The AASV is pleased to announce the program for the Student Seminar at the 2016 AASV Annual Meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana. Fifty-five veterinary students from 16 universities submitted abstracts for consideration. A panel of three veterinarians representing private practice, industry, and academia reviewed and scored the abstracts to select 15 for oral presentation at the meeting. The panel also approved 40 abstracts for poster presentation. Zoetis, sponsor of the Student Seminar and Poster Session, provides a $750 travel stipend to each student selected to participate in the oral session and co-sponsors a $250 stipend for each poster presenter.
At the meeting, the students’ oral presentations and written materials will be judged to determine the recipients of AASV Foundation scholarships ranging from $500 to $5000, funded by Elanco Animal Health and Zoetis. The Student Seminar will take place Sunday, February 28, from 1:00 to 5:15 pm, and the scholarship awards will be announced during the noon luncheon on Monday, February 29. The schedule for the Student Seminar oral presentations follows:
Concurrent Session #1: Student Seminar
Sunday, February 28, 2016
1:00 – 5:15 PM
Session Co-Chairs: Alex Ramirez and Maria Pieters
Sponsored by ZOETIS
1:00
The effects of tulathromycin injectable solution on reducing the transmission of swine respiratory pathogens from sows to wean pigs
Timothy Pearson, University of Tennessee
1:15
Correlation between aggression and cognitive bias in gestating sows
Sindumani Manoharan, University of Pennsylvania
1:30
Evaluation of diagnostic sampling techniques used in the farrowing house to increase sensitivity of detection and sequencing of influenza A virus (IAV-S) in swine
Ryan Strobel, University of Minnesota
1:45
Assessing and ranking sow farm biosecurity within a production system
Brent Sexton, Iowa State University
2:00
Effect of administering tulathromycin to IAV-S positive weaned pigs to control swine respiratory disease
Kathleen Wood, North Carolina State University
2:15
Characterization of shedding and viremia in naive or vaccinated replacement gilts given 1-7-4 RFLP PRRS live virus inoculation
Taylor Engle, Virginia-Maryland Regional CVM
2:30
Evaluation of a second iron supplementation and the use of zinc oxide in the prevention of iron- deficient anemia in young pigs
Eric Perrin, University of Guelph
2:45
BREAK
3:15
Viral ecology determined by metagenomic sequencing within multisourced swine markets located in the SE United States
Olivia Myers, North Carolina State University
3:30
Effect of herd closure on the pattern of Mycoplasma hyosynoviae and Mycoplasma hyorhinis infection
Alyssa Anderson, University of Minnesota
3:45
Vesicles, hoof lesions, and severe lameness in commercial finishing pigs in the United States
Scott Radke, Iowa State University
4:00
Evaluation of Salmonella Typhimurium fecal shedding in pigs vaccinated with Salmonella Choleraesuis-Typhimurium vaccine via drinking water and challenged four weeks later
Quynn Steichen, Kansas State University
4:15
Evaluation of the effect of shipping and handling of oral fluid samples on detection of influenza
A virus in swine by PCR
Victoria Foerster, Iowa State University
4:30
Use of topical spray containing lidocaine to mitigate pain in pigs undergoing castration
Sara Davenport, University of Pennsylvania
4:45
Residue depletion profile of ampicillin trihydrate in cull sows
Christine Mainquist-Whigham, Iowa State University
5:00
Characterization of genomic and pathogenic changes of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus after
serial passages in cell culture
Holly Salzbrenner, Iowa State University
5:15
Session concludes