T
Tracy Stokol
Researcher at Cornell University
Publications - 124
Citations - 4568
Tracy Stokol is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bone marrow & Anemia. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 113 publications receiving 3843 citations. Previous affiliations of Tracy Stokol include Brigham and Women's Hospital & Sao Paulo State University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluation of nonesterified fatty acids and β-hydroxybutyrate in transition dairy cattle in the northeastern United States: critical thresholds for prediction of clinical diseases.
TL;DR: Postpartum serum NEFA concentration was most associated with the risk of developing DA, CK, metritis, or retained placenta during the first 30 d in milk, although prepartum NEFA and postpartum BHBA were both significantly associated with development of clinical disease.
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Concentrated bone marrow aspirate improves full-thickness cartilage repair compared with microfracture in the equine model.
Lisa A. Fortier,Hollis G. Potter,Ellen J Rickey,Lauren V. Schnabel,Li Foong Foo,Leroy R Chong,Tracy Stokol,J. Cheetham,Alan J. Nixon +8 more
TL;DR: Delivery of bone marrow concentrate can result in healing of acute full-thickness cartilage defects that is superior to that after microfracture alone in an equine model, and has the clinical potential to improve cartilage healing.
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Associations of elevated nonesterified fatty acids and β-hydroxybutyrate concentrations with early lactation reproductive performance and milk production in transition dairy cattle in the northeastern United States
TL;DR: With the exception of milk production in heifers, this study indicates that increased concentrations of serum NEFA and BHBA had a detrimental effect on reproductive performance and milk production.
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From People to Panthera : Natural SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Tigers and Lions at the Bronx Zoo.
Denise McAloose,Melissa Laverack,Leyi Wang,Mary Lea Killian,Leonardo C. Caserta,Fangfeng Yuan,Patrick K. Mitchell,Krista Queen,Matthew R. Mauldin,Brittany D. Cronk,Susan L. Bartlett,John M. Sykes,Stephanie Zec,Tracy Stokol,Karen Ingerman,Martha A. Delaney,Richard L. Fredrickson,Marina Ivančić,Melinda Jenkins-Moore,Katie Mozingo,Kerrie Franzen,Nichole Hines Bergeson,Laura B. Goodman,Haibin Wang,Ying Fang,Colleen Olmstead,Colleen McCann,Patrick Thomas,Erin L. Goodrich,François Elvinger,David C. Smith,Suxiang Tong,Sally Slavinski,Paul P. Calle,Karen A. Terio,Mia Kim Torchetti,Diego G. Diel +36 more
TL;DR: These were the first confirmed cases of natural SARS-CoV-2 animal infections in the United States and the first in nondomestic species in the world and provide epidemiological and genetic evidence for human-to-animal transmission of the virus.
Journal ArticleDOI
Association between the proportion of sampled transition cows with increased nonesterified fatty acids and β-hydroxybutyrate and disease incidence, pregnancy rate, and milk production at the herd level
TL;DR: It was shown that there were detrimental herd-level effects if a large enough proportion of cows had increased metabolite concentrations, and further demonstrated that a high prevalence of herds have opportunity for improvement.