The use of minimal invasion techniques is relatively common in veterinary medicine. We now have a more amiable alternative that will be offered to our patients’ owners during the investigation and treatment determination procedures. We can inspect areas of the body and the ones we do not have access to. We can offer more precise diagnostic and surgical treatments that produce less pain than some conventional methods.
The availability of the instrument is not sufficient. If you know how to use it, interpret the results and then count with a human team that is at the height of the work that is taking place. The appearance of specialized centers will increase. And this podcast interviewed a Isabel Montenegro MartÃnez about the details of some procedures for minimally invasive medicine. Isabel is in charge of the anesthesia and pain management service of the Center for Veterinary Medicine of the Minimum Invasion of Canaries (CVMIC) and is a member of SEAAV (Spanish Society of Anesthesia and Veterinary Analgesia) and GAVA (AVEPA Anesthesia Group).
During the interview, Isabel spoke about the pathologies that are being investigated and dealt with by the mayor in the streets referring to the CVMIC.
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