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AASV Announces Student Seminar Participants for 2025

The AASV is pleased to announce the program for the Student Seminar at the 56th AASV Annual Meeting, to be held in San Francisco, California. Forty-two veterinary students from 15 universities submitted abstracts for consideration. A panel of six veterinarians from private practice, industry, and academia reviewed and scored the abstracts to select 15 for oral presentation and 26 for poster presentation at the meeting. A grant from the Zoetis Foundation supports $750 awards for the students selected to participate in the oral session and $500 awards for the poster presenters.

At the meeting, the students’ oral presentations will be judged to determine the recipients of AASV Foundation scholarships, including the $5000 top student presenter scholarship supported by the grant from the Zoetis Foundation and 14 additional scholarships from $500 to $2500 funded by Elanco Animal Health.

The Student Seminar, co-chaired by Drs Justin Brown and Jordan Gebhardt, will take place Sunday, March 2, from 1:00 to 5:15 pm. The scholarship awards will be announced during the AASV-AASV Foundation luncheon on Monday, March 3. The schedule for the students’ oral presentations follows, and joins the full conference program online at aasv.org/annmtg/program/.

1:00 Retention rates of females through parity 3 in herds with high and low circulating Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae
Lindsey Britton, North Carolina State University

1:15 Determining the optimal infective dose of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae lung homogenate when administered by intratracheal inoculation
Daisy Cagle, North Carolina State University

1:30 Determining the ideal pH target to inhibit Escherichia coli growth in swine drinking water
Rachel Retterath, University of Minnesota

1:45 Evaluation of population and individual-based sampling methods for surveillance of porcine astrovirus type 4 in cohort of pigs during farrowing and nursery phases
Emma Zwart, Iowa State University

2:00 Could we reduce vaccine reactogenicity in pigs?
Sloane Murray, University of Guelph

2:15 Comparison of neonatal umbilical therapeutic interventions for the reduction of navel defects in downstream pigs
Matilyn Wheeler, Iowa State University

2:30 A comparison of two methods: Quantitative PCR (qPCR) vs autofluorescence technique in the diagnostic of Cystoisospora suis in a clinically affected farm treated with a new injectable combination of toltrazuril and iron for parenteral application (Forceris®)
Nicole Seebach, University of Guelph

2:45 REFRESHMENT BREAK
Co-sponsored by ZOETIS

3:15 Lameness in conventional compared to organic swine finishing facilities
Elizabeth Taylor, University of Pennsylvania

3:30 The before, during, and after of emergency swine depopulation with foam
Gabriela Grant, University of Minnesota

3:45 Computationally predicted T-cell epitope trends for 30 years of wild-type PRRSV-2 strains from the USA
Julia Baker, University of Minnesota

4:00 Impact of cross-fostering on PRRSV transmission among piglets
Kristen Cleaver, Iowa State University

4:15 Investigation of a compliance marker and cost of Salmonella vaccination by gel and oral drench
Gabrielle Duhe, Louisiana State University

4:30 Comparison of cell-mediated immunity induction by two porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) vaccines in adult breeding swine
Jacqueline Springer, University of Illinois

4:45 Comparative efficacy of water soluble tylvalosin and lincomycin hydrochloride in finishing pigs administered a Lawsonia intracellularis (Li or ileitis) oral challenge
Heejoo (Patrick) Jung, The Ohio State University

5:00 Comparison of piglet vaccination timing protocols on early nursery stress and performance
Macy Moore, Iowa State University

5:15 Session concludes