a wise cattleman who
knows how to consistently turn a profit, and as a
veterinarian with a holistic mindset.
“Hazard’s view is, ‘Look at how these animals
behave and use their behavior. Get to know the normal
behavior of animals and learn to work cooperatively
with them.’ That’s his way of promoting health and
productivity. I think it was good for the students to
hear him say this,” noted Jones about Hazard, now in
his early 90s.
“Meeting the ‘Grass Guru,’ Dr. Hazard, was
very special,” said Deana Veal (DVM 2015), who is
interested in food animal medicine and who was one
of three students on the journey. “Having him share
his veterinary and practical knowledge combined with
years of wisdom made visiting his operation a real
treat!”
Inspiration for future veterinarians
In Bartlesville, Okla., the students toured the
Gallery Ranch, owned by Tom Gallery, and learned
how its operations benefited from the services
of livestock consultant Shaun Sweiger, DVM. As
president of Cattle Stats, LLC, Sweiger provides cattle
owners with strategies for preventing and eliminating
bovine viral diarrhea (BVD) in their herds. Gallery
explained to the group that hiring Sweiger has saved
him a lot of money, because Sweiger has improved the
health of his herds while also lowering his expenses for
drugs.
“I want beef producers to think of veterinarians as
an asset, not a liability,” said Jones. “A good partnership
between a beef producer and a veterinarian produces
more beef and costs the rancher less money.”
From Oklahoma the group traveled to De Soto,
Kan., to tour the Merck Animal Health production
facility and learn more about Merck’s operations from
its technical services manager, Mark Spire, DVM, MS,
DACT. Spire showed the group how vaccines were
made, led them through the research farm on site, and
introduced them to other members of the Merck staff.
“Merck makes antibiotics and vaccines. But like
a lot of companies, Merck sees that consumers want
a more prevention-minded product from the food
animal industry,” said Jones. “So, the trend toward
less antibiotic use in the future is brought about by a
combination of improving consumer confidence in the
industry and also reducing production costs.”
Jones hopes the multi-state tour will encourage
his students to bring more advanced production
medicine practices to Georgia. “Veterinarians who
work with small herd owners in the Southeast can
assist the industry by encouraging these owners to
vaccinate, deworm, castrate and manage calves to be
more disease resistant. Calves from farms that have
a documented health program are more valuable, in
that due to their better health they weigh more and
therefore sell for more.”
The trip also provided insight about the industry
for Ray Kaplan, DVM, PhD, DEVPC, DACVM
(Parasitology), a professor of infectious diseases
who specializes in parasitology. “I gained a deeper
understanding of how the industry works and the
multiple priorities beef producers have, with parasite
control being just one of them,” Kaplan shared.
“Thus I gained a much better appreciation of how
to make recommendations for parasite control that
can be integrated into the management priorities of
the farm. It remains a challenge to figure out ways to
make cattlemen appreciate that parasite surveillance
— including testing for drug resistance — is a good
investment because it can substantially improve
profitability.”
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
37
StudentNews
Katy Mayhew (DVM 2016) was awarded
a grant from the Morris Animal Foundation
Veterinary Student Scholars Program for her project,
“Characterization of Equine Synovial Explant Model
for Mesenchymal Stem Cell Use in Osteoarthritis.”
The grant funded her work in the UGA Veterinary
Teaching Hospital’s Regenerative Medicine Laboratory,
which is overseen by John Peroni, DVM, MS, DACVS,
an associate professor of large animal surgery.
Lindsay Boozer (DVM ’08), who completed
her residency in neurology at the UGA Veterinary
Teaching Hospital in July, won a research abstract
award at the American College of Veterinary Internal
Medicine (ACVIM) Forum in June. Her abstract
was titled “Pharmacokinetic evaluation of generic
extended release formulations of levetiracetam in
dogs.”
Five UGA CVM students received accolades at the
American Association of Avian Pathologists awards
luncheon in July:
Valerie Marcano (DVM 2017), who is in the
CVM’s DVM/PhD program, received the AAAP
Foundation Poultry Scholarship Award.
Sheilena Brookshire (DVM 2015) and Eric
Shepherd (DVM 2016) both received the Eskelung
Preceptorship Award.
Stivalis Cardenas Garcia, MVZ, a PhD student
in the Department of Pathology, received the Reed
Rumsey Award.
Chad Malinak (MAM 2013) won the Outstanding
Field Case/Diagnostic Report Award for his oral
presentation “Investigation of Clinical Disease in Free
Range Organic Egg Layers.”
Three postdoctoral students completing their
research at the UGA CVM received $40,000
scholarships from Merial, which has been sponsoring
students since 2006 in the specialty areas of veterinary
pathology and microbiology in the field of infectious
disease:
Sophie Aschenbroich, DVM, DACVP, who
completed her anatomic pathology residency at the
UGA CVM in July and passed her board certification
in September. The focus of her PhD work is the
identification of specific host macrophage genes
critical in the intracellular survival of Burkholderia
thailandensis and Burkholderia mallei.
38
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Matthew Abraham, DVM, MS, who is
researching the role of SH gene in the pathogenesis
of J paramyxovirus (JPV). Dr. Abraham came to
UGA from India to pursue his master’s in poultry
science from the UGA College of Agricultural and
Environmental Sciences.
Carmen Jerry, DVM, a student in the College’s
combined residency/PhD program in anatomic
pathology, with a poultry emphasis. Her PhD work is
focused on avian influenza.
Congratulations!
The following former residents recently passed their
specialty boards:
Leticia Dantas Divers, board certified by the American
College of Veterinary Behaviorists
Lindsay Boozer (DVM ’08), by the American College of
Veterinary Internal Medicine, in Neurology
Jeremy O’Neill, by the American College of Veterinary
Internal Medicine, in Neurology
Kate Sycamore, by the American College of Veterinary
Internal Medicine, in Internal Medicine
Sophie Aschenbroich (DVM ’11, PhD 2017), by the
American College of Veterinary Pathologists
Jennifer Dill, by the American College of Veterinary
Pathologists
Sheryl Coutermarsh-Ott, by the American College of
Veterinary Pathologists
Nancy Collicutt (MS ’16), by the American College of
Veterinary Pathologists
Tory Watson (DVM ’09), by the American College of
Veterinary Pathologists
Justin Thomason, by the American College of Veterinary
Internal Medicine, in Cardiology
Elise Myer (MAM ’13), by the American College of Poultry
Veterinarians
Chad Malinak (MAM ’13), by the American College of
Poultry Veterinarians
Vijay Durairaj (PhD ’12), by the American College of
Poultry Veterinarians
Dainna Stelmach (MS ’14), by the American College of
Veterinary Radiologists
Guide dog advocate
shares insight
Members of Veterinarians as One In Culture
and Ethnicity club, or “VOICE”, recently
invited Toni Eames, MS, to talk to the group
about the importance of a veterinarian’s role
in maintaining the health and well-being of
guide, hearing and service dogs, and also about
preferred patterns of interacting with clients
who have disabilities. Eames is president of the
International Association of Assistance Dog
Partners, which she co-founded with her late
Back row, left to right: Susan Williams, DVM, PhD, DACPV, an associate
professor at the UGA Poultry Diagnostic and Research Center and the faculty
husband Ed Eames, PhD, in 1993. She is a welladviser for VOICE; Adriana Weil (DVM 2016), club president; Toni Eames,
known advocate for partnering disabled persons
guest speaker; John E. McCormack, DVM, retired from the department of
Large Animal Medicine; Yaritbel Torres Mendoza (DVM 2017), club secretary;
with service dogs, and provides educational
Jan McCormack, wife of Dr. McCormack. First row, left to right: Karolina
outreach to veterinarians, nurses, graduates of
Ferreira (DVM 2016), an event coordinator for VOICE; Adora, Toni Eames’
social science programs, disaster relief workers,
guide dog; Jessica Comolli (DVM 2016), an event coordinator for VOICE;
Valerie Marcano (DVM 2017), vice president of VOICE and a student in the
as well as to airline and hotel companies, and
DVM-PhD program. Photo provided by VOICE.
other organizations. Toni Eames has been
partnered with guide dogs since 1967, and
has made presentations to veterinary schools throughout North America and as far away as South Africa. Her
talk was titled, “Veterinarians as Healers, Helpers and Humanitarians: Effective client communication and
relationship building with clients with disabilities.” VOICE is a national student-run club that promotes sociocultural awareness.
What’s the most effective test for identifying the causative agents of BRD?
Danielle Doyle, DVM (MFAM ’14), is conducting a study to compare the results, when sampled from a single calf,
of all four diagnostic tests used to identify the causative agents of bovine respiratory disease (BRD) in affected cattle.
BRD is the No. 1 cause of sickness and death in weaned dairy calves. Currently, the four tests used to identify the viruses
and bacteria that contribute to BRD include nasal swabs, deep nasopharyngeal swabs, bronchoalveolar lavage, and transtracheal wash. To date, no research has been done to compare the agreement of these tests when sampling a single calf.
In her project, Doyle will identify dairy calves affected with BRD by examining the calves, scoring their clinical signs
and inspecting their lungs with an ultrasound. Calves that meet a certain clinical score and have abnormal lungs on
ultrasound will then be sampled with all four diagnostic tests, and the findings from each test will be compared. Doyle and
her collaborators hope their findings will result in better recommendations to veterinarians and producers on how to most
accurately identify the causative agents of BRD.
Doyle’s collaborators include her mentors, Amelia Woolums, DVM, MVSc, PhD, DACVIM, DACVM, a professor of
large animal internal medicine; Roy Berghaus, DVM, MS, PhD, DACVPM, an associate professor of food animal health
and medicine whose focus is on epidemiology; and Brent Credille, (DVM ’08, PhD ’14), DACVIM (Large Animal), an
assistant professor of beef production medicine. Doyle is also collaborating with Terry Lehenbauer, DVM, MPVM, PhD,
DACVPM (Epidemiology), an associate professor and director of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine’s Veterinary
Medicine Teaching & Research Center in Tulare, Calif.
The MFAM program is based in the department of Food Animal Health and Management, which is a division of the
Department of Population Health.
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
39
StudentNews
strongly insisted against it. From then on, whenever
we’d see each other in the hall between classes, he
unfailingly said ‘Hi’ to me by name. He had a very
genuine way of making people feel special.”
After his death, to honor him, the Class of 2018
wore their nametags to UGA’s first football game and
also to the annual Dean’s Tailgate party.
“He was always smiling,” remembered classmate
Ashlynn Turner. “He made people around him happy,
just by smiling.”
“He was the sweetest, most kind person,” recalled
classmate Shelbe Lynn Harry, who said she also met
Shayegan during the class’s orientation and that he
became her first friend at the CVM. “He would do
anything to make you smile. I am so happy I got to
spend the time with him that I did, because he changed
a part of me.”
To commemorate their friend’s memory, the Class
of 2018 raised money to buy a brick through the
College’s Brick & Horseshoe Campaign, which raises
funds to help build the new UGA Veterinary Teaching
Hospital that opens in March 2015.
“Even though he wasn’t here for long, he will
always be a part of our class and the brick will always
be a part of the UGA College of Veterinary Medicine,”
said Turner. The brick reads: “In honor of Sina
Shayegan and his love for shelter animals. — UGA
CVM 2018.”
At 114 students, the Class of 2018 is the largest
class to enter the CVM, and Shayegan’s classmates
are adamant that he will always be counted among
them. After his death, the class adopted the hashtag
#114STRONG, which was also printed on t-shirts for
the Kudzu Olympics competition between the DVM
classes, said Turner.
“Our UGA CVM Class of 2018 will always be 114,”
Turner stated firmly.
Sina Shayegan is survived by his mother, Farideh
Pedrami, and father, Ben Chernobrov.
Sina Shayegan had the opportunity to get to know his classmates during the Class of 2018’s orientation, which takes place prior to the start of the
school year. Photo by Justin Brown, DVM 2016.
Remembering Sina
Sina Shayegan’s bright smile and kind, caring
nature helped him leave an indelible mark on his
colleagues in the Class of 2018. Just 26 years old
and only seven days into his veterinary education,
Shayegan passed away on Aug. 27.
Shayegan arrived at the University of Georgia by
way of Cumming, Ga., where he had relocated with
his mother, from Tehran, Iran, in 1999. He graduated
from UGA in 2012 with a bachelor’s of science degree
in biology.
While he spent barely a month with his classmates,
Shayegan left a lasting impression and is remembered
fondly.
“He didn’t expect anything in return for helping
others, and he was passionate about helping others,
pleasing them, and making sure their experience
was good,” recalled classmate Blake Hardin. “He was
40
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Dean Sheila W. Allen with Sina Shayegan at the White Coat
Ceremony for the Class of 2018. Photo by Sue Myers Smith.
passionate about shelter medicine. He liked a good
comedy. And, he volunteered his time with different
shelter organizations and nursing homes around the
Athens area.”
Always considerate of others, Shayegan wore his
nametag to every gathering with his class. “He saw
the nametag as a way to break the ice and help you
introduce yourself to someone,” said Hardin.
“I was fortunate enough to have met him during
his short time at the College,” recalled classmate
Katarina Yi. “In fact, he was the very first friend I
made as I stood in line to check in on the first day
of orientation, as he was right in front of me. He told
me he wasn’t great with names but was going to really
make an effort to learn everyone’s names. After a
few minutes of conversation, he still struggled with
my name, so I told him he could call me ‘Kat,’ but he
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
41
FacultyNews
Recently Published Books
Many members of the CVM faculty are involved
in writing or editing textbooks, or contributing book
chapters on subjects within their areas of expertise.
Below is a sampling of recent contributions to
veterinary educational materials:
Col. Bob Walters, left, of the U.S.
Army Veterinary Corps presents Corrie
Brown, DVM, PhD, DACVP, with an
award in recognition of her contributions
to the training of military veterinarians
deployed to stability operations in
resource-poor areas of the world.
Dr. Brown, a professor of anatomic
pathology, helped develop the Veterinary
Support to Stability Operations training
that is now mandatory for all military
veterinarians who wish to deploy to these
zones. Photo used with permission of U.S.
Army Medical Command.
Heather Fenton, DVM, is now board-certified by
the American College of Veterinary Pathologists. Dr.
Fenton is a public service assistant for the Southeastern
Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study.
Naola Ferguson-Noel, PhD, MAM, DVM,
received the Bayer Snoeyenbos Award from the
American Association of Avian Pathologists. Dr.
Ferguson-Noel is an associate professor of avian
medicine at the Poultry Diagnostic and Research
Center.
Charles Hofacre, MS, DVM, (MAM ’85, PhD
’92), received the Lasher-Bottorff Award from the
American Association of Avian Pathologists. Dr.
Hofacre is a professor of avian medicine and director
of clinical services for the Poultry Diagnostic and
Research Center. Dr. Hofacre was also recently
appointed to the Humane Heartland™ Scientific
Advisory Committee.
T. Douglas Byars, DVM, a noted equine
veterinarian and former tenured professor in the UGA
College of Veterinary Medicine, died July 7 at his home
in Georgetown, Ky. He was 70. Dr. Byars left UGA
to be the head of equine medicine for the practice of
Hagyard, Davidson, and McGee, later renamed the
Hagyard Equine Medical Institute. He was the first
private equine veterinarian to receive the Robert W.
Kirk Award, in 2007, for professional excellence from
the American College of Veterinary and Internal
Medicine.
42
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
BSAVA Manual of Canine and Feline Neurology
(BSAVA; 4th edition; co-editor)
Small Animal Neurological Emergencies (CRC Press; 1st
edition; co-authored)
Canine and Feline Epilepsy: Diagnosis and Management
(CABI; co-authored)
—Simon Platt, BVM&S, MRCVS, DACVIM
(Neurology), DECVN, a professor of neurology and
neurosurgery in the Department of Small Animal
Medicine and Surgery
Michael J. Yabsley, MS, (PhD ’04), an associate
professor of wildlife disease who is jointly appointed
to the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease
Study and the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural
Resources, was elected to the board of the Companion
Animal Parasite Council.
Sam Franklin, MS, DVM, PhD, DACVS,
DACVSMR, and Jared Williams, (MS ’02, DVM
’06), PhD, were selected for the 2014-2015 UGA
Teaching Academy Fellows Program. They will
work with 18 other early-career faculty members at
UGA throughout the year to further develop their
teaching skills. Dr. Franklin is an assistant professor
of orthopedics and Dr. Williams is a clinical assistant
professor of large animal medicine.
Progress in Heritable Soft Connective Tissue Diseases
(Springer; book editor and author of four chapters)
—Jaroslava Halper, MD, PhD, DABP, a professor
of pathology in the Department of Pathology
Veterinary Anaesthesia (Saunders; co-authored)
—Cynthia M. Trim, BVSc, MRCVS, DVA,
DACVA, DECVA, a professor emeritus of
anesthesiology in the Department of Large Animal
Medicine
Small Animal Surgery (Elsevier; 4th edition; authored
multiple chapters)
—MaryAnn Radlinsky, DVM, MS, DACVS,
an associate professor of soft tissue surgery in the
Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery
A Field Manual of Animal Diseases by Syndromes with
Emphasis on Transboundary Animal Diseases (Boca
Publications Group; author)
—Corrie Brown, DVM, PhD, DACVP, a
professor of anatomic pathology in the Department
of Pathology
Lisa Bazzle, DVM, clinical instructor of emergency
and critical care for small animals; Department of Small
Animal Medicine and Surgery
Charles Stephen Roney, DVM, (MAM ’87), DACPV,
clinical associate professor, Poultry Diagnostic and
Research Center; Department of Population Health
Andrew Bugbee, DVM, DACVIM, clinical assistant
professor of small animal internal medicine; Department
of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery
Brian Jordan, PhD, assistant professor, Poultry
Diagnostic and Research Center; Department of
Population Health (jointly appointed to the Department
of Poultry Science in the College of Agriculture and
Environmental Sciences)
María Ferrer, DVM, MS, DACT, associate professor of
theriogenology; Department of Large Animal Medicine
Alison G. Meindl, DVM, clinical assistant professor;
Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery
Dr. Jared Williams
Clinical Veterinary Advisor: Birds and Exotic Pets
(Saunders; co-authored)
—Jörg Mayer, DVM, MS, DABVP (ECM),
DECZM (Small mammal) DACZM, an associate
professor of zoological medicine in the Department
of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery
New Faculty at UGA CVM
Kathryn A. Diehl, DVM, MS, DACVO, assistant
professor of ophthalmology; Department of Small
Animal Medicine and Surgery
Dr. Sam Franklin
Current Therapy in Reptile Medicine and Surgery
(Saunders; co-edited)
—Stephen Divers, BVetMed, DZooMed,
DACZM, DECZM(herp), FRCVS, a professor of
zoological medicine in the Department of Small
Animal Medicine and Surgery
Courtney Murdock, PhD, assistant professor;
Department of Infectious Diseases (jointly appointed to
the Odum School of Ecology)
Melinda Brindley, PhD, assistant professor; Department
of Infectious Diseases (jointly appointed to the
Department of Population Health)
Jaime Tarigo, (DVM ’02), PhD, DACVP, assistant
professor of clinical pathology; Department of Pathology
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
43
AlumniNews
College of Veterinary Medicine
Alumni Association
Members of the Executive
Board
Chad Schmiedt (DVM ’00)
cws@uga.edu
President
Flynn Nance (DVM ’83)
dawgvet83@comcast.net
Immediate Past President
Marian Shuler Holladay (DVM ’01)
shulervet05@yahoo.com
President-Elect
Doris Miller (DVM ’76)
miller@uga.edu
Secretary-Treasurer
Jon Anderson (DVM ’03)
jranderson77@gmail.com
Eddie Crittendon Jr. (DVM ’91)
pawprintsdoc@bellsouth.net
Rebecca Dixon (DVM ’02)
rstinson@carolinaequinehospital.com
Karen Duncan (DVM ’84)
karen.duncan@sp.intervet.com
Jamie Fleming (DVM ’05)
jmfleming8@gmail.com
Alan Herring (DVM ’85)
dairydoc@gmail.com
Pat Hill (DVM ’84)
patmack@earthlink.net
Thomas Hutto (DVM ’85)
huttothomas@gmail.com
Brett Levitzke (DVM ’00)
blevitzke@verg-brooklyn.com
Ginger Macaulay (DVM ’84)
ginger@cherokeetrail.net
Catherine McClelland (DVM ’83)
catherinemcclelland@mindspring.com
the
!
us
p
am
H ello UGA Alumni!
o
st
Greetings from your Alumni Association!
We are just weeks away from
moving into our new UGA Veterinary
Teaching Hospital and Veterinary
Education Center. We can’t wait
for you to see our new facility! I
encourage you to join us on one of the
tours that will be available during our
Alumni Weekend.
We are always happy to welcome
alumni back to Athens, but we realize
the diaspora of our community is
broad. The College historically hosts
Dr. Chad Schmiedt, DVM, DACVS.
two Athens-based events per year: the Photo by Carolyn Crist.
annual Dean’s Tailgate, held each fall, and the Alumni Weekend, held each March. But
because members of our community are everywhere, we look for other opportunities
to bring our collective together. In October, alumni were able to visit with one another
during a gathering held at the RJ Rockers Brewing Company in Spartanburg, S.C.
The event was hosted by the College during the fall meeting of the South Carolina
Association of Veterinarians. The College hosts similar events each year during the
annual meetings of the American Association of Equine Practitioners, the North
American Veterinary Community, the Georgia Veterinary Medical Association, the
summer meeting of the South Carolina Association of Veterinarians, and the American
Veterinary Medical Association.
Your Alumni Association is a unique and incredible assemblage with expertise
in every area of veterinary medicine. We encourage you to stay in touch with one
another, to swap ideas, and to not be shy about sharing with us your ideas about how the
College can do a better job at educating tomorrow’s veterinarians. If you would like to
host an alumni gathering in your area, please contact our alumni director, Marti Brick
(706.542.7049 or vetalums@uga.edu), and she will help you facilitate its success!
If you would like to help us support programs and scholarships for our students, the
research endeavors of our faculty, funds to help clients and patients in need, or broader
initiatives to support our CVM’s continued success, please consider making a gift to the
College. If we each give a little bit, together we can help significantly.
Never forget that ALL graduates of the UGA CVM are automatically members of
the Alumni Association! If you want to get more involved with us, please contact Marti
Brick.
Go Dawgs!
Bill Seanor (DVM ’83)
billseanor@me.com
Sheila Allen
sallen01@uga.edu
Dean, Ex-officio
Sincerely,
Chad Schmiedt
his
T
ur
o
ar
ye
o
a
rgi
Ge
urn
t
e
r
c
ce
’s
n
A
e
UG
fer
n
n
co
ro
te
en
C
52nd Annual Veterinary Conference
& Alumni Weekend
March 27-28, 2015
Get CE You Can Use in Your Daily Practice
Keynote Speaker
Thoracic & Abdominal
Dr. Hayley Murphy
&Interpretation
“The Great Ape Project”
— RADIOGRAPHY—
Anticonvulsant
Therapy Options
Director of Veterinary
Services, Zoo Atlanta
CARDIOLOGY
HOW TO HELP
the backyard
chicken owner
LEGAL ISSUES
—regarding—
COMPOUNDING
D R U G S
Diagnosis and
monitoring of
DIABETES &
CUSHING’S
DISEASE
Heartworm Disease &
Heartworm Resistance
plus other topics for both large and small animals, as well as
running your practice • up to 15 hours CE with 2 LEAP hours
DVM (’00), DACVS
President
Speaker bios, maps, hotel information and online registration are all on the conference website:
44
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
www.vet.uga.edu/conference
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
45
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA®
College of Veterinary Medicine
Fascination with poultry lesions leads Franca to
CVM’s pathology program, and PDRC
By Lee Adcock
Honor or memorialize family members, recent
graduates, family veterinarians or treasured
animals and their owners with a personalized
brick or horseshoe!
Each donation to this program supports the
College’s Veterinary Medical Center. Brick tiles
and horseshoes will be permanently incorporated
into the new hospital facilities and grounds.
Proceeds support the teaching hospital
building fund at the University of Georgia
College of Veterinary Medicine
To order a brick or horseshoe, please visit
www.vet.uga.edu/giving/ or call us at
706.542.1807
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA®
Pet
Memorials
Pet Memorials
College of Veterinary Medicine
Meaningful to clients, veterinarians and the College
“It is hard to find anything positive about the death of a pet, but
this is one thing that adds more meaning. The Pet Memorial
donation is something very positive, and the clients are not
expecting it.”
— Mark Mosher, DVM ’81
“The Pet Memorials are a win/win. They are good for the client
and good for the clinic.”
— Tom Nemetz, DVM ’81 PhD
46
For more information, please contact us:
Phone: 706.542.1807
E-mail: give2vet@uga.edu
Web: www.vet.uga.edu/GO/memorial
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Drs. Mosher and Nemetz are pictured with
Mac Reheney (left) and Indie Hale (right)
outside South Athens Animal Clinic, which
has donated for more than 30 years.
As an avian pathologist, Dr. Monique Franca loves Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System
to find new poultry lesions. She proudly displays one
(CAHFS), based at the University of California, Davis
on her computer, a cecal crypt with numerous silver
— at a pathology conference in Brazil. “I wrote an
stain-positive spirochetes. “I really enjoy spending
email to him, and in less than an hour I got this long
time looking through the microscope,” she shared,
email back from him that talked about all the things
adding: “And I really get excited
he did in the diagnostic lab, the
when I see some ‘cool’ lesions.”
interesting cases he was working
on and how he loves to teach.”
Franca completed a combined
Shivaprasad offered Franca an
PhD and residency program
externship and she accepted. “I
in veterinary pathology at the
learned so much there and saw
UGA CVM in 2013, and now
so many cases, and so many
is an assistant professor at the
interesting lesions. I just fell in
Poultry Diagnostic and Research
love with it. After six months I
Center. She is board certified
applied for the poultry medicine
by the American College of
residency at CAHFS and got
Poultry Veterinarians and the
accepted.”
American College of Veterinary
Pathologists. “There are not many
At that point, Franca knew
pathologists specialized in avian
she had found her niche. But
pathology in the United States
to practice and teach avian
and other countries,” Franca said.
pathology, she’d still need more
“Since there is a high demand
training — and that’s why she
for pathologists specialized in
came to UGA in 2009 to pursue
poultry pathology, I felt like I
a second residency and a PhD in
could make a difference by being
veterinary pathology.
one of the people to teach and
During her time at UGA,
train veterinary students and
Monique Franca, DVM, PhD, DACPV, DACVP.
Franca learned many fine details
Photo by Christopher B. Herron.
pathology residents in this area.”
about the pathology of various
Franca was born in Santos, a
species, but what inspired her the
coastal town in Brazil. She set out for veterinary school most was the raw passion and expertise she witnessed
in 2002, when she was 18 years old. “I always loved
in her mentor, Elizabeth Howerth, DVM, PhD,
all kinds of animals and I chose veterinary medicine
DACVP, a professor of anatomic pathology. Franca
because I believed there were so many things I could
marvels at Howerth’s “outstanding teaching skills, hard
potentially do as a veterinary doctor.”
work and supreme dedication” toward all her students.
As Franca immersed herself in veterinary school
Today, Franca is a diagnostician, teacher and
at Sao Paulo State, she found a gap in her studies: “In
researcher at UGA’s Poultry Diagnostic and Research
the second year of the veterinary school, I learned all
Center. She’s involved in multiple investigations on
about poultry nutrition and management. In the third
avian diseases, like avian influenza in wild birds and
year of the veterinary school, I took courses on general focal duodenal necrosis in egg layers. Her teaching
and mammalian pathology — but we didn’t have much duties expand beyond the physical classroom, as she
opportunity to learn about gross and microscopic
also tutors students in an online training course. And,
pathology of poultry diseases.” The more Franca
of course, being a pathologist means she gets to see
learned about pathology and poultry medicine, the
many “cool” lesions in her office.
more she yearned for a bridge between the two.
For many, that’d be a full workload — but Franca
In 2005 she met H.L. Shivaprasad, BVSc, MS, PhD, loves it all. “The favorite part of my job is that I never
DACPV — an avian pathologist from the California
get bored.”
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
47
Tom Kuhn (DVM ’77) was selected to serve
as vice president of the North Carolina Veterinary
Medical Association.
David M. Pinson (DVM ’78), PhD, DAVCP,
DACLAM, received an Outstanding Teaching award
from the University of Illinois College of Medicine
at Peoria. Dr. Pinson teaches in the pathology and
pharmacology curriculum for M2 students of the
College of Medicine.
Lisa K. Nolan (DVM ’88, MS ’89, PhD ’92)
received the Phibro Animal Health Excellence
in Poultry Research Award from the American
Association of Avian Pathologists.
Adam Eichelberger (DVM ’03) was elected
to the national Council on Public Health and
Regulatory Veterinary Medicine, which advises
the American Veterinary Medical Association
about livestock and food health, food safety and
communicable diseases.
48
The University of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
Sisters Kristen Merrick (DVM ’14) and
Justin Brooke Merrick (DVM ’14) are both
practicing veterinary medicine in Georgia. Kristen
joined the staff of East Coweta Veterinary Hospital.
Justin is practicing at Fayetteville Animal Hospital
and Southern Crescent Animal Emergency Clinic.
Two members of the CVM alumni community
were named to the UGA Alumni Association’s 40
Under 40 Class of 2014: Chad Schmiedt (DVM
’00), DACVS,
an associate
professor of soft
tissue surgery in
the UGA CVM’s
Department of
Small Animal
Medicine and
Surgery, and
Aleisha Gomes
Swartz (DVM
’02), who is the
chief veterinarian
for the Hawaiian
Humane Society.
Dr. Schmiedt
currently serves
as president of the
Dr. Giddens
UGA Veterinary
Alumni Association.
Jessica Giddens, MADS, (DVM ’14), has opened
her own mobile practice, JAG Veterinary Services,
which is available to a 10-county area covering South
Georgia and North Florida.
Dr. Stinson
Jeffrey Klausner (DVM ’72), MS,
DACVIM, received the 2014 Meritorious Service
Award from the American Veterinary Medical
Association for his efforts conducted
outside the scope of his normal veterinary
work to improve the lives of animals and
people around the globe. Klausner is the
senior vice president and chief medical
officer for Banfield Pet Hospitals.
Gale Galland (DVM ’86), MS,
DACVPM, received the 2014 Public Service
Award from the American Veterinary
Medical Association in recognition of her
longtime service to the public health sector.
Galland served 21 years as a commissioned
officer with the U.S. Public Health Service
working at the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, and eventually
leading the CDC’s laboratory animal
program. She retired in 2013.
Thomas “Tommy” Gray Dickson
(DVM ’66); York, S.C.; June 26
John Risser (DVM ’61); Adamstown,
Md.; June 29
Larry M. Richman (DVM ’60);
Annapolis, Md.; July 2
Ellen J. Maxwell (DVM ’57);
Watkinsville, Ga.; July 20
Robert Ray Kennedy Jr. (DVM ’83);
Dublin, Ga.; Aug. 26
Harold Dwight Blackwelder
(DVM ’71); Statesville, N.C.; Aug. 31
J. William “Bill” Martin III
(DVM ’74); Valdosta, Ga.; Sept. 23
Ann Victoria Hurst (DVM ’77);
Orangeburg, S.C.; Sept. 29
F. Ray Turk (DVM ’56); Athens, Ga.;
Sept. 30
James “Jim” Earnest Strickland
(DVM ’61); Claxton, Ga.; Aug. 2
Harty Stewart Powell (DVM ’53);
Brentwood, Tenn.; Oct. 16
James C. Weatherly (DVM ’66);
Ooltewah, Ga.; Nov. 15
Dr. Galland
William Mack Atkins (DVM ’56);
Rock Spring, Ga.; Nov. 19
Bobbie Joe Butler (DVM ’62);
Charlotte, N.C.; Nov. 21
We want to know what you’re up to!
Your classmates want to know what’s happening in your life. Drop us
a line! Please include your current contact information, including your
phone number and email address, to help us keep our alumni database
up to date. Send your information to:
eterinary M
of V
ed
ge
ic
le
Marti Brick
vetalums@uga.edu
or fax: 706.583.0242
Follow
the
CV M
and
A l u m n i A s s o c i at i o n ’ s
TH
e
in
Jennifer Davis (DVM ’95) is now the
Compliance Liaison Veterinarian in the Office of
Animal Welfare at the University of Pennsylvania.
She also recently became board-certified by the
American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine
(ACLAM) following completion of her residency in
this area at Emory University.
Chad Malinak (MAM ’13) received the
Outstanding Field Case/Diagnostic Report
Award from the American Association
of Avian Pathologists for his presentation
“Investigation of Clinical Disease in Free
Range Organic Egg Layers.”
Rebecca Stinson (DVM ’02) was
elected vice president of the American
Veterinary Medical Association. As vice
president, Dr. Stinson will serve as liaison to
the student chapters of the AVMA, and also
as a voting member of the AVMA Executive
Board. Dr. Stinson also currently serves on
the UGA Veterinary Alumni Association
board.
Obituaries:
Co
l
Sam Adams (DVM ’73) received
the 2014 Nathan Brewer Lifetime
Achievement Award from the
American College of Laboratory
Animal Medicine (ACLAM). Only
Dr. Maddox
those who have made “rare and
exceptional contributions to the field
of laboratory/comparative medicine” can receive such
an honor. To date, Dr. Adams is the fourth recipient
of this award.
Christina Parr-Lindsey (DVM ’13) received the
Reed Rumsey Award from the American Association
of Avian Pathologists. Dr. Lindsey is currently a
resident in poultry health management at
North Carolina State University.
Photo couresty of the AVMA.
Gene Maddox (DVM ’59) received the 2014
Georgia Farm Bureau Commodity Award, which
honors an individual who has supported and
promoted Georgia agriculture.
Maddox was elected as a house
representative in 2004 and served eight
years.
Photo couresty of the AVMA.
AlumniNews
®
EU
NIV
E R SIT Y O
O
F GE
RG
IA
current activities!
www.vet.uga.edu
www.facebook.com/ugavetmed
twitter.com/ugavetmed
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015
49
Why I Give:
Melissa A. Kling-Newberry
Melissa A. Kling-Newberry (BSA ’80, DVM
’83) is the attending veterinarian for the Mercer
University—Macon campus, and also director of
the Animal Care Facility at the Mercer University
School of Medicine. Previously, she worked in
private practice for 28 years and she continues to see
patients on a limited basis. She and her husband, Pep
Newberry, who has been at Blue Bird Body Company
as an engineering technician for 35 years, recently
moved to rural Macon after living in Perry, Ga., for
30 years.
The Newberrys have five “children” — their dog
Tank and four cats: indoor cats Tater and Ivan, and
outdoor cats Minnie and Zoey. Tank loves them all.
Dr. Kling-Newberry has deep ties with the UGA
CVM, as her father, J. Malcolm Kling, graduated in
1959, and she has friends on the faculty. Through
the years, she has referred patients to the UGA
Veterinary Teaching Hospital, including Tank, who
was referred recently to the oncology and surgery
services.
How do you donate to the CVM and why?
I donate toward the construction of the new
Veterinary Medical Center (which opens in March).
While in private practice I designated my pet
memorials to this fund; now I just make an automatic
monthly donation. I chose this fund over others as
the project required such an enormous startup, and
the new Teaching Hospital is in great need.
I also have a separate life insurance policy for
which the CVM is the sole beneficiary to be used for
the Wildlife/Zoological Medicine/Exotic Pets service.
I pursued my passion for exotic animal species and
wanted to have this particular policy as a way to give
back after I am gone.
I feel it is important to “give back.” The College
cannot run on the state funds it receives and needs
donations to provide the education and vast array
of services to students and clients. In recent years,
50
The University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine
50 The University
of Georgia | College of Veterinary Medicine
private donations have become even more important.
Because of the education I received, and the
opportunities I had as a senior student, I have been
able to pursue my passion in treating exotic species.
Why did you each choose to begin donating to the
CVM? Do you donate to other causes?
Years ago, when I learned about the pet memorial
program, it was the perfect way to honor my clients
and memorialize my patients. I have received phone
calls from both men and women who break down in
tears while trying to thank me. I have also received
thank you notes. I have always found it very touching
that I receive the most heartfelt thanks from one of
the worst situations an owner has to endure. I have
had a couple clients give to the CVM as a result.
I also donate to Guiding Eyes for the Blind in
New York, which is an internationally accredited
guide dog school; Vital Ground Foundation in
Montana, which permanently protects land for
grizzly bears and other wide-ranging wildlife; and the
World Wildlife Fund.
Donating money is a deeply personal experience.
What would you share with others about giving?
I have had a few clients over the years ask me how
they could help by making a donation to a charity or
particular cause, and I have requested they donate to
the CVM.
What would you tell others about the experience of
giving to a cause?
I felt even stronger about giving back to the
CVM after we had to take Tank for treatment for oral
melanoma, which happened last fall.
We got Tank from a family friend when he
was barely 6 weeks old and he barely fit into my
two hands held together. He is a Pit Bull-PointerLabrador Retriever mix, and looks almost like a pure
Pit Bull. He is the sweetest dog ever and he loves our
cats. He’s now 7 and a half years old and weighs 78
pounds. Tank goes everywhere with my husband and
they share a very special bond. So, needless to say,
Pep was simply devastated when we got Tank’s cancer
diagnosis. There was no decision to be made other
than for me to refer him for a second opinion to the
UGA Veterinary Teaching Hospital’s Oncology service.
Being on the receiving end of the process was a
new experience for me, and it could not have been
better given the circumstances. The Hospital’s front
desk receptionist was very welcoming and made us
feel right at home. The student on Tank’s case, Daniel
Carrig (a student from St. George’s University who was
doing his clinical rotations at the UGA CVM), was
very personable and Tank was very comfortable with
him. Daniel kept us informed with updates on Tank’s
status at least twice a day. Our oncology resident, Dr.
Jessica Mobley Thiman (DVM ’12), was very caring
and thorough at explaining all of our options with oral
melanoma, as did our surgeon, Dr. Chad Schmiedt
(DVM ’00). They both enabled us to make informed
decisions that made us feel we were doing everything
possible for Tank.
When we went to pick up Tank, we discovered that
Daniel had spent extra time with him, and in fact Tank
went to the exam room door that led back into the
hospital as if he wanted to go back into the hospital.
Imagine our surprise! The pathology reports from all
the lesions came back in a very timely manner, and
thankfully for now Tank is cancer free. Pep was very
impressed with how our referral went, that everyone
was so nice and caring, and he felt like we made the
right choice by pursuing the referral.
Is there anything you’d like to add that has not been
asked?
I cannot stress how important it is for alumni
and other donors to contribute to the College and its
programs, so the same type of service we received can
be provided to all patients and clients.
I have always wanted to be a veterinarian and knew
from a very early age that was what I wanted to do. I
remember the day I had my interview and one of the
people I was waiting with said: “You know, only one in
three interviewees gets accepted?” Interestingly enough,
on the first day of orientation I noticed all three of us
had been accepted!
Photo of Tank provided by Dr. Melissa Kling-Newberry
and Pep Newberry.
For More Information
If you would like to make a gift to the UGA
College of Veterinary Medicine, contact
our Office of Veterinary External Affairs at
706.542.1807 or give2vet@uga.edu
Aesculapian Spring/Summer 2014
Aesculapian | Fall 2014/Winter 2015 51
51
College of Veterinary Medicine
Athens, GA 30602-7371
Return Service Requested
Dates to remember:
March 25
March 27-28
April 3
April 9
April 17
May 2
June 3-7
June 6
June 14-June 20
June 17-21
June 17
July 10-14
August 1
August 16
September 23
Opening date for new UGA Veterinary Teaching Hospital
52nd Annual Veterinary Conference and Alumni Weekend (at the Georgia Center)
Annual Open House at the UGA CVM
Phi Zeta Ceremony
Honors and Awards Banquet
CVM Graduation (ticket required)
Emerald Coast Veterinary Conference (GVMA annual meeting)
UGA Alumni Reception (GVMA annual meeting)
VetCAMP
Southeast Veterinary Conference (SCAV Summer Meeting)
UGA hosts SEVC Grand Opening/Reception (SCAV Summer meeting)
AVMA Annual Convention (Boston)
Hawaii Dawg-O (at the Georgia Theatre)
White Coat Ceremony
Vet School for a Day
Continuing Education Courses:
CE dates and topics are subject to change. Questions about CE? Contact Melissa Kilpatrick at melissak@uga.edu
or 706.542.1451, or online at www.vet.uga.edu/ce
March 27-28
March 28
April 25-26
April 25-26
July 16-18
August 16
October 10-11
October 24-25
November 14
November 15
December 5-6
December 11-12
December 12-13
52nd Annual Veterinary Conference and Alumni Weekend (at the Georgia Center)
Veterinary Technician Conference
Diagnosis and Treatment of Ear Disease
Basic Ultrastructure and Ultrastructural Pathology
Diagnostic Endoscopy (flexible and rigid)
Laser Therapy
Small Animal Surgery
Small Animal Medicine
Dentistry for Veterinary Technicians
Veterinary Dentistry
Avian & Reptile Endoscopy
Small Animal Arthroscopy
Interventional Minimally Invasive Surgery
This publication is paid for by private donations, and is available online at www.vet.uga.edu. For future mailings, if you would prefer
to receive our Aesculapian or Annual Report electronically, please email us at vetnews@uga.edu and tell us what email address you
would like us to notify when the publication goes online. Thank you for your support of the UGA College of Veterinary Medicine!