Ayman Ahmed Salem, DVM v. Virginia Board of Veterinary Medicine

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 2025
Docket1437234
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ayman Ahmed Salem, DVM v. Virginia Board of Veterinary Medicine (Ayman Ahmed Salem, DVM v. Virginia Board of Veterinary Medicine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ayman Ahmed Salem, DVM v. Virginia Board of Veterinary Medicine, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Beales, Athey and Callins Argued at Arlington, Virginia

AYMAN AHMED SALEM, DVM MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1437-23-4 JUDGE DOMINIQUE A. CALLINS MARCH 11, 2025 VIRGINIA BOARD OF VETERINARY MEDICINE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FREDERICK COUNTY Brian M. Madden, Judge

Michael E. Thorsen (Emily K. Blake; McGavin, Boyce, Bardot, Thorsen & Katz, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

James E. Rutkowski, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General; Robert B. Bell, Deputy Attorney General; Allyson K. Tysinger, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Laura Ann Booberg, Senior Assistant Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Dr. Ayman Ahmed Salem appeals the circuit court’s judgment affirming the decision of

the Virginia Board of Veterinary Medicine (the “Board”) suspending his license to practice

veterinary medicine in Virginia. Dr. Salem argues that the Board erred in finding that he

engaged in unprofessional conduct by violating certain provisions of the Regulations Governing

the Practice of Veterinary Medicine (the “Regulations”) because the Board did not hear expert

testimony establishing that he violated the Regulations. Dr. Salem also argues that the Board’s

findings were unsupported by sufficient factual evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm

the circuit court’s judgment.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND1

Prior to the current proceedings, Dr. Salem was a licensed veterinarian who operated two

veterinary practices in Virginia: Silver Spring Veterinary Hospital in Winchester and

Harrisonburg Veterinary Emergency Clinic in Harrisonburg. Between August 2006 and January

2022, the Board imposed discipline on Dr. Salem several times, including placing him on

probation from October 24, 2012, through September 23, 2013, and issuing him multiple

reprimands.

In 2021, the Virginia Department of Health Professions2 received complaints from five

dog owners who had brought their dogs to Dr. Salem for emergency medical care. After further

investigation, the Board voted to summarily suspend Dr. Salem’s license to practice veterinary

medicine in Virginia, pending a hearing. The Board subsequently sent Dr. Salem a notice of

formal administrative hearing with a statement of allegations against him and the specific

regulations the Board believed he had violated. A two-day hearing was conducted from July 28

to 29, 2022, before the Board president and four other Board members, all of whom were

licensed veterinarians. During the hearing, the Board heard evidence on Dr. Salem’s medical

treatment of the five dogs involved in the complaints: Tucker, Cal, Levi, Addison, and Snoopy.

I. Tucker

Curt Shade testified that he sought medical care for his dog Tucker after noticing that

Tucker was unable to urinate. Shade’s regular veterinarian was unavailable, so he took Tucker

to Dr. Salem’s Winchester hospital. Dr. Salem indicated to Shade that Tucker likely had bladder

stones. Shade observed Dr. Salem attempt several times to insert a catheter into Tucker’s

1 “On appeal, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Board, the party prevailing below.” Doe v. Va. Bd. of Dentistry, 52 Va. App. 166, 170 (2008). 2 The Virginia Board of Veterinary Medicine is a regulatory board within the Department of Health Professions. Code § 54.1-2503. -2- urethra. Dr. Salem recommended surgery, assuring Shade that he had experience with the

“routine” procedure. Shade left Tucker in Dr. Salem’s care. Several hours later, Dr. Salem

called Shade saying, “he couldn’t finish the surgery” and that Shade “needed to take [Tucker]

somewhere immediately or he was going to die.” After returning to Dr. Salem’s hospital, Shade

found Tucker “barely breathing” and “lifeless.” Shade immediately took Tucker to VCA Animal

Emergency Critical Care in Leesburg, where Shade learned that Tucker was “going blind,” his

“vitals were dangerously low,” and he needed another surgery.

Dr. Sienna Church, an emergency veterinarian at VCA, treated Tucker. She explained

that Dr. Salem had referred Shade to her facility and called her to inform her that Shade was on

the way. During that conversation, Dr. Salem advised Dr. Church of which drugs he had used to

sedate Tucker. Dr. Church testified that Tucker arrived at VCA in “critical” condition.

Dr. Church observed that Tucker was “[s]everely obtunded,” meaning that “he had no gag

reflex,” “very weak pulse,” and no “pupillary, light reflexes,” and Dr. Church was “unable to

obtain a blood pressure.” Based on Tucker’s condition and Dr. Salem’s description of the drugs

he used for Tucker’s surgery, Dr. Church concluded that Tucker was suffering from “[o]ver

sedation.” After Dr. Church administered a reversal agent, Tucker recovered his sight and

mental awareness after “a couple of days.” Tests revealed that Tucker “had urine in his

abdomen,” so Dr. Church recommended surgery. The surgeon who performed Tucker’s

operation found “multiple stones” in the urethra, “multiple blood clots” in the bladder, and saw

that the urinary bladder incision created in the prior surgery by Dr. Salem was leaking. Dr.

Church emphasized that after this kind of surgery “you should be making sure that all stones are

removed.”

Dr. Salem testified that while performing surgery on Tucker, the catheter became stuck

and he was unable to pass it, causing him to become “very upset.” Dr. Salem explained that he

-3- became “rushed” while closing the incision. Dr. Salem acknowledged that leakage is a typical

complication of the type of surgery he performed on Tucker and that he was “supposed to”

conduct a leakage test but was “not able to perform” the test on Tucker. Dr. Salem denied

over-sedating Tucker and claimed that Tucker had merely reacted badly to a normal dose of

anesthesia. When asked about the allegation that he did not maintain complete treatment records

of Tucker, Dr. Salem answered that he “did not complete it because the dog was feral to the

surgery.”

II. Cal

Taylor Swisher testified that she took her dog Cal to Dr. Salem’s Harrisonburg clinic

after Cal started vomiting “bowel yellow” liquid and became very lethargic and weak. Because

Cal’s condition worsened on a Sunday when Cal’s regular veterinary hospital was closed,

Swisher took Cal to Dr. Salem’s clinic. Swisher informed Dr. Salem that Cal had a history of

eating foreign objects, which had resulted in Cal needing exploratory surgery in the past. After

doing X-rays and a blood test on Cal, Dr. Salem told Swisher that he “didn’t see anything” on the

X-rays, but “the blood work was a little concerning.” Dr. Salem asked to keep Cal overnight but

offered no further explanation as to his concerns regarding Cal’s blood test results. Swisher

agreed to leave Cal overnight at the clinic. The next morning, Dr. Salem told Swisher over the

phone that Swisher could pick up Cal, and Swisher’s father-in-law went to the clinic to pick up

Cal. Dr. Salem provided “a whole bag of medications,” but did not indicate that Cal needed

further care from another veterinarian. Noticing that Cal continued to appear very sick, Swisher

decided to take him to Westwood Animal Hospital for additional treatment. At Westwood,

further X-rays and blood tests revealed that Cal’s blood work was normal, but he had a blockage.

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