Veterinarians from the UPWr Faculty of Veterinary Medicine have taken responsibility for the welfare of rescue dogs of the Mountain and Water Volunteer Rescue Services and Volunteer Fire Department, as well as 'retired' rescue dogs. Specialist consultations, diagnostic tests, essential laboratory analyses and treatment will be free of charge for handlers of these four-legged heroes.
https://upwr.edu.pl/en/news/upwr-supports-emergency-service-rescue-dogs-542.html
During the kick-off meeting, representatives of nine partnering universities of the EU GREEN consortium launched a project to build and develop joint activities within the alliance. Universities from Ukraine were invited to cooperate – on the initiative of UPWr, representatives of ten institutions, including those from Kiev and Lviv, came to Cáceres.
https://upwr.edu.pl/en/news/launching-the-eu-green-project-536.html
The Doctoral School of the Wrocław University of Environmental and Life Sciences is closely connected with Leading Research Groups, which leaders and members are supervisors of doctoral theses written at the school, and together with a doctoral students’ representative form the Doctoral School Council. Two years after its formation, the Doctoral School and its doctoral students are undergoing evaluation.
https://upwr.edu.pl/en/news/upwr-doctoral-school-window-to-the-world-350.html
Division of Pathomorphology and Veterinary Forensics
1. Evaluation of the remodelling of myocardium in dogs with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD).
Team: Izabela Janus, DVM, Marcin Nowak DVM, PhD, Rafał Ciaputa DVM, PhD, Małgorzata Kandefer-Gola, DVM, PhD, prof. Janusz A. Madej, DVM, PhD (in collaboration with the Department of Internal Diseases: Agnieszka Noszczyk-Nowak, DVM, PhD, prof. Urszula Pasławska, DVM, PhD)
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and (...)
https://wmw.upwr.edu.pl/en/faculty/faculty-structure/department-of-pathology/research
The role of type 1 fimbriae in Salmonella infections
Team: Maciej Ugorski, Krzysztof Grzymajło, Aleksandra Orłowska, Agata Mikołajczyk
Infection by Salmonella is initiated by the attachment and colonization of gut mucosa, which seems to be an essential step in the pathogenesis of salmonellosis. There is convincing evidence suggesting that type 1 fimbriae play an important role in bacterial survival and persistence in the host, although their exact role in adhesion, invasiveness, pathogenesis (...)
https://wmw.upwr.edu.pl/en/faculty/faculty-structure/department-of-biochemistry-and-molecular-biology/research