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University of Wisconsin
Madison, WI
Programs Offered
- Residency in Anatomic Pathology
A 3-year training position in anatomic pathology based on diagnostic casework
from the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital designed to prepare the individual
for the certifying examination of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists.
The successful applicant will have opportunities to participate in the instructional
program in anatomic pathology and to conduct research projects.
- Residency in Clinical Pathology
A 3-year residency in clinical pathology that provides clinical pathology
training through diagnostic service responsibilities, teaching in the professional
DVM curriculum, and research in clinical pathology. The goals of the program
are for the resident to achieve competency in the discipline of laboratory
medicine and prepare for the ACVP certifying examination, generate and disseminate
new knowledge in applying laboratory medicine to the solution of clinical
and research problems, and gain experience in teaching and communicating
with diverse audiences
- Advanced Training in Zoological Pathology
A 2-year program for individuals with two or more years of residency training
in anatomic pathology is designed to provide training and experience to prepare
the trainee for a career in zoo, wildlife, avian, aquatic, or exotic animal
pathology and eligibility to take the ACVP certifying examination in anatomic
pathology.
- COPLOW Fellowship in Ocular Pathology
To provide a training program in comparative ocular pathology and vision science
for veterinarians intending to pursue board certification in veterinary ophthalmology
or as a prelude to anatomic pathology training. The fellow has primary responsibility
for managing the pathology case material, grossing in and photographing the
globes, reviewing the histopathology prior to meeting jointly with senior pathologist,
and following up on consultations or special procedures.
- Graduate PhD:
The primary objective of the program is to provide research training in
experimental pathology leading to successful completion of the requirements
for a PhD degree. Under
most circumstances, it is expected that candidates with a veterinary degree
and lacking other degrees (e.g., an MS degree) will take 3-4 years to complete
the requirements of the PhD degree.
Facilities
The School of Veterinary Medicine has a caseload of primary care and referral
patients in small and large animals and in exotic species. Represented specialties
include general practice, internal medicine, dermatology, neurology, oncology,
cardiology, ophthalmology, soft tissue and orthopedic surgery, theriogenology,
radiology, and production medicine. The Wisconsin Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory
is a full-service diagnostic laboratory that receives whole animals, tissues,
and a variety of specimens from practicing veterinarians. State-of-the-art
WVDL necropsy facilities are shared with the SVM pathology program, offering
students and residents exposure to training with a broad range of species and
case material. Exposure to traditional and molecular diagnostic techniques,
including immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, PCR, cell culture, and
flow cytometry, in bacteriology, parasitology, virology, immunology, and oncology
is provided by a combination of resources at both sites.
Because of its location in Wisconsin, trainees will also have access to the
expertise and training opportunities that are available at the National Wildlife
Health Laboratory, Wisconsin Regional Primate Center, UW Research Animal Resource
Center, Milwaukee Zoo, UW School of Medicine and Public Health, Marshfield
Clinic Laboratories, Covance Laboratories, and the Comparative Ophthalmic Research
Laboratory of Wisconsin. These laboratories and their respective staff provide
training in gross and microscopic assessment of specimens derived from companion
animals, food animals, poultry, fish, migratory birds, primates, exotic species,
human beings, and laboratory animals.
The Department of Pathobiological Sciences is housed in a modern building
with other academic units of the School of Veterinary Medicine (SVM). Well-equipped
shared-use laboratories within the Department and School are available for
graduate research studies and include flow cytometry, histopathology, electron
microscopy, high performance liquid chromatography, and P3-level containment
facilities. The Department is heavily oriented towards research on infectious
diseases ranging from molecular biology to whole animal studies and has contemporary
equipment housed in individual faculty laboratories suitable for experimental
studies on bacterial, viral, and metazoan diseases. Ample, well-designed isolation
rooms as well as conventional animal holding facilities are available for studies
on large or small animals at the School’s Charmany Instructional Facility.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison has a long-standing tradition of research
excellence in the biological sciences and has all the research resources associated
with a large, research-oriented medical school, including the McArdle Laboratory
for Cancer Research. The campus has superb library facilities, and central
research resources associated with the High and Intermediate Voltage Electron
and Confocal Microscopy Facility, the Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center,
and the National Wildlife Health Laboratory are available upon arrangement
for individual research projects.
Community
The School of Veterinary Medicine is located on the Madison campus, close
to the School of Medicine and Public Health and the College of Agriculture
and Life Sciences. The student population of the University is approximately
45,000, and the population of Madison and the surrounding community is approximately
350,000. Madison is the State capital and is a cosmopolitan city, readily accessible
to the many recreational areas throughout the region. The city is built
around four lakes, and its gentle hills, scattered parks, and woodlands provide
an urban setting with a friendly atmosphere. The Madison area has some
of the finest elementary and secondary schools in the nation and provides an
ideal environment for daily activities. Madison’s excellent location
is enhanced by its fine airport that is served by six major airlines directly
or through commuter service to Chicago, Milwaukee, or the Twin Cities.
Stipends and Maintenance
Graduate Research Assistantships (GRA) and a NIH-NCRR Training Grant to provide
contemporary research training to graduate veterinarians are available for
graduate training positions. Residencies and COPLOW fellowship are funded at
levels competitive with other residency programs.
STAFF
- Phil Bochsler, Clinical Diagnostic Professor of Pathology (WVDL)
Mechanisms of innate and acquired immunity/host defense against pathogens;
inflammation; leukocyte and endothelial cell biology; pathology of domestic,
experimental, and other animals
- Ali Brower, Clinical Diagnostic Assistant Professor of Pathology
Diagnostic pathology, comparative neuropathology, wildlife diseases and production
animal diagnostics
- Bruce Christensen, Professor of Parasitology
Research addresses mosquito-borne diseases and the genetic and molecular
factors that control mosquito-vector competence. Cellular,
biochemical, molecular and functional genomics approaches are used to study
the inter-relationships between mosquitoes and the disease agents they
transmit.
- Annette Gendron-Fitzpatrick, Affiliate Assistant Professor of Pathology,
Director of Pathology and Laboratory Services of the Research Animal Research
Center
Comparative pathology, neuropathology, lymphoid neoplasms, diseases of zoo,
wildlife and exotic animals
- Suzanne Gibbons-Burgener, Clinical Diagnostic Assistant Professor
of Epidemiology (WVDL)
Epidemiology of zoonotic diseases and bacterial resistance; surveillance
and monitoring methods; validation of diagnostic assays and methods
- Michael T. Collins, Professor of Microbiology
Paratuberculosis (Johne’s disease) and the biology of its causative
agent, Mycobacterium
paratuberculosis
- Charles J. Czuprynski, Professor of Microbiology
Immunoregulation of antibacterial resistance; phagocyte biology; cytokines;
listeriosis; pasteurellosis; Johne’s disease; inflammatory bowel disease; Histophilus
somni, blastomycosis
- Richard R. Dubielzig, Professor of Pathology
Comparative ocular pathology; comparative dental pathology; spontaneous animal
neoplasia; and the diseases of dogs and cats
- Kristen Friedrichs, Clinical Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology
Quality standards, histiocytic proliferations in dogs and cats, hematology
(large animal, small animal, rodent), oncologic cytology, immunochemistry
- Oliver Ginther, Professor
Reproductive physiology: many aspects of the regulation of follicles,
corpus luteum, and pregnancy in cattle and horses
- Yoshihiro Kawaoka, Professor of Virology
Influenza virus – molecular mechanism of interspecies transmission of
the virus leading to influenza pandemics in humans; molecular pathogenesis
of influenza in poultry and mammals; Ebola virus – role of viral proteins
in pathogenesis and viral replication
- Kathy Kurth, Clinical Diagnostic Associate Professor of Virology (WVDL)
Molecular pathogenesis of viruses and the development of molecular and conventional
diagnostic tests
- Thomas McKenna, Clinical Diagnostic Professor and Director of Wisconsin
Veterinary Diagnostic Lab
Diagnostic assay and vaccine development for exotic diseases of livestock
- Ogi Okwumabua, Clinical Diagnostic Professor of Bacteriology (WVDL)
Diagnostic bacteriology, vaccine development, molecular mechanism of bacterial
pathogenesis, evolution and dissemination of drug resistance among bacterial
pathogens
- Jorge Osorio, Assistant Professor of Virology
Molecular pathogenesis of viruses and emerging diseases; vaccinology
- Christopher W. Olsen, Professor of Virology and Public Health and
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs.
The molecular epidemiology of swine influenza viruses and their public
health significance; the development of DNA-based vaccines and the study of
mucosal immunity
- Marie Pinkerton, Clinical Assistant Professor of Pathology
Diagnostic veterinary pathology; pathology of wildlife, zoo, exotic and aquatic
species; zoonotic diseases of small wild mammals
- Eric Sandgren, Associate Professor of Experimental Pathology and Director
of the Research Animal Resources Center
Genetics of epithelial cancers; contribution of genomic instability to tumor
progression; molecular regulation of tumor growth and metastasis
- Ronald D. Schultz, Professor and Chair
Immunopathogenesis of viral diseases; developmental aspects of immunity;
effects of environmental factors on immune systems; vaccinology
- Gary Splitter, Professor of Immunology
Host-pathogen interactions: Genome and transcriptional interplay between Brucella and
its host
- Howard Steinberg, Clinical Professor of Pathology
Diagnostic veterinary pathology; diseases of zoo, wildlife and exotic animals;
hepatic pathology; diagnostic immunohistochemistry; viral-induced hepatocarcinogenesis
- Linda Sullivan, Clinical Instructor of Microbiology, Immunology, Parasitology,
and Clinical Pathology
Diagnosis of infectious diseases in veterinary species, hematology
of domestic avian and exotic animals, parasitology
- M. Suresh, Associate Professor of Immunology
Immunology of viral diseases, T cell development and differentiation,
vaccinology
- Adel M. Talaat, Assistant Professor of Molecular Biology
Functional genomic of infectious diseases (currently mycobacterial infections)
to understand their molecular pathogenesis and the nature of host-pathogen
interactions to produce the next generation of vaccines
- Chester B. Thomas, Associate Professor of Epidemiology
Infectious diseases epidemiology; microbiology and pathogenesis of avian
and bovine mycoplasmas.
- Peter Vanderloo, Clinical Associate Diagnostic Professor (WVDL)
Diagnostic medicine, management in production agriculture, infectious disease
and client services
- Susan E. H. West, Associate Professor of Microbiology
The molecular biology of bacterial pathogens of medical and veterinary importance;
regulation of virulence factors; identification of in vivo expressed genes
- Timothy P. Yoshino, Professor of Parasitology; Director, Cellular & Molecular
Parasitology Training Program
Physiological interactions between parasites and their invertebrate intermediate
hosts; phylogeny of cellular immune mechanisms; invertebrate immunobiology;
regulation of reproduction in snail vectors
- Karen M. Young, Clinical Professor of Clinical Pathology
Diseases of bone marrow; oncology, including tumor stem cells and
serum markers; cytologic/histologic correlations; curriculum development
and diagnostic reasoning in pathology
For additional information, please contact:
Dr. Howard Steinberg, Anatomic and Zoologic training positions [steinbeh@svm.vetmed.wisc.edu]
Dr. Karen Young, Clinical Pathology training positions [youngk@svm.vetmed.wisc.edu]
Dr. Richard R. Dubielzig, Comparative Ocular Pathology Fellowship [dubielzr@svm.vetmed.wisc.edu]
Dr. Chuck Czuprynski, Training Grant Director [czuprync@svm.vetmed.wisc.edu]
Dr. Debbie McKenzie, PhD Program Administrator [mckenzie@svm.vetmed.wisc.edu]
Department of Pathobiological Sciences
School of Veterinary Medicine
University of Wisconsin – Madison
2015 Linden Drive
Madison, WI 53706
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