From ‘cat’ scans to pacemakers for pooches: number of vets almost doubles alongside huge leap forward in pet medicine

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2024-06-16 01:54:38
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2024-06-16 01:54:38
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The Veterinary Council of Ireland has revealed there are 3,542 veterinary practitioners on their register compared to 2,408 vets registered in 2014. The number of veterinary specialists such as cardiologists, ­radiologists or reproductive specialists has nearly doubled from 30 in 2014 to 59 currently on the register.

Meanwhile, veterinary nurses have also nearly doubled from 667 a decade ago to 1,206 currently working in practices.

Dr Bill Cashman, who runs a veterinary practice in Cork, said there have been huge leaps forward in pet medicine in recent years.

The number of pet specialists is rising.
Photo: Getty/Stock image

“You can get a specialist cardiologist now that can do all sorts of surgery for a condition called the tetralogy of Fallot.
It is a major surgery on very, very small babies but now it can be done on dogs,” he said.

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“You can put a pacemaker into a dog.
In orthopaedics you can have spinal surgery and hip replacements.

“The cancer side has advanced a lot as well, you can get all sorts of chemotherapeutic drugs and radiation.”​

The member of the Veterinary ­Ireland Companion Animal Society said diagnostics for much-loved pets is “as long as your arm”.

“There are some lovely new treatments for skin disease and arthritis, but they’re injections.
They’ve given us a big step in treatment.

“Ultrasound, ECGs, X-rays, MRIs, CAT scans are all available now, although much more so in the UK and in America than they would be here.”

People feel guilty putting down a dog at 15 or 16 years of age

However, he said advanced technology means X-rays can be pinged across to specialists around the world.

“If you’re buying a horse, you can have X-rays taken and let’s say the buyer was in America.
The X-rays can be sent to the vet there and they look at them and they buy them on that.”

Dr Cashman said he is seeing far more old-age diseases among dogs.

“When I was growing up, if a dog got to five he was called lucky — nowadays people feel guilty putting down a dog at 15 or 16 years of age.

“In the David Attenborough world, out in the wild, most dogs wouldn’t ever make that.
Now because dogs are living a lot longer, they’re getting the diseases of old age [such as] cancers and arthritic conditions.

“We’re also tending to see more overweight problems which is linked to arthritis and diabetes.”


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