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Dr John Finnie
BVSc PhD DVSc
FRCVS
- Location: Australia
- Year of Fellowship: 2009
- Route to Fellowship: Meritorious Contributions to Knowledge
Field of work
Universities and colleges
Areas of special interest
- Neuropathology
Areas of support
- Collaborative research
Professional positions
- Associate Professor, Discipline of Anatomy and Pathology, Adelaide Medical School, University of Adelaide
Biography
Associate Professor John Finnie is a veterinary anatomical pathologist with experience in diagnostic and investigative pathology, including gross and histopathology, ultrastructural pathology, immunohistochemistry, and toxicological, comparative and laboratory animal pathology.
His main research interest is the pathology and pathogenesis of neurological diseases, with investigative experience in the following disorders: traumatic brain injury (blunt, closed, non-missile; penetrating missile; and paediatric non-accidental (“shaken baby syndrome”) head injuries); tunicamycin (corynetoxins) and Clostridium perfringens type D neurotoxicity and retinopathy; neurological effects of exposure to mobile communication radiofrequency fields; neuroaxonal dystrophy; demyelinating peripheral neuropathy; and forensic neuropathology, lysosomal storage diseases, and neoplasia.
Dr Finnie has lectured and supervised postgraduate (Honours and PhD) students at medical and veterinary schools. He has also supported research using considerable experience in animal welfare and ethics and management of laboratory animal facilities, and continues to provide pathology examinations for a wide range of biomedical research projects.
His main research interest is the pathology and pathogenesis of neurological diseases, with investigative experience in the following disorders: traumatic brain injury (blunt, closed, non-missile; penetrating missile; and paediatric non-accidental (“shaken baby syndrome”) head injuries); tunicamycin (corynetoxins) and Clostridium perfringens type D neurotoxicity and retinopathy; neurological effects of exposure to mobile communication radiofrequency fields; neuroaxonal dystrophy; demyelinating peripheral neuropathy; and forensic neuropathology, lysosomal storage diseases, and neoplasia.
Dr Finnie has lectured and supervised postgraduate (Honours and PhD) students at medical and veterinary schools. He has also supported research using considerable experience in animal welfare and ethics and management of laboratory animal facilities, and continues to provide pathology examinations for a wide range of biomedical research projects.