Kurt Selberg

Kurt Selberg is a North Idaho native; where his family owned a quarter horse ranch. After completing his doctorate in veterinary medicine from Washington State University, he completed an equine sports medicine internship at Virginia Equine Imaging in Middleburg, VA. He received his training in diagnostic imaging from Colorado State University and is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Radiologists. Following his residency he completed fellowship in advanced imaging with training from Colorado State University and from Musculoskeletal Radiologists in Fort Collins, CO. He was an Assistant Professor of equine diagnostic imaging at the University of Georgia for 4 years before returning to an equine diagnostic imaging position at Colorado State University in September of 2016.
Kurt Selberg – Field Guide to Better Imaging
Kurt Selberg – the Mysteries of the Digital Sheath
Kurt Selberg – Ultrasound for the SL
Sue Dyson

Sue Dyson qualified as a veterinarian from the University of Cambridge in 1980. After an internship at the University of Pennsylvania and a year in private equine practice in Pennsylvania, Sue returned to Great Britain to the Animal Health Trust, Newmarket. Sue ran a clinical referral service for lameness and poor performance, attracting clients from all over the United Kingdom, Ireland and continental Europe for 37 years. From 2019 she has worked as an independent consultant, combining her horsemanship skills with her veterinary experience, with the aim of maximising performance potential.
Sue Dyson – SI or not SI That is the question
Sue Dyson – The pain ethogram of the ridden horse
Patrick McCue

Dr. Patrick McCue was raised on a small family farm in rural northern New York State. He received a bachelor’s degree from Potsdam State University and attended graduate school at the University of Montana. Dr. McCue graduated from veterinary school at the University of California, Davis, in 1986. He subsequently completed an internship in Large Animal Medicine and Surgery at the University of Pennsylvania and a residency in Equine Reproduction at the University of California, Davis. He became a Diplomate of the American College of Theriogenologists in 1991 and received a PhD in Comparative Pathology, with an emphasis on reproductive endocrinology and ovarian pathology in the mare, from UC-Davis in 1992. Dr. McCue joined the faculty at Colorado State University in 1994 as an Assistant Professor with dual roles in Equine Field Service and Equine Reproduction. He was honored to be named the Iron Rose Ranch Chair of Equine Reproduction in 2007. Dr. McCue retired from CSU as a tenured Professor of Equine Theriogenology in 2024 after 30 years of service.
Patrick McCue – Equine Embryo Transfer – Mangagement of Donor Mare
Patrick McCue – Equine Embryo Transfer-Mangagement of Recipient Mares
Patrick McCue – Evaluation of Equine Embryos
Patrick McCue – The Art of Transferring Embryos
Patrick McCue – Breeding the Post-Partum Mare
Patrick McCue – Reproductive Problems of the Post-Partum Mare
Charlotte Hopster-Iversen

Charlotte Hopster-Iversen is an Associate Professor in Equine Internal Medicine at the University of Copenhagen and a Diplomate of the European College of Equine Internal Medicine (ECEIM). She holds a PhD from the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover, Germany. Her research focuses on equine cardiology and poor performance, with collaborations across Europe and the US. Dr. Hopster-Iversen is actively involved in various veterinary organizations.
Charlotte Hopster-Iversen – Cardiology
Charlotte Hopster-Iversen – Poor Performance
Nanna Luthersson

Nanna qualified from the Royal Danish Vet. School in 1992. She has been working in different equine practices in Denmark and joined Hestedoktoren as a partner in 2007.
Her main interests are GI problems, endocrinological problems, laminitis and nutrition. She has been involved in educational programs and courses in equine nutrition, equine endocrinological diseases, GI problems and laminitis during the last 15 years.
She has been involved in many research projects concerning equine gastric ulceration and laminitis. The gastric ulcer research has been focusing on prevalence and risk factors. During the last few years she has been in charge of several research projects in Iceland looking at gastric ulcers in Iceland, both horses in nature and human management.
Nanna is the author of several textbooks in equine nutrition and has also performed specialist advisor tasks in the equine feed industry.
Nanna Luthersson – Nutrition & EGUS
Claudia Hartley

Specialist in veterinary ophthalmology working across four themes: clinical excellence, clinical research, teaching (both undergraduate and postgraduate) and charitable work (largely revolving around animal welfare). Contributor to textbooks on veterinary ophthalmology, peer-reviewed journal publications and non-peer reviewed literature for scientists, medical ophthalmologists, veterinary practitioners and the general public (mostly pet owners). Served on numerous veterinary committees both nationally and internationally, and more recently as a trustee for Free the Bears UK. Local, national, and international speaker on veterinary ophthalmology at conferences, congresses, continuing professional development institutions and events.
Claudia Hartley – Ophthalmology Immune-mediated Keratitis
Claudia Hartley – Ophthalmology PPE
Johan Bröjer

Johan Bröjer is a Professor of Equine Internal Medicine at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU). He is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine (large animals) and Diplomate of the European College of Equine Internal Medicine. Dr. Bröjer holds an MSc from the University of Guelph, Canada and a PhD from the SLU, both in the area of equine exercise physiology. Dr. Bröjer is a research leader for the Swedish equine endocrinology team at the SLU. The research has focused on pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment of equine insulin dysregulation. Currently, he is focusing on pharmacological treatment of insulin dysregulated horses with SGLT-2 inhibitors. These research projects are in collaboration with Uppsala Diabetes Centre, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU) and the District Veterinarians in Sweden.
Insulindysregulation
Neurology
Neurologic or lame
Sigríður Björnsdóttir

Sigríður Björnsdóttir Graduated from the Norwegian College of Veterinary medicine in 1992
She has the position of Senior Veterinary Officer for Horses at the Icelandic Food and Veterinary Authority since 1994 and has been Visiting Professor at the Agricultural University of Iceland since 2020.
She has a PhD in Clinical Radiology from the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Dept. of Clinical Radiology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences 2002. Her thesis was called Bone spavin in Icelandic horses – Aspects of predisposition, pathogenesis and prognosis, and she has since published multiple times on this subject. Other areas of her research are Summer eczema in Icelandic horses, gait analysis, epidemiology and bit-related lesions of the mouth of competition horses.
What’s new on bone spavin?
Managing Icelandics
Elin Hernlund

Elin Hernlund, DVM, Ph.D is a researcher in biomechanics, clinician with a
focus on equine orthopedics and a teacher in functional and applied anatomy
of the equine locomotor apparatus, with a base at the Swedish University of
Agricultural Sciences. As a post-doc researcher, she is also involved in
several different research projects with a keen interest in enhancing the use of
AI as an ancillary tool to aid in detecting subtle lameness in the horse.
Hernlund & Rhodin – Measuring Lameness with Objective Methods
Marie Rhodin

Marie Rhodin, DVM, Ph.D, DACVSMR/ECVSMR is an associate
Professor in equine clinical biomechanics at the department of Anatomy,
Physiology and Biochemistry, Swedish University of Agricultural
Sciences. Her main research focus is orthopedic diagnostics, orthopaedic
pain and objective motion analysis in horses, horse-rider interaction.