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To learn more about how to support this project, contact the CVM Development Team at 515-294-0867.

Dr. Allbaugh and veterinary student performing a horse eye exam.

Elevating Expertise in Equine Care

The College of Veterinary Medicine at Iowa State University: First in Animal Care

SINCE IOWA STATE’ S COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE WAS ESTABLISHED as the first public veterinary school in the nation, it has been a leader in veterinary education and research, and in providing cutting-edge animal health care services to the people of Iowa and beyond. Today, the college upholds a reputation for providing leading-edge clinical services, with the Lloyd Veterinary Medical Center averaging more than 25,000 total cases a year from states throughout the country, including the Midwest, New Mexico, Washington, and California.

The Lloyd Veterinary Medical Center comprises the Hixson-Lied Small Animal Hospital, with a focus on companion animals, and the Large Animal Hospital, which offers healthcare services for horses, food animals, and camelids. In 2008, the college completed an addition to the Large Animal Hospital that, at the time, provided state-of-the-art facilities and supported the needs of the college and of the agricultural industry.

Since then, tremendous growth in the clientele and expertise of the Large Animal Hospital has led to exciting opportunities to expand existing services and create new ones. Specifically, a rapidly growing equine industry in Iowa has led to the need for an equine facilities expansion that will elevate the college’s capabilities to provide services to clients, educate the next generation of veterinarians, and conduct cutting-edge clinical research.

aerial view of Large Animal Hospital expansionLarge Animal Hospital Expansion

The Large Animal Hospital expansion involves the construction of several key areas that will dramatically extend the hospital’s services and capabilities to support equine clients. These include:

  1. Increasing available intensive care areas to accommodate critically ill patients, including mares and foals
  2. Adding space for equine reproductive services
  3. Adding area to grow equine rehabilitation services
  4. Adding laboratory space for advanced reproductive technologies such as embryo transfer and in vitro fertilization

Additional Intensive Care Areas

The project will increase the number of equine intensive-care stalls available to manage critically sick patients. Specially designed stalls will allow for more effective management of pregnant mares with high-risk pregnancies and mare and foal pairs where either (or both) require intensive care. This has become a high priority as the college anticipates an increase in the number of cases in the coming years; for example, in 2023, the ICU housed 30 foaling mares, a number anticipated to grow by approximately 5 to 10 percent each year. In addition to accommodating more births during higher- volume seasons, more stalls will allow for safer distancing among animals being treated for a variety of conditions in the ICU.

Equine Reproductive Services

The college continues to grow equine reproductive services offered to clients. This includes observation of low-risk mares during the foaling season, semen collection and management for stallions, and mare breeding management services. The addition of stalls and a new stallion collection area specifically designed to facilitate these services will allow for space to grow and enhance productivity and safety.

Advanced Reproductive Technologies Laboratory

Increasing reproductive services opens the opportunity to offer the most advanced reproduction techniques, including in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer to both equine and food animal clientele. Due to tremendous growth in this field, expanding the hospital’s capacity in this area will offer substantial opportunities to engage students, interns, and residents. The new laboratory would also provide increased outreach such as training programs for private practitioners, and it will offer a service for practitioners to send oocytes to the hospital for development into embryos.

Rehabilitation Medicine

Recent scientific studies and research have discovered the benefits of rehabilitative exercise in equine athletes, leading to increasing demand by equine owners for specialty rehabilitation services. Offering these services will require additional stall space to allow for the longer-term care required for rehabilitation of patients, and increased space for advanced care equipment such as an underwater treadmill. In adding designed-for-purpose spaces to support rehabilitation services, the Lloyd Veterinary Medicine Clinic would become the sole provider of these services in the Midwest — and a leader in this important aspect of equine care.

Dr. Wong listening to horse with stethoscope

Impact on Other Services

Expanding the hospital’s offerings in reproductive and rehabilitative care will lead to the overall expansion of current equine caseloads. For example, horses brought to the medical center for advanced sports medicine and rehabilitation may require surgical interventions, further growing the surgical caseload. Offering additional reproductive services will increase the need for potential internal medicine care and surgical needs of mares and foals, and increase the emergency caseload associated with reproductive abnormalities and difficult births. Expanding the caseload in these key areas will increase valuable opportunities for students, interns, and residents to gain practical experience in these in-demand areas of veterinary medicine.

Expansion Renderings

mare and foal

With a heartfelt interest in the equine industry, we are committed to the expansion of the Large Animal Hospital, which will deliver cutting-edge equine health care services throughout the state of Iowa and beyond. Our pledge is to match all contributions for the project until the base construction cost of $9.4 million has been achieved.

Scott (BSNucE ‘86, MENucE ’87) and Angie (BFA ’87) State In memory of Dr. Raymond E Cooney (DVM ’46)

veterinary student listening to horse with stethoscopeOpportunities to Support the Equine Facilities Expansion Project

The total cost of the equine facilities expansion is estimated to be $12 million, including approximately $9.4 million for constructing the new areas of the facility. For donors, the project offers a range of naming opportunities that will permanently associate their name — or someone they wish to honor — with excellence in large animal and equine care at Iowa State University. One Iowa State alumni couple, Scott and Angie State, have committed a lead gift to the project to honor their love of horses and desire to see increased equine care available in Iowa and beyond; it is their hope that additional donors who share their passion will join them in making this important project a reality.

In addition to making a naming gift toward the facility, donors may wish to include an amount to create an outright or endowed fund in support of staff, programs, and other aspects of equine care.

equine case wards hallway

Equine Expansion Project Gifts

Support this project by making a gift. Contact the CVM Development Team at 515-294-0867 or visit the link below.

Gift Fee

A one-time administrative fee is applied to charitable contributions to help leverage current and future fundraising and stewardship for Iowa State University. The fee, which allows the Iowa State University Foundation to increase financial support for Iowa State students, faculty, programs, and facilities, is 5 percent with a graduated scale available on gifts larger than $10 million.