• Home
  • About
  • Articles
  • Books
  • Contact

Veterinary Radiology

Teaching and learning about veterinary diagnostic imaging.

  • Modality
    • Radiographs
    • Ultrasound
    • CT/MRI
  • Region
    • Thorax
    • Abdomen
    • Musculoskeletal
    • Neurologic
  • Species
    • Canine
    • Feline
    • Equine
    • Exotic

Known Case Conference

February 1, 2007 By Allison Zwingenberger

Tonight's session had a variety of interesting cases as usual. One of them was a young, large breed dog who presented for vomiting. On the abdominal radiographs, there was increased soft tissue opacity cranial to the diaphragm, which was centered on midline on the d/v projection. Of course, thoracic … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Known Case Conference

Ultrasound Tuesday

January 30, 2007 By Allison Zwingenberger

For those of you doing ultrasound in practice, there are some fundamental facts about the vascular anatomy of the liver that are useful to know. The liver has a dual blood supply, with 75% coming from the portal vein, and 25% from the hepatic artery. The portal vein delivers nutrient-rich and … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Ultrasound Tuesday

Cardiology cases

January 26, 2007 By Allison Zwingenberger

I recently discovered VetGo Cardiology, written by my former cardiology professor, Dr. O'Grady. It's a good, up to date, collection of cases involving thoracic radiology and heart disease. Cardiology is one of those areas that radiologists and general practitioners deal with fairly regularly, so … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Pets will eat the strangest things

January 25, 2007 By Allison Zwingenberger

I read a great post at Dolittler yesterday that inspired me to show some of my best radiographs. Dr. Khuly has a fun example of a gastric foreign body that you can see clearly on the x-ray. The post, and the comments that follow are a testament to the fact that pets will eat anything, and vets have … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The solitary, indistinct pulmonary nodule

January 24, 2007 By Allison Zwingenberger

One of the most frustrating things to diagnose is a single, ill-defined pulmonary nodule. It is usually an animal with cancer, and the clinician wants to check it for metastatic disease. For a clear positive answer, we would like to see multiple, well-defined soft tissue nodules in the lungs. Is it … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 180
  • 181
  • 182
  • 183
  • 184
  • 185
  • Next Page »
  • Bloglovin
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter
AtlasCover787x1024 amazon-availablenow

Veterinary Radiology News

Sign up for alerts about new cases and newsletters.

We will respect your privacy.

Archives

Recent Comments

Tags

abscess adenocarcinoma bronchiectasis carcinoma cardiomyopathy coccidioidomycosis discospondylitis elbow dysplasia eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy erosive polyarthritis feline infectious peritonitis FIP foreign body fracture gastric dilation gastric foreign body gastrointestinal GDV heart failure hemangiosarcoma hiatal hernia histiocytic sarcoma hypertrophic cardiomyopathy intestinal foreign body linear foreign body lymphoma megaesophagus osteochondrosis osteomyelitis osteosarcoma patent ductus arteriosus PDA pericardial effusion pneumonia pneumothorax polyarthritis PPDH pulmonary pulmonary abscess pulmonary adenocarcinoma pulmonary carcinoma sarcoma thymoma tracheal collapse vascular ring anomaly

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in