

This handbook about small animal emergency care contains the diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to the most common emergencies seen in small animal practice, classified by organ systems. For each emergency, a definition of the condition that has caused the situation, its causes, the diagnostic approach, and the most appropriate treatment is provided. The goal is to provide an easily accessible quick reference guide to save valuable time during stressful emergency medical cases.
Quick reference guide based on the protocol of primary assessment and the most frequent pathologies in each section. The goal of the work is to put within reach of veterinarians a small book, including essential information that they can always keep handy to make the consultation time more profitable, especially in the stressful moments of the emergency clinic.
The Author
Carlos Torrente Artero
Carlos Artero received his veterinary degree from the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB) in 1995 and performed an internship at the UAB Veterinary Teaching Hospital in 1996. He obtained a master’s degree in veterinary medicine and animal health in 2009 and a Ph.D. in veterinary medicine in 2014, both from the UAB. He has been director of the Postgraduate Programme in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care of the UAB since 2015.
He worked in private practice with a focus on emergency and critical care until 2006, the year he became an associate professor in the Animal Medicine and Surgery Department of the UAB School of Veterinary Medicine and director of the Emergency and Critical Care Unit at the UAB Veterinary Teaching Hospital.
He has performed residencies and received specialty training at various universities and private referral centers in Europe, the United States, and Canada. He is currently a member of IVECCS (International Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society), a member of the Member Relations Committee for Standards of Practice of EVECCS (European Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society), and associate editor of the Journal LAVECCS (Latin-American Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society).
He has written several publications and delivered conference presentations and lectures, both in Spain and internationally, in his areas of interest: acid-base alterations, hemodynamic regulation, and ventilator management of critical patients. In 2011, he and Lluis Bosch jointly published Small Animal Emergency Medicine, Volumes I and II (Editorial Servet).
Table of contents:
1. Triage and initial assessment
Remote triage
In-person triage
Primary assessment
Secondary assessment
2. Cardiovascular emergencies
Hypovolaemic shock
Cardiopulmonary arrest
Congestive heart failure
Arrhythmias
3. Respiratory emergencies
Upper airway obstruction
Allergic bronchitis/feline asthma
Pneumonia
Pleural space diseases
4. Haematological emergencies
Anaemia
Coagulopathies
5. Gastrointestinal emergencies
Gastric dilatation-volvulus
Acute pancreatitis
6. Urological emergencies
Acute renal failure
Feline urethral obstruction
7. Neurological emergencies
Seizures
Cranioencephalic trauma (CET)
8. Metabolic emergencies
Addisonian crisis
Diabetic ketoacidosis
9. Reproductive emergencies
Dystocia
Pyometra
10. Environmental emergencies
Heat stroke
Hypothermia
Data sheet
Specific References
The evolution of veterinary cardiology in recent years has been extraordinary due to the new diagnostic methods available, which, in addition to making diagnostic processes more efficient, have made it possible to identify pathologies that were previously unknown.
This is currently available!
This book reviews, using a highly visual approach, the most common eye disorders and diseases affecting dogs; it includes illustrations, images, and 3D animations to provide veterinary practitioners with a genuine experience of clinical ophthalmology. The content is particularly useful, with concise, comprehensible texts that are supported by the visual material.
This book deals with pain in companion animals and how it affects their welfare, health and, of course, behaviour. It describes the difficulties encountered, throughout history, to finally reach the conclusion that animals and humans share the same neurophy- siological mechanisms to feel pain, and what their sensitive pathways are. It then goes deeper into the changes that pain can cause in the behaviour of dogs and cats and the tools available to the veterinary surgeon to control it. Good veterinary practice and professional ethics lead us to try to reduce pain in animals as much as possible. Having a book such as this one can help us achieve this objective.
In this practical atlas, the description of the anatomy of the dog’s joints provided in the previous edition has been completed and complemented with new tools, 3D animations, and self-evaluation tests that will help readers acquire knowledge and form a better understanding of joint anatomy and function – elements of great importance for each dog’s physical health and well-being.