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Knowledge Home

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  • Guidelines for Wiki Corrections

Case Studies

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Repo Lab

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Data Science

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Equipment

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Bayesian Statistics

8
  • Weight Loss, Adaptation and Other Asymmetric Biological Phenomena
  • Statistical Paradoxes and Ignorant People
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Monitoring

6
  • Artifacts in End-Tidal CO2 Monitoring and Capnography in Dogs and Cats
  • Body Temperature
  • Depth of Anesthesia
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Automated Workflow

2
  • n8n
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Procedure Specifics

2
  • Bronchoscopy in Dogs and Cats
  • Considerations for Veterinary Anesthetists When Working Around MRI

Pathophysiology

5
  • Pathophysiology of Sepsis and Shock in Dogs and Cats
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  • Chronic Kidney Disease
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RAG

2
  • Vector Store Database
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Pharmacology

19
  • Commonly Used CRI Drugs in Veterinary Anesthesia: A Reference Guide
  • Reversal of Neuromuscular Junction Blockers in Dogs and Cats
  • Considerations for Selecting Induction Drugs
  • Opioids in Veterinary Anesthesia: A Summary
  • Pharmacology of Fentanyl in Dogs and Cats
  • Buprenorphine
  • Clinical Pharmacology of Methadone in Dogs and Cats
  • Opinion-Why Midazolam Sucks as a Co-induction Agent with Propofol
  • Historical Perspective: Benzodiazepines in Co-Induction with Ketamine and Propofol
  • Atropine vs. Glycopyrrolate
  • Drug-Drug Interactions and Polypharmacy
  • Norepinephrine During Anesthesia in Dogs and Cats
  • Dopamine vs Dobutamine: Pharmacological Comparison
  • Dexmedetomidine
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GitHub

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Endocrine

3
  • Addison’s Disease
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Hugging Face

1
  • Hugging Face

Nervous System

4
  • Seizures (Idiopathic Epilepsy)
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Local Hosted LLMs

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Hepatorenal

3
  • Anesthetic Considerations for Patients with Protein-Losing Nephropathy
  • Anesthetic Management for Cats and Dogs with Hepatic Shunts
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Respiratory

6
  • Mechanical Ventilation in Dogs and Cats: A Comprehensive Summary
  • Preoxygenation Before Anesthesia in Dogs and Cats: Advantages and Disadvantages
  • Feline Asthma
  • Laryngeal Paralysis
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  • Comparative Physiologic Parameters

Cardiovascular

9
  • Intravenous Fluid Rate Selection During Anesthesia for Dogs and Cats
  • Goal-Directed Fluid Therapy in Veterinary Patients
  • Interpretation of Arterial Pressure Tracings During Anesthesia
  • Pressure Waveform Analysis and Plethysmography for Preload Assessment in Anesthetized Animals
  • Subaortic Stenosis in Dogs
  • Feline Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
  • Mitral Valve Disease in Dogs and Cats
  • Coagulation and Hemostasis
  • Cardiovascular Physiologic Parmaters

Commerical LLMs

4
  • Why Most AI Chatbots Are Poor Sources of Medical Advice for Professionals
  • OpenAI
  • Claude
  • Commercial LLMs

Other

10
  • Navigating the Legal Complexities of Extralabel Drug Use in Veterinary Medicine
  • When to Use Continuous Rate Infusions for Medication Delivery: A Pharmacoeconomic Analysis
  • Using AI Chatbots to Calculate Veterinary Medication Dosages: Fentanyl CRIs Made Simple
  • Managing Esophageal Reflux During Canine Anesthesia
  • Supervision of Non-Veterinarians Delivering Anesthesia
  • Learning Veterinary Anesthesia Skills
  • The Glycocalyx: Structure and Significance
  • The Limitations of Mortality Rate as an Anesthesia Safety Indicator
  • The Value of Monitoring Guidelines in Anesthesia Practice
  • The Pros and Cons of Using Anesthesia Checklists in Veterinary Medicine
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GitHub

1 min read

GitHub is a web-based platform that helps developers manage and share their code. It’s like a social network for programmers, where they can store their projects, collaborate with others, and track changes to their code over time. It uses Git, a version control system, to keep track of all the updates made to a project, so you can see who made which changes and when.

Here’s how it works for a novice:

  • Repositories: A repo is where your project’s files and history are stored. Think of it as a folder for your code.
  • Commits: When you make changes to your project, you “commit” them. This saves a snapshot of your code at a specific point in time.
  • Branches: You can create branches to experiment or work on new features without messing with the main project (called the “main” or “master” branch). Later, you can combine those changes back into the main branch.
  • Collaboration: GitHub makes it easy to work with others. You can share your repo with people, and they can contribute by suggesting changes, which you can review and approve.
  • Pull Requests: A pull request (PR) is a way to propose changes to a project. It’s like saying, “Here’s what I changed, do you want to add this to the main project?”

GitHub is widely used for open-source projects, where anyone can contribute, but it’s also helpful for private projects and individual developers to keep their code organized and backed up. It’s beginner-friendly once you get the hang of the basics!

Updated on February 19, 2025

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