TikTok favorite K-9 Officer Arlo receives surgery for bullet wound at OSU veterinary hospital

Following eight hours of complex surgery at Oregon State University’s Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine, Thurston County Sheriff’s Office K-9 Officer Arlo was walking with assistance Saturday morning after being treated for two bullet wounds suffered in a police chase in Washington state. K-9 Arlo has amassed more than 642,000 TikTok followers in just over a year on the job. “It’s a miracle that Arlo’s still alive,” said Dr. Jen Warnock, the orthopedic veterinary surgeon who repaired the bone damage to Arlo’s vertebrae. “The C6 vertebra was shattered; the bullet missed an artery that would’ve killed him by a millimeter; it could’ve destroyed his carotid artery. “He’s unlucky but lucky at the same time.”

Giving back to ‘reflect the world we practice in’

It might seem hard to pinpoint a favorite moment from 36 years of veterinary practice. But for Dr. Mike Bellinghausen (D.V.M. ’84), there’s no contest. “It came after 35 years of private practice in November of 2019,” he said. Bellinghausen was standing outside a temporary clinic in an old auditorium in Cuzco, Peru having just finished a week with the World Vets organization, which provides veterinary care to underserved regions around the globe. His daughter Stephanie (B.S. Biology ’16) was by his side.

Teaching old vets new tricks: Lorie Kennerly retires after 38 years in IT

Lorie Kennerly first walked through the doors of Magruder Hall as an Oregon State University employee in Dec. 1982 – six months before the first class of the Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine received their veterinary degrees.

Kennerly, an information technology consultant, spent most of her career in IT, but “my position pre-dated the age of IT,” she said. In the early days, computers were barely used. “Early on, my job was to teach old veterinarians how to use a mouse,” she said. “What a hoot!”

Lioness rescued from ‘Tiger King’ facility receives surgery at OSU veterinary hospital

Doctors at Oregon State University’s veterinary hospital are well-versed in spaying and neutering pets, but they had their hands full on Monday when an extra-large patient came in for her appointment. Chobe the lioness, who was rescued from “Tiger King” Joe Exotic’s Oklahoma facility in 2018 and now lives at the WildCat Ridge Sanctuary in Scotts Mills, was brought in for a CT scan at the Lois Bates Acheson Veterinary Teaching Hospital.