Meridian Veterinary Services

Meridian Veterinary Services Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Meridian Veterinary Services, Pet service, 105 University Boulevard W, Silver Spring, MD.

Lead by Dr. Leanne Lipton, BS, DVM, CVA, CVSM, CVC, CVTN, CVFT, we at Meridian Veterinary Services strive to treat you and your pet as part of our family, ensuring you feel welcome and confident from your pet's general to holistic medical care. A small animal (dogs and cats) veterinary practice for integrative medicine which includes:

• Acupuncture
• Chiropractic
• Tui-Na (Chinese Therape

utic Massage)
• Homeopathy
• Chinese Herbs
• Physical Therapy
• Nutritional Counseling
• Prolotherapy
• Orthotics
• Non-Sedation Dentals

We also offer Annual Wellness visits to update your pet's vaccines, some general surgical procedures like spays, neuters, sedated dental cleanings and growth removals and puppyhood to geriatric appointments.

🌸 No Lilies for Kitties — A Simple Rule That Saves LivesMany cat owners are unaware that Lilies are one of the most dang...
03/24/2026

🌸 No Lilies for Kitties — A Simple Rule That Saves Lives

Many cat owners are unaware that Lilies are one of the most dangerous toxins for Cats. Even a small exposure—such as chewing a leaf, licking pollen from their fur, or drinking water from a vase—can lead to Acute Kidney Failure in less than three days and may be fatal without prompt treatment.

True Lilies (Lilium species) and Daylilies (Hemerocallis species), including Easter Lily, Tiger Lily, Asiatic Lily, and Stargazer Lily, are especially toxic to Cats. Because these flowers are common in bouquets and seasonal arrangements, accidental exposure happens more often than many people realize.

🚨 If your Cat ingests any part of a Lily, this is a Medical Emergency.
Pet Owners should Call Pet Poison Helpline or bring the Cat and the Plant to a Veterinarian as soon as possible. Early treatment—ideally within the first few hours—greatly improves the chances of recovery.

📞 Pet Poison Helpline: 855-764-7661
💲 Consultation Fee: approximately $49 per Incident, which includes follow-up guidance for the duration of the poisoning case.

As we move into Spring and holiday seasons when flowers are more common in homes, awareness is critical. Prevention is simple: Keep Lilies Out of Homes With Cats and Choose Pet-Safe Flowers Instead.

Protecting Pets starts with education—and sharing this message could save a life.

Infographic created by: Pet Poison Helpline

Lawn spray season starts this week. And March is the worst possible timing for everything living in the soil.Ground-nest...
03/17/2026

Lawn spray season starts this week. And March is the worst possible timing for everything living in the soil.

Ground-nesting bees are active right now — mining bees and sweat bees that nest in bare soil patches between grass blades. They make up the majority of native bee species. A lawn treatment in March hits them during their most exposed period, when they're nesting at the surface.

Firefly larvae are in the top few inches of soil right now, where they've been developing for a year or more. They won't become the fireflies you see in June for another few months. A March application reaches them at a stage you can't see and won't connect to the missing lightshow in summer.

Earthworms are migrating upward through the thaw line this week. They're at peak density in the top layer of soil — exactly where the treatment lands. The same earthworms that aerate your soil and feed the robins nesting in your yard.

Robin pairs nesting near untreated lawns consistently fledge more chicks than pairs near treated ones. The difference comes down to food supply — nestlings eat almost exclusively soil invertebrates for the first two weeks of life. Fewer worms and larvae in the soil means fewer surviving chicks.

The lawn can handle a few w**ds in March. The soil biology that supports everything above it handles the chemicals much less well.

🌿 How to get the timing right:

- Push the first lawn treatment back to late April or May — by then ground-nesting bees have finished their early cycle, earthworms have dispersed deeper, and firefly larvae are less concentrated at the surface
- Spot-treat problem areas instead of broadcasting across the full lawn — most of the yard doesn't need it
- Mow at three and a half inches — taller grass shades out most w**d seedlings naturally without chemicals
- If you use a lawn service, call this week and ask what they're applying and when. You have the right to adjust the schedule
- An untreated lawn with healthy soil biology often looks better by midsummer than a treated one — the earthworms, fungi, and microbes that chemicals remove are the same organisms that build the root structure your grass depends on

One timing change protects the soil biology that makes the lawn work in the first place 🌿

Created by Kindness for All Living Beings

That turtle on the log at the park pond — the one basking in the weak March sun with her legs stretched out like she has...
03/17/2026

That turtle on the log at the park pond — the one basking in the weak March sun with her legs stretched out like she hasn't moved in months.

She hasn't.

I'm the Painted Turtle. I just survived five months underwater without surfacing to breathe.

In October, when the water dropped below fifty degrees, I sank to the bottom and buried myself in the mud. Stopped eating. My heart rate dropped from forty beats per minute to roughly one beat every ten minutes.

But I still needed oxygen.

My body solved it. I have specialized tissue that absorbs dissolved oxygen directly from the water — through my cloaca. For five months I've been breathing very slowly through my rear end, buried in mud, without moving, in water just above freezing.

As oxygen ran low, my body switched to producing energy without it — like a sprinter in the final stretch of a race. The byproduct is lactic acid. To buffer it, my shell dissolved calcium carbonate into my bloodstream. My skeleton was neutralizing my own blood chemistry to keep me alive.

I used my bones to survive not breathing.

Right now I'm on this log because I need sunlight. My vitamin D is depleted. My muscles haven't fired in five months. I'm slow because I'm relearning how to be a land animal after being a submarine all winter.

🐢 If you see a turtle on a log in March:

- Don't approach, touch, or throw anything to see if it's alive — it's alive, and it's recovering from something harder than anything else in your neighborhood went through
- Basking is critical right now — every minute of sun restores body temperature, vitamin D, and muscle function
- If you see one crossing a road, help it across in the direction it was heading — but carry it low to the ground and never by the tail
- Painted turtles return to the same pond year after year — the one on that log has probably been wintering there longer than you've been visiting

Five months underwater. No air. No food. No movement.

And the first thing she did when the ice melted was climb onto a log and face the sun 🌿

Created by Kindness for All Living Beings

My Dearest Human,If you’re reading this, it means there’s still a gentle place in your heart where my small paws once re...
03/17/2026

My Dearest Human,

If you’re reading this, it means there’s still a gentle place in your heart where my small paws once rested. I can feel that place too. I feel it in the quiet moments when memories arrive without warning… and in the silence when you notice the space beside you is no longer filled the way it used to be.

But I want to share something with you softly.

When I took my last breath, it wasn’t the end of us. It was only the end of the pain my body carried.

When you whispered goodbye, something peaceful happened. The heaviness faded. The tiredness lifted. It felt as if warm light wrapped around me, carrying every ache away. I was surrounded by a calm so gentle it felt like love itself holding me.

And then I saw it — a bridge shining with colors brighter than any rainbow you’ve ever seen.

Before stepping onto it, I looked back at you. I saw your shaking hands and the tears you tried so hard to hide. I saw how deeply you loved me.

If I could have spoken your language in that moment, I would have said:
Please don’t feel guilty.
Please don’t wonder if you did enough.
You gave me everything.
You loved me all the way here.

As I crossed the bridge, each step carried a memory of us — your laughter, the quiet evenings we shared, the mornings when you smiled at me, and the ordinary days that felt special simply because we were together.

I wasn’t alone. There were other beloved animals here too — cats, dogs, loyal companions — each carrying the love of someone who misses them just as much as you miss me.

Here, there is no pain. I can stretch and run again without feeling tired. I can rest peacefully, the way I used to when I curled beside you. The air is warm, the light is soft, and everything feels safe.

So what do I do now?

I wait.

Not with sadness. Not with loneliness.

I wait the way I always did — the way I waited by the door, certain that you would come home. Time here feels different, like a quiet pause between heartbeats.

I still remember your voice. I still remember the way you said my name. I remember your hands, your laughter, and the comfort of being near you. You didn’t just give me shelter — you gave me a place where I truly belonged.

That love didn’t disappear when I left. It simply changed form.

When sunlight suddenly warms your face…
When you feel a calm you can’t explain…
When you sense something gentle and familiar near you…

That isn’t your imagination.
That’s love.
That’s us.

You did enough. You were enough. You will always be enough.

Don’t let the sadness of my last day erase the beauty of all the days we shared. Hold on to the laughter, the quiet moments, and the way we understood each other without needing words.

And one day — far from now — when your own path grows quiet and peaceful, you will see that bridge too.

And when you do…

I will run to you with bright eyes and a happy heart, whole and free again.

And you will understand something wonderful.

I was never truly gone.

I was only waiting.

Until that day, live kindly. Love again when your heart is ready. Smile when you remember me. Let my memory bring warmth instead of only tears.

I am still yours. Still near. Still loving you with every soft purr carried on the light.

Forever your kitten,
waiting patiently for the sound of your footsteps again. 🌈🐾

Created by I Love Pets

Keeping up with routine care helps pets stay comfortable and healthy.For a limited time, Meridian Veterinary Services is...
03/12/2026

Keeping up with routine care helps pets stay comfortable and healthy.
For a limited time, Meridian Veterinary Services is offering a special bundle for $39.59 that includes:
A Professional orthopedic nail trim and Thorough a**l gland expression
Regular nail trims help prevent discomfort, posture issues, and joint strain. A**l gland expression can help relieve irritation and prevent more serious problems.
If your pet has been scooting, licking the rear area, or if their nails are getting a little too long, this is a great time to schedule a quick visit.
📞 Call us to book
Meridian Veterinary Services
Integrative care for the whole pet.

We love seeing relationships develop between "siblings".  We think Bodhi (black/tan) is appreciative of his new "sister"...
02/17/2026

We love seeing relationships develop between "siblings". We think Bodhi (black/tan) is appreciative of his new "sister" playmate Cali!

I believe Marley (on our left) has accepted her new "little" sister Penny.  They snuggle on the couch, in their crate, o...
02/09/2026

I believe Marley (on our left) has accepted her new "little" sister Penny. They snuggle on the couch, in their crate, on dad's lap, everywhere! Too sweet.

We could not agree more with this.  We have been hosting Dazzling Canines, more specifically Tara, for almost 3 years.  ...
02/03/2026

We could not agree more with this. We have been hosting Dazzling Canines, more specifically Tara, for almost 3 years. She is incredibly skilled, patient, calm, knowledgeable and gentle with our patients. We are fortunate to have her visit us once a month to offer her services to our patients. For more information, call us 301-593-3749.

I'm thrilled to introduce Tara McElhinney, veterinary technician, animal aromatherapist, canine dental care specialist, and truly one of the most compassionate animal professionals I know.

Tara has worked with animals for over a decade, blending her experience as a veterinary technician with holistic tools like essential oils, Reiki, and fear-free handling to bring comfort and healing to anxious dogs and those needing dental care. And her results speak for themselves… just wait until you hear her story about Bella the rescue Chihuahua.

In this interview, she shares how essential oils helped transform Bella from an aggressive, fearful pup into a loving, snuggly companion and how oils like Lavender, Vetiver, Peace, and Copaiba help her calm even the most anxious dogs during dental cleanings.

🎥 Click Here to Watch the Interview on YouTube
➡️ https://youtu.be/nePgubMW68Y

🌿 Want to Work with Tara? Here’s How:
Tara offers in-person and virtual sessions and is currently serving Colorado, Maryland, Virginia, Washington DC, and Georgia (with plans to expand!).

🖥 Website: www.dazzling-canines.com
📧 Email: [email protected]
🐾Animal Aromatherapy Consultant Page: essentialoilvet.com/aromatherapist/tara-mcelhinney

📱 Connect with Tara on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/1DifrR1Dg8
and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dazzlingcaninesllc

Whether your dog struggles with anxiety, oral health, or overall wellness, Tara’s holistic approach can make a meaningful difference.

I’m so honored to feature her unique expertise! Please take a moment to watch our conversation, and don’t hesitate to reach out to Tara if you feel drawn to work with her. She’s incredible, and your animals will be in very good hands.

The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show is this weekend.  Staying inside to watch this is a much better idea than being out...
01/29/2026

The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show is this weekend. Staying inside to watch this is a much better idea than being outside! Here’s your official streaming schedule for the 150th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show 📺 From Flyball and Agility to Breed Judging to Junior Showmanship and Best in Show, you won’t miss a second of the action. Save this post and set your reminders — starts soon.

The Westminster Kennel Club, established in 1877, is America's oldest non-profit organization dedicated to the sport showing of dogs.

One of our patients is the model for this calendar!  It contains humor, advice and motivational suggestions.  Proceeds f...
01/27/2026

One of our patients is the model for this calendar! It contains humor, advice and motivational suggestions. Proceeds from the sales support the senior rescue that Hershey was adopted through. We are very proud of this little man!

Amazon link: https://a.co/d/61l8M8g
IG: seniorpupwisdom

To keep our patients, clients and staff safe, we will be closed on Monday, January 26th.  We hope everyone is staying wa...
01/25/2026

To keep our patients, clients and staff safe, we will be closed on Monday, January 26th. We hope everyone is staying warm and comfortable.

Address

105 University Boulevard W
Silver Spring, MD
20901

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 7pm
Tuesday 10am - 7pm
Wednesday 10am - 7pm
Thursday 10am - 7pm
Sunday 10am - 2pm

Telephone

+13015933749

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