Department of Clinics

This department was created in 2013 under the Veterinary Science frontier. The professors of this department teach pharmacology (General Pharmacology, Neurology, and Systemic Pharmacology), Toxicology, Gynecology, Ventricular Surgery, Internal medicine and venereology, clinical diagnosis and artificial implantation for treating and assisting domestic animals.

Educational goals

1.      Familiarity with the pharmacological properties of veterinary, their safe and effective use, their harmful side effects and their forms

2.      Introduction of Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacodynamics, Pharmacotherapy and their use in medical care

3.      Earning the abilities necessary for the safe and effective use of drugs affecting various body systems

4.      Acquiring the necessary abilities for the effective and safe application of anti-bacterial, antifungal, antiviral, anti-cancer and anti-cancer drugs

5.      Familiarizing students with the importance of fluid therapy in animals, determining the amount of dehydration in animals from the clinical signs, how fluid should be adapted to animals, how to navigate these fluids to adapt to the animal, how to adapt fluids to animals, the use of fluid therapy in animals and the types of fluid used in animal medicine

6.      Ability to identify, regulate and treat various animal poisons.

7.      Knowing how to measure the drug and determine the amount of drug used for treatment of systemic and infectious diseases.

8.      Familiarity with the concept of drug remnants and its impact on public health

9.      Knowing the importance of drug resistance to antimicrobial agents and learning how to prevent it.

10.  Students' familiarity with the basics of surgical science, wounds, injuries, stitches, general conditions and surgical procedures

11.  Familiarity with general and local anesthetic techniques, radiology and its adaptive area, specific and systemic surgery

12.  Students' familiarity with the methods of horn, dissonance, rominatomy and cesarean section

13.  Knowledge of students with the basics of internal medicine and its importance in the diagnosis and successful treatment of animal diseases

14.  Familiarity with Clinical Disease Procedures, Explaining the Practice of Diagnostic and Appliance Use in Clinical Examination of Animals

15.  Familiarity with students with meteorological diseases, complications due to food shortages, physical and chemical agents, including poisons

16.  Familiarity with systemic diseases such as diseases of the blood-forming system, digestive system, blood circulation, respiratory, neurological, reproductive organs, bone and skin

17.  Familiarity with methods of conducting laboratory tests to better diagnose some diseases.

18.  Familiarity with clinicians to diagnose and relieve animals (animal imprisonment)

19.  Learn the basics of catching the history of the disease (Anamneses).

20.  Students' familiarity with the patient's disease records, health attestation, vaccine card, etc.

21.  Students' familiarity with examining vital signs such as temperature, pulse, respiration, and introducing the devices used for this purpose

22.  Students' familiarity with the physical examination of animals, such as touching, observing, hearing, smelling, and introducing the means used for this purpose

23.  Student's familiarity with the approach of the catheter and using it in the ventricle

24.  Familiarizing students with methods of animal diagnosis

25.  Familiarizing students with the development of an interdisciplinary diagnosis list and developing an effective therapeutic plan using the accurate diagnosis of animal diseases.

26.  Familiarizing students with different methods of matching drugs to different animals

27.  Familiarizing students with the genital system of male and female animals

28.  Familiarize students with the functions of the genital system of male and female animals, the diseases of these systems, the examination of these systems, the methods of treatment and prevention of these diseases and practical work on these systems with students.

29.  Familiarizing students with the importance of artificial insemination in animals, the benefits and disadvantages of it, the ways and means used in this method, the way of artificial insemination in the cow, and the practical work of animals on the living and remaining high on the uterus isolated in Laboratory

Curriculum of Clinic Department
No
Subject 
Type of Subject 
Number of Credit
1
Veterinary Triagenology 1
Specialized 
2
2
Veterinary Triagenology 2
Specialized 
3
3
Clinical diagnosis
Specialized 
2
4
Surgical Veterinary 1 
Specialized 
2
5
Surgical Veterinary 2
Specialized 
5
6
Veterinary internal medicine  1
Specialized 
3
7
Veterinary internal medicine  2
Specialized 
4
8
Veterinary Pharmacology and Toxicology  1
Specialized 
4
9
Veterinary Pharmacology and Toxicology  2
Specialized 
4