Baharak Akhtardanesh | Veterinary Science | Editorial Board Member

Prof. Baharak Akhtardanesh | Veterinary Science | Editorial Board Membcer 

Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman | Iran

**Dr. Baharak Akhtardanesh, DVM, DVSc, a board-certified small animal internist and accomplished professor at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, is a distinguished Iranian veterinarian whose career reflects exceptional contributions to clinical practice, academic instruction, and research in small animal internal medicine. Born in 1975 in Ahvaz, Iran, she completed her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) at Shahid Chamran University of Ahvaz in 2001, where her thesis focused on the bacteriological and serological assessment of brucellosis in buffaloes and its public health implications. She then advanced her academic training by earning a DVSc and board certification in small animal internal medicine from the University of Tehran in 2005, producing a doctoral thesis on the molecular detection of gastric Helicobacter-like organisms in domestic and stray cats. Throughout her career, Dr. Akhtardanesh has held several significant academic and administrative positions, including Head of the Small Animal Internal Medicine Ward (2006–2014, 2020–2024), Vice Director of the Clinical Sciences Department (2014–2018), and consulting veterinarian in laboratory animal science at Kerman University of Medical Sciences for 15 years. Since 2020, she has also been actively involved in training residents in a rigorous four-year small animal internal medicine residency program. As a clinician, she provides expert diagnosis and management of complex medical conditions in dogs, cats, rabbits, and rodents, while playing a central role in teaching clinical rotations to senior veterinary students and delivering postgraduate training in laboratory animal sciences. A prolific researcher, Dr. Akhtardanesh has authored 74 international scientific articles, presented her findings at 40 international congresses and 110 national symposia, and supervised or advised over 60 postgraduate theses, making her a leading academic figure in small animal medicine, zoonotic diseases, gastrointestinal disorders, dermatology, animal ethics, and laboratory animal science. Her research collaborations extend across national and international institutes, particularly in zoonosis, infectious diseases, and public health. She maintains an active scholarly presence through ORCID, ResearchGate, Google Scholar, and her university homepage. Recent international congress contributions include studies on canine toxoplasmosis and venereal transmission, detection of Rickettsia species in hedgehog-associated ticks, and molecular identification of Cytauxzoon felis in cats across multiple Iranian provinces. Known for her dedication to rigorous scientific inquiry, compassionate clinical care, and excellence in training the next generation of veterinary professionals, Dr. Baharak Akhtardanesh continues to be a highly respected authority in small animal internal medicine in Iran and beyond.

Profiles: Orcid | Google Scholar

Featured Publications

Akhtardanesh, B., Ziaali, N., Sharifi, H., & Rezaei, S. (2010). Feline immunodeficiency virus, feline leukemia virus and Toxoplasma gondii in stray and household cats in Kerman–Iran: Seroprevalence and correlation with clinical and … Research in Veterinary Science, 89(2), 306–310.

Khedri, J., Radfar, M. H., Borji, H., Azizzadeh, M., & Akhtardanesh, B. (2014). Canine heartworm in southeastern of Iran with review of disease distribution. Iranian Journal of Parasitology, 9(4), 560.

Akhtardanesh, B., Ghanbarpour, R., & Blourizadeh, H. (2010). Serological evidence of canine monocytic ehrlichiosis in Iran. Comparative Clinical Pathology, 19(5), 469–474.

Akhtardanesh, B., Sharifi, I., Mohammadi, A., Mostafavi, M., Hakimmipour, M., & others. (2017). Feline visceral leishmaniasis in Kerman, southeast of Iran: Serological and molecular study. Journal of Vector Borne Diseases, 54(1), 96–102.

Akhtardanesh, B., Moeini, E., Sharifi, I., Saberi, M., Sadeghi, B., Ebrahimi, M., & others. (2020). Leishmania infection in cats positive for immunodeficiency virus and feline leukemia virus in an endemic region of Iran. Veterinary Parasitology: Regional Studies and Reports, 20, 100387.

Baharak, A., Reza, K., Shahriar, D., Omid, A., Daruoosh, V., & Nasrin, A. (2012). Metastatic apocrine sweat gland adenocarcinoma in a terrier dog. Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine, 2(8), 670–672.

Khalili, M., Rezaei, M., Akhtardanesh, B., Abiri, Z., & Shahheidaripour, S. (2018). Detection of Coxiella burnetii (Gammaproteobacteria: Coxiellaceae) in ticks collected from infested dogs in Kerman, Southeast of Iran. Persian Journal of Acarology, 7(1).

Nasrin, A., Baharak, A., & Reza, K. (2012). Concurrent cystic endometrial hyperplasia, ovarian luteoma and biliary cyst adenoma in an aged rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus): Case report and literature review. Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine, 2(3), S1975–S1978.

Akhtardanesh, B., Ghanbarpour, R., Babaei, H., & Nazeri, M. (2011). Serological evidences of canine brucellosis as a new emerging disease in Iran. Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Disease, 1(3), 177–180.

Yan Xiaofei | Veterinary Science and Veterinary Medicine | Best Researcher Award

Yan Xiaofei | Veterinary Science and Veterinary Medicine | Best Researcher Award

Xinjiang Agricultural University | China

As of 30 October 2025, Dr. Xiaofei Yan is a life-sciences researcher based at the Xinjiang Key Laboratory for Ecological Adaptation and Evolution of Extreme Environment Biology, College of Life Sciences, Xinjiang Agricultural University (Urumqi, China). Yan’s work spans veterinary and animal-health epidemiology, parasitology and microbial pathogens of agricultural animals, with an applied focus on disease surveillance, molecular diagnosis and antibiotic sensitivity relevant to livestock and aquaculture in arid and semi-arid ecosystems. Her peer-reviewed output includes an epidemiological study of gastrointestinal nematode and Eimeria coccidia infections in Kazakh sheep populations (PLOS ONE, 2021), a preprint and subsequent peer work on Aeromonas infections in Esox lucius aquaculture (preprint 2024; journal version 2025), and contributions to integrative taxonomy and parasite description work (Int. J. Parasitol.: Parasites and Wildlife, 2025), reflecting a portfolio that mixes field epidemiology, laboratory diagnostics and molecular systematics. These publications demonstrate a pattern of collaborative, regionally focused research that combines large-scale sample collection and modern molecular techniques to address animal-health problems of direct economic and ecological importance in Xinjiang. According to publicly indexed author profiles list an h-index of 2 with an i10-index of 1 and a small set of indexed works (several platforms list 3–5 items attributed to her), together with citation counts that are driven largely by the PLOS ONE 2021 paper (which has been cited multiple times). These bibliographic snapshots indicate an early-career researcher building a focused body of work with growing local and international visibility. Beyond publications and citation metrics, Yan is active in multi-author studies that draw on local animal collections, pathogen isolation and molecular sequencing, and she frequently appears as a lead or co-corresponding author on studies addressing livestock and aquaculture pathogens — evidence of both field leadership and laboratory expertise. Looking ahead, Yan’s profile suggests continued productivity in applied parasitology, host–pathogen surveillance and diagnostics for animal production systems in extreme environments; researchers or administrators seeking details for collaboration, citation tracking or evaluation should consult her ORCID record and recent indexed articles for the most current list of outputs and citation totals. (Sources: PLOS ONE author page and article; preprint and preprint record for the Aeromonas study; PubMed/ScienceDirect listing for the 2025 parasitology paper; and aggregated author-metric pages such as Scilit/ResearchGate which list ORCID and h-index snapshots.

Profiles: Scopus| Orcid

Featured Publications

an, X., Liu, M., He, S., Tong, T., Liu, Y., Ding, K., Deng, H., & Wang, P. (2021). An epidemiological study of gastrointestinal nematode and Eimeria coccidia infections in different populations of Kazakh sheep. PLOS ONE, 16(5), e0251307. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251307

Yan, X., Zhao, Y., Wang, T., Cao, X., … (2024, May 20). Identification and antimicrobial sensitivity studies of Aeromonas species associated with bacterial septicemia of Esox lucius in Xinjiang, China [Preprint]. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202405.1239.v1

Yan, X., Zhao, Y., Wang, T., Liu, C., Cao, X., Yusuf, R., … (2025, Aug). New species of Parapharyngodon (Nematoda: Pharyngodonidae) parasite of Laudakia stoliczkana (Lacertilia: Agamidae) from Turpan-Hami Basin, China. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2025.101107

Yan, X., Zhao, Y., Wang, T., Liu, C., Cao, X., Yusuf, R., … (2025, Dec 31). Pathogenic characterization of Aeromonas in infected farmed Esox lucius from Xinjiang, China. All Life. https://doi.org/10.1080/26895293.2025.2550780.

Yan, X., … (2025, May 12). Redescription and revised classification status of Abbreviata phrynocephali comb. nov. (Spirurida: Physalopteridae) from the Yarkand toad-headed agama Phrynocephalus axillaris (Lacertilia: Agamidae). Zootaxa, 5633(2). https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5633.2.6