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Adesola Odunayo
Researcher at University of Tennessee
Publications - 39
Citations - 326
Adesola Odunayo is an academic researcher from University of Tennessee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Famotidine. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 33 publications receiving 202 citations. Previous affiliations of Adesola Odunayo include University of Florida & University of Missouri.
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Immunomodulatory effects of opioids.
TL;DR: In this article, the immunomodulatory effects of opioids were reviewed in animal models and they showed that opioids can affect both the acquired and innate arms of the immune system, including natural killer cell activity, T-cell proliferation, antibody production, phagocytic cell function, and cytokine production.
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Evaluation of the Effect of Orally Administered Acid Suppressants On Intragastric pH in Cats
S Parkinson,M Katherine Tolbert,Kristen M. Messenger,Adesola Odunayo,M. D. Brand,Gigi S Davidson,Erin E. Peters,Ann Reed,Mark G. Papich +8 more
TL;DR: Fractionated enteric‐coated OT is an effective acid suppressant despite disruption of the enteric coating and both omeprazole formulations provide superior acid suppression in cats compared to famotidine or placebo.
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Association of Veterinary Hematology and Transfusion Medicine (AVHTM) Transfusion Reaction Small Animal Consensus Statement (TRACS) Part 2: Prevention and monitoring
Elizabeth B. Davidow,Shauna L. Blois,Isabelle Goy-Thollot,Lauren Harris,Karen Humm,Sarah Musulin,Katherine J Nash,Adesola Odunayo,Claire R. Sharp,Eva Spada,John M. Thomason,Jenny Walton,K. Jane Wardrop +12 more
TL;DR: This systematic evidence evaluation process yielded recommended prevention and monitoring guidelines and a proposed transfusion administration form, but significant knowledge gaps were identified, demonstrating the need for additional research in veterinary transfusion medicine.
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Adjunctive therapy with intravenous lipid emulsion and methocarbamol for permethrin toxicity in 2 cats
Kendon W. Kuo,Adesola Odunayo +1 more
TL;DR: This is the first reported use of ILE as an adjunctive treatment for cats with permethrin toxicity, and outcome was favorable in both cats and no adverse effects were noted from the ILE.
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Incidence of incompatible crossmatch results in dogs admitted to a veterinary teaching hospital with no history of prior red blood cell transfusion
TL;DR: Results indicated immunologic incompatibility can exist between first-time transfusion recipients and potential blood donor dogs and the authors suggest veterinarians consider crossmatching all dogs prior to transfusion when possible.