Vetco Total Care operates the full-service veterinary hospital inside the Petco at 10410 Friars Road in Grantville, San Diego, staffing the clinic with licensed doctors of veterinary medicine who provide nose-to-tail wellness exams, vaccination protocols, diagnostic workups, dental cleanings, and surgical procedures for dogs and cats. Petco's national veterinary division runs more than 200 Vetco Total Care hospitals, and this Grantville location—designated Hospital 559 in the network—handles the full scope of primary-care and sick-pet visits from its position on the east Friars Road commercial corridor. The in-house diagnostic suite runs blood panels, urinalysis, and fecal screening during the appointment window so the attending veterinarian can review results before the client leaves. Walk-in healthy-weight assessments and microchip scans are available at no charge, and the clinic accepts CareCredit financing for procedures that exceed a single-visit budget. Cats and dogs recovering from dental extractions or soft-tissue procedures sometimes need post-operative grooming restrictions, and Paws & Bows Pet Grooming in College Area coordinates coat-care timelines with veterinary discharge notes. The 92120 ZIP code places the Petco building along east Friars Road near the 8 freeway interchange, drawing pet owners from Grantville, Allied Gardens, and the broader SDSU corridor who combine supply shopping with veterinary visits in a single stop. Select Vetco Total Care hospitals perform orthopedic and advanced soft-tissue surgeries, and availability varies by location—clients should call Hospital 559 directly to confirm procedural capabilities at this Friars Road site. Vaccination schedules follow AAHA and AAFP guidelines, with core and lifestyle-based protocols tailored to each pet's age, breed, and exposure risk. Pet owners in the broader Grantville area also source specialized diets and supplements from Our Feathered Friends in Allied Gardens, which stocks species-specific nutrition across birds, reptiles, and small mammals. The hospital's digital dental-radiography system captures full-mouth imaging sets that reveal sub-gingival pathology—root resorption, periapical abscesses, and alveolar bone loss—invisible to a visual oral exam alone.