Dakota Sproule
Issue 28, Winter 2015
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Issue 29, Spring 2016
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Issue 30, Spring 2017
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Issue 31, Fall 2017
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Issue 32, Winter 2017
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Refreshed Site and New Member-only Content
We are very excited to announce that the World Association of Traditional Chinese Veterinary Medicine (WATCVM) and the American Association of Traditional Chinese Veterinary Medicine (AATCVM) have joined forces to offer one all-inclusive membership. With the new joint-membership comes new member-only benefits and a refreshed, updated site design. In addition to the current benefits, such as a subscription to the American Journal of TCVM (AJTCVM), members will now also have access to an electronic library with TCVM books and articles, easy-to-access online presentations and reference materials, searchable online journal issues and newsletters, and a practitioner directory. Additionally, TCVM news updates and events will be shared from around the world, via WATCVM’s individual country association pages. The reformatted website and membership design encourages networking and case discussion between peers, making it easy to stay informed about what’s going on in the TCVM community, and incorporates several great resources that will make life as a practitioner so much easier! Additionally, the site will host the WATCVM Foundation, a branch of the WATCVM dedicated to funding research projects, promoting the education of TCVM at veterinary colleges, developing TCVM research standards, and assisting veterinarians in developing countries to incorporate TCVM programs into their veterinary schools.
WATCVM Supports TCVM Efforts at Veterinary Colleges
One of the objectives of the WATCVM is to assist in incorporating TCVM and Integrative Veterinary Medicine (IVM) as a part of veterinary curricula around the world. WATCVM supports these efforts by (a) assisting veterinary students as they start TCVM student clubs, or work with existing IVM or Holistic clubs, to introduce acupuncture (ACP) and offer hands-on ACP demonstrations, (b) by delivering presentations on IVM to illustrate the importance of TCVM to vet college students, faculty and staff, and (c) by working closely with faculty advisors of the clubs to ‘create’ a favorable environment for TCVM and IVM teaching at veterinary colleges.
Soon after the inception of WATCVM in 2013, Dr. Mushtaq Memon, WATCVM Executive Director visited the first veterinary college at Iowa State University (ISU) in 2014. ISU’s Veterinary College was founded in 1879 as the first public veterinary college in the US. ISU has old connections with TCVM. Dr. Jiang Cisheng (1914-2004) was a well-known professor and TCVM expert in China, holding the second highest national position of his time. He was the first Chinese citizen to be sponsored by the Chinese government to travel to the US and learn veterinary medicine. Dr. Jiang received his DVM from ISU in 1948, before the Cultural Revolution was led by Chairman Mao in 1949.
ISU also has a special place in Dr. Memon’s heart as he landed in the US from Pakistan in 1975 and began his studies at ISU.
Equine Uveitis Resolved By Haliotis Powder And Bo Yun San
Equine Uveitis Resolved By Haliotis Powder And Bo Yun San
This is not a complicated case, but a very significant one for me because I thought of myself as a small animal practitioner. Horse pulses have been elusive, at best, and I always joke around that I have a veterinarian for my own horse. You just can’t do everything!
One day this past spring, shortly after taking the Liver module, another horse in my horse’s barn, made my heart sink. “Cheyenne”, a 12 year old Standardbred mare, looked out her stall door with an eye that was extremely swollen, completely closed, and had tears running down her cheek so that the left side of her face was saturated. She was in obvious pain and head shy. I do not get to the barn as often as I would like, and had no idea how long she had been this way. I e-mailed the owner, who is also a friend, to ask what had happened, and I heard back that this had started one day after spring shots 3 WEEKS AGO! His veterinarian diagnosed uveitis and had prescribed an antibiotic/ steroid ointment, but said the horse would probably lose the eye. He would appreciate anything I could do to help. So the case begins.
The horse presented with pulses that were bounding and rapid, a tongue that appeared reddish-purple. The TCVM diagnosis was Liver Heat secondary to the vaccines that had progressed to Liver Phlegm Fire. Points that were significant and easily needled were chosen. “Cheyenne” was not that happy about the needles. The first treatment included: local points GB 1, ST 1, BL 1, distal points GB 34, GB 44, ST 45, BL 67, Ting point LIV 1 and 2 points to release heat LI 4, and GV 14. A vial of Bo Yun San powder was mixed with approximately 15 ml. of 0.9% NaCl solution to make an eye drop and applied as best as possible to the severely swollen eye twice daily. I had a 200 gram container of HaIiotis powder (since I only practice small animal!) which we started at 15 grams twice daily.
I returned to the barn 2 days later, and she had the eye open a small amount and the tearing was slightly less. Pulses remained bounding and slightly less rapid, tongue slightly less reddish-purple. The same acupuncture treatment was used.
I received a phone call from the owner the following morning to say that the eye was wide open! The horse was eating better, and he was thrilled. We continued the eye drops and more Haliotis Powder was ordered and continued twice daily. We continued the treatments every 3 – 7 days as I could make it to the barn for approximately 3 weeks, and the eye is now completely open, the tearing has stopped and the horse still has her eye and eyesight. A small scar remains in the eye and we will continue to attempt to resolve this lesion.
My Journey into TCVM
My Journey into TCVM
By Bruce Ferguson, DVM, MS,CVA, CVCH, CVTP, CVFT