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Veterinary Clinical Podcasts

117 SUB

Veterinary Clinical Podcasts

Dominic Barfield

814108, Higher Education, Education, Medicine, Rvc, Science & Medicine, Veterinary, Science, Higher, Royal

5643 Ratings

🗓️ 26 June 2020

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Joining Brian and myself remotely is Dr Rebecca Geddes, Clinical Scientist Fellow in small animal medicine here at the RVC. We managed to persuade Dr Geddes to come back onto the podcast to talk about SUBs (subcutaneous ureteral bypass) in cats, something that she has recently started to look a lot into from a medical perspective. We hope that you enjoy.

Some papers of interest:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30311526/
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30398425/
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24174498/

If you have any comments about this podcast, please get in touch: email [email protected]; tweet @dombarfield. We would greatly appreciate your time to rate us on Apple podcast or Acast and kindly write us a review.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Good day. Dominic Barfield here. And this is the ABC Clinical Podcast. Thank you for listening and

0:04.1

thank you for subscribing on your smartphone or generic fruit-based device. And we're really grateful

0:08.2

for you taking the time to download and this to this ABC podcast. And we don't ask for much in return.

0:12.3

They'd be incredibly grateful if you could pop to Apple Podcasts or ACAST and leave us for review.

0:16.3

Obviously, a five-star review would be great, but we'd really appreciate a moment of your time to leave us for review. So joining Brian and myself, not in the studio, again remotely in an appropriate

0:25.7

social distance. It's Dr Rebecca Geddes, who sees one of our clinical scientist fellows in

0:32.1

Small Animal Medicine here at the Royal Veterinary College. So thank you, Bex, for joining us. Thank you very much for having me,

0:39.6

Don. And we're glad that the building work is sort of finished at your home, because obviously

0:45.5

everyone's sort of either at work remotely or home. So I'm glad that's stopped for the day,

0:50.2

so hopefully we won't have any acoustic issues.

0:56.5

And I hope that the building work goes well.

1:01.6

But we thought we'd talk about subuteric stents. Because I suppose maybe you could tell us how you started to get involved in the ureteric stents that we perform here at the obviously.

1:14.1

Okay, well, yeah, absolutely.

1:15.8

Firstly, I'd say we don't place too many stents now, or certainly in cats,

1:21.1

which I think is what we were going to sort of focus on today.

1:23.8

We now tend to place the subcutaneous urechral bypass devices or subs. But I've really come into this

1:31.7

from the medical side of things. Obviously, as you said, I'm a small animal internal medicine

1:36.6

rather than surgery. So I don't place the subs myself, but I'm particularly interested in

1:42.7

why we're seeing so many cats that actually have

1:46.5

ureteric obstructions, because that seems to be something that's been on the rise. And the vast

1:52.6

majority of the time, it's because they've got a stone in their ureter. So why are these cats

1:58.0

forming kidney stones that are then causing them problems blocking their ureters?

...

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