ICAR JRF Veterinary Science (Code 13) — anatomy, reproduction, medicine, parasitology, pharmacology, pathology, microbiology, surgery, and public health.
ICAR JRF Veterinary Science usually covers anatomy, reproduction and gynaecology, medicine, parasitology, pharmacology and toxicology, pathology, microbiology, surgery and radiology, and veterinary public health and epidemiology.
Veterinary Science is commonly listed as Code 13 in the ICAR AIEEA PG subject groups. Students often search this code first to confirm they are preparing the correct syllabus stream.
Most students prioritize pathology, microbiology, pharmacology, parasitology, medicine, reproduction, and public health because these areas carry dense concepts and repeat strongly in question-bank style revision.
Yes. Pathology is one of the most important scoring areas because students are often tested on lesions, disease processes, inflammation, degeneration, necrosis, neoplasia, and systemic pathology basics.
A practical approach is to revise organism groups, morphology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, host association, vectors, and disease-control basics through short tables instead of long unstructured reading.
Yes. Drug classification, mechanism basics, dosage logic, toxic syndromes, antidotes, and therapeutic applications are common and highly testable areas in veterinary-science preparation.
Yes. Zoonoses, milk and meat hygiene, food safety, epidemiology, and public-health principles are practical scoring areas that students often search because they connect veterinary science with real-world impact.
Yes. Previous year questions help students identify repeating themes such as disease agents, lesions, pharmacology definitions, parasitic diseases, reproductive terminology, and public-health concepts.
Most students revise fastest with subject-wise summary sheets, disease-agent tables, pathology and pharmacology quick lists, public-health notes, and focused PYQ practice instead of rereading all source material.