Research Podcasts – Veterinary Science on the Move
A podcast by The Royal Veterinary College
Categories:
63 Episodes
-
43 Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses (NCLs)
Published: 2/9/2010 -
42 Wildlife Reservoirs of Disease and Tuberculosis
Published: 1/12/2010 -
41 The Bovine Tuberculosis Epidemic
Published: 12/11/2009 -
40 Virology of H1N1 Influenza (Swine Flu)
Published: 11/13/2009 -
39 Epidemiology of H1N1 Influenza (Swine Flu)
Published: 10/21/2009 -
38 Endothelial Dysfunction and Cardiovascular Disease
Published: 9/22/2009 -
37 Lactation Curve Modelling in Dairy Cattle and Sheep
Published: 8/14/2009 -
36 Current and Future Trends in Veterinary Education and the Profession
Published: 7/24/2009 -
35 New Advances in the Treatment of Epilepsy in Dogs
Published: 6/22/2009 -
34 Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
Published: 5/26/2009 -
33 New Imaging Modalities in Small Animal Veterinary Medicine
Published: 5/6/2009 -
32 Equine Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
Published: 3/20/2009 -
31 Canine Mitral Valve Disease and Congestive Heart Failure
Published: 3/6/2009 -
30 The Cytoskeleton and Molecular Motors in Health and Disease
Published: 1/27/2009 -
29 The LIVE Centre and VetConnect
Published: 12/9/2008 -
28 Dietary Fatty Acids and Fertility of Humans and Animals
Published: 11/5/2008 -
27 Pathogen Evasion of The Immune System and Animal Disease
Published: 10/13/2008 -
26 Elephant Locomotion
Published: 10/2/2008 -
25 The Role of Mitochondria in Health and Disease
Published: 8/5/2008 -
24 Syringomyelia in Dogs
Published: 7/9/2008
After a seven-year hiatus, the RVC podcast returns with Dominic Barfield taking the reins and talking to the researchers at all stages in their careers about the work that they are doing at the UK’s oldest veterinary school. Continuing from the back catalogue from Dr Mattias Kleinz (episodes 1 to 20) and Dr Mark Cleasby (episodes 20-50) Dom (episodes 50-63) with the help of Brian Cox will get you back up to speed with how the Royal Veterinary College, the University of London's veterinary school, is pushing the frontiers in veterinary medicine and basic science. We will provide you with an insight into the current research being undertaken and those dedicated researchers in the pursuit of answering those questions to benefit animal health and welfare, today, tomorrow, and beyond. We hope that you enjoy it.