VMC 905: Advanced Topics in Small Animal Dermatology

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VMC 905: Advanced Topics in Small Animal Dermatology In Workflow 1. 19VMC Grad Head (lizette_hardie@ncsu.edu) 2. CVM CC Coordinator GR (kenuss@ncsu.edu; kasulli6@ncsu.edu) 3. CVM CC Chair GR (ajbirken@ncsu.edu; sam_jones@ncsu.edu) 4. CVM Dean GR (kmmeurs@ncsu.edu; keven_flammer@ncsu.edu) 5. ABGS Coordinator (george_hodge@ncsu.edu; lian_lynch@ncsu.edu; mlnosbis@ncsu.edu) 6. ABGS Meeting (george_hodge@ncsu.edu; lian_lynch@ncsu.edu; mlnosbis@ncsu.edu) 7. ABGS Chair (george_hodge@ncsu.edu; lian_lynch@ncsu.edu; mlnosbis@ncsu.edu) 8. Grad Final Review (george_hodge@ncsu.edu; lian_lynch@ncsu.edu; mlnosbis@ncsu.edu) 9. PeopleSoft (ldmihalo@ncsu.edu; blpearso@ncsu.edu; Charles_Clift@ncsu.edu; jmharr19@ncsu.edu; Tracey_Ennis@ncsu.edu) Approval Path 1. Mon, 01 Feb 2016 13:51:20 GMT Elizabeth Hardie (lizette_hardie): Approved for 19VMC Grad Head 2. Mon, 08 Feb 2016 18:04:39 GMT Kirk Nuss (kenuss): Approved for CVM CC Coordinator GR 3. Mon, 08 Feb 2016 18:13:23 GMT Adam Birkenheuer (ajbirken): Approved for CVM CC Chair GR 4. Mon, 08 Feb 2016 23:00:36 GMT Keven Flammer (keven_flammer): Approved for CVM Dean GR 5. Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:43:05 GMT George Hodge (george_hodge): Approved for ABGS Coordinator 6. Wed, 24 Feb 2016 14:35:36 GMT Melissa sbisch (mlnosbis): Approved for ABGS Meeting New Course Proposal Date Submitted: Thu, 28 Jan 2016 02:30:50 GMT Viewing: VMC 905 : Advanced Topics in Small Animal Dermatology Changes proposed by: pbiziko Course Prefix VMC (Veterinary Medicine - CASS) Course Number 905 Cross-listed Course Title Advanced Topics in Small Animal Dermatology Abbreviated Title Advanced Topics in Dermatology College

College of Veterinary Medicine Academic Org Code Teaching - CASS Department (19VMC) CIP Discipline Specialty Number 51.2401 CIP Discipline Specialty Title Veterinary Medicine. Term Offering Spring Only Year Offering Offered Every Year Effective Date Spring 2017 Previously taught as Special Topics? Course Delivery Face-to-Face (On Campus) Grading Method Letter Grade Only Credit Hours 1 Course Length 13 weeks Contact Hours (Per Week) Component Type Lecture 1 Course Is Repeatable for Credit Instructor Name Petra Bizikova Instructor Title MVDr, PhD, Dip ACVD, DipECVD; Assistant Profesor of Dermatology Grad Faculty Status Assoc Contact Hours

Anticipated On-Campus Enrollment Open when course_delivery = campus OR course_delivery = blended OR course_delivery = flip Enrollment Component Per Semester Per Section Multiple Sections? Comments Lecture 100 100 This is an elective course and therefore the number of students electing to take this course is difficult to predict. Open to 100 students, but likely to be 1/2 of this. Course Prerequisites, Corequisites, and Restrictive Statement Students need to achieve a passing grade in a VMC951 (Companion Anim Med Surg); Concurrent enrollment in 3rd year DVM program Is the course required or an elective for a Curriculum? Catalog Description This course will provide broad understanding of small animal dermatology by building upon the basic foundation principles covered in VMC 951. Students will learn to recognize, diagnose and treat both common and uncommon skin diseases of small animals. Justification for new course: This course is justified because: 1) Dermatologic problems are very common in the practice of small animal medicine. Consistently, in survey studies, dermatology problems are the number one reason, or are in the top 3 reasons, that a client seeks veterinary medical services. 2) The vast majority of students enrolled in the veterinary curriculum will become small animal veterinarians. 3) Very little material is taught about clinical veterinary dermatology in the curriculum of the College. There are currently only 6 lectures provided in VMC 951. Important information about basic treatments will be provided, including those for ear diseases and atopic dermatitis. Skin diseases of cats will be added. Multi-drug resistant infections will be addressed. Autoimmune diseases will be covered as well as approaches to safe immunosuppression of the dermatology patient. Small mammal (pocket pets) skin diseases will be added. 4) This course will fill this curriculum gap and provide resources relevant to the majority of students that will be directly applicable to some of the most common problems in practice of veterinary medicine. Does this course have a fee? Consultation College(s) Contact Name Statement Summary College of Veterinary Medicine none Outside consultant is not required Instructional Resources Statement The lecture workload of teaching this new one credit elective will be spread between three faculty to minimize the impact of the added work. All faculty involved in the course are employed and are currently teaching in the veterinary degree program and have agreed to their lecture commitments. There is no laboratory component of this course. Course Objectives/Goals As skin and ear problems are the most common reasons for small animals to be brought to the veterinarian, this course will aim at broadening the students' knowledge in this subject to allow them to become proficient clinicians. Student Learning Outcomes By the end of the course, students will be able to:

Identify the most common skin disease of dogs and cats Identify the most common skin diseases of pocket pets Recognize most common autoimmune skin diseases of small animals Recognize skin manifestations of internal diseases Recognize presenting features of small animal dermatology emergency cases Outline a diagnostic approach and treatment plan for patients with multidrug resistant bacterial skin infections Outline a diagnostic approach and treatment plan for acute and chronic/recurrent otitis externa cases Design a detailed treatment plan for atopic dermatitis based on published treatment guidelines Apply key principles and identify relevant medications for safe immunosuppression of dermatological patients Student Evaluation Methods Evaluation Method Weighting/Points for Each Details Quizzes 40 points Instructors will provide eight 5-point Moodle quizzes (take-home) throughout the semester. Test 60 points Thirty multiple choice questions, application of knowledge type, comprehensive final exam for all 13 lectures, given during finals week. Topical Outline/Course Schedule Topic Time Devoted to Each Topic Activity 10 top feline dermatological diseases and their management 10 top feline dermatological diseases and their management (continued) Week 1 Week 2 Treatment guidelines of canine AD Week 3 Approach to a patients with a multi-resistant skin infection Week 4 dules infectious or not Week 5 Otitis externa case-based approach Week 6 Otitis externa treatment approach Week 7 Immunosuppression in veterinary dermatology Week 8 Selected autoimmune skin diseases Week 9 Cutaneous manifestations of internal diseases Week 10 Dermatology emergencies Week 11 Dermatology of small mammals Week 12 Selected cutaneous neoplasias Week 13 Syllabus VMC905_Dermatology Electives_Bizikova.docx Additional Documentation Additional Comments

The elective course has been pre-reviewed the by Curriculum Committee of the College of Veterinary Medicine. This new course partially fulfills the goals of a larger curriculum development at the College to institute elective courses and it has been pre-approved by the curriculum committee to be relevant to the overall curriculum of the College. mlnosbis 2/9/2016: no conflicting courses or consultation needed outside CVM. ghodge 2/17/2016 Ready for ABGS review. ABGS Reviewer Comments: - concerns or comments. Course Reviewer Comments Key: 8860