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1 group structure observed in the African wild dog.
2 essory olfactory systems of the African wild dog.
3 y of the auditory system of the African wild dog.
4 tia-like arrangement as seen in the domestic dog.
5 cies could be identified in the African wild dog.
6 the main olfactory bulb of the African wild dog.
7 epresentative individual of the African wild dog.
8 her carnivores, such as the domestic cat and dog.
9 t is associated with a form of PRA in the LA dog.
10 mal recessive 20 (SCAR20) in both humans and dogs.
11 ed to determine the genotypes of over 900 LA dogs.
12 r202Ala and Gly76Ser substitutions in single dogs.
13 s but were truncated after introduction into dogs.
14 similarly related to present-day wolves and dogs.
15 taTQST) were compared between OA and control dogs.
16 utoimmune process as a cause of sDM in adult dogs.
17 modeling (FLM), for healthy, adult companion dogs.
18 niasis in humans and canine leishmaniasis in dogs.
19 d PA-Xs were transmitted more efficiently in dogs.
20 mesocephalic, dolichocephalic and crossbred dogs.
21 pment and treatment of behaviour problems in dogs.
22 age, more than 7 times longer than untreated dogs.
23 epithelium of rodents, and in live conscious dogs.
24 say also identified liver injury in rats and dogs.
25 being reported with increasing frequency in dogs.
26 he epidemiology of guinea worm infections in dogs.
27 f 123 breeds determined it was private to LA dogs.
28 quantify the probability of rabies in biting dogs.
29 anda habitat is within the foray distance of dogs.
30 tion of these proteins among 81% of group II dogs.
31 lication, pathogenicity, and transmission in dogs.
32 over-generalisation of global age trends in dogs.
33 ancreas is not a likely cause of DM in these dogs.
34 simulations, ex vivo heart preparations, and dogs.
36 roaming dog populations: Liziping, with many dogs (~0.44/km(2)), and Daxiangling, with few dogs (~0.1
37 s: Eurasian and American wolves and domestic dogs.(1) Genetic studies have suggested these groups tra
40 re prevalent in domestic cat versus domestic dog (51%, n = 32 of 62 cats; 15%, 11 of 70 dogs were pos
41 istine and prednisone, where the majority of dogs achieve complete/partial response; however, it is v
43 the skin surface and dermal microbiota of 11 dogs affected by spontaneous mast cell tumor (MCT), usin
46 ased birth cohort we measured mite, cat, and dog allergen levels in dust samples collected from homes
47 cing the genomes of 10 modern Greenland sled dogs, an ~9500-year-old Siberian dog associated with arc
53 melanoleuca) were historically hunted using dogs and are currently threatened by free-roaming dogs a
56 rowth in the Shetland Sheepdog and toy breed dogs and confers risk for MCM through vertical pleiotrop
57 spositions and protections in brachycephalic dogs and explore differing inferences between univariabl
60 be normal sleep-wake cycles of healthy adult dogs and the effects of physiologic traits on these patt
62 o the family Canidae which includes domestic dogs and their closest relatives (i.e., wolves, coyotes,
65 group possess intermediate features between dogs and wolves.(6)(7) However, whether this morphologic
66 Elimination plasma half-life of ~20 h in dogs and ~70 h in man is achieved by a strong albumin bi
68 nd toxicology in vitro and in vivo (mice and dogs), and the biodistribution and clearance of pHLIP IC
69 cies, including those associated with human, dog, and mouse feces, exhibit AQI-dependent incidence dy
70 ion was found in Pomeranians and other small dogs, and a homozygous Arg219Pro change occurred predomi
75 voured foods are more often fed to cats than dogs, and such foods tend to have higher arsenic content
76 content of the vocalizations of African wild dogs, and the behaviors generated, occurs beyond the cla
78 zations within the brain of the African wild dog, apart from a relatively large brain size, the obser
79 tion leads to a lower BMF(lim) in a juvenile dog (approximately 35) compared to its older self, even
84 esults indicated that GI values for domestic dogs are largely consistent with what would be expected
86 canine influenza viruses (CIVs) prevalent in dogs are thought to pose a public health threat arising
88 ibe the scent marking activity of 3 guardian dogs as they defend livestock from coyote depredation in
89 tion of PA-X enhanced viral pathogenicity in dogs, as shown by aggravated clinical symptoms and histo
91 enland sled dogs, an ~9500-year-old Siberian dog associated with archaeological evidence for sled tec
93 l Ca(2+) wave activity in normal and failing dog atrial myocytes which occurs during the action poten
95 can improve detection of these conditions in dogs, benefitting them and their potential as models for
97 n programme with respect to the treatment of dog bites, ensuring availability of PEP, and continuing
98 tion index, all reveal that the African wild dog brain is, in general, similar to that of other mamma
102 nd DeltaTQST(p < 0.001) increased in control dogs but not OA dogs (DeltaMQST p = 0.65; DeltaTQST p =
105 ge of hosts including humans, pigs, ferrets, dogs, cats, hamsters, and at least 2 genera of bats.
106 group of hereditary retinal degenerations in dogs characterised by depletion of photoreceptor cells i
107 ost common chronic neurological condition in dogs, characterised by recurrent seizure activity and as
108 mation, within the brain of the African wild dog closely resembles that observed in other carnivores.
115 lation of MCT dermis, obtained only on three dogs, demonstrated an intra-individual reduction of taxa
118 research has used stable isotope analysis of dog diets for insight into human subsistence ('canine su
119 illance program was highly elevated when the dog displayed hypersalivation (OR = 34.6, 95% CI 11.3-10
121 haviors and potential singular origin during dog domestication make them an attractive, but elusive,
122 e of D. medinensis, but due to the method of dog drinking (lapping) compared to humans (suction and/o
123 ngs, we coded behavioural expressions of pet dogs during a real-life firework situation at New Year's
124 efficient glucose disposal in rats, pigs and dogs during constant intravenous infusion and euglycemic
125 When returning to the owner (homewards), dogs either followed their outbound track ('tracking') o
126 s, prion disease has never been described in dogs even though they were similarly exposed to the bovi
127 t owners in the UK are advised to have their dog examined through the British Veterinary Association/
129 2 immunodominant proteins were recognized by dogs experimentally and naturally infected with Bartonel
130 ain the ALS-associated cellular phenotype of dogs expressing the mutant SOD1 protein and reveals that
131 dentical visual stimuli (videos of human and dog faces and occiputs) were examined using functional m
134 any object as either a unique individual (my dog Fred) or a member of an object category (dog, animal
135 us in Liziping were clustered around remote "dog-free zones." Expanding this analysis across the enti
136 munity to P. kandelakii saliva in humans and dogs from Tbilisi is probably caused by insufficient exp
137 o vs. anti-oxidant minerals between cats and dogs, further in vivo balance studies are warranted.
142 ls, the olfactory system of the African wild dog has certain features that appear to correlate to the
144 are clinical and histopathological features, dogs have been proposed as models for INS research.
145 azole and maropitant citrate in hospitalised dogs, highlighting a need for initiatives to decrease in
147 while expression of mouse, rat, chimpanzee, dog, horse, goat, sheep, and human Mxra8 enables alphavi
149 omprehensive framework of the most important dog human related activities and their impact on owner w
152 ership well-being outcomes based on specific dog human related activities with which dog owners are i
154 eme altitude (>4,000 m) of the highland wild dogs' (HWD) observed range and confirmed vocalizations i
155 en, ground beef, ground pork, hamburger, hot dog, ice cream, liver, luncheon meat, margarine, meat-fr
156 tion sites in liver samples from six treated dogs identified 1,741 unique AAV integration events in g
158 t for the adaptation of influenza viruses to dogs.IMPORTANCE Epidemics of equine-origin H3N8 and avia
159 ren with FLG mutations who were exposed to a dog in infancy (odds ratio, 0.16; 95% CI, 0.03-0.86; P =
160 the most common enteric pathogen of cats and dogs in developed countries and infect ~1 billion people
162 s us to project the risk of rabies in biting dogs in Haiti shortly after the bite event and make prov
163 ve occurred in the ability to study sleep in dogs, including development of non-invasive polysomnogra
164 nt are administered to a large proportion of dogs, including to many of those with no presenting sign
167 ppear that the sociality of the African wild dog is dependent upon the processing of information extr
169 d timely risk assessment of rabies in biting dogs is critical to ensure that rabies PEP is administer
170 approach to hereditary methemoglobinemia in dogs, it demonstrates the possibility of how genotype-ph
171 iomyocytes were isolated from control and AF dogs (kept in AF by atrial tachypacing [600 bpm x 1 week
172 s (kidneys, n = 56; urine, n = 21), domestic dogs (kidneys, n = 54; urine, n = 28) and non-domesticat
173 tch conveys meaning to its listener, as when dogs learn that distinct pitch trajectories whistled by
174 d overlapping electrodes, as afforded by the dog-leg design, allow for efficient heat management and
175 printed circuit board (PCB), with a bespoke "dog-leg" track design, that can be rolled up for ease of
176 ges in personality occur unevenly during the dogs' life course, however, their dynamics seems to be s
177 nce sectors such as mental health advocates, dog lovers, video game developers, vegans, bitcoin inves
178 tensive vocal repertoire of the African wild dog (Lycaon pictus) has led to the assumption that the a
180 ack dynamics in a population of African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) to test these contrasting model pre
181 human and preclinical species (e.g. murine, dog, macaque) in both biochemical and cellular assays.
182 Similar to humans, the fecal microbiome of dogs may be useful in diagnosing diseases or assessing d
183 dditional trends in our data suggesting that dogs may have a similar pattern to that described in peo
184 increase in FVIII protein expression in two dogs may have been due to clonal expansion of cells harb
187 e used hidden Markov models to test how wild dog movements were affected by the Human Footprint Index
189 ing functional magnetic resonance imaging in dogs (n = 20; 45% female) and humans (n = 30; 50% female
193 e and compared them to behaviour of the same dogs on a different evening without fireworks (control c
195 her four comparing methods on recall, the UH-DoG outperforms them on both precision and F-score.
196 CRISPR-Cas9 to knock out the oncogene p53 in dog oviductal epithelia cultured in a dynamic microfluid
197 out taking into account the heterogeneity of dog-owner dyads, especially the activities with which th
198 o repeated cross-sectional studies comparing dog owners and non-owners, without taking into account t
201 study reinforces the importance of assessing dog ownership well-being outcomes based on specific dog
202 as a significant interaction between FLG and dog ownership, but the risk of sensitization to any alle
203 sistency regarding mental health benefits of dog ownership, partially due to repeated cross-sectional
204 overweight and obesity was greater in female dogs (P = 0.003) and in dogs that were neutered (P = 0.0
206 en the similarity in body weight between the dog pairs and the overall accuracy of predictions, altho
211 There is currently no evidence that cats or dogs play a significant role in human infection; however
213 alysis with human genomes reveals aspects of dog population history that mirror humans, including Lev
214 he expected effort needed to reduce regional dog populations, and assess methods for achieving effect
215 ature reserves with contrasting free-roaming dog populations: Liziping, with many dogs (~0.44/km(2)),
216 n canid cognition has revealed that domestic dogs possess a surprising array of complex sociocognitiv
217 t best match zooarchaeological data indicate dogs predominantly consumed salmon and forage fish (35-6
218 the first transgenic mouse model expressing dog prion protein (PrP) was generated and challenged int
222 nfections of pets, such as cats, ferrets and dogs, raises questions about the susceptibility of anima
223 y information and raise the possibility that dogs represent a clinically relevant animal model of dys
224 xpression profiling of the lungs of infected dogs revealed that differentially expressed genes were m
225 Pharmacokinetic studies in mice, rats and dogs revealed that fluoxazolevir localizes to the liver.
228 ed 27 ancient dog genomes and found that all dogs share a common ancestry distinct from present-day w
229 horse some 5,500 years ago followed those of dogs, sheep, goats, cattle, and pigs by ~2,500-10,000 ye
234 ssociation/ Kennel Club/ International Sheep Dog Society (BVA/KC/ISDS) eye scheme annually, and simil
236 othesized that in vitro expression of mutant dog SOD1 would recapitulate features of human ALS (ie, S
238 sled dogs traces back to Siberia, where sled dog-specific haplotypes of genes that potentially relate
241 d to improve owner's well-being, (e.g. human-dog tactile interaction increases owner's self-esteem),
242 Significant correlations between measures on dog tags and wristbands were observed (r(s) = 0.38-0.90;
244 loss of sympathetic innervation in sPanc in dogs that do not suffer from DM links the disease in the
245 iographs, and synovial fluid samples from 30 dogs that sustained RCCL and 9 clinically healthy dogs w
249 Different associations were observed for dogs: there was a significant interaction between FLG an
250 lly and clinically normal non-brachycephalic dogs, tissue segmentation maps and a cortical atlas gene
251 ated the susceptibility of domestic cats and dogs to infection and potential for infected cats to tra
252 ports the value of using silicone bands with dogs to investigate health impacts on humans from shared
253 l neurological dysfunction, allowing treated dogs to live beyond 2.5 years of age, more than 7 times
254 bility of subordinate competitors (like wild dogs) to move through areas that are unfavorable due to
256 icate that the major ancestry of modern sled dogs traces back to Siberia, where sled dog-specific hap
260 ped to quantify the risk of rabies in biting dogs, using data from Haiti's animal rabies surveillance
261 circulates among multiple wildlife sources, dog vaccination alone would not be effective at protecti
262 ination, biting 2 or more people, and if the dog was a puppy also increased the probability that a bi
263 is (OR = 19.0, 95% CI 4.8-74.8) and when the dog was dead at the time of the assessment (OR = 20.7, 9
265 et keeping, in particular daily contact with dogs, was inversely associated with AD risk (OR = 0.40;
266 canine retinal mutations in LA PRA-affected dogs, we sought to identify the genetic cause of PRA in
270 or this insertion, and the sequenced healthy dogs were either heterozygous or homozygous for the wild
273 ng experimental inoculation, 9 (90%) group I dogs were variably seroreactive to one or more of six sp
276 IRF and PFA deliveries were randomized in 8 dogs with 2 superior PVs ablated using one technology an
286 pump inhibitor omeprazole is administered to dogs with gastroduodenal ulceration or oesophagitis, whe
289 enotype-phenotype correlations of humans and dogs with hereditary methemoglobinemia are not yet well
290 ve biases in this study population; however, dogs with IE were significantly more likely to be unable
291 ion, a causative NAGLU variant in Schipperke dogs with MPS IIIB was identified and was found at high
292 ivities, genotypes, and clinical signs in 30 dogs with persistent cyanosis without cardiopulmonary di
293 ctive loss of islet-associated beta cells in dogs with sDM and sDMPanc, suggesting that collateral da
294 vation markers in pancreatic islets of adult dogs with spontaneous DM (sDM), spontaneous pancreatitis
296 genomic DNA and expanded cell clones in five dogs, with 44% of the integrations near genes involved i
297 ere extracted from a random sample of 22,333 dogs within the VetCompass Programme from a sampling fra
300 ter into containers), it seems unlikely that dogs would ingest copepods readily through drinking.