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evolution and growing interest in recognizing, diagnosing, and treating oral and dental problems in certain large animal species (eg, horses, donkeys, and alpacas). The manuscripts shared in this issue focus on common dental problems in equines and adequate

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in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association

) begin in utero. Often referred to as metabolic programming , this concept is well established in human medicine; nutritional influences during early life are suspected to also be predictors of important equine health outcomes, but relatively little

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in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
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, fibrosis, and senescence. Equine The large animal manuscripts shared here continue to demonstrate the far-reaching aspects of regenerative medicine, including studies focused on MSCs, EVs, and gene therapy. First, M’Cloud et al 6 provide a

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in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
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-Checklist-Antimicrobial-Stewardship.pdf . As an equine veterinarian and surgeon of over 30 years, I still find it difficult to change my mindset, still need to remember to think twice before reaching for antimicrobials “just to be safe.” I personally find the AVMA veterinary checklist raises

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in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
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version of JAVMA were historically categorized in the following sections: Small Animal/Exotic/Avian, Equine, Food Animal/Small Ruminant/Ratite/Poultry/Aquaculture, Wildlife/Laboratory Animal, and General. When I took over as Editor-in-Chief, I began

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in American Journal of Veterinary Research
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version of JAVMA were historically categorized in the following sections: Small Animal/Exotic/Avian, Equine, Food Animal/Small Ruminant/Ratite/Poultry/Aquaculture, Wildlife/Laboratory Animal, and General. When I took over as Editor-in-Chief, I began

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in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association

interest. So, whether you are focused on small animals, equine, livestock, or exotics, you will find in this issue something relevant for your daily practice. The selected articles range from how to approach clinically common dermatological issues to

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in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
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, or we can focus on specific disease topics such as feline diabetes, equine strangles, canine osteosarcoma, Marek’s disease in chickens, African swine fever, or avian influenza. The possibilities are very exciting—and we would love to hear your ideas

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in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association