Michael O. Childress
Purdue University
43 Papers
124 Citations
Michael O. Childress is an academic researcher from Purdue University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 37 publications. Previous affiliations of Michael O. Childress include University of Missouri.
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Papers
Prospective trial of metronomic chlorambucil chemotherapy in dogs with naturally occurring cancer.
T. N. Leach,Michael O. Childress,S. N. Greene,Ahmed Mohamed,George E. Moore,D. R. Schrempp,S. R. Lahrman,Deborah W. Knapp +7 more
TL;DR: Chlorambucil given in a metronomic protocol showed antitumor activity in dogs with a variety of naturally occurring cancers.
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Hematologic Abnormalities in the Small Animal Cancer Patient
TL;DR: Although cancer-related hematologic abnormalities are frequently described in the veterinary literature, the incidence, prevalence, and clinical significance of these abnormalities are less well-defined.
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Characterization and treatment of transitional cell carcinoma of the abdominal wall in dogs: 24 cases (1985–2010)
Takashi Higuchi,Grant N. Burcham,Michael O. Childress,Jacob J. Rohleder,Patty L. Bonney,José A. Ramos-Vara,Deborah W. Knapp +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that ABWTCC is uncommon, but once TCC becomes established and clinically detectable in the abdominal wall, it carries a poor prognosis and it is crucial to minimize risk of TCC seeding at surgery.
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Retrospective analysis of factors affecting clinical outcome following CHOP-based chemotherapy in dogs with primary nodal diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
TL;DR: Presence of thrombocytopenia, greater age, higher neutrophil count, and higher serum globulin concentration all may be associated with a particularly poor outcome in dogs receiving CHOP-based chemotherapy for DLBCL.
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Results of biopsy via transurethral cystoscopy and cystotomy for diagnosis of transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder and urethra in dogs: 92 cases (2003–2008)
Michael O. Childress,Larry G. Adams,José A. Ramos-Vara,Lynetta J. Freeman,Shuang He,Peter D. Constable,Deborah W. Knapp +6 more
TL;DR: Cystoscopic biopsy is an effective method to obtain biopsy samples in dogs with TCC of the bladder and urethra and Cystoscopy is more likely to produce a diagnostic-quality biopsy sample in female dogs withTCC than in male dogsWith TCC.
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