<p style="text-align: center"><span style="color: rgb(255,255,255)"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman'"><font face="Verdana" size="6"><br />
</font></span><span style="font-size: xx-large"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman'"><font face="Verdana">ARKLE Veterinary Care</font></span></span></span></p>


ARKLE Veterinary Care

shimshimshim
none
shim
shim
shim

ARKLE Veterinary Care has tried to organize information about pet care, diseases, treatments and routine home care for you on this website. 

There is so much information available for pet owners it can be very overwhelming.  Also realize that you need to be very careful researching your pet's condition on the internet. Some websites are wonderful sources of helpful and accurate information, but other sites may be incomplete, or worse yet, just plain wrong.  Be very careful and always remember that "free advice may only be worth what you paid for it", "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing" and "just because it is in print does not make a thing true or accurate". Your veterinarian is the first, best source of information about properly caring for your pet.

If you are a first time pet owner, or just have a specific question about your pet's basic health care, our Pet Health Questions Answered page may have just what you need. 

If you want to look up a disease or health problem or medication for your pet please visit the VIN Library (Veterinary Internet Network) The Veterinary Information Network, or VIN, is the world's first and largest online veterinary community, where new articles are added weekly by the experts at VIN to make sure that our readers have the most current veterinary information available. Dr. Levinson frequently visits the VIN website to learn, consult with specialists and research the latest information to help provide for your pet's best care.

You can also learn about a disease or medication that has been prescribed for your pet on our Lifelearn Cliented On-line library.  If you are a first time pet owner, or find the language in the VIN Library a little too technical for your taste, the Lifelearn library may be a better choice.


 

shim