I operate across two settings in the San Fernando Valley and Northern Los Angeles: mobile at primary-care hospitals for routine and elective procedures, and at Bixby Animal Specialty & Emergency (Tuesday through Friday) for cases that require 24-hour care, multispecialty involvement, or advanced imaging.
ACVS Diplomate — a credential held only by surgeons who complete a rigorous residency and pass written and oral board examinations.
For routine and elective cases, I bring specialty instrumentation, implants, and orthopedic power equipment to your hospital's operating room.
For cases requiring 24-hour care, multispecialty support, or advanced imaging, I operate Tuesday–Friday at Bixby Animal Specialty & Emergency.
Every referral begins with a review of the case and a recommendation of which setting fits — mobile, specialty hospital, or a different path entirely.
Nevis Vet Surgery & Orthopedics was founded on a straightforward premise: the surgical setting should match the patient. Routine and elective procedures on stable patients are often best kept at the hospital your clients already know — and in those cases I bring the specialty equipment and expertise to your operating room. Cases that require 24-hour monitoring, multispecialty involvement, or advanced imaging belong in a specialty hospital, where full ICU, critical care, and internal medicine support are immediately available.
For that second pathway, I operate Tuesday through Friday at Bixby Animal Specialty & Emergency. Every referral begins with a review of history, laboratory work, and imaging. I reply with a recommended pathway — mobile surgery at your hospital, or referral to Bixby — along with a surgical plan, an estimate, and anything that should be addressed pre-operatively. When the case is complex or the client would benefit from hearing directly from a specialist, I am glad to consult with owners in person, by phone, or by video.
The goal is a model that respects both tracks: your hospital's role in continuity of care for cases that fit that setting, and the resources of a specialty center for cases that deserve them.
Every referral begins with the same question: does this patient belong in a primary-care operating room with mobile surgical support, or at a specialty hospital with 24-hour care and multispecialty backup? Both are right answers — the question is which one fits this patient.
At your primary-care hospital, with your team.
Routine and elective procedures on stable patients with standard peri-operative care needs.
Mass excisions · MPL and TPLO in healthy dogs · cystotomy · pyometra · cesarean section · enucleation · anal sacculectomy · straightforward abdominal exploratory in stable patients · umbilical & inguinal herniorrhaphy.
I bring the specialty instrumentation, implants, and orthopedic power equipment. Your team provides the OR, anesthesia machine, licensed technician, medications, and peri-operative care.
At Bixby Animal Specialty & Emergency, Tuesday through Friday.
Cases requiring 24-hour monitoring, multispecialty involvement, advanced imaging, or an on-site ICU.
Unstable GDV with sepsis · hemoabdomen with coagulopathy · cases requiring CT · thoracic surgery with likely post-op ventilation · patients with significant cardiac or pulmonary comorbidities · complex fracture repair · revision surgery · major oncologic resection.
24-hour ICU and critical care, internal medicine, dedicated anesthesia team, CT, and on-site emergency service — the resources complex cases deserve.
Unsure which pathway fits? Send the case — pathway recommendation is part of every consult.
Procedures are grouped by system below. Not every procedure is listed — please call or email for anything not shown, or for multi-procedure and complex cases. A complete price sheet is available on request.
Most cases receive a surgical plan and estimate within 24 hours. Urgent and emergency cases are prioritized — call the cell directly.
If your regular veterinarian has referred you for surgery, here is what to expect. Not every pet needs the same kind of hospital to have the best outcome — so the first step is figuring out where your pet should have their procedure.
For many routine procedures, the best place is the hospital your pet already knows. I bring the specialty equipment and perform the surgery in your primary veterinarian's operating room, while their team — familiar faces to your pet — handles admission, anesthesia, monitoring, and recovery.
For more complex cases, your pet may be better served at a specialty hospital with 24-hour nursing, an intensive-care unit, and other specialists (internal medicine, emergency critical care) on site. In those cases I operate at Bixby Animal Specialty & Emergency, where the resources match what your pet needs.
Your veterinarian and I discuss which setting fits before anything is scheduled, so you know the plan in advance. I am always glad to speak with you directly — in person, by phone, or by video — to walk through what the surgery involves, what recovery looks like, and to answer any questions.
No matter which setting the surgery happens in, your primary veterinarian continues to care for your pet through recovery and for all the follow-up afterward. I send a written surgical summary you can keep for your records, and I remain available to your veterinarian for any post-operative questions that come up.
If you have questions and would like to speak with me directly before your pet's surgery, ask your veterinarian or reach out using the contact information below.
Gastric dilatation volvulus, septic abdomen, hemoabdomen, major traumatic wounds, and foreign-body obstructions rarely belong in a primary-care OR — these cases need ICU and 24-hour support. When availability permits, I accept them on-call at Bixby Animal Specialty & Emergency. Call or text the cell and I will reply with an ETA and triage guidance within minutes.
Primary coverage across the greater San Fernando Valley and adjacent Northern Los Angeles communities. Travel to hospitals outside this footprint is considered by request.
— Outside the Valley? Call to discuss travel.
The fastest path is a direct text or call to the cell. For case submissions with attached records or imaging, email is preferred. Most inquiries receive a reply within 24 hours.