New Bolton Center Experts Offer A Trio of Free Presentations at Dressage at Devon
Monday, August 20, 2012
All horse show visitors welcome Friday, September 28th and Sunday, September 30th. Attendees could win a tour of New Bolton Center
[August 20, 2012; Kennett Square, PA] – Penn Vet’s New Bolton Center is pleased to participate in the prestigious Dressage at Devon Horse Show with three valuable presentations of interest to all horse owners and caregivers. At each of the three presentations, there will be an opportunity for questions and answers and participants who sign in will have a chance to win a private tour of Penn Vet’s New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, as well as lunch with a clinician. The talks take place Friday, September 28 and Sunday, September 30 in The Devon Room.
The schedule for the New Bolton Center presentations is as follows:
Friday, September 28 at 2 pm: A Team Approach to Soundness. Elizabeth Davidson, DVM, DACVS, associate professor of sports medicine, and Patrick Reilly, chief of farrier services, will focus on issues of lameness and the role of the farrier.
Dr. Davidson specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of lameness. She has particular interest in sport horse injuries and has expertise in neck and back pain. Her research includes the use high-speed treadmill for evaluation of poor performance and nuclear scintigraphy for identification of stress-related injuries.
Patrick Reilly has been chief of farrier services and director of the Applied Polymer Research Laboratory at New Bolton Center since 2006. He is continually exploring new materials and techniques for the advancement of hoof care, and is studying the development of a protocol for in-shoe force measurement as a means of quantifying the effect of different shoes on the hoof. As the husband of an FEI dressage rider, Reilly is knowledgeable about dressage and specific hoof issues related to the sport.
On Sunday, September 30, Chelsey Miller, DVM, ophthalmology resident, will offer two presentations.
Dr. Miller received her veterinary degree from North Carolina State University before completing an internship at Penn Vet's New Bolton Center. She continued her education at New Bolton Center and is now completing a residency in veterinary ophthalmology.
At 1:00 pm, Dr. Miller will present Keeping Centerline In Focus: Cutting Edge Advances in Equine Ophthalmology where she will address diamond burr debridement, cataract surgery with intraocular lens placement, glaucoma laser surgery and the latest anti-fungal treatment.
At 2:30 pm, Dr. Miller will present Behind the Scenes at New Bolton Center. Dr. Miller will take the audience on a virtual trip behind the scenes of Penn Vet’s large animal campus, New Bolton Center. The presentation will focus on the George D. Widener Hospital, which carries one of the largest caseloads of any academic large hospital in the country, as well as other facilities on the almost 700-acre campus.
Penn's School of Veterinary Medicine is one of the world's premier veterinary schools. Founded in 1884, the School was built on the concept of Many Species, One Medicine. The birthplace of veterinary specialties, the School serves a distinctly diverse array of animal patients, from pets to horses to farm animals at our two campuses. In Philadelphia, on Penn's campus, are the Matthew J. Ryan Veterinary Hospital for companion animals, as well as classrooms, laboratories and the School's administrative offices. The large-animal facility, New Bolton Center, in Kennett Square, Pa., encompasses hospital facilities for the care of horses and food animals as well as diagnostic laboratories serving the agriculture industry. The School has successfully integrated scholarship and scientific discovery with all aspects of veterinary medical education.
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