Veterinary Blog for Education, Careers, and Real Vet Life

Welcome to the Vet Candy Blog—your go-to destination for veterinary education, career growth, and real-life insights from the world of animal health.

From free RACE-approved CE courses and clinical updates to NAVLE prep and career advice, our content is designed for veterinarians, vet techs, and students who want to stay informed, inspired, and ahead in their careers.

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Latest Veterinary News & Clinical Insights

Can Losing Weight Help Bulldogs Breathe Better? Texas A&M Is Finding Out.
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Can Losing Weight Help Bulldogs Breathe Better? Texas A&M Is Finding Out.

Researchers at Texas A&M's Small Animal Teaching Hospital are running an ongoing clinical trial investigating whether weight loss produces measurable improvements in respiratory function in overweight brachycephalic dogs. The lead graduate assistant on the project, Dr. Braiden Blatt, put it simply: there are surgical interventions that can help these dogs, but there are things that have not been looked into, especially for owners who cannot pursue every option.

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Texas A&M Researcher compares AI, human evaluators in swine medicine
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Texas A&M Researcher compares AI, human evaluators in swine medicine

A Texas A&M Veterinary Education, Research, & Outreach (VERO) program-led research team is studying whether artificial intelligence (AI) could play a supportive role in the evaluation of respiratory disease in pigs.

In their recently published study, the team, led by Dr. Robert Valeris-Chacin, an assistant professor at VERO in the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences’ (VMBS) Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, assessed the capabilities of an AI to detect lesions in pig lungs, which can be a sign of pneumonia-causing bacteria.

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Texas A&M research collaboration uncovers how domestic rabbits become feral in the wild
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Texas A&M research collaboration uncovers how domestic rabbits become feral in the wild

Researchers at the Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences (VMBS) have uncovered how natural selection “rewilds” domestic rabbits.

The study, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, helps answer the question of how normally tame rabbits — which have many natural predators — can become a force of ecological destruction when purposefully or accidentally reintroduced to the wild.

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