Philip H. Kass
University of California, Davis
639 Papers
3.6K Citations
Philip H. Kass is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 621 publications. Previous affiliations of Philip H. Kass include Hebrew University of Jerusalem & University of Pretoria.
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Papers
•Journal Article
Dietary modulation of methotrexate-induced enteritis in cats.
TL;DR: Feeding of a complex diet containing intact protein as the nitrogen source abrogated the proximal small intestinal atrophy and bacterial translocation associated with feeding an amino acid-based purified diet.
15
Thick‐section reformatting of thinly collimated computed tomography for reduction of skull‐base‐related artifacts in dogs and horses
Yael Porat-Mosenco,Yael Porat-Mosenco,Tobias Schwarz,Tobias Schwarz,Philip H. Kass,Philip H. Kass +5 more
TL;DR: Thick-section reformatting significantly improves image quality of CT scans of the caudal fossa in dogs and horses through statistically significant reduction of artifacts and image noise.
15
A comparative randomized field trial on intramammary and intramuscular dry cow antibiotic treatment of subclinical Staphylococcus aureus mastitis in dairy cows.
TL;DR: The unfavourable results of the cefquinome systemic DCT might reflect inadequate pharmacokinetic properties of the drug regarding poor udder penetration in subclinical mastitis and short antimicrobial effect compared with the IMM treatment.
15
Effects of three fentanyl plasma concentrations on the minimum alveolar concentration of isoflurane in Hispaniolan Amazon parrots (Amazona ventralis)
Michelle G. Hawkins,Peter J Pascoe,Heather K Knych,Tracy L. Drazenovich,Philip H. Kass,David Sanchez-Migallon Guzman +5 more
TL;DR: Fentanyl significantly decreased the MACiso in healthy Hispaniolan Amazon parrots, but this was accompanied by a depressive effect on heart rate and blood pressure that would need to be considered for application of this technique in clinical settings.
15
Penetrating injuries to the frog (cuneus ungulae) and collateral sulci of the foot in equids: 63 cases (1998-2008).
TL;DR: Results suggested that penetrating injuries located centrally in the foot of equids without involvement of a synovial structure have a favorable prognosis, especially if managed early.
15