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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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Intermittent bouts of swallowing difficulty plus some discomfort even when swallowing was successful.
A mixed-breed dog exhibiting several episodes of an REM sleep disorder. (Courtesy of T Schubert and C Chrisman) (See page 251 in the Manual)
Removal of an inflammatory polyp from the ear canal of a cat.
Foreign bodies: removal of plant awns using grasping forceps passed through the working channel of the video-otoscope.
Removal of tracheal obstruction shown in Tracheoscopy clip using a biopsy forceps. Cytology of the material collected during this procedure demonstrated presence of fungal spores, suggestive for an aspergilloma. © Yvonne van Zeeland, Utrecht University
This clip shows the left kidney of the same cat as in Hydronephrosis. Multiple echogenic foci are seen within the central part of the kidney, and these cast clear acoustic shadows. The foci were judged to be multiple small renal calculi. Mild fluid distension of the renal pelvis is also present. (Courtesy of F. Barr)
The kidney of this adult crossbred dog is a normal shape and size, and has normal architecture. However, an ill defined region of increased echogenicity is visible in the cortex of the caudal pole (on the right of the screen). (Courtesy of F. Barr)
Same dog as in Renal infarction (1). This clip, using Power Doppler, shows very limited perfusion of the peripheral region. The appearance is consistent with a small, organized infarct of the renal cortex. (Courtesy of F. Barr)
This clip shows the left kidney of an adult Golden Retriever. The kidney is enlarged and irregular in outline. There is mild fluid distension of the renal pelvis and diverticula centrally. The renal parenchyma shows loss of the normal corticomedullary definition. In the second half of the clip, a rounded hypoechoic mass is seen cranial to the kidney, representing an enlarged lymph node. The final diagnosis was lymphoma. (Courtesy of F. Barr)
Resection of a cranial mediastinal mass and removal from the thorax in a specimen retrieval bag.
Resection using an endoscopic stapler of a consolidated lung lobe in a dog secondary to pneumonia associated with chronic grass awn migration.
Respiratory distress in a bird which actually had Capillaria infestation causing crop discomfort. Video with permission from Surrey Poultry Vet.
Open-mouth breathing demonstrated in this ‘chicken cam’ video of hens housed overnight during hot weather with little ventilation. Video with permission from Surrey Poultry Vet.
Salpingitis in a hen. Concentric rings of hypo and hyperechogenicity represent the annular nature of salpingitis lesions. It can be imagined as a pyometra in a bitch with solid content. Video with permission from Henrietta Kodilinye-Sims.
Respiratory distress in an isolated, lethargic hen. Video with permission from Surrey Poultry Vet.
Increased inspiratory sounds associated with the upper respiratory tract in a hen. Video with permission from Surrey Poultry Vet.
Syngamus trachea causing open-mouth breathing in a lethargic bird.
This clip demonstrates fluid within the retroperitoneal space of a 2-year-old Labrador Retriever with acute renal inflammation due to leptospirosis. The clip begins centred on the kidney itself, then moves more caudally.
A left apical four-chamber view in a dog, showing a large hypoechoic right atrial mass. The mass expands into the right ventricular chamber and around the tricuspid valve.
The right thoracic limb monoparesis is caused by a complete brachial plexus avulsion. Note the inability of the animal to extend or flex the elbow. In addition, there is an ipsilateral miotic pupil (partial Horner's syndrome) and lack of the ipsilateral cutaneous trunci flex, which indicates spinal cord damage caused by the avulsion. (See page 337 in the Manual)