D
Daniel J. Wilson
Researcher at University of Missouri
Publications - 17
Citations - 725
Daniel J. Wilson is an academic researcher from University of Missouri. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gait analysis & Lameness. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 17 publications receiving 690 citations.
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Journal Article
Evaluation of mild lameness in horses trotting on a treadmill by clinicians and interns or residents and correlation of their assessments with kinematic gait analysis
Kevin G. Keegan,David A. Wilson,Daniel J. Wilson,Bryan K. Smith,Earl M. Gaughan,R. S. Pleasant,James D. Lillich,Joanne Kramer,Rick Howard,C. Bacon-Miller,E. G. Davis,K. A. May,H. S. Cheramie,W. L. Valentino,P. D. van Harreveld +14 more
TL;DR: Mild lameness may be difficult to evaluate during treadmill locomotion because clinicians were more repeatable in their subjective evaluation of lameness than interns or residents, and they were not more reliable at detecting the true state of Lameness.
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Botulinum toxin type A use in piriformis muscle syndrome: a pilot study.
TL;DR: VAS data suggest that intramuscular piriformis injection with 100 units of botulinum toxin type A can reduce pain to a greater extent than similar injections with vehicle alone.
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Efficacy of strength training in prepubescent to early postpubescent males and females: Effects of gender and maturity
TL;DR: Findings support the general observation that physical benefits can be gained safely by children who participate in a weight training programme.
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Kinematics of the hind limb in trotting horses after induced lameness of the distal intertarsal and tarsometatarsal joints and intra-articular administration of anesthetic
TL;DR: Increased length of hind limb protraction and symmetry of tubera coxae vertical excursion are sensitive indicators of improvement in tarsal joint lameness.
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Changes in kinematic variables observed during pressure-induced forelimb lameness in adult horses trotting on a treadmill.
TL;DR: Investigation of kinematic changes induced by heel pressure in horses found decreased fetlock joint extension during stance and increased head vertical movement and asymmetry are sensitive indicators of forelimb lameness.