Ken Ton Animal Clinic – Vets in Tonawanda
Clinic Overview
Ken Ton Animal Clinic is an independent veterinary clinic in Tonawanda, New York. It treats dogs, cats, birds, and a range of exotic and small mammal pets, including rabbits, ferrets, and guinea pigs. The clinic offers wellness care, surgery, dental services, in-house laboratory testing, and digital radiology.
Ken Ton Animal Clinic is an independent veterinary clinic in Tonawanda, New York. It treats dogs, cats, birds, and a range of exotic and small mammal pets, including rabbits, ferrets, and guinea pigs. The clinic offers wellness care, surgery, dental services, in-house laboratory testing, and digital radiology. For care outside normal hours, it lists referral hospitals rather than in-house emergency service.
Services
- •Wellness exams and vaccinations
- •Puppy wellness care
- •Medical diagnosis and treatment for health conditions
- •Spay and neuter surgery
- •Soft tissue surgery, including mass removals, urinary bladder surgery, hernia repair, and foreign body surgery
- •Select orthopedic surgery, including ACL repair, femoral head ostectomy, and amputations
- •Wound care
- •Dental cleanings and dental extractions
- •General anesthesia with monitoring of heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and other vital signs
- •In-house diagnostic laboratory testing, including CBC, chemistry profiles, cytology, fecal testing, urinalysis, and blood tests
- •Digital radiology (digital X-rays)
- •Species seen include dogs, cats, birds, rabbits, ferrets, guinea pigs, other small mammals, and exotic pets
- •Out-of-hours referral hospitals listed: BluePearl Pet Hospital and Orchard Park Veterinary Medical Center
Pricing
No published pricing information is available for this clinic.
People
Peter Freyburger, DVM, is listed as a veterinarian. Eilis, LVT, is listed as hospital administrator.
Reviews
Google lists a 4.7/5 rating from 550 reviews. Recent written comments mention caring doctors and staff, puppy care, and supportive end-of-life care for a chinchilla, including a handwritten card and urn. One recent review describes a traumatic cat euthanasia visit, citing difficulty placing an IV, concerns about sedation, and dissatisfaction with the follow-up response.

