Tracey Ritzman
Veterinarian
Carolinas Veteterinary Care Clinic
Neoplasia of Exotic Companion Mammals

Dr. Ritzman’s clinical work focuses on non-traditional animals such as birds (companion and wild), exotic mammals (ferrets, rabbits, rodents, chinchillas, guinea pigs), reptiles, and fish. She is board-certified through the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners in Avian and Exotic Companion Mammals.
Dr. Ritzman is a veterinarian at Carolinas Veterinary Care Clinic in Huntersville, North Carolina. She also provides medical and surgical veterinary care raptors, at the Carolina Raptor Center in the Charlotte area.
Jacobo Romano Noriega
Zoological Medicine Resident
Université de Montréal
Behavioral Evaluation of Corn Snakes (Pantherophis guttatus) with Renal Disease
Treatment of a Mummified Fetus by Unilateral Hysterectomy in a Cownose Ray (Rhinoptera bonasus)

Jacobo Romano Noriega is a third-year zoological medicine resident at the University of Montreal in St-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada. Dr. Noriega completed his veterinary studies in Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico. He then completed a small animal rotating internship at Purdue University, followed by an avian and exotics specialty internship at the Schwarzman Animal Medical Center in New York.
Miranda Sadar
Associate Professor
Colorado State University
Causes of Mortality in Sugar Gliders (Petaurus breviceps) Presented to Colorado State University
Diagnosis and Treatment of an Oral, Migrating Foreign Body Penetrating the Spinal Cord in a Rabbit
Mycoplasma spp. Pneumonia and Subsequent Pulmonary Hypertension in a Domestic Ferret
Comparison of a Point-Of-Care Assay and Laboratory Analyzer for Cardiac Troponin I in Guinea Pigs
Amylase as a Predictor of Mortality in Guinea Pigs (Cavia porcellus)

Dr. Miranda Sadar is a graduate of Colorado State University. She completed a one-year specialty internship at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. After finishing a two-year fellowship at the Wildlife Center of Virginia, she completed a zoological residency at the University of California, Davis. Dr. Sadar worked at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine for two years prior to moving back to Colorado State University, where she is an Associate Professor.