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Urinary indices of renal function in sheep with induced aminoglycoside nephrotoxicosis
1990
Garry, F. | Chew, D.J. | Hoffsis, G.F.
Aminoglycoside nephrotoxicosis (AGNT) was induced in ewes by daily SC administration of gentamicin. Changes in urinary indices of renal function during the development of AGNT are reported. Measurements from timed, volume-measured urine samples were made on days 0, 7, and 8 and included creatinine clearance, total excretion (TE) rates of electrolytes (Na, K, Cl, P) and urine volume. Measurements from free-catch urine samples (without volume measurement) were made daily and included fractional excretion (FE) rate of electrolytes, urine osmolality, and urine-to-serum osmolality and urine-to-serum creatinine ratios. With the onset of AGNT, FE rates of Na, K, Cl, and P increased many fold above baseline values (200 X, 4 to 5 X, 6 to 9 X, and 70 to 95 X, respectively, on days 7 and 8), indicating decreased tubular reabsorption or increased tubular secretion. The increased FE rates were not representative of increases in total electrolyte excretion rates. The total excretion of Na (TE(Na)) was mildly increased, TE(K) was decreased, TE(Cl) was unchanged, and TE(P) was significantly increased on days 7 and 8. Abnormal urinalysis results, glucosuria, and increased FE(P) preceded appreciable increase in serum creatinine concentration. Other abnormal urinary indices of renal function coincided with or followed the increase in serum creatinine concentration. Urinary indices may help characterize renal function associated with the disease state, but did not provide early indication of AGNT.
Show more [+] Less [-]Quantitative morphologic study of the pituitary and thyroid glands of dogs administered L-thyroxine
1990
Panciera, D.L. | Atkins, C.E. | Bosu, W.T.K. | MacEwen, E.G.
To determine the effects of long-term thyroxine treatment, histomorphometric analysis was performed on the pituitary and thyroid glands of healthy dogs, dogs treated for 9 weeks with a replacement dose of L-thyroxine, and dogs at 6 weeks after cessation of thyroxine treatment. In treated dogs, the volume density of thyrotropes decreased during thyroxine treatment and increased 6 weeks after cessation of treatment, compared with thyrotropes of healthy nontreated dogs. The activity of the thyroid gland was decreased in dogs during thyroxine treatment, as evidenced by decreases in epithelial volume density, epithelial height, and follicular area, and increase in colloid volume density, compared with thyroid gland activity in nontreated dogs. After cessation of thyroxine treatment, the thyroid gland had decreased colloid area, follicular area, and epithelial volume density, and increased interstitial volume density, compared with the thyroid gland of healthy nontreated dogs. Thyroxine treatment resulted in suppression of pituitary thyrotropes and thyroid follicular activity.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of sample handling on adrenocorticotropin concentration measured in canine plasma, using a commercially available radioimmunoassay kit
1990
Hegstad, R.L. | Johnston, S.D. | Pasternak, D.M.
A commercially available radioimmunoassay (RIA) kit for measurement of human adrenocorticotropin (hACTH) was validated for use in dogs. Assay sensitivity was 3 pg/ml. Intra-assay coefficient of variation (X 100; CV) for 3 canine plasma pools was 3.0 (mean +/- SD, 33 +/- 0.99 pg/ml), 4.2 (71 +/- 2.4 pg/ml) and 3.7 (145 +/- 3.7 pg/ml) %. Interassay CV for 2 plasma pools measured in 6 assays was 9.8 (37 +/- 3.6 pg/ml) and 4.4 (76 +/- 3.4 pg/ml) %, respectively. Dilutional parallelism was documented by assaying 2 pools of canine plasma at 3 dilutions and correcting the measured result for dilution. Corrected mean concentrations for the first pool were 33 (+/- 0.99), 36 (+/- 4.3), and 33 (+/- 6.8) pg/ml; corrected mean concentrations for the second pool were 145 (+/- 5.4), 141 (+/- 10.8) and 125 (+/- 3.4) pg/ml. Recovery of 1-39hACTH added to canine plasma (6.25, 12.5, 25.0, 50.0, and 100.0 pg/ml) was linear and quantitative (slope = 0.890, R2 = 0.961). To test whether anticoagulant or the protease inhibitor, aprotinin, influences ACTH concentration in canine plasma, ACTH was measured in canine blood collected in 4 tubes containing anticoagulant: heparin (H), heparin + 500 kallikrein inhibitor units (KIU) of aprotinin/ml (HA), EDTA (E), and EDTA + aprotinin (EA). Plasma ACTH concentration was the same when samples containing H and HA, or HA and E were compared, and was significantly (P < 0.01) lower in samples containing EA. Plasma storage at -20 C for 1 week or 1 month was not associated with significant change in ACTH concentration in canine plasma, using any of the 4 anticoagulant treatments. Plasma ACTH concentration measured after 6 months' storage at -20 C was significantly (P < 0.01) lower for all anticoagulants used. Synthetic 1-39hACTH added to canine blood was accurately recovered (88 to 109%, n = 3) from plasma containing EDTA, with or without aprotinin, whereas percentage recovery was overestimated by 18 to 91% in heparinized plasma. Plasma ACTH concentrations in EDTA-treated canine blood kept at 4 or 22 to 25 C for 15 to 90 minutes prior to centrifugation at 8 C were not significantly different. Plasma ACTH concentration in canine plasma was affected by storage tube material. Concentration of ACTH in canine plasma stored in borosilicate glass tubes for 1 week or 1 month at -70 C was significantly higher than initial ACTH values (P less than or equal to 0.01), but was unchanged over time in plasma stored in polypropylene or polystyrene tubes. Sample handling procedures affect canine plasma ACTH concentration measured by use of the RIA kit. Optimal sample handling conditions for plasma ACTH measurement in dogs include use of EDTA anticoagulant, blood collected at 20 to 25 C (room temperature) followed by centrifugation within 15 to 90 minutes, and plasma storage in plastic (not glass) tubes for not longer than 1 month at -20 C.
Show more [+] Less [-]Use of a multiple logistic regression model to determine prognosis of dairy cows with right displacement of the abomasum or abomasal volvulus
1990
Grohn, Y.T. | Fubini, S.L. | Smith, D.F.
Data at admission and at surgery were collected on 458 cows with right displacement of the abomasum or abomasal volvulus, to derive multiple logistic regression models for predicting postsurgical outcome (productive, salvaged, or terminal). The derived models contained few and easily obtained variables. The weight associated with each variable was determined objectively. Three admission variables (heart rate, base excess, and plasma chloride concentration), and 5 surgical variables (heart rate, base excess, diagnosis, method of decompression used, and appearance of abomasal serosa) were used in the final models. Predicted outcomes that used the admission and surgical models were closely related with actual outcomes. Total correct classification for satisfactory (productive) versus unsatisfactory outcome (salvaged and terminal) was 78.2% for the admission model and 82.7% for the surgical model. Combining data on cows with productive and salvaged outcomes as satisfactory outcome, and terminal as unsatisfactory outcome, total correct classification was 90.7% for the admission model and 93.2% for the surgical model. Using predicted probabilities, the market value of productive and salvaged cows, and the medical and surgical costs, one can calculate the expected economic value of each outcome. Treatment can be justified if the sum of the expected value of productive and salvaged outcome exceeds the sum of the medical and surgical costs and the expected salvaged value of the cow that was not treated surgically.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of coagulation and fibrinolysis during the prodromal stages of carbohydrate-induced acute laminitis in horses
1990
Prasse, K.W. | Allen, D. Jr | Moore, J.N. | Duncan, A.
The balance of coagulation and fibrinolysis was studied in 15 horses during the prodromal stages of acute laminitis induced by carbohydrate overload. Progression of the disease was stopped 12 to 24 hours before the expected onset of lameness in trial 1 (8 horses) and at the onset of lameness in trial 2 (7 horses). The end points in each trial were identified by specific changes in blood pressures (trial 1) and by changes in pulse, rectal temperature, and arterial pressure (trial 2) that were anticipated on the basis of original description of the experimental model. Blood samples for hemostasis evaluation were collected before and after carbohydrate overload in trial 1 and after carbohydrate overload in trial 2. Significant changes were not detected in platelet count, mean platelet volume, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen concentration, plasminogen concentration, alpha-2-antiplasmin, antithrombin III, protein C, thromboxane B2, or fibrin(ogen) degradation product concentration. We concluded that an imbalance in coagulation and fibrinolysis is not pathogenic in the onset of experimentally induced equine acute laminitis. Because several test methods used to evaluate hemostasis in these horses were new, reference values for 34 healthy adult horses were established.
Show more [+] Less [-]Induction of neutralizing antibodies against bovine leukosis virus in rabbits by vaccination with recombinant vaccinia virus expressing bovine leukosis virus envelope glycoprotein
1990
Ohishi, K. | Suzuki, H. | Maruyama, T. | Yamamoto, T. | Funahashi, S. | Miki, K. | Ikawa, Y. | Sugimoto, M.
Three kinds of recombinant vaccinia virus (RVV)--mO-HA/ATI, LO1-HA/ATI and mO-HA/7.5kD--expressing bovine leukosis virus (BLV) envelope glycoprotein (gp60) were constructed. The BLV envelope gene of RVV mO-HA/ATI and LO1-HA/ATI or of RVV mO-HA/7.5kD was expressed under control of the promoter of A-type inclusion body (ATI) protein gene of cow-pox virus or vaccinia virus 7.5-kD protein gene, respectively. The vaccinia virus strain, LC16mO, was used as vector for RVV mO-HA/ATI and mO-HA/7.5kD, and strain LO-1 was used for RVV LO1-HA/ATI. Strains LC16mO and LO-1 are attenuated vaccine virus strains originating from the Lister original vaccinia virus. All 3 kinds of constructed RVV expressed gp60 in cultured rabbit kidney cells after infection; mO-HA/ATI expressed more antigen than did mO-HA/7.5kD. Rabbits vaccinated with RVV produced considerable antibody capable of inhibiting syncytium formation, as well as antibody with virion-binding ability. The RVV that used ATI promoter induced higher antibody titer than did the RVV that used 7.5-kD promoter. Results indicate that BLV gp60 is responsible for induction of neutralizing antibodies that suppress in vitro formation of syncytia among BLV-infected cells. Applicability of RVV, especially those using ATI promoter, was evaluated in a vaccine against bovine leukosis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Prophylactic effects of recombinant bovine interferon -alpha 1 on acute Salmonella typhimurium infection in calves
1990
Peel, J.E. | Kolly, C. | Siegenthaler, B. | Martinod, S.R.
The in vivo effects of a single prophylactic dose of recombinant bovine interferon (rBoIFN)-alphaI1 in calves with salmonellosis were investigated, using a Salmonella typhimurium infection model. Treatment with rBoIFN-alphaI1 reduced the degree of septicemia compared with that in control groups, and, in one experiment, using disease of reduced severity, body temperature was lower in treated calves than in controls.
Show more [+] Less [-]Experimentally induced Staphylococcus aureus mastitis in selenium-deficient and selenium-supplemented dairy cows
1990
Erskine, R.J. | Eberhart, R.J. | Scholz, R.W.
Ten Holstein cows were fed a selenium-deficient (SeD) diet containing 0.04 mg of Se/kg of dry matter for 3 months before and throughout their first lactation. A selenium-supplemented (SeS) group of 10 cows was fed an additional 2 mg of Se/head/d to increase dietary Se concentration of the dry matter to approximately 0.14 mg/kg of body weight. An intracisternal challenge exposure of 40 to 60 colony-forming units (CFU) of Staphylococcus aureus was administered into 1 or 2 quarters of the udder of each trial cow at about the twenty-second week of lactation. Blood Se concentration (microgram/ml +/ - SEM) at the time of challenge exposure was 0.035 +/- 0.002 in SeD and 0.139 +/- 0.006 in SeS cows. Infections were established in 14/16 of the challenge-exposed quarters in SeD and 16/19 of the challenge-exposed quarters in SeS cows. The infection in 1 quarter of each Se group cleared without treatment by the end of the 8-week trial period. Log10 peak bacterial concentrations in milk from infected SeD quarters (5.04 +/- 0.25 CFU/ml) were higher (P < 0.05) than those of infected SeS quarters (4.40 +/- 0.12 CFU/ml). Log10 peak somatic cell count (SCC) in milk from infected SeD quarters (7.18 +/- 0.08 cells/ml) did not differ from that of SeS quarters (7.17 +/- 0.05 cells/ml). Peak bacterial concentrations were attained sooner (P < 0.05) in SeD quarters (9.5 +/- 4.0 days) than in SeS quarters (20.7 +/- 3.1 days). Similarly, peak SCC were reached earlier (P < 0.05) in SeD (4.3 +/- 1.1 days) than in SeS quarters (13.3 +/- 3.8 days). The Se groups did not differ significantly with respect to peak milk concentrations of bovine serum albumin or IgG1. Throughout the 8-week trial, the Se groups did not differ significantly in milk bacterial concentration, SCC, bovine serum albumin, or IgG1. Selenium status did not affect the percentage of challenge exposures resulting in infection, duration, or severity of experimentally induced S aureus mastitis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Thyroid and adrenal function tests in adult male ferrets
1990
Heard, D.J. | Collins, B. | Chen, D.L. | Coniglario, J.
Effects of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) on plasma concentrations of thyroid hormones, and effects of ACTH and dexamethasone on plasma concentrations of cortisol, were studied in adult male ferrets. Thirteen ferrets were randomly assigned to test or control groups of eight and five animals, respectively. Combined (test + control groups) mean basal plasma thyroxine (T4) values were different between the TRH (1.81 +/- 0.41 microgram/dl, mean +/- SD) and TSH (2.69 +/- 0.87 microgram/dl) experiments, which were performed 2 months apart. Plasma T4 values significantly (P < 0.05) increased as early as 2 hours (3.37 +/- 1.10 microgram/dl) and remained high until 6 hours (3.45 +/- 0.86 microgram/dl) after IV injection of 1 IU of TSH/ferret. In contrast, IV injection of 500 microgram of TRH/ferret did not induce a significant increase until 6 hours (2.75 +/- 0.79) after injection, and induced side effects of hyperventilation, salivation, vomiting, and sedation. There was no significant increase in triiodothyronine (T3) values following TSH or TRH administration. Combined mean basal plasma cortisol values were not significantly different between ACTH stimulation (1.29 +/- 0.84 microgram/dl) and dexamethasone suppression test (0.74 +/- 0.56 microgram/dl) experiments. Intravenous injection of 0.5 IU of ACTH/ferret induced a significant increase in plasma cortisol concentrations by 30 minutes (5.26 +/- 1.21 microgram/dl), which persisted until 60 minutes (5.17 +/- 1.99 microgram/dl) after injection. Plasma cortisol values significantly decreased as early as 1 hour (0.41 +/- 0.13 microgram/dl), and had further decreased by 5 hours (0.26 +/- 0.15 microgram/dl) following IV injection of 0.2 mg of dexamethasone/ferret. These results indicate that IV injection of 1 IU of TSH/ferret is preferable to IV injection of 500 microgram of TRH/ferret for thyroid function testing in adult male ferrets. Results of this study also indicated that when TRH or TSH is used for the thyroid-stimulation test in male ferrets, plasma T4 concentrations, instead of T3, should be used as the indicator of thyroid response. Additionally, IV injection of 0.5 IU of ACTH and 0.2 mg of dexamethasone may be used in ferrets for the ACTH stimulation and dexamethasone-suppression tests, respectively.
Show more [+] Less [-]Renal net acid and electrolyte excretion in an experimental model of hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis in sheep
1990
Lunn, D.P. | McGuirk, S.M. | Smith, D.F. | MacWilliams, P.S.
Renal electrolyte and net acid excretion were characterized during generation and maintenance of hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis in a ruminant model. Two phases of renal response with regard to sodium and net acid excretion were documented. An initial decrease in net acid excretion was attributable to increase in bicarbonate excretion with associated increase in sodium excretion. As the metabolic disturbance became more advanced, a second phase of renal excretion was observed in which sodium and bicarbonate excretion were markedly decreased, leading to increase in net acid excretion and development of aciduria. Throughout the metabolic disturbance, chloride excretion was markedly decreased; potassium excretion also decreased. These changes were accompanied by increase in plasma renin and aldosterone concentrations. There was apparent failure to concentrate the urine optimally during the course of the metabolic disturbance, despite increasing plasma concentration of antidiuretic hormone.
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