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Video library
Welcome to the BSAVA Video Library. This page gathers together all the clinical videos that are published alongside our manual chapters and Companion articles. If you have access to the source content you will be able to play the video from this page, as long as you are logged in. If you do not have access, clicking on the video title will take you to the source article or chapter. You can either use a library pass, or buy the chapter or article, to gain access to all the videos and the full text of that chapter or article. Please note that library passes cannot be used on Companion articles - BSAVA members already have access to Companion. Alternatively you can buy the entire book to gain access to all the videos in that book. You can use the filters on the left to focus on your topics of interest and you can also search the site and filter by content type=video. Please contact us with any feedback or suggestions.
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- Simon Platt [5]
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Live echo loop of the right parasternal long-axis image and simultaneous ECG.
Right parasternal short-axis view at the level of the chordae tendinae.
Right parasternal short-axis view at the level of the mitral valve demonstrating the classic fish mouth appearance.
Loop of the right parasternal short-axis view at the level of the aorta and left atrium. The valve leaflets of the aorta look like a Mercedes Benz sign and the left atrium is comma shaped.
This clip shows a sagittal plane through the bladder neck, with cranial displayed on the left-hand side of the screen. An ectopic ureter seen as an anechoic tubular structure (arrowed) running dorsal to the bladder before it converges with the urethra just beyond the bladder neck. (Courtesy of the University of Liverpool)
Note the complex repetitive discharges present at the masticatory muscles and absence of spontaneous activity at the other group of muscles.
Electroretinography can be performed under general anaesthesia, or under sedation in a cooperative patient. A corneal contact lens electrode is used to record retinal voltage changes that occur in response to a defined flash of light or repeated flashes of light. The response is expressed as a waveform. (See page 174 in the Manual)
This clip shows a right parasternal short-axis view at the level of the aortic valve in a dog with endocarditis. Irregular, hyperechoic, vegetative lesions are present on all three aortic cusps.
A right parasternal long-axis outflow view in the same dog as in Endocarditis (1). Note the large hyperechoic vegetations on the ventricular side of the aortic cusps.
The myocardium appeared to be affected at the area of the atrioventricular region, consistent with a severe endomyocarditis.
Courtesy of Hollie Horton
Endoscopic removal of a grass stalk foreign body from the airway of a dog.
Enlarged, rounded and hypoechoic colic lymph nodes are present in a 1-year-old cat with feline infectious peritonitis. These lymph nodes are located at the ileocolic junction.
This clip shows similarly enlarged, rounded and hypoechoic hepatic and pancreaticoduodenal nodes in the same cat as in Enlarged abdominal lymph nodes (1).
Epiglottic retroversion – intermittent spontaneous retroflexion of the epiglottis during inspiration causing obstruction of the rima glottidis.
A young Cavalier King Charles Spaniel with episodes of collapse. The syndrome seen in this breed is initially characterized by an increased stride length, especially in the thoracic limbs, leading to collapse. (See page 249 in the Manual)
(a) Labrador Retriever with exercise intolerance due to myasthenia gravis.
(b) A Boxer showing exercise intolerance progressing to a rigid and weak stance due to polymyositis. (See page 342 in the Manual)
A Labrador Retriever with exercise-induced collapse (a) 5 minutes post-exercise
(b) 10 minutes post-exercise. (Courtesy of Dr S Taylor) (See page 365 in the Manual)