Updates on Diagnosis and Treatment of Canine Elbow Disease

This session covers updated concepts related to the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and recent treatment of canine elbow disease.

Agenda

Laura E. Peycke, DVM, MS, DACVS (Small Animal), DACVSMR, facilitates the following presentations:

  • Donald A. Hulse, DVM, DACVS, DECVS: Elbow Dysplasia
  • Kei Hayashi, DVM, MS, PhD, DACVS (Small Animal), DJCVS: Advanced Imaging to Understand Elbow Pathology
  • Katherine H. Barnes, DVM, MS, DACVS (Small Animal), CCRP: Updates and Treatments for Advanced Medial Compartment Disease

 

Recording date: June 23, 2021

 

Non-CE webinar

This webinar is not eligible for CE credits.

Katherine Barnes, DVM, DACVS (Small Animal)

Clinical Assistant Professor, Orthopedic Surgery

Texas A&M University

Dr. Barnes is an assistant professor of small animal orthopedic surgery at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine. She received her DVM degree from Oregon State University in 2011, finished a rotating small animal internship at Cornell University in 2012, and then completed a master's degree in biomedical and veterinary sciences along with a small animal surgery residency at the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 2015. Dr. Barnes has special interests in minimally invasive surgery and sports medicine and is a member of the American College of Veterinary Surgeons.

Kei Hayashi, DVM, MS, PhD, DACVS (Small Animal), DJCVS

Professor

Cornell University

Dr. Hayashi graduated from the University of Tokyo with BVMS/DVM/PhD degrees (1993-1997), and then obtained MS and PhD degrees at the University of Wisconsin (1997). He completed a small animal surgery residency at the University of Wisconsin (2003) and became a Diplomate, American College of Veterinary Surgeons. He served as an assistant professor of small animal orthopedic surgery at the Michigan State University (2003-2005) then moved to the University of California, Davis, and was tenured with accelerated promotion in 2012. He began his appointment at Cornell in 2013 and was promoted to full professor in 2020. His research focus is on pathology of ligament/tendon injury and wound healing, evaluation of total joint replacement systems, molecular profiling of osteoarthritis, and comparative orthopedics and sports medicine. His clinical interests are in arthroscopy, total joint arthroplasty, biological approach to joint surgery, minimally invasive fracture treatment, and application of novel research discoveries to clinical patients.

Donald Hulse, DVM, DACVS, DECVS

Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine

Dr. Hulse graduated from Texas A&M in 1970 and completed his surgery training at Kansas State University in 1973. Commencing in 1970 and continuing until his appointment as a professor of orthopedic surgery at Texas A&M University in 1984, Dr. Hulse served as a clinician in general practice and as a staff surgeon at Louisiana State University and Oklahoma State University. He successfully fulfilled the requirements for admission into the American College of Veterinary Surgeons in 1977. He has developed techniques commonly used for the treatment of bone and joint disorders in dogs and is well published in veterinary literature. His clinical research interests focus on minimally invasive surgery for joint disorders and for fracture treatment.

Laura Peycke, DVM, MS, DACVS (Small Animal), DACVSMR (Moderator)

Clinical Professor

Texas A&M University

Dr. Peycke is a clinical professor whose appointment at TAMU CVM is focused on participating as a board-certified small animal surgeon and sports medicine and rehabilitation clinician in the department of veterinary clinical sciences. Her primary focus is clinical surgery service and teaching. Her teaching responsibilities include course coordination, lecturing, laboratory instruction (1st – 3rd year veterinary students), and clinical rotation supervision (4th year veterinary students and house officers) in the discipline of small animal surgery. Her interests include teaching all facets of surgical theory and technical skills. She is also the ACVS program director overseeing surgical resident activity and training. Her clinical rotation commitment includes covering the orthopedic surgery service. She has a passion for organizing and participating in any and all education events pertaining to surgery and improvement of patient musculoskeletal health. Her research interests primarily include clinical research collaborative support of others’ projects and support of house officer projects.

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