
Now is your chance to watch the on-demand webinar “New Ways to Use Surgical Lasers for Everyday Skin Conditions” with Dr. John Godbold. This webinar was originally recorded on July 20, 2021.

Now is your chance to watch the on-demand webinar “Innovations in Soft Tissue Procedures: New Less-Painful Approaches to Surgery” with Dr. John Godbold.

Watch in realtime VetScalpel CO2 laser SuperPulse incisions. These full-thickness incisions are quick and precise with no charring, no bleeding, and no noticeable inflammation.

“Laser” Les Lattin is a legend when it comes to laser surgery and his contributions to veterinary medicine. He has been working with VetScalpel, Aesculight, LuxarCare, and Luxar since the…

Check out the new article “Lasering in on a better approach for BOAS patients” by John C. Godbold, Jr., DVM. Article Preview: Brachycephalic dog breeds have increased in popularity over…

Churo, an 11-month-old Maine Coon cat’s eye was getting very irritated from a corneal ulcer caused by entropion. Churo was taken to William E. Schultz, DVM, at the Schultz Veterinary…

In this video, Noel Berger, DVM, MS, uses a VetScalpel CO2 laser to ablate the inflamed tissue of the mucous lining. Dr. Berger demonstrates using the VetScalpel at both 20…

We were lucky to have the chance to interview Jakub Kaczmarek, DVM, an ECVS Surgical Resident in Augsburg, Germany. During the interview, Dr. Kaczmarek touched on many points related to…

Watch as David Duclos, DVM, DACVD, uses his VetScalpel CO2 laser at 40 watts continuous wave to ablate tumor’s in a cat’s ear (apocrine cystomatosis). The laser is used to…

By Anna Nikolajdu-Kudła, DVM, and Ziemowit Kudła, DVM, VAT; Poland, Med-Wet For The Education Center Originally Published In Veterinary Practice News, April 2019 – Download as a PDF Persistent ductus…

In this case study, a 13-year-old Dalmatian-cross dog was presented to Jon Plant, DVM, DACVD, for a rapidly enlarging ulcerated sebaceous epithelioma between the digital and metacarpal pads of the left front limb. This case illustrates how VetScalpel CO2 laser surgery is used to remove cutaneous tumors that might otherwise pose a greater challenge.