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- Anesthesia and Pain Management
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Behavior Service
- Blood Donor Program
- Cardiology
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- Dermatology
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Internal Medicine
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- Our Services
- Preparing for Your Appointment
- What to Expect
- Hyperthyroidism and Iodine (I131)
- Interventional Radiology
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Oncology
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- Special Equipment
- What to Expect at Chemotherapy Appointments
- Undergoing Chemotherapy
- Care at Home
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Clinical Trials
- Direct Comparison of CHOP and LOPP Chemotherapy and Genomic Analysis for Naïve T Cell Lymphoma in Client-owned Dogs
- Efficacy and safety of a novel anti-cancer therapeutic for the treatment of metastatic mammary carcinoma in cats
- Phase II open-label non-randomized multicenter clinical trial of trametinib for dogs with histiocytic sarcoma
- Dose escalation study for a novel STING agonist in tumor-bearing dogs
- Time to Maximal Response to Neoadjuvant Corticosteroids in Dogs with Mast Cell Tumors
- Ophthalmology
- Orthopedic Surgery
A horse that is cryptorchid has retained one or both testicles. While the horse may have reduced fertility or be infertile, its testosterone levels will remain the same. This means behavioral problems will still occur, so the horse still should be castrated. These horses are castrated while under general anesthesia, as the procedure is more complicated and requires more time.