LIVE LECTURE
Using Mobile Footage for Feline Neurological Diagnoses
- July 23, 2025 | 19:30 AEST
- Add to calendar
Starts in
Days
Hours
Minutes
About the webinar
As the sayings go, ‘a video speak a million words’ and ‘once you’ve seen it once you never forget’! These sayings could not be more appropriate to this webinar. The smartphone has significantly impacted how we approach veterinary neurology. It now allows us to observe pets in their home environments, providing invaluable insight into abnormal behaviours. While finding information of pretty much any neurological conditions can be done on the internet, seeing them on a video and having an expert analysing them with you can be priceless especially when dealing with conditions which are episodic. Often these patients can be totally normal when presented to you. Smartphones also help in cases where cats won’t walk in consult rooms or for nervous dogs that dislike vet visits. Owners can record their pets moving naturally at home, reducing stress for the animal and giving us a clear view of what concerns the owner. When faces with a discrepancy between a pet owner who is clearly worried about what they have witnessed and a pet who does not give any clinical clue on examination, the temptation can be high to (re-)act by running lots of tests which are often prescribed ‘blindly’ hoping to find these clues. Many of the episodic conditions we will cover often do not show up on any tests making their diagnosis even more challenging. The take home message is if you are not sure ask for the owner to obtain a video before embarking on any diagnostic procedure especially if the animal is normal on examination.
You will be able to join the live webinar directly from this page.
When is it?
Australia and New Zealand
USA and Canada
Other Countries
Australia and New Zealand
Date: Wednesday, 23 July 2025
Time: 19:30 AEST [Sydney] | 21:30 NZST [Auckland]
Time: 19:30 AEST [Sydney] | 21:30 NZST [Auckland]
USA and Canada
Date: Wednesday, 23 July 2025
Time: 05:30 EDT
Time: 05:30 EDT
Other Countries
All Countries are Invited to Join this Webinar! To check the time in your zone/country, please click here.
Note: This webinar is being recorded. If you are unable to attend the live lecture, a link to the recording will be shared with you a few days following the lecture.
Speaker

Dr Laurent Garosi
DVM, FRCVS, DipECVN – RCVS & EBVS® European recognised specialist in veterinary neurology
Laurent is a Diplomate of the European College of Veterinary Neurology (ECVN), RCVS/European Specialist in Veterinary Neurology and Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeon by meritorious contribution to clinical practice.
He is currently clinical director of a Teleradiology company called Vet Oracle, the first of its kind, offering off-site neuro-imaging (MRI and CT) and neurology/neurosurgery specialist advice across the globe as well as general imaging. His main clinical and research interests are cerebrovascular diseases, neuro-imaging, paroxysmal dyskinesia and feline neurology.
Laurent has published widely in the field of neurology and is a regular speaker on the national and international continuing education circuit. He is past president of the ECVN, past chief examiner of the ECVN examination committee, co-founder of the Facebook page Veterinary Neurology and co-editor with Simon Platt of a textbook on Small Animal Neurological Emergencies. He is the 2021 recipient of the WSAVA best speaker of the year and 2022 recipient of the BSAVA Bourgelat award for truly outstanding international contribution to the field of small animal practice.
Laurent has published widely in the field of neurology and is a regular speaker on the national and international continuing education circuit. He is past president of the ECVN, past chief examiner of the ECVN examination committee, co-founder of the Facebook page Veterinary Neurology and co-editor with Simon Platt of a textbook on Small Animal Neurological Emergencies. He is the 2021 recipient of the WSAVA best speaker of the year and 2022 recipient of the BSAVA Bourgelat award for truly outstanding international contribution to the field of small animal practice.