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John B. Kaneene

Researcher at Michigan State University

Publications -  270
Citations -  11344

John B. Kaneene is an academic researcher from Michigan State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mycobacterium bovis & Population. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 268 publications receiving 10530 citations. Previous affiliations of John B. Kaneene include United States Department of Agriculture & Cornell University.

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A lameness scoring system that uses posture and gait to predict dairy cattle reproductive performance

TL;DR: It is believed that a 5-point lameness scoring system that assessed gait and placed a novel emphasis on back posture effectively identifies lame cows and should trigger corrective interventions.
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Patterns of antimicrobial resistance observed in Escherichia coli isolates obtained from domestic- and wild-animal fecal samples, human septage, and surface water.

TL;DR: Water sample isolates were resistant only to cephalothin, which may suggest that the resistance patterns for farm environment samples may be more representative of the risk of contamination of surface waters with antimicrobial agent-resistant bacteria.
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The effects of nitrate, nitrite and N-nitroso compounds on human health: a review.

TL;DR: The effects of nitrate, nitrite, and N-nitroso compounds on human health are reviewed and special emphasis has been placed on the role of these compounds on infant methemoglobinemia and gastric cancer.
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Dry cow diet, management, and energy balance as risk factors for displaced abomasum in high producing dairy herds

TL;DR: Significant risk factors for displaced abomasum included a negative energy balance prepartum, a high body condition score, suboptimal feed bunk management prepartsum, prepartums diets containing > 1.65 Mcal of net energy for lactation/kg of dry matter, winter and summer seasons, high genetic merit, and low parity.
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Management practices and reported antimicrobial usage on conventional and organic dairy farms.

TL;DR: Comparison of reported antimicrobial usage between conventional and organic dairy farms found that conventional dairy producers were more likely to use advice from veterinarians for recommendations of treatment, and organic farmers were morelikely to rely on advice from other farmers.