Pferdepraxis Eva Bramkamp

Pferdepraxis Eva Bramkamp Mobile Tierarztpraxis für Zahnheilkunde beim Pferd

4 Jahre Pferdezahnpraxis Bramkamp 🥳🦷🐴❤️Danke für alles 😊
04/09/2025

4 Jahre Pferdezahnpraxis Bramkamp 🥳🦷🐴❤️
Danke für alles 😊

3 Jahre Pferdepraxis Bramkamp 😍🤩🦷🐴♥️🥳🍀Vielen Dank für Euer Vertrauen, tolle Kunden und noch tollere Patienten 🦷🐴💓       ...
05/09/2024

3 Jahre Pferdepraxis Bramkamp 😍🤩🦷🐴♥️🥳🍀
Vielen Dank für Euer Vertrauen, tolle Kunden und noch tollere Patienten 🦷🐴💓

10/02/2024

UK's first and largest Specialist equine veterinary dentistry practice.
All advanced and routine dental procedures, referrals, head and sinus surgery, CT scanner.

Neues Zahnequipment 😍Mit extra kleinem Raspelkopf für Shetty und Co 😃🦷🐴♥️
08/02/2024

Neues Zahnequipment 😍
Mit extra kleinem Raspelkopf für Shetty und Co 😃🦷🐴♥️

08/02/2024
08/02/2024

February is National Pet Dental Health Month. While horses don’t exactly qualify as pets, this is still a good opportunity to remind everyone about the importance of having a veterinarian check your horse’s teeth at least once a year.

Following is some important food for thought (pun intended) courtesy of AAEP member Dr. Christine Staten:

“Did you know that horses don’t really need their incisors to eat? Yep, even pasture. But if their incisors are a mess, it affects their ability to appropriately grind their food with their molars and pre-molars.

Dental work in horses is not just about floating teeth to get off points. It’s about balancing the mouth so that they can get the most nutrition out of their food without pain.

Shearing hay in the mouth is necessary to get the nutrition out. The guy in the picture was skinny because he could not move his jaw laterally enough to shear his food, but his health and body condition score improved significantly once the incisors were balanced.”

When was the last time you had your horse’s teeth checked?

04/12/2023
23/11/2023

DID YOU KNOW?

Strangles is one of the most commonly contagious diseases of the horse (worldwide) and in 2017 it became a nationally monitored disease. This condition is caused by bacterial infection with "Streptococcus equi subspecies equi" (referred to as "S. equi”), which typically infects the upper airway and lymph nodes of the head and neck, and is highly contagious in horse populations—particularly affecting young horses.

Transfer from horse to horse usually involves direct face-to-face contact, or exposure to things such as contaminated feed, water, hands, veterinary instruments or grooming tools. A stall or van recently used to house or transport a horse that is shedding the organism may also be a source of infection.

WATCH OUT FOR ASYMPTOMATIC CARRIERS!
It is not uncommon for strangles infections to recur on a farm with previous outbreaks of the disease, and the primary source of recurrent infections are most likely asymptomatic carrier horses—animals who display no clinical signs but may continue to shed the bacteria for months to even years, serving as a continual source of new infections.

If you suspect a strangles outbreak, be sure to involve your veterinarian right away to determine the diagnosis and the best control practices for your particular farm. Without control and biosecurity measures, a strangles outbreak will ultimately affect all susceptible horses, last longer, and have a greater chance of leading to complications.

**Please note that strangles is a reportable disease in some states.**

To learn more about strangles, visit our website at https://aaep.org/issue/understanding-equine-strangles
And as always, contact your veterinarian for more information as they remain the best source of advice!

Wenn Ihr vor dem Winter die Blutwerte noch mal checken wollt
26/10/2023

Wenn Ihr vor dem Winter die Blutwerte noch mal checken wollt

In den nächsten Wochen steht ein Gesundheitscheck 🩺 für Diamiro an. Analysiert werden klinisch relevante Parameter wie die γ-GT, GLDH, Kreatinin und das Gesamteiweiß.
Vorsorge ist der Schlüssel 🔑 zur Gesundheit! Nutzen Sie deshalb gerne unsere Aktion „Fit in den Winter“ ❄️⛄️, die vom 13. bis 18. November stattfindet, um Ihre Patienten 🐴 bestmöglich auf die kalte Jahreszeit vorzubereiten. Zusätzlich besteht die Möglichkeit, ein Blutbild anzufordern und eine Kotprobe vergünstigt untersuchen zu lassen.
Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter: https://laboklin.de/de/fit-in-den-winter/

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Arnsberg
59821

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Montag 09:00 - 17:00
Dienstag 09:00 - 17:00
Mittwoch 09:00 - 17:00
Donnerstag 09:00 - 17:00
Freitag 09:00 - 13:00

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