Originally Posted by
Heathpack
Ok, sorry veterinary neurologist.
But do you imagine that an MD neurologist has significantly different physiology training or that CV physiology in a dog or a horse is different from a human? Actually logistically, I probably spend way more time thinking about CV physiology than does an MD neurologist because I am the one running my anesthesia (on an intellectual level, I am not literally the person administering the anesthesia) and managing my critical care cases so I make a lot of treatment decisions that an MD neurologist would delegate to an anesthesiologist or a criticalist.
But apologies if my disclaimer was somehow not enough of a disclaimer.
As I said I have a lot of respect for vets. The multidisciplinary nature of the work is what most impresses me. Still...