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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (
cage
)
29,987
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The welfare of seven domestic cats housed singly in a quarantine cattery was studied for six months. Behavioural data were obtained with cameras and by time-lapse video recording, and cortisol to
creatinine
ratios were measured in urine samples collected from litter trays. It took five weeks for the cats to show evidence of adaptation to their new environment. They spent most of the first two weeks concealed in a house on the floor of their
cage
. As they adapted, they spent less time hiding and more time higher in the
cage
. The cats were inactive for approximately 90 per cent of the time observed, and they received little human contact. Compared with the first day, the cats' cortisol to
creatinine
ratios were significantly lower from their second month in quarantine.
...
PMID:Welfare of cats in a quarantine cattery. 969 49
In this experimental study, 35 males were exposed to artificial magnetic fields. The fields were produced by a set of Helmholz coils internally isolated by a Faraday
cage
which effectively eliminated electrical fields. Each participant stayed inside the coils for 40 minutes on two occasions with an interval of seven days, but was actually only once exposed to a static magnetic field (9.6 mT) and oscillating magnetic fields of variable frequency and strength. Urine and blood samples were taken before and after exposure, and before and after non-exposure. Analysis detected significant changes in serum
creatinine
level after exposure (p < 0.0001). The changes in serum
creatinine
level in the nonexposed situation were significantly smaller than the changes found in the exposed situation (p < 0.0001). The changes i urine
creatinine
after 40 minutes of exposure was also found to be significant (p < 0.01). Exposure to magnetic fields may induce biological reactions.
...
PMID:[Creatinine and calcium in urine and blood after brief exposure to magnetic fields]. 1008 71
Hyperuricemia is a common finding in patients with malignant diseases. Chemotherapy can induce life-threatening tumor lysis syndrome with severe hyperuricemia, other metabolic abnormalities, and acute renal failure. Intrarenal precipitation of uric acid contributes to renal insufficiency in this situation. Allopurinol, by preventing the conversion of hypoxanthine and xanthine to uric acid, has been long considered the standard pharmacological approach to hyperuricemia and prevention of tumor lysis syndrome. However, allopurinol itself may facilitate precipitation of xanthine crystals and has little influence on already-formed uric acid crystals deposited in the kidney. Urate oxidase further oxidizes uric acid to the highly water-soluble allantoin in mammals, except humans, who lack this enzyme. We report four cases of hyperuricemia (initial serum uric acid concentrations, 14.0 to 25.0 mg/dL) associated with malignant diseases treated with exogenous urate oxidase. Two of the patients showed full-blown tumor lysis syndrome. A single urate oxidase infusion (1,000 U) readily reduced serum uric acid levels in all patients. Furthermore, renal insufficiency, determined by serum
creatinine
concentrations, improved in three of the four patients. No adverse effects were observed. Currently, a recombinant urate oxidase is undergoing clinical testing and may make this efficient therapy more widely available. We believe that treatment with urate oxidase is a safe and efficient therapy for patients with
cancer-associated
hyperuricemia and may be effective even in individuals with only moderately elevated serum uric acid concentrations.
...
PMID:Hyperuricemia and renal insufficiency associated with malignant disease: urate oxidase as an efficient therapy? 1056 Nov 60
Qualitative urinalysis using Multistix reagent strips for the detection of urinary pH, protein, glucose, bilirubin, blood, ketone, urobilinogen and
creatinine
can be carried out with a few drops of mouse urine. The use of metabolic cages is not practical for such qualitative studies particularly when several animals are involved. Here we describe two different methods for collecting pure mouse urine. The single animal method (SAM) involves allowing a single mouse to urinate on Glad cling wrap outside of the animal
cage
. The multiple animal method (MAM) involves partitioning seven mice into seven different make-shift compartments laid out on top of the cling wrap and allowing them to urinate. The voided urine, in each case, is then aspirated into micro-centrifuge tubes using a Pipetman. Without coercion pure urine was obtained as early as 12 s. Volumes in the range of 10-250 microl were obtained. Modifications of the SAM could prove useful for rat or mouse urine collection under conditions of microgravity.
...
PMID:Mouse urine collection using clear plastic wrap. 1075 97
Welfare-related physiological and behavioural responses were studied in farm-bred male blue foxes (Alopex lagopus). Three different-sized cages (80-cm long [CL80], 120-cm long [CL120], and 240-cm long [CL240]; each 105-cm wide x 70-cm high) with wire-mesh floors and one enlarged
cage
(CL240E) with both wire-mesh floor (240-cm long x 105-cm wide x 70-cm high) and earthen floor (80-cm long x 105-cm wide x 70-cm high) were compared. N = 30 males for each group. The experiments lasted from weaning in July to pelting in December. Statistical analyses were based on the models accounting for litter as a block effect. Breaking strength of tibia was highest for foxes having access to both wire-mesh and ground floors (CL240E). Stress-induced hyperthermia was evident during capture and immobilisation. The highest rectal temperature (mean +/- SEM) was found in CL240E (capture: 39.6 +/- 0.09 degrees C, restraint:40.0 +/- 0.09 degrees C) and the lowest in CL80 (capture: 39.1 +/- 0.09 degrees C, restraint: 39.7 +/- 0.09 degrees C). Likewise, capture time (median; interquartile range) in the home
cage
was highest in CL240E (29; 18 to 44) and lowest in CL80 (12; 9 to 14). During capture, foxes tended to withdraw to the farthest site within the
cage
. CL240E foxes typically showed the most fear towards human. The most confident animals were found in CL80. The cortisol:
creatinine
ratio (median; interquartile range) obtained from circadian urine did not reveal statistically significant differences among CL80 (3. 5; 2.6 to 4.1), CL120 (2.3; 1.5 to 3.8) and CL240 (2.3, 1.5 to 3.7). The earthen flooring complicated the urine sampling and conclusions for CL240E (1.7; 1.2 to 2.2). CL240E foxes were the most active and explorative on both wire-mesh- and ground-floored open-field arenas. Altogether, 53% of furs from CL240E were classified as very dirty. Dirtiness of furs in other test groups was slight. In conclusion, the present results did not reveal an unambiguous superiority of any of the studied
cage
options for well-being of farmed blue foxes.
...
PMID:Effects of space allowance and earthen floor on welfare-related physiological and behavioural responses in male blue foxes. 1091 98
A 57-year-old male patient, recently known with an anal carcinoma with inguinal lymph node involvement, was admitted because of anorexia, nausea, vomiting and constipation. On physical examination the patient was dehydrated, and a systolic murmur, grade III/VI, punctum maximum apex cordis, was heard. Serum calcium was raised (4.50 mmol/l), as was the serum
creatinine
(328 mumol/l). Both values had been normal 14 days before admission. Serum parathormone was suppressed. A bone scan did not reveal evident lesions in the skeleton. FDG-PET scan showed uptake of the tracer into the bone marrow. A bone biopsy showed metastasis of a squamous cell carcinoma. Shortly after that the patient died. Hypercalcaemia is associated with cancer. Colorectal/anal carcinomas have a low incidence of hypercalcaemia. The prognosis of patients with
cancer associated
with hypercalcaemia is poor.
...
PMID:[Clinical thinking and decision making in practice. A patient with anal cancer and hypercalcemia]. 1110 69
To study renal handling of urinary electrolytes from male Fisher 344 rats during spaceflight, waste pads were obtained from cages flown in space and from cages used for ground controls. Pads were obtained from cages in which animals were group-housed (n=6 animals/
cage
) (Animal Enclosure Module; AEM) for 12 days or individually housed (2 animals/divided
cage
) (Research Animal Holding Facility; RAHF) for 19 days. Pads were washed, and extracts analyzed for sodium, potassium, chloride, calcium, and
creatinine
concentrations. It was observed that spaceflight reduced the absolute concentrations of electrolytes deposited onto the pads. When adjustments were made for deposition on all
cage
surfaces during flight, electrolyte and
creatinine
concentrations were similar to those of controls. Specifically, there were no differences in the sodium-, potassium-, and chloride-to-
creatinine
ratios of flight and control animals, suggesting no difference in the renal handling of these electrolytes during spaceflight. The calcium-to-
creatinine
ratio of urine on flight waste pads was reduced, suggesting an increase in reabsorption. From these analyses, the renal handling of sodium, potassium, and chloride does not appear to be altered in rats during spaceflight, while that of calcium may be. Deposition of urine on all surfaces of the cages during spaceflight should be considered in the design of future animal habitats, and in future analyses of waste pad constituents.
...
PMID:Deposition and renal handling of urinary electrolytes from rats during spaceflight. 1154 83
Aristolochic acids (AA), present in Aristolochia plants, are the toxin responsible for Chinese herbs nephropathy (CHN), a rapidly progressive tubulointerstitial nephritis (TIN). To clarify the mechanisms of the development of CHN, we tried to induce TIN in mice using AA. Three strains of inbred mice, BALB/c, C3H/He and C57BL/6, received 2.5 mg kg(-1) of AA or AA sodium salt (AANa) daily by intraperitoneal or oral administration, 5 days a week for 2 weeks. Serum and renal tissue were obtained at sacrifice. Twelve-hour urine samples were individually collected in a metabolic
cage
at one-week intervals. In the AA-injected groups, severe tubular injury, with the appearance of acute tubular necrosis, and rare cell infiltration into the interstitium, were seen in BALB/c mice. C3H/He mice also developed TIN with prominent cell infiltration into the interstitium and interstitial fibrosis. In C57BL/6 mice, only mild and focal tubulointerstitial changes were seen. Serum
creatinine
and blood urea nitrogen increased in BALB/c and C3H/He mice. Immunofluorescent study revealed no deposition of immune components in kidneys. In the AANa-treated groups, TIN was also seen in all groups, but even more severe tubulointerstitial changes were induced by intraperitoneal injection. Further examination using purified AAI, AAII, AAIVa and aristolactam I (ALI) revealed that AAI induced strong nephrotoxicity in mice, and that AAII resulted in mild nephrotoxicity. However, AAIVa and ALI caused no nephrotoxicity in this experimental system. There are strain differences in mice in their susceptibility to AA nephropathy. AAI exerted the strongest nephrotoxic effect in mice.
...
PMID:Acute nephrotoxicity of aristolochic acids in mice. 1500 81
In mouse kidney, the conventional protein kinase C (PKC) isoenzyme alpha is expressed in glomeruli, the cortical collecting duct (intercalated cells only), and medullary collecting duct. To get insights on its function, PKC-alpha knockout (-/-) and wild-type (+/+) mice were studied. When provided free access to water, PKC-alpha -/- mice showed approximately 50% greater urine flow rate and lower urinary osmolality in 24-h metabolic
cage
experiments despite a greater urinary vasopressin-to-
creatinine
ratio vs. PKC-alpha +/+ mice. Renal albumin excretion was not different. Clearance experiments under inactin/ketamine anesthesia revealed a modestly reduced glomerular filtration rate and showed a reduced absolute and fractional renal fluid reabsorption in PKC-alpha -/- mice. The sodium-restricting response to a low-sodium diet was unaffected in PKC-alpha -/- mice. Urinary osmolality was reduced to similar hypotonic levels in PKC-alpha -/- and +/+ mice during acute oral water loading or application of the vasopressin V(2)-receptor antagonist SR-121463. In comparison, the lower urinary osmolality observed in PKC-alpha -/- mice vs. wild-type mice under basal conditions persisted during water restriction for 36 h. In conclusion, PKC-alpha appears not to play a major role in renal sodium reabsorption but, consistent with its expression in the medullary collecting duct, contributes to urinary concentration in mice. Considering that PKC-beta I and -beta II are coexpressed with PKC-alpha in mouse medullary collecting duct, the present results indicate that conventional PKC isoenzymes cannot fully compensate for each other.
...
PMID:Evidence for a role of protein kinase C-alpha in urine concentration. 1503 42
The
cage
systems commonly used for housing laboratory rats often result in sedentary and overweight animals, as a consequence of restricted opportunities for physical activity combined with ad libitum feeding. This can have implications both for animal well-being and for the experimental outcome. Physical activity has several known positive effects on health and lifespan, and physical fitness might therefore be incorporated into the animal welfare concept. The aim of this study was to investigate if and how pen housing affects the physical activity and fitness of rats. Thirty-two juvenile male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned to two different housing systems for a 4-week period. Sixteen rats were kept individually in standard Makrolon type III cages (42x26x18 cm) furnished with black plastic tubes (singly-housed, SI). The remaining rats were kept in groups of eight, housed in large floor pens (150x210 cm), which were furnished with various objects to increase environmental complexity (pen-housed, PH). The body weight gain, and food and water intake of the rats were measured. During weeks 3 or 4, home
cage
behaviour, urinary cortiosterone/
creatinine
ratios (CO/CR), and muscle strength on an inclined plane, were measured. Enzyme activities and glycogen content were measured in tissue samples from m. triceps brachii taken after euthanization at the end of the study. There were no significant differences between groups for food and water intake, but PH rats weighed 14% less than SI rats after 4 weeks, and PH rats also had a more diverse behavioural pattern than SI rats. PH rats had significantly higher oxidative capacity (28% more citrate synthase (CS)) and greater glycogen content (28%) in their muscle samples than SI rats. The PH rats performed significantly better on the inclined plane, both in the muscle strength test (mean angle 75+/-0.5 degrees for PH rats and 69+/-0.4 degrees for SI rats) and the endurance strength test (mean time 233+/-22 s for PH rats and 73+/-14 s for SI rats). There was a negative correlation between body weight and results on the inclined plane for the PH rats. There were no significant differences between housing types with respect to CO/CR ratios. In conclusion, the large pen represents an environment that stimulates physical activity and more varied behaviour, which should be beneficial for the welfare of the animal.
...
PMID:Housing-related activity in rats: effects on body weight, urinary corticosterone levels, muscle properties and performance. 1570 24
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