Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine
Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine
Advancing the health and well-being of animals and people. #CornellVet
Throughout history, the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine's expertise in research, education and medicine has answered the needs of a changing world. From expert clinical service, to translational medicine, to food security, the college is focused on critical animal and human health priorities that define and impact our planet’s future.
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Please note: this account is not administered by veterinary professionals. For medical advice please consult your veterinarian.
For any inquiries related our hospitals, please call us at 607-253-3060 or use our online contact form via the website: www.vet.cornell.edu/hospitals/contact-us
For questions related to the Cornell Equine Seminar Series, please email: [email protected]
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When you say don’t treat if they have antibodies but no symptoms, wouldn’t active Lyme turn into chronic and then have a high ospf, chronic being harder to treat ? I am confused when you say if a horse has antibodies but no symptoms do not treat. Also Antibodies meaning Ospc and Ospf ?? Is there a number that we should say yes treat.. I am assuming high chronic Lyme never goes down only rises? Ty
This was incredibly well done and useful! Thanks for the info - new equine asthma diagnosis...
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My cat is completely cured by FIP Rescue Group. They have lifetime guarantee or something like this. I know how bleak, and scary, the first weeks are. But he needs you to work as hard as you ever have to pull him back from the brink. It is going to take not just financial sacrifice, but also a lot of hard emotional work once you begin treatment. It's the hardest thing I've ever done, and the most rewarding. It was the hardest 3 months of my life. But TwinTwin is strong, and healthy again. Money is nothing compared to that. Now I am FIP Rescue Group's volunteer, they gave me special discount. (VOLCARO60V)(VOLCARO10C)(VOLCARO5T)
Nice work. Congratulations. Well explained. Interesting. Thank you. I have a question out of curiosity: When you cut that planarian into four pieces, it did not die. Instead, each piece turned into a new planarian. Are these four planarians genetically identical to the original one, or are they different? If they are not the same, which one retains the original genetic structure, or have all of them changed genetically?
Hello
Live this information. Thank you. Fascinating work
This is honestly a great video
I can't get my cats mouth open!
My cat cla,ps his mouth shut and will not open. When he does he bites. if I do manage to get it in, he acts like he has swallowed it, then walks away and spits it out, if he hasn't alreasy shoved the pill out with his tongue when I do manage to get it in. :( He is very suck and weak and won 'te at but still has the strength to clamp his mouth shut. I don't want to lose him form his stubbornness. things tha used to wpork aren 't working anymore. I abve no one to hepl me.
I was told by my veterinarian to never tilt the cats head back when administering a liquid by syringe. This is because the cat can inhale the liquid thus aspirating into the lungs.
Teşekkürler hocam
On June 4, 2024, I lost my 3.5-year-old male cat, Haruru Bubble Granger, to Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP). He was a fully vaccinated and neutered indoor cat. During his life, Haruru only got sick once, likely due to stress after a stay at a pet hotel. Early on Thursday morning, May 30th, around 1:00 AM, I noticed he had diarrhea. His stool was yellow and much mushier than usual. He typically had dark brown, firm stool that wouldn't break apart easily when cleaning. A few hours later, at around 11:45 AM, he had another loose, yellow bowel movement. Shortly after (around 10 minutes later), he vomited a large amount of yellow liquid food and appeared weak. He had occasionally vomited a similar yellow liquid before, but never in such a significant quantity. Concerned, I took Haruru to the vet that same day. The vet initially diagnosed him with a general illness and dismissed my concern about panleukopenia (FPV) because he was vaccinated. The night after the first vet visit, Haruru's breathing became heavy and labored. He seemed uncomfortable and restless, searching for a different place to sleep. The next morning, May 31st, I gave him the prescribed medication (antibiotics and anti-emetics). He showed some interest in his wet food but refused his usual dry food. A few hours later (between 1-3 hours later), his breathing worsened and developed an unusual sound. Suspecting a respiratory issue, I rushed Haruru back to the vet and requested an x-ray. The x-ray results were normal, leaving the vet unsure of the cause. They recommended hospitalization for further observation and blood tests. The following day, Saturday, June 1st, there was no change in Haruru's symptoms. We requested a blood test, which was difficult to obtain because his blood clotted quickly. After the blood test, they performed another test involving a sample collected from his rectum. Minutes later, they confirmed FPV and suspected a "wet type" of FIP based on the blood test results. Knowing the severity of FPV, I inquired about Haruru's chances of survival. The vet was pessimistic, as they had not had any successful FIP treatments in their practice. We asked if there were any options, and they suggested trying GS-441524, a medication not readily available in my city due to its high cost. We were advised to look for it in another city. Throughout the weekend, Haruru's symptoms remained consistent, though his urine became increasingly yellow. We visited him daily, and despite his condition, his eyes remained bright, and he responded to us with his tail (he wasn't a very vocal cat). On Monday night, June 3rd, at 8:30 PM, the GS-441524 finally arrived, and Haruru received his first injection. Sadly, on Tuesday morning, June 4th, at 5:03 AM, Haruru passed away peacefully with his veterinarian by his side. Even though we knew his chances were slim, we remained optimistic, as some cat owners in Indonesia (our country) had shared stories of their cats surviving FPV and FIP. It's heartbreaking that we couldn't save him. The vet informed us that the FIP had already affected Haruru's vital organs, including his respiratory and digestive systems. We miss Haruru dearly. We'll always love you, our precious furbaby. We hope for more extensive research to develop better methods for early FIP detection and raise awareness, so more cats can survive this devastating illness.
Hi, I'm sorry for your loss. I have one cat with FIP too right now, We are doing medication with GS-441524, today is Day 26 . his condition is very irregular, sometimes the medication is going well, most of the time he have been being dimmed and sad. Our days are very heartbreaking to witness his condition. Hope always been put in top priority along with the medication, but we surrender to God's plan. We care about him so much though ! Sending hugs from here in Bekasi :)
That's why you don't make the hand feet shorter. That doesn't keep them on the ground longer. You get the front feet shorter so they are breaking over and getting out of the way guy. You sound like you might be done. Cornell needs me to take your place.
The only symptoms my cat had were increased thirst and profound weakness. She acted normal, ate normally and had no weight loss.
Thank you dr
Very useful; I just followed your directions and was able to pull 3ml without issue.
There’s has to be a treat in that syringe. No way a cat likes meds that much.
How tf the cattle is soo calm?
Ive missed these live. Im so pleased we have an opportunity to see them at a convenient time. There is so much good information here.
Hi Bestie, I didn't know you were famous
I tried that today, almost lose a limb
Mine works it to the side of his mouth, crews it, spits it out😢 your mindset has to be " I'm going to get this done bc my cats health depends on me doing it". I watch a vedio each time before I give the pill
Thanks for doing this! Very informative 😊
From Egypt, we watching you.❤
This helped me! Thank you🙏🏻
❤❤❤
can this work stage 4 CKD dogs? my dog's SDMA is 73
Thank you for the question. In the right canine patient, chronic dialysis for end stage kidney disease can be an option very similar to what you might see in the human medicine. The team at Cornell focuses more on acute kidney injury with a treatment period of 3 weeks to see if the injured kidneys can heal, however we are certainly open to discussing chronic dialysis if it makes sense for the dog and their family. These treatments are typically performed 3 times/week for about 5 hours each time. The best step is to approach your family veterinarian about the option and have them reach out to the dialysis team at Cornell for a consult. Best of luck and thank you again for the thoughtful question!
i've adopted a stray kitten and he has worms so he needs like two medications a day for a week... strongest cat i've ever had. the first time was fine, but now he knows what the syringe means for him and it takes like two people to hold him down. he's not even 8 months yet
This cat must be tranquilized!
Thank you captain obvious. If I had someone to help me, I wouldn't be looking for advice on how to do this.
🧼 wtf are this recommendations, baking powder?
I would like to know... my barefoot horse is built uphill and bears too much weight on the rear = sore back. Can I just shoe her back feet to raise up the hind end?
Vaccine please!
Awesome and thank you!
The cat in the video is not a real cat. Trust me.
Just wondering if adrenaline could have anything to do with the onset of rhabdomyolysis?
God is still good ❤
Would love to see an update, too. Thank you for your attention and dedication to helping our kitties
Videos like this just annoy me because if the cat was that cooperative we wouldn't be here watching HOW TO videos about it!
This medication is disgusting to taste. Yes, I tasted it. It starts out sickly sweet and finishes with a bitterness only known to people who have tasted quinine. The one time I tried to give one of my cats this stuff, he started salivating like someone turned on a tap and then started struggling to get away. I've been giving cats medicine for years, but this stuff is about as tasty as liquid flagyl, which also could never more than a drop into a cat's mouth. For heaven sake give us pills we can put in #4 capsules which most cats can swallow easily.
Yesss my cat struggles so much with the taste of his heart medicine, that he throws up afterwards. I don't know what to do anymore, he threw it up 2 days in a row now and I literally tried EVERY trick possible 😔
Thx much from Algeria ur fan madoui alynas (tarik) But u injected lidocaine 2ml Why no xylazine
Cool vids!
Don't forget to remove the earrings prior to scrubbing
WHY do they always use the most docile cats for these instructional videos?? In the real world, the cats squirm, scratch, run away, etc. It’s next to impossible to get them to sit still for a second, once they realize what you are trying to do!!
I hope that cat is a paid actor !!!
Is FIP contagious to humans?
thank you, i feel so guilty & i started panicking but he seems fine. he didnt even get up from laying on my lap.
For everyone saying they will get clawed if they try this, if you are keeping your cats nails trimmed, that wont be a problem. Its best to administer meds like this when they are drowsy after a nap.
It’s interesting you said the virus potentially mutates if it gets out of the intestinal tract. Our little kitty started having diarrhea several months ago with blood present in the stool. Emergency vet found she was infected with roundworms. She was treated for that and started getting better for a while but then started having severe diarrhea with blood and mucus. She has since been diagnosed with probable FIP. So I’m wondering if maybe the roundworms caused lesions in her intestinal tract which allowed the benign virus to enter her bloodstream and mutate??