Susan E. Johnson
Ohio State University
32 Papers
129 Citations
Susan E. Johnson is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 32 publications.
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Papers
Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis in 11 Dogs with a History of Phenobarbital Administration (1995–2002)
Philip A. March,Andrew Hillier,Steven E. Weisbrode,John S. Mattoon,Susan E. Johnson,Stephen P. DiBartola,Peter J. Brofman +6 more
TL;DR: Dogs in the SND/PB group accounted for 44% of all histologically confirmed cases of SND that were evaluated at The Ohio State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital between 1995 and 2002 and Chronic administration of PB requires further examination as a potential risk factor for the development of S ND.
70
•Journal Article
Visceral leishmaniasis in an English foxhound from an Ohio research colony.
Cheryl L. Swenson,Silverman J,Paul C. Stromberg,Susan E. Johnson,David A. Wilkie,Kathryn A. Eaton,Gary J. Kociba +6 more
TL;DR: Visceral leishmaniasis was diagnosed in a 5-year-old English Foxhound born and housed in an Ohio research colony and postmortem examination revealed widely disseminated Leishmania amastigotes within macrophages.
47
Toddlers' Differential Susceptibility to the Effects of Coparenting on Social-Emotional Adjustment.
Lauren E. Altenburger,Sarah N. Lang,Sarah J. Schoppe-Sullivan,Claire M. Kamp Dush,Susan E. Johnson +4 more
TL;DR: A study which tested whether infants high in negative affectivity are differentially susceptible to observed coparenting behavior in relation to their subsequent social–emotional development found partial support for the differential susceptibility hypothesis.
31
Hepatic Abscesses Associated With Diabetes Mellitus in Two Dogs
TL;DR: Two diabetic dogs presented for anorexia, persistent fever, and poor control of hyperglycemia suggest an association between diabetes mellitus and hepatic abscessation.
26
•Journal Article
Systemic mycosis caused by Acremonium sp in a dog.
TL;DR: Findings indicated that Acremonium spp can be pathogenic and should not be ignored when cultured, and was initially considered a contaminant.
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