Archive for October, 2009

National Canine Health Initiative Discussed

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

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National Canine Health Initiative Discussed at Golden Retriever Foundation Annual Gala

Denver/Oct. 27, 2009 — Though one of America’s favorite breeds, golden retrievers are also the No. 1 dog breed to get cancer, and more than half of those diagnosed will die of the disease. That statistic may change in the future. Morris Animal Foundation is planning to launch a new National Canine Health Initiative in 2010. David Kinghorn, president of the Golden Retriever Foundation, discussed Morris Animal Foundation’s cancer initiative at the organization’s annual gala Oct. 26, 2009.

Morris Animal Foundation will announce specific project details in the spring, but the goal of the initiative is to determine the genetic, nutritional and environmental risk factors for cancer. While studying cancer risks, researchers will also be able to capture risks for other chronic diseases. To begin, Morris Animal Foundation will be recruiting 1,000 golden retrievers that are healthy and cancer free. As additional funding becomes available, golden retriever puppies and other breeds will be added to the project. The study will last throughout the lifetimes of the enrolled dogs—making it the largest study of its kind for dogs—and will be supervised by scientists, veterinarians and project managers. Considerable information will be obtained on each dog throughout its life, including what it eats and whether it is exposed to potential carcinogens.

The Golden Retriever Foundation is a longstanding partner in the fight against canine cancer, and the organization will be instrumental in helping Morris Animal Foundation move forward with this cancer initiative.

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Betty White Brings Safe Watch by Monsignor and MAF Together

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Betty White Brings Safe Watch by Monsignor and Morris Animal Foundation Together to Benefit Senior Community

National Roll-Out Campaign Set for November with Spokesperson, Actress Betty White…

Nashville, TN, October 26, 2009-Scheduled for a November roll-out starting in the states of Tennessee and Florida, Tennessee home-based Safe Watch by Monsignor has created a new technology designed to empower senior citizens in their independence. Named the number 1 safety device for seniors, Safe Watch is a combination of technology’s most recent advancements.  It’s a watch, it’s cellular and it’s the smallest GPS tracking device in the world.  The watch utilizes cutting edge technology to provide security and comfort to the senior community with instant access to emergency help, critical medical information and personal emergency contacts.

Recently Safe Watch endorsement spots were filmed in Los Angeles with beloved actress and animal lover, Betty White.  Betty introduced Morris Animal Foundation (of which she has been a trustee for the past forty two years) to Monsignor C. Riley, president and CEO of Safe Watch by Monsignor.  At her request, Paul Raybould, executive vice president of the organization, flew out to Nashville to present the foundation and its story to Monsignor and the Safe Watch team.

“After hearing the background and scope of the Morris Foundation I understand why Betty loves them so much and wanted us to forge an alliance with them,” shares Monsignor.  “We are proud to support the Morris Animal Foundation and their scientific breakthrough cures for animal diseases.  Pets are a proven comfort to the senior community, which makes supporting the foundation very fulfilling.”  Safe Watch by Monsignor has committed to 4 years of a portion of product sales proceeds to benefit the organization.

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Identifying Drugs that Could Manage Obesity in Cats

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Suzanne Shaff Photography

Study Results:

Obesity in cats has reached epidemic proportions: An estimated 20 to 48 percent of owned cats are now overweight. Obese cats are more likely to develop health problems, such as diabetes, skin conditions, heart disease and severe lameness. Researchers at Auburn University investigated whether they could use drugs to act on two protein molecules in the brain, known as melanocortin-3 and melanocortin-4 receptors, to treat obesity in cats. They hypothesized that drugs targeting the melanocortin-3 receptor may decrease fat storage, whereas drugs acting on the melanocortin-4 receptor may decrease food intake and increase energy expenditure, resulting in decreased body weight. They successfully identified the sequences of these molecules and identified several drug compounds that bind to these protein molecules in a laboratory setting. These preliminary results will allow researchers to manipulate melatonin protein molecules in the brain that could help manage obesity in cats. The next step is to move this research into the clinical setting. D06FE-005

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Shorter Test Accurately Assesses Behavior of Relinquished Dogs

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Suzanne Shaff Photography

Study Results:

Canine behavioral problems are a leading risk factor for relinquishment of dogs to shelters. The decision to euthanize a relinquished animal with behavioral issues is often made using subjective assessments made when the animal is in the sometimes frightening and unfamiliar environment of the shelter. The Canine Behavioral Assessment and Research Questionnaire (C-BARQ) is a reliable and valid method of assessing behavior and temperament traits in dogs, but its length precludes its use in many shelters. Behavioral scientists from the University of Pennsylvania tested a shortened version of the C-BARQ to determine its effectiveness as a tool for providing shelters with reliable, objective data on a dog’s behavior in the home environment. They also looked at the reliability of the behavioral information that relinquishing owners provide, in an effort to test the hypothesis that relinquishing owners conceal or understate the prevalence and severity of behavior problems if they believe information may lead to euthanasia rather than adoption of their animal. Results of the study validated that shelters can use the shortened version of the questionnaire to collect valid and reliable behavioral information from people relinquishing dogs to shelters, and that the C-BARQ may be a valuable adjunct to existing behavioral and temperament screening methods currently in use. D07CA-071

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Firehouse Animal Health Centers Celebrates Human-Animal Bond

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

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Firehouse Animal Health Centers Celebrates Human-Animal Bond, Invests in Veterinary Medicine with Morris Animal Foundation Memorial Card

As chief medical officer for a growing veterinary hospital group in Denver, Colo., Dr. Jed Rogers recognizes the need for high-quality animal health research and timely data, which is one reason he supports Morris Animal Foundation (MAF).

For more than 61 years, the Denver-based nonprofit has funded animal health studies that provide veterinarians worldwide with tools to treat, cure and protect their patients.

“MAF is a valuable professional resource for health issues that concern us,” says Rogers, who has donated regularly on behalf of Firehouse Animal Health Centers since 2004. “We deal with complicated cases and are always searching for answers,” he adds. “Having research information at our fingertips is a big benefit.”

Firehouse Animal Health Centers support animal health studies by participating in the Foundation’s veterinary memorial card program. For a minimum $10 each, MAF sends memorial cards on behalf of Firehouse Animal Health Centers to clients who have lost beloved pets.

The cards are customized with the name of a special pet, pet parents and veterinarians involved in medical care. In addition to supporting animal health research around the world, these special pet sympathy cards celebrate the lives of special patients.

“Everyone feels just a bit better knowing that research can lead to new cures,” says Patricia Olson, DVM, PhD, president and CEO of MAF. “There is comfort in supporting scientists who diligently seek cures to the diseases that harm our loved ones.”

Each year, Firehouse co-sponsors MAF studies that reflect the needs of their patients, or support needs in the community. This year, the team will support a study to address animal cruelty and one that looks at feline kidney disease. Last year two feline health studies were selected.

“One thing we believe strongly is that cats in general are underrepresented when it comes to medical care,” says Rogers.

All of the MAF-funded research goes through a rigorous review process led by one of three scientific advisory boards. The end goal is to help veterinarians care for their patients.

“This Foundation was created by a veterinarian, and our mission is to provide new tools to veterinarians,” says Olson. “We appreciate veterinarians like Dr. Rogers and his colleagues at Firehouse Animal Health Centers, who help us explore new medical frontiers for animals.”

Learn more about MAF pet sympathy cards online.

memorial card

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Estes Park K9K Walk to Cure Canine Cancer Videos

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

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News About Facial Cancer in Horses

Monday, October 19th, 2009

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New Cancer Treatment

Research into a new treatment for squamous cell carcinoma-the most common facial cancer in horses-shows great promise.

As summer gets under way, many horse owners begin the annual campaign to protect their white-faced horses from the sun. Sun damage causes many different problems-issues ranging from a simple case of sunburn all the way to skin cancers. In fact, squamous cell carcinoma-the most common cancer affecting the eye and ocular structures of the horse-is directly linked to sun exposure. It can be painful and difficult to treat, so forewarned is forearmed! Prevention is the best way to avoid facial cancer, though new treatment options are on the horizon and show promise.

Researchers at the University of Missouri have developed a novel approach to periocular squamous cell carcinoma (PSCC), and preliminary results suggest that it may be more effective than current treatments, require fewer treatments/shorter hospital stays and result in the preservation of eyelid function.

PSCC is a malignancy that commonly affects horses on the cornea, third eyelid or eyelid. Predisposing factors include breed (Belgians, Paints and Appaloosas most commonly), poor pigmentation (light-colored skin) and exposure to ultraviolet light at high altitudes or frequent sun exposure.

Big-picture benefits to the research, which was funded by Denver-based Morris Animal Foundation, are that the treatment may work on this type of tumor in other locations and in other species.

Prevent Sunburn and Photosensitivity

How do you know if your horse is getting sunburned? It looks just like sunburn on your own skin: pink or red skin with blistering, cracking and peeling. Horses with large white patches on their faces or heads are at higher risk, but white socks or bellies can even allow the sun to burn. If the skin underneath the white hairs is pink, be proactive to prevent sunburn in that area.

Some industry groups report that certain weeds may also increase photosensitivity in horses. These include white clover, ragwort, St. John’s wort, field bindweed and buckwheat. These weeds contain alkaloids that can cause liver damage and, subsequently, high sensitivity to the sun. Maintaining a weed-free pasture can avoid exposing a horse to additional risk.

New Treatment

If your horse develops squamous cell carcinoma there is hope. With funding from Morris Animal Foundation, Dr. Elizabeth A. Giuliano at the University of Missouri has developed a new therapy consisting of surgical resection and local photodynamic therapy.

Giuliano and her team first surgically resect the tumor and then apply laser light immediately after injecting a photodynamic drug into the tumor bed. Results from the study thus far show that the combined therapy prevents tumor recurrence, requires fewer hospital visits and has better cosmetic outcome for horses with cancer.

Case Example

Dixie, a 17-year-old gray American saddlebred horse, was the first horse to receive the treatment after her owner, Rose Pasch of Cuba, Missouri, and her veterinarian noticed that Dixie’s eye was irritated. The cause was a troublesome growth. Although it was removed the next day, the growth returned.

“It kept getting bigger, and she’d keep her eye closed all the time, and it would water, Pasch said. “It was hurting her.”

Pasch took Dixie to Dr. Giuliano, who was conducting a pilot clinical trial for PSCC treatment.

“Because the skin on the face of the horse tightly adheres to the underlying bone, we can’t do certain reconstructive procedures,” Dr. Giuliano says. “Without retaining the eyelid, it is virtually impossible to save the eye.” Losing an eye is disastrous for horses, who rely heavily on sight, especially in work and performance situations.

A standard procedure for treating PSCC cancer in horses is surgery followed by chemotherapy or freezing or burning off the tumor, but results are mixed. Using this innovative new treatment, Dr. Giuliano injects a photoreactive chemical into cells surrounding a tumor and treats the area immediately with a laser light.

“Dixie was the very first horse I treated with this therapy,” Dr. Giuliano says. “I did have to treat her twice, but she’s been cancer-free for five years.” For the pilot study, Dr. Giuliano treated 20 horses with the new therapy with encouraging results. She received a second grant to further study the treatment and is currently evaluating PSCC’s ability to inhibit tumor recurrence over time.

Thanks to Dr. Giuliano’s research, and other equine health projects being funded by Morris Animal Foundation, the hope is that Dixie-and many horses like her-will march on for many years to come.

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Treating Equine Asthma

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

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Veterinarians Take Cues from Human Asthma Patients to Treat Equine Heaves

New research funded by Morris Animal Foundation may provide new tools and hope for equine asthma sufferers.

Equine heaves, also known as recurrent airway obstruction (RAO), is a debilitating disease that affects more than half the horses in some countries. Equine experts describe it as one of the most commonly diagnosed conditions affecting the lungs of older horses in the United States and Europe. Similar to human asthma, heaves occurs when airborne particles cause inflammation and muscle constriction in a horse’s airway.

While the condition can often be managed through a combination of environmental changes and medical therapy, there is no cure, and commonly used drugs often cause side effects.

Signs of heaves include nonproductive coughing, difficulty breathing and exercise intolerance. The disease can severely impact a horse’s quality of life, which is one of the reasons Morris Animal Foundation (MAF) has supported research to treat it.

Dr. Virginia Buechner-Maxwell and her team at Virginia Tech’s College of Veterinary Medicine have been evaluating a new, promising treatment that uses inhaled magnesium to help open constricted airways.

Natural Elements

Magnesium is a natural element found in the body that causes muscle relaxation and has been used as a treatment for people with asthma. Because the medicine works by relaxing muscles in the constricted airway, Dr. Buechner-Maxwell believes inhaled magnesium could help horses with heaves, too.

With MAF funding, she conducted a small pilot study to see if an aerosol form of magnesium combined with albuterol, another drug that relaxes constricted airway muscles, could improve respiratory function in horses who suffer from heaves.

Both magnesium and albuterol are inexpensive. Albuterol has been used to treat equine heaves and human asthma for many years, but its beneficial effect only lasts 30 minutes to an hour in horses. Dr. Buechner-Maxwell and her co-workers discovered that treating RAO-affected horses with a combination of inhaled magnesium and albuterol prolonged the beneficial effects for at least four hours, which was the total amount of time the horses’ responses were monitored.

Although the study is limited-data were generated from six horses-these results provide enough positive merit that Dr. Buechner-Maxwell is in the process of performing more extensive studies to better define the benefits of combining magnesium with albuterol in the treatment of heaves.

“If we can now determine an optimal dose of magnesium in combination with albuterol or other bronchodilators, we may have a new, safer medication that significantly improves response to treatment without substantially increasing the cost of therapy,” Dr. Buechner-Maxwell says.

She even decided to use the new therapy on her 28-year-old horse, Monty, who was suffering from such severe heaves that she was considering euthanasia. During two and a half months of treatment, Monty seemed to improve, and the amount of medication required to make him comfortable diminished. Dr. Buechner-Maxwell cautions that Monty’s response may have been coincidental, but it gave her hope that the benefits she observed in the study horses would also be experienced by horses treated in their home environment.

“His response is motivation to study this therapeutic approach more closely,” she explains.

Based on her promising results, Dr. Buechner-Maxwell believes this RAO study will lead to an easier, safer and less expensive treatment for horses with heaves.

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Technicians Who Advance Veterinary Research

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

Beetem is shown here helping patients at the University of Missouri Veterinary Teaching Hospital.

Beetem is shown here helping patients at the University of Missouri Veterinary Teaching Hospital.

MAF Salutes Credentialed Technicians Who Advance Veterinary Research

By Heather Grimshaw

For Jodi Beetem, a registered veterinary technician (RVT) and certified canine rehabilitation practitioner at the University of Missouri Veterinary Teaching Hospital, every day presents exciting professional challenges.

Beetem juggles a variety of tasks, including prepping, bandaging and sedating patients and assisting with diagnostic workups and surgery. As the orthopedic surgery and physical reha

bilitation technician at the veterinary teaching hospital, Beetem also fields client phone calls and handles scheduling and receiving as well as orthopedic and neurologic physical rehabilitation.

During National Veterinary Technician Week, October 11-17, Morris Animal Foundation (MAF) salutes the work of Beetem and her colleagues, whose work in veterinary clinics, teaching hospitals and elsewhere enriches the lives of animals around the world. Many credentialed technicians, like Beetem, are an essential part of research projects-such as those funded by the Foundation-at university teaching hospitals and institutions around the world.

Working at the university, Beetem sees the value of research and appreciates the ability to see improvements from the therapies provided.

“Although I’m not a surgeon, I help with post operative care and rehabilitation and help the clients understand how to properly take care of their dog after surgery,” she says. “I’m helping improve quality of life for every dog that comes in to see us.”

A love of animals helped guide Beetem toward veterinary medicine, and a career day in eighth grade solidified her career choice.

“A veterinarian and a veterinary technician came in to speak to us, and I loved what I heard about becoming a veterinary technician,” she says. “I made my decision right then and there.  I think I was the only student who knew exactly what I was going to do and which school I was going to go to before freshman year of high school.”

After high school, Beetem received her associate’s degree in applied science/veterinary technology and then passed a state and a national board exam to become a registered technician. Each state requires continuing education for technicians-as well as veterinarians-to maintain their licenses.

Certification was, for Beetem, an opportunity for advanced education and professional opportunity.

“The education you get in school is very important,” explains Beetem, who works with three veterinary orthopedic surgeons and four surgery residents who rotate through the veterinary clinic at the university. One of the surgeons she works with is Dr. James Cook, a researcher who won MAF’s Thank Your Vet for a Healthy Pet® award in 2008.

As a testament to her commitment to the health of her patients, Beetem keeps in touch with some of the patients-and their pet parents-who pass through the hospital.

“I have a handful of favorite patients,” she says, “The [pet parents] always send me pictures and updates, and I love it!”

One of her favorite patients is Buddy, who was flown to the hospital from New York for limb-sparing surgery on his front paw. After Cook conducted the surgery, Buddy stayed at the veterinary teaching hospital for almost a month and recovered nicely.

“I definitely had a few tears in my eyes when I had to take him back to the airport,” says Beetem, “But that’s just one of my favorites…”

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MAF Wildlife Web Exclusive

Friday, October 9th, 2009

MAF celebrates wildlife health research and accomplishments with an online exclusive that features health researchers and experts, animal advocate Joan Embery and MAF executives who discuss the importance of ongoing research and conservation and the unique role the Foundation plays in keeping these animals alive and healthy.

Watch the wildlife web exclusive.

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