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Some effects of limited exercise on purpose-bred Beagles
1988
Campbell, S.A. | Hughes, H.C. | Griffin, H.E. | Landi, M.S. | Mallon, F.M.
Amendments to the Animal Welfare Act (PL 99-198) require that an exercise program for dogs be established by the attending veterinarian. A 6-week study was conducted to determine the effects of a moderate exercise program in purpose-bred Beagles. Sixteen male Beagles (4/group) were maintained as follows: (1) standard cage without exercise; (2) standard cage with individual exercise periods (35 minutes, 3 times/week); (3) large cage without exercise; and (4) standard cage with group-release exercise periods. Blood samples were collected for CBC, serum biochemical analysis including determination of serum cortisol concentration, and immune function (lymphocyte transformation assay). Group-released dogs interacted with each other during most of the exercise time. Fighting in these dogs occurred only during the third week. Dogs had little inclination to exercise when released along into the exercise area. Regardless of the size of the cage, dogs did not exercise unless human beings were present in the room. There were no significant differences in laboratory findings among dogs in the 4 groups. This moderate exercise program had no demonstrable effects. Similarly, continuous cage housing, without a formal exercise program, could not be determined to be detrimental to the physiologic or health status of dogs.
Show more [+] Less [-]Serum and synovial fluid steady-state concentrations of trimethoprim and sulfadiazine in horses with experimentally induced infectious arthritis
1988
Bertone, A.L. | Jones, R.L. | McIlwraith, C.W.
The tarsocrural joints of 11 horses were inoculated with 1.2 to 2.16 x 10(6) viable Staphylococcus aureus organisms susceptible to a trimethoprim-sulfadiazine (TMP-SDZ) combination with minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 0.25 microgram of TMP/ml and 4.75 microgram of SDZ/ml. Antimicrobial treatment consisted of oral administration of a TMP-SDZ combination-30 mg/kg of body weight given once daily (group-1 horses) or 60 mg/kg given as 30 mg/kg every 12 hours (group-2 horses). Paired serum and synovial fluid samples were obtained before intra-articular inoculation with the S aureus, after inoculation with S aureus but before antimicrobial treatment, and after inoculation at various hourly intervals after oral administration of the TMP-SDZ combination. The TMP-SDZ combination was administered daily in the 2 dosages for 21 days. Samples were collected after day 3 of repetitive drug administration so that drug steady-state concentration would have been achieved. Serum and synovial fluid samples were analyzed for TMP and SDZ concentrations. Administration of the TMP-SDZ combination at a dosage of 30 mg/kg once daily was not effective in maintaining TMP or SDZ concentrations above the MIC of TMP-SDZ for the S aureus (0.25 and 4.75 microgram/ml for TMP and SDZ, respectively) in the infected synovial fluid or in maintaining adequate TMP concentration in the serum. The alternative use of the TMP-SDZ combination at a dosage of 60 mg/kg given as 30 mg/kg every 12 hours was effective in maintaining serum and synovial fluid concentrations of TMP and SDZ that were greater than the MIC for the infective organism. Sulfadiazine concentration was significantly (P less than or equal to 0.05) lower in the infected synovial fluid sample than that in the corresponding serum sample. We concluded that administration of 60 mg of TMP-SDZ/kg given as 30 mg/kg every 12 hours is more effective than 30 mg/kg given once daily for the treatment of equine infectious arthritis caused by organisms for which the MIC of TMP-SDZ is less than or equal to 0.25-4.75 microgram/ml.
Show more [+] Less [-]Method to create and maintain the patency of the bovine mammary papilla
1988
Nassef, M.T. | Coy, C.H. | Watson, G.L.
The patency of mammary papillae was reestablished after surgically induced injury. Perforated prosthetic tubes with affixed Dacron tubing or Teflon strips were implanted in 18 abrabed papillae of lactating dairy cows and were secured with sutures. Wound healing was assessed by palpation and visual inspection. All wounds, with one exception, healed by first intention. Machine milking, reinstituted on day 5 after surgery, caused no apparent discomfort. Grossly and histopathologically, all implants stimulated a variable degree of mucosal metaplasia and hyperplasia. Only implants with Teflon strips became anchored by fibrotic invasion. Mastitis, tube migration, and milk fistulas were complications of the procedure.
Show more [+] Less [-]Force plate analyses before and after stabilization of canine stifles for cruciate injury
1988
Budsberg, S.C. | Verstraete, M.C. | Soutas-Little, R.W. | Flo, G.L. | Probst, C.W.
Ground reaction forces were measured from the hind limbs of 9 dogs before and after stabilization of unilateral cranial cruciate ligament rupture. Before surgery, peak vertical force, associated impulses, and weight distribution were significantly less (multivariate analysis P less than 0.02) in the affected limb, compared with the clinically normal limb. Craniocaudal peak forces and impulses, divided into braking and propulsion, also were significantly less in the affected limb. At a minimum of 7 months after retinacular imbrication, all vertical and craniocaudal measurements in the affected limb were increased significantly. Significant changes were not found in the normal limb. Furthermore, at the postoperative evaluation, there was no significant difference in any measurement between the affected and normal hind limbs. The results indicated restoration of function in the cruciate-deficient limb when compared with the clinically normal hind limb at a walking gait during the study time period.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effect of levamisole on immune function and reproductive performance in first-litter gilts
1988
Purswell, B.J. | Dawe, D.L. | Brown, J. | Williams, D.J.
First-litter commerical cross-bred gilts were treated with levamisole (1.5, 2.5, or 3.5 mg/kg of body weight) weekly during the last 4 weeks of gestation, because similar treatment of dairy heifers had improved postpartum maternal health and neonatal survival. In the gilts, differences in reproductive performance were not found on the basis of pig survival at birth, pig survival at weaning, birth weight, or weaning weight. Also differences between treated and control gilts were not found in response of circulating lymphocytes to mitogen stimulation (phytohemagglutinin A, concanavalin A, and pokeweed mitogen). In all gilts, the lymphocyte response to mitogen stimulation was decreased during the first week after farrowing.
Show more [+] Less [-]Ecologic study of the risk factors for environmental mastitis in cows
1988
Schukken, Y.H. | Erb, H.N. | Sears, P.M. | Smith, R.D.
An index was developed to measure the proportion of intramammary infections caused by environmental microorganisms on dairy farms. This environmental index can be interpreted as the probability that an intramammary infection was caused by an environmental pathogen, rather than by a contagious pathogen. Using the environmental index as the outcome variable, risk factors for environmental mastitis were studied on 10 dairy farms in New York. Turning the cows outside was associated with lower environmental index, and having cows drink from a stream increased the environmental index. Selective (rather than uniform) nonlactating cow intramammary treatment was related to a lower environmental index (apparently because the farms practicing selective nonlactating cow treatment suffered from epizootics of contagious mastitis).
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of intracisternal bead devices on lacteal secretion components, plaque formation, and bacterial infection during the nonlactating period
1988
Nickerson, S.C. | Thompson, W.J. | Oliver, S.P. | Akers, R.M.
Effects of placing intracisternal bead devices (ICB) into teat cisterns of 6 dairy cows, from the end of lactation through parturition, were studied. Lacteal secretion samples were collected weekly from each mammary quarter during the nonlactating period to monitor composition changes in ICB-fitted and nonfitted quarters. In quarters remaining uninfected (n=15), there were significantly higher mean somatic cell counts (P less than 0.05), percentage of neutrophils (P less than 0.019), and cell viability (P less than 0.038), but significantly lower percentage of macrophages (P less than 0.013) in ICB-fitted quarters compared with those in nonfitted quarters. The ICB had no significant effect on mean weekly values for percentage of lymphocytes, pH, lactoferrin, citrate, citrate/lactoferrin molar ratio, serum albumin, alpha-lactalbumin, and N-acetyl-beta-D-glycosaminidase. In infected quarters (n=9), pH of mammary secretions was significantly (P less than 0.004) higher in ICB-fitted quarters, but concentrations of lactoferrin (P less than 0.004), alpha-lactalbumin (P less than 0.013), and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (P less than 0.028) were significantly lower, compared with those in nonfitted quarters. Coagulase-negative staphylococci comprised approximately 90% of all infections. Over the nonlactating period, 16.4 and 41.5% of samples from nonfitted and ICB-fitted quarters, respectively, contained coagulase-negative staphylococci. Microscopic examination of ICB from uninfected quarters revealed a thin coating of plaque with adhering neutrophils, macrophages, and multinucleated giant cells. Microscopic examination of plaque on devices from ICB-fitted quarters harboring coagulase-negative staphylococci revealed numerous adherent cocci and neutrophils.
Show more [+] Less [-]Survival of rough and smooth strains of Brucella abortus in bovine mammary gland macrophages
1988
Harmon, B.G. | Adams, L.G. | Frey, M.
Chronic bovine brucellosis is characterized by persistent infection of the mammary gland. The interaction of live Brucella abortus with bovine mammary gland macrophages was studied in vitro. Opsonization of smooth B abortus strain 2308 and rough strain 45/20 was required for phagocytosis by mammary gland macrophages. When opsonized with specific antiserum, strains 2308 and 45/20 stimulated a considerable oxidative burst when phagocytized by mammary gland macrophages. Intracellular survival rates for strain 2308 were significantly higher than those for strain 45/20. After being phagocytized, B abortus localized in phagosomes and phagolysosomes of mammary gland macrophages.
Show more [+] Less [-]Differential effect of T-2 toxin on murine host resistance to three facultative intracellular bacterial pathogens: Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella typhimurium and Mycobacterium bovis
1988
Ziprin, R.L. | McMurray, D.N.
The effect of T-2 toxin, a radiomimetic immunosuppressive agent, on resistance to the facultative intracellular bacterial pathogens Listeria monocytogenes (strain EGD), Mycobacterium bovis (BCG Copenhagen 1331), and Salmonella typhimurium was determined. Female Swiss ICR mice were given a single dose of T-2 toxin (4 mg/kg of body weight) by gastric gavage. On the seventh day after toxin administration, the mice were infected by intraperitoneal inoculation with L monocytogenes, S typhimurium, or M bovis. Mice given the toxin also were exposed to respirable droplet nuclei containing L monocytogenes or M bovis. The effect of the toxin on the course of infection was monitored by observing mortality or by enumeration of bacteria in te spleen or lungs of infected mice. The toxin increased resistance to infection with L monocytogenes initiated by intraperitoneal inoculation, but reduced resistance to M bovis infection initiated by intraperitoneal inoculation. The toxin had no appreciable effect on the course of salmonellosis or on resistance to infection initiated by inhalation of L monocytogenes or M bovis aerosols. Therefore, it was concluded that T-2 toxin does not necessarily reduce resistance to infection in mice. The toxin's effect on the course of in vivo bacterial infections depends on the nature of the infective agent and the route of inoculation.
Show more [+] Less [-]Communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints in horses
1988
Ford, T.S. | Ross, M.W. | Orsini, P.G.
To study communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints of the horse, 50 forelimbs were obtained from fresh cadaver specimens. Blue latex solution (20 +/- 2.5 ml) was injected into the middle carpal joint, and the specimens were frozen in extension. Frozen specimens were cut into 1-cm sagittal sections from the middle of the radius to the middle of the metacarpus. The communications between the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints and the presence, length, and position of the distopalmar outpouchings of the carpometacarpal joint were recorded. The middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints always communicated between os carpale III (C3) and os carpale IV (C4). An additional communication between the joints existed in 17 (34%) of the specimens, 10 on the palmar aspect of C4, and 3 on the palmar aspect of os carpale II (C2). When os carpale 1 (C1) was present (n = 5), communication between C1 and C2 was observed in 4 of the 5 specimens. In all specimens, medial and lateral distopalmar outpouchings of the carpometacarpal joint were observed and were located between the axial surface of os metacarpale II (MC2) and os metacarpale IV (MC4) and the abaxial surface of the suspensory ligament. There was no significant difference between the lengths of the lateral (2.3 +/- 0.54 cm) or medial (2.6 +/- 0.75 cm) distopalmar outpouchings. Small extensions from the distopalmar outpouchings were seen and extended axially into the fibers of the suspensory ligament or between the suspensory ligament and the distal accessory ligament of the deep digital flexor tendon. In one carpus, the middle carpal joint communicated with the antebrachiocarpal joint between the articulation of the os carpi intermedium (Ci) and the os carpi ulnare (Cu).
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