Search - Veterinary Services
31 - 40 of 57 results
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First Aid Guide for Your Pet
This RVC First Aid Guide for pet owners is an aid for emergency situations, but is not intended to replace veterinary advice that is specific to your pet. -
Article
Rabbit Vaccination Concerns
Nadene Stapleton, Veterinary Surgeon (Exotics) at the Royal Veterinary College's Beaumont Sainsbury Animal Hospital discusses the problem of animals not being vaccinated, incuding pet rabbits, which are at risk of a fatal infectious disease. -
Article
The Value of a New Digital Pathology Platform
The Royal Veterinary College has establishment a digital pathology platform, which allows digital scanning of glass slides to produce high-resolution digital slide images. -
Article
Laying the Foundations of Groundbreaking Treatments
Royal Veterinary College Professor of Molecular Immunology Dirk Werling explains how the evolution of fascilities at the RVC will lay the foundations of research that will help animals globally. -
Vomiting and Diarrhoea
Cases referred to the RVC benefit from our state-of-art endoscopy suite and additional diagnostic imaging modalities such as ALICAM and fluoroscopy -
Endocrinology
The RVC offer a wide range of services allowing us to find the optimal treatment or management strategies for endocrine conditions in each individual dog and cat -
Immune mediated disease clinic
At the RVC, we’re passionate about getting the best outcome for dogs and cats with autoimmune diseases, and about conducting research to find the best treatments for the future. -
Fact File
Psittacosis
Psittacosis is a zoonotic disease, which means that it can be transmitted from birds to people.
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Fact File
Encephalitozoon cuniculi in rabbits
E. cuniculi is a pathogen that primarily affects the nervous system and kidneys of rabbits
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Article
Improving Lives of Older Cats – Geriatric Cat Clinic
In 1992, the RVC’s Geriatric Cat Clinic (GCC) was established with the aim of researching the common conditions of older cats and to help with the care and medical management of the cats that attend the clinic. Since then, more than 4,000 cats have come to the research clinic.