Purina (6/23/2021
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Clinician’s Brief Partner Webinars
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Your CE Certificate
CB Partner Webinar
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Purina{reg}
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We hope you found the information valuable in the treatment and management of dogs with chronic enteropathies.
Evaluate chronic diarrhea cases by first characterizing it as small-, large-, or mixed-bowel disease. Causes of chronic large-bowel diarrhea include food-responsive enteropathy, antibiotic-responsive enteropathy, steroid-responsive enteropathy, colonic neoplasia, granulomatous colitis, and whipworms.
A thorough patient history and medical evaluation is paramount to the diagnosis of chronic enteropathies. Utilizing the Canine IBD Activity Index (CIBDAI) can be very helpful in scoring severity, guiding diagnostic and treatment plans, and monitoring response.
Interpret diagnostics in conjunction with clinical signs and response to therapy. For example, protein-losing enteropathies can have normal serum globulin levels, and abdominal ultrasonography can be normal in patients with IBD and lymphoma. TLI should be considered if weight loss is present, regardless of appetite.
Younger dogs with less severe disease and predominantly mixed or large intestinal signs are more likely to respond rapidly to elimination diets alone.
Refractory diarrhea often reflects an incorrect diagnosis, but other causes can include lack of owner compliance, suboptimal drug therapy, lack of vitamin B12 supplementation, antibiotic resistance, and/or a concurrent disorder.
Download a printable PDF of these takeaways.
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Please note that a minimum of 50 minutes worth of attendance during the live event was required to receive your certificate. If you did not download your CE certificate during the event, click here to download your certificate.
If you did not meet the 50-minute minimum, please view the on-demand version here and complete a 5-question quiz to receive your certificate.
{{webinarsautomatedemailsthankyou::ce_certificate_url}}
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Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#," sponsored by Purina{reg}.
Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#."
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Dear #FIRSTNAME#,
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Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#," sponsored by Purina{reg}. We hope you found the information valuable in the treatment and management of dogs with chronic enteropathies.
Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#." We hope you found the information valuable in the treatment and management of dogs with chronic enteropathies.
|
Below you will find the Top 5 Takeaways from the webinar.
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Top 5 Takeaways
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- Evaluate chronic diarrhea cases by first characterizing it as small-, large-, or mixed-bowel disease. Causes of chronic large-bowel diarrhea include food-responsive enteropathy, antibiotic-responsive enteropathy, steroid-responsive enteropathy, colonic neoplasia, granulomatous colitis, and whipworms.
- A thorough patient history and medical evaluation is paramount to the diagnosis of chronic enteropathies. Utilizing the Canine IBD Activity Index (CIBDAI) can be very helpful in scoring severity, guiding diagnostic and treatment plans, and monitoring response.
- Interpret diagnostics in conjunction with clinical signs and response to therapy. For example, protein-losing enteropathies can have normal serum globulin levels, and abdominal ultrasonography can be normal in patients with IBD and lymphoma. TLI should be considered if weight loss is present, regardless of appetite.
- Younger dogs with less severe disease and predominantly mixed or large intestinal signs are more likely to respond rapidly to elimination diets alone.
- Refractory diarrhea often reflects an incorrect diagnosis, but other causes can include lack of owner compliance, suboptimal drug therapy, lack of vitamin B12 supplementation, antibiotic resistance, and/or a concurrent disorder.
|
Download a printable PDF of these takeaways.
|
|
Your CE Certificate
|
Please note that a minimum of 50 minutes worth of attendance during the live event was required to receive your certificate. If you did not download your CE certificate during the event, click here to download your certificate. If you did not meet the 50-minute minimum, please view the on-demand version here and complete a 5-question quiz to receive your certificate.
|
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Feel free to pass this along to colleagues who may be interested.
|
If you would like to reference the on‑demand version of the event, click here.
|
Thanks again for attending,
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The Clinician's Brief Team
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The Purina{reg} Team
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Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#," sponsored by Purina{reg}.
Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#."
|
|
Dear #FIRSTNAME#,
|
Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#," sponsored by Purina{reg}. We hope you found the information valuable in the treatment and management of dogs with chronic enteropathies.
Thank you for attending our webinar, "#EVENTTITLE#." We hope you found the information valuable in the treatment and management of dogs with chronic enteropathies.
|
Below you will find the Top 5 Takeaways from the webinar.
|
|
Top 5 Takeaways
|
- Evaluate chronic diarrhea cases by first characterizing it as small-, large-, or mixed-bowel disease. Causes of chronic large-bowel diarrhea include food-responsive enteropathy, antibiotic-responsive enteropathy, steroid-responsive enteropathy, colonic neoplasia, granulomatous colitis, and whipworms.
- A thorough patient history and medical evaluation is paramount to the diagnosis of chronic enteropathies. Utilizing the Canine IBD Activity Index (CIBDAI) can be very helpful in scoring severity, guiding diagnostic and treatment plans, and monitoring response.
- Interpret diagnostics in conjunction with clinical signs and response to therapy. For example, protein-losing enteropathies can have normal serum globulin levels, and abdominal ultrasonography can be normal in patients with IBD and lymphoma. TLI should be considered if weight loss is present, regardless of appetite.
- Younger dogs with less severe disease and predominantly mixed or large intestinal signs are more likely to respond rapidly to elimination diets alone.
- Refractory diarrhea often reflects an incorrect diagnosis, but other causes can include lack of owner compliance, suboptimal drug therapy, lack of vitamin B12 supplementation, antibiotic resistance, and/or a concurrent disorder.
|
Download a printable PDF of these takeaways.
|
|
Your CE Certificate
|
Please note that a minimum of 50 minutes worth of attendance during the live event was required to receive your certificate. If you did not download your CE certificate during the event, click here to download your certificate. If you did not meet the 50-minute minimum, please view the on-demand version here and complete a 5-question quiz to receive your certificate.
|
|
Feel free to pass this along to colleagues who may be interested.
|
If you would like to reference the on‑demand version of the event, click here.
|
Thanks again for attending,
|
The Clinician's Brief Team
|
The Purina{reg} Team
|
|
|
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