Born in San Borja, Peru, Jose Oyola Morales discovered his love for animals on his grandparents' farm. He later lived in Delaware and chose Oklahoma State University as the place...
Nearly 10 years ago, equine veterinarians at Oklahoma State University's Veterinary Medical Hospital treated Barbie, daughter of a three-time world champion roping horse, for a...
At just 9 months old, Tripp Traw weighs over 80 pounds. He is a Great Pyrenees mix owned by JoAnn Traw of Farmington, Ark. The puppy underwent surgery at Oklahoma State's...
Shelley Wilmoth lives in Fayetteville, Ark. She has a soft spot for Dachshunds. She has rescued two male Dachshunds and Rosie Claire, a long haired Dachshund with big eyes that...
Dr. Michael Schoonover, assistant professor of surgery at Oklahoma State University's Center for Veterinary Health Sciences, couldn't find any literature on fusing both the knee and the fetlock in the same limb on the same horse, but that didn't
Sisk had what is known as "angular limb deformity" in both of his front legs. This meant the bone or bones grew abnormally such that they were deviated and rotated, making normal walking near impossible.
No one knows how it happened — they can only guess. It's a miracle he's alive. It certainly isn't the type of case that veterinarians at Oklahoma State University's Veterinary Medical Hospital are used to seeing.