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One hundred and eighty-six cases of milk fever in 80 herds spread over five counties were used to compare treatment with 8g calcium plus 500 mg magnesium in aspartate with the conventional 12-36g calcium as borogluconate. The data obtained from both the herds and their individual cases show that the treatments gave broadly similar results, and a single intravenous treatment cured 74-7 per cent of cases. It appeared that milk fever was not likely to recur with each succeeding parturition. No breed susceptibility was recognised. No correlation was found between the severity of the clinical signs and the inorganic phosphate concentrations. An incidence of milk fever of 8-79 per cent was recorded.
Vet Rec 1975 Aug 02
PMID:Clinical and biochemical responses to the treatment of milk fever. 115 31

A total of 351 single-suckled beef calves were blood sampled at twice-weekly intervals for the first two and a half weeks of life. Twenty three of them died, 13 of a syndrome characterised by acute collapse and 10 of diarrhoea which had persisted for several days before death. Those which died acutely showed a sudden terminal rise in blood levels of potassium, magnesium, inorganic phosphate and total protein. Those which died after several days of diarrhoea showed a more gradual increase in blood chloride and urea concentrations and in packed cell volume values. It is suggested that these changes indicate a difference in the pathogenesis of the two situations. Calves which died had lower blood glucose levels before the onset of clinical signs than those which survived. It is suggested that this may have been a contributory factor in their mortality.
Vet Rec 1975 Nov 29
PMID:Biochemical studies of the "collapse syndrome" in suckled calves. 121 27

The sympathetic innervation of the giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis) carotid arterial system is described in this study using the sucrose-potassium phosphate-glyoxylic acid (SPG) method. The brachiocephalic and bicarotid trunks showed a paucity of sympathetic innervation. Smooth muscle nests observed in the outer layers of the tunica media in these arteries revealed a rich network of sympathetic nerve fibres. The common carotid artery showed numerous sympathetic nerve fibres particularly in the outer muscular zone of the tunica media. The internal maxillary, ramus anastomoticus, and arteria anastomotica also revealed a rich sympathetic innervation and a deep penetration of the nerve fibres into the tunica media. It is suggested that the rich sympathetic innervation of the giraffe carotid arteries maintains a basal tonic state in the smooth muscle in the tunica media. This, in turn, may enable the animal to maintain a relatively high rate of blood flow in the carotid arteries in diastole despite the pressure run-off. It is further suggested that the muscular structure and dense sympathetic innervation of the internal maxillary and its branches to the carotid rete mirabile provide the animal with an array of mechanisms to modulate its cranial circulation particularly when it bends its head to drink.
Anat Rec 1991 Jul
PMID:The structural organization and adrenergic innervation of the carotid arterial system of the giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis). 186 11

We report the distribution of sympathetic nerves in the hindlimb arterial system of the giraffe based on the histochemical demonstration of monoamines by the sucrose-potassium phosphate-glyoxylic acid method. It is noted that the hindlimb arterial system shows regional variations in its sympathetic innervation with regard to the density and the penetration of the nerves into the tunica media not hitherto described. The femoral and popliteal arteries showed a paucity of sympathetic innervation. Distally the dorsal pedal and great metatarsal arteries showed sparse sympathetic innervation characterized by a tendency toward exclusion of the nerves toward the outer layers of the tunica media. In contrast, the anterior (cranial) tibial artery in the leg revealed a relatively rich pattern of sympathetic innervation and a greater penetration of the nerves into the tunica media. The latter part of the arterial system showed a marked thickening of the tunica media and luminal narrowing, thus suggesting a "sphincteric" function. It is conceivable that this sphincter subserves a dual function, namely, to modulate blood flow to the distal parts of the limbs, and secondly to channel blood to the thigh and crural musculature. Pertinent to this is the fact that the presumptive sphincter occurs immediately after the crural muscular branches are given off.
Anat Rec 1991 Jan
PMID:Sympathetic innervation of the hindlimb arterial system in the giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis). 199 75

Serum calcium, magnesium and phosphate values of ewes recently affected by vaginal prolapse were compared with unaffected ewes in four flocks. Subclinical hypocalcaemia was demonstrated in some affected and unaffected ewes in three flocks. Magnesium and phosphate values were normal. In two flocks the body condition of ewes recently affected by vaginal prolapse was variable and reflected the variation in condition found in the flock. In a third flock affected ewes had significantly lower body condition scores than unaffected ewes (P less than 0.001). Analysis of the fourth flock was not possible. Oestrogenic mycotoxins were not detected in any of the feed samples taken from these flocks. The following year the management, nutrition and energy, and the protein and calcium status of ewes in 12 flocks of greyface/mule ewes with a history of a regular high (greater than 3 per cent) or low (less than 1 per cent) prevalence of vaginal prolapse were compared. A high prevalence was not associated with any particular feedstuff. A high or intermediate (1 to 3 per cent) prevalence of vaginal prolapse was found in three of the four flocks managed as a single group and these three flocks were fed on an unrestricted basis. Body condition scoring and beta-hydroxybutyrate estimation confirmed that ewes in these flocks were overfed. The prevalence of vaginal prolapse in the flocks was not related to the serum albumin, calcium or urea of the ewes. Therefore subclinical hypocalcaemia was probably a consequence of vaginal prolapse rather than a cause.
Vet Rec 1991 Mar 02
PMID:Nutritional factors associated with vaginal prolapse in ewes. 203 22

The increase in both glucose 6-phosphatase and hexokinase activities in brown adipose tissues of cold-exposed mice probably relates to thermogenesis by the substrate cycle between glucose 6-phosphate and glucose (Watanabe et al.: Anatomical Record 219:39-44, 1987). To clarify the factors causing the simultaneous increase, we examined biochemically the effects of uni- or bilateral surgical denervation of brown adipose tissues, of adrenalectomy, or of streptozotocin injection on the increase in the two activities in the tissues of cold-exposed mice. Further, the effects of denervation on the increase were also examined histochemically. The simultaneous increase in the two activities was inhibited in the denervated tissues of cold-exposed animals in biochemical and histochemical experiments. However, the increase in the activities was not inhibited in the tissues of animals exposed to cold after adrenalectomy or streptozotocin injection. The results suggest strongly that the activation of the substrate cycle in brown adipose tissues of cold-exposed mice is caused by a transmitter released from sympathetic nerve endings, probably norepinephrine.
Anat Rec 1990 Mar
PMID:Neuronal regulation of substrate cycle between glucose 6-phosphate and glucose in brown adipose tissues of cold-exposed mice. 215 53

Osteocalcin, a major noncollagenous matrix protein of bone, dentin, and cementum, is found in tight association with the calcium phosphate mineral phase of these tissues. This article reviews the structural data for osteocalcin relevant to mineral adsorption. The equilibrium-binding properties for Ca2+ ions and hydroxyapatite are considered, along with the apparent physicochemical effects of osteocalcin on bone mineral dynamics. Several of osteocalcin's possible biological activities (involvement in mineralization, chemoattraction, and leukocyte elastase inhibition) are discussed in relation to the mineral-adsorption characteristics of this protein.
Anat Rec 1989 Jun
PMID:Osteocalcin-hydroxyapatite interaction in the extracellular organic matrix of bone. 254 10

A microbiological procedure for determining dioxidine concentrations in biological fluids with using E. coli AB 2472 rec A 16, a reparation deficient strain as a test organism is described. Cell suspension of the strain 24-hour culture is added to 1.2 per cent agar with Hottinger digest (140 mg per cent of amine nitrogen), 3 g/l of disubstituted sodium phosphate and 0.4 per cent of glucose cooled to 50 degrees C. 10 ml of the medium are added to every Petri dish with metallic cylinders put on the agar. After the medium solidification the cylinders are removed and 0.1 ml of the solution being tested is added to every well. The dishes are incubated for 24 hours under anaerobic conditions. The test system sensitivity is 0.2 microgram/ml of dioxidine. The relationship between the growth inhibition zone and the drug concentration is linear within dioxidine concentrations of 0.2 to 3.2 micrograms/ml.
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PMID:[A microbiological test system for determining dioxidine levels in biological fluids]. 266 75

Samples of decalcified chicken bone together with varying concentrations of phosphoproteins from bone or egg yolk (phosvitin) were used in vitro as heterogenous nucleators for the induction of Ca-P apatite crystals. The lag time between exposure of the collagen-phosphoprotein complexes and the time nucleation of crystals occurred decreased as the concentration of Ser(P) and Thr(P) increased. Enzymatic cleavage of the phosphate groups by wheat germ and phosphatase reversed this effort, indicating that the phosphate group per se principally facilitated the nucleation of Ca-P crystals by the phosphoprotein complex and collagen.
Anat Rec 1989 Jun
PMID:Mechanism of calcification: role of collagen fibrils and collagen-phosphoprotein complexes in vitro and in vivo. 267 81

The calcification of cartilage matrix in endochondral bone formation occurs in an extracellular matrix composed of fibrils of type II collagen with which type X collagen is closely associated. Also present within this matrix are the large proteoglycans containing chondroitin sulfate which aggregate with hyaluronic acid. In addition, the matrix contains matrix vesicles containing alkaline phosphatase. There is probably a concentration of calcium as a result of its binding to the many chondroitin sulfate chains. At the time of calcification, these proteoglycans become focally concentrated in sites where mineral is deposited. This would result in an even greater focal concentration of calcium. Release of inorganic phosphate, as a result of the activity of alkaline phosphatase, can lead to the displacement of proteoglycan bound calcium and its precipitation. The C-propeptide of type II collagen becomes concentrated in the mineralizing sites, prior to which it is mainly associated with type II collagen fibrils and is present in dilated cisternae of the enlarged hypertrophic chondrocytes. The synthesis of type II collagen and the C-propeptide, together with alkaline phosphatase, are regulated by the vitamin D metabolites 24,25(OH)2 cholecalciferol and 1,25 (OH)2 cholecalciferol. At the time of calcification, type X collagen remains associated with type II collagen fibrils. It may play a role in preventing the initial calcification of these fibrils focusing mineral formation in focal interfibrillar sites. This process of calcification is clearly very complex, and involves different interacting matrix molecules and is carefully regulated at the cellular level.
Anat Rec 1989 Jun
PMID:Cartilage macromolecules and the calcification of cartilage matrix. 267 83


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