Search results for "Swine."

showing 10 items of 466 documents

Environmental drivers of breeding sites in blackfly species of medical and veterinary importance in eastern Spain

2021

Geographical distribution and abundance of the pupae of six blackfly species of medical and veterinary concern were studied in eastern Spain according to three different sets of explanatory variables including in-stream variables, both (i) abiotic (i.e., physicochemical) and (ii) biotic (i.e., richness and abundance of either taxonomically or ecologically close related taxa), as well as (iii) meteorological and landscape variables. The results showed specific habitat requirements for pupation in Simulium (Boophthora) erythrocephalum (De Geer, 1776) and Simulium (Wilhelmia) equinum (Linnaeus, 1758), two of the six species studied regarding elevation and temperature. While the rest of the spe…

Abiotic componentVeterinary medicineBiotic componentGeneral VeterinarySwinePupaTemperatureInterspecific competitionBiologyGeneralist and specialist speciesbiology.organism_classificationHabitatSpainAbundance (ecology)Insect ScienceAnimalsCattleSimuliidaeParasitologySpecies richnessSimuliumEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMedical and Veterinary Entomology
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New prospective in treatment of Parkinson's disease: Studies on permeation of ropinirole through buccal mucosa

2012

The aptitude of ropinirole to permeate the buccal tissue was tested using porcine mucosa mounted on Franz-type diffusion cells as ex vivo model. Drug permeation was also evaluated in presence of various penetration enhancers and in iontophoretic conditions. Ropinirole, widely used in treatment of motor fluctuations of Parkinson's disease, passes the buccal mucosa. Flux and permeability coefficient values suggested that the membrane does not appear a limiting step to the drug absorption. Nevertheless, an initial lag time is observed but the input rate can be modulated by permeation enhancement using limonene or by application of electric fields. Absorption improvement was accompanied by the …

Absorption (pharmacology)IndolesTime FactorsSwinePharmaceutical SciencePharmacologyModels BiologicalPermeabilityAntiparkinson AgentsBuccal delivery Ropinirole Parkinson's disease Absorption enhancement Porcine buccal mucosaDrug Delivery SystemsElectricityCyclohexenesmedicineAnimalsAdjuvants PharmaceuticIontophoresisTerpenesChemistryMouth MucosaAdministration BuccalParkinson DiseasePenetration (firestop)Buccal administrationIontophoresisPermeationRopiniroleMembraneSettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoFeasibility StudiesLimoneneEx vivomedicine.drugBiomedical engineeringInternational Journal of Pharmaceutics
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A Good Breath of Oxygen for Beta-Like Cells Obtained From Porcine Exocrine Pancreatic Tissue

2011

Ischemia is the most important factor that affects organ survival during harvesting. The two-layer method (TLM) is one of several cold storage solutions that seeks to preserve organs and cells avoiding in vivo and in vitro ischemia. We compared the retrieval of beta-like elements from exocrine pancreatic cells using TLM versus University of Wisconsin (UW) solutions. For this purpose pancreata laparoscopically harvested from 20 female pigs were preserved in UW solution or TLM before digestion. The resulting exocrine cells were divided into 2 groups: the first was cultured in a designed medium to allow differentiation into beta-like cells and the second was cryopreserved before the differenti…

AdenosineTime FactorsCell SurvivalSwineAllopurinolCellular differentiationOrgan Preservation Solutionsbeta-like-cells porcine esocrine pancreatic tisuueCold storageCell SeparationCryopreservationAndrologyPancreatectomyRaffinoseIn vivoSettore BIO/13 - Biologia ApplicataInsulin-Secreting CellsmedicineAnimalsInsulinViaspanCells CulturedCryopreservationFluorocarbonsTransplantationbusiness.industryCell DifferentiationAnatomyGlutathionePancreas ExocrineIn vitroCulture MediaOxygenTransplantationSettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleGlucosemedicine.anatomical_structureTissue and Organ HarvestingFemaleLaparoscopySurgeryPancreasbusiness
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Fluke egg characteristics for the diagnosis of human and animal fascioliasis by Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica

2009

In trematodiases, shape and size of the fluke eggs shed with faeces are crucial diagnostic features because of their typically reduced intraspecific variability. In fascioliasis, the usual diagnosis during the biliary stage of infection is based on the classification of eggs found in stools, duodenal contents or bile. The aim of the present study is to validate the identification of Fasciola species based on the shape and size of eggs shed by humans, characterizing their morphometric traits using a computer image analysis system (CIAS). The influence of both the geographical location and of the host (human and livestock) has been analysed. Coprological studies were carried out in fasciolias…

AdultFascioliasisPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyGeorgiaAdolescentSwineEggsVeterinary (miscellaneous)HelminthiasisZoologyParasitic disease diagnosisFecesYoung AdultHepaticaPeruparasitic diseasesImage Processing Computer-AssistedmedicineAnimalsHumansFasciola hepaticaHelminthsChildMicroscopySheepFasciolabiologyEquidaeFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseFasciolaInfectious DiseasesVietnamParasitologyInsect ScienceCattleEgyptParasitologyTrematodaActa Tropica
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Humidity of Anaesthetic Gases with Respect to Low Flow Anaesthesia

1994

It has been demonstrated in an experimental study in swine using the scanning electron microscope that a rebreathing technique utilising minimal fresh gas flowrates significantly improves climatization of anaesthetic gases. Consequently, effects of various anaesthetic techniques on airway climate must be assessed, which covers the need for suitable measuring devices. Basic principles and methods of humidity measurement in flowing anaesthetic gases include gravimetric hygrometry, dew point hygrometry, wet-dry bulb psychrometry, mass spectrometry, spectroscopic hygrometry and electrical hygrometry. A custom-made apparatus for continuous measurement of humidity and temperature in the inspired…

AdultHot TemperatureTime FactorsSwineThermometersPartial PressureAnalytical chemistryBronchiCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicineAbsorption03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAnesthesia Closed-CircuitTidal VolumeAnimalsHumansMedicineCiliaDesiccation030223 otorhinolaryngologyMoistureHygrometerbusiness.industryElectric ConductivityWaterHumidityHumidity030208 emergency & critical care medicineEquipment DesignPartial pressureRespiration ArtificialFresh gas flowVolumetric flow rateTracheaMucusAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineDew pointAnesthesiaAnesthetics InhalationGravimetric analysisVolatilizationPulmonary VentilationbusinessAnaesthesia and Intensive Care
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In vivo confocal laser endomicroscopy of the human liver: a novel method for assessing liver microarchitecture in real time

2008

Background and study aims Confocal endomicroscopy is a unique novel tool for in vivo histology in humans. Due to limitations imposed by the form of the equipment and by sterilization workflows, its use has been limited to the gastrointestinal tract so far. We have developed a rigid miniaturized probe for confocal endomicroscopy of the human liver during laparoscopy. Patients and methods To assess the feasibility and potential clinical value of this new system (diameter 6.3 mm), 25 patients with liver disease were examined during routine minilaparoscopy under conscious sedation. Results Subsurface serial images (from surface to 250 microm) were generated in real time after fluorescein inject…

AdultLiver CirrhosisMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtySwineConfocallaw.inventionLiver diseaseConfocal microscopylawIn vivoEndomicroscopyAnimalsHumansMedicineAgedMicroscopy Confocalmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryLiver DiseasesGallbladderGastroenterologyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseEndoscopyFatty Livermedicine.anatomical_structureLiverFemalebusinessPreclinical imagingEndoscopy
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In-vivo investigation of material quality of bone tissue by measuring apparent phalangeal ultrasound transmission velocity

1995

The square of ultrasound transmission velocity in a material is related to the modulus of elasticity, which is known to be an indicator of stability in bone. The aim of our study was to use ultrasound transmission velocity to obtain information about the material properties of bone tissue, keeping other factors possibly influencing ultrasound transmission as constant as possible. Apparent phalangeal ultrasound transmission velocity (APU) measured in 54 isolated, fresh pig phalanges was shown to be independent of bone mineral density (BMD) measured by SPA. Fastest sound transmission led exclusively through cortical bone so that intertrabecular connectivity in spongious bone could not influen…

AdultMaleAdolescentSwineMiddle fingerBone tissueBone and BonesFingersMetacarpophalangeal JointRheumatologyBone DensityIn vivomedicineAnimalsHumansOsteoporosis PostmenopausalAgedUltrasonographyAged 80 and overBone mineralbusiness.industryUltrasoundAge FactorsReproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicineAnatomyMiddle AgedPhalanxElasticitymedicine.anatomical_structureMaterial qualityFemaleCortical boneNuclear medicinebusinessClinical Rheumatology
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Balantidiasis in Aymara children from the northern Bolivian Altiplano.

1998

Balantidium coli infection was coprologically studied in 2,124 Aymara children 5-19 years of age from the schools of 22 communities of the northern Bolivian Altiplano over a five-year period. Infection with B. coli was found in 11 of the communities surveyed, with prevalences of 1.0-5.3% (overall prevalence=1.2%). The prevalences observed are some of the highest reported and did not differ significantly among the various age groups or between boys and girls. These prevalences, the apparent absence of symptoms or signs of illness due to this parasite in the schoolchildren surveyed at the time of stool sampling, and the consistency of stool samples of the infected students suggest that they a…

AdultMaleBoliviaAdolescentSwineAge groupsVirologymedicinePrevalenceAnimalsHumansBalantidiasisProtozoal diseaseChildBalantidium colibiologyBalantidiasisbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseInfectious DiseasesEl NiñoChild PreschoolParasitologyFemaleAsymptomatic carrierDemographyThe American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene
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Endoluminal therapy of GERD with a new endoscopic suturing device

2005

Background Endoscopic, endoluminal therapy might be an alternative treatment option in light of the costs of proton pump inhibitor therapy and possible complications after laparoscopic surgery. The aim of the current study was to assess the efficacy and the safety of a new endoluminal suture device (ESD) in pig models and humans. Secondly, 3 and 6 months' follow-ups were performed, and possible complications and their management were evaluated. Methods In the preclinical phase of the study, suturing procedures were practiced and evaluated in 8 pig models (Erlanger Endo Trainer). In the clinical phase, 20 patients with mild esophagitis, small or no hiatal hernia, and signs of abnormal acid e…

AdultMaleLaparoscopic surgerymedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentEndoscopeManometrySwineSedationmedicine.medical_treatmentEndoscopy GastrointestinalGastric AcidHiatal herniaEsophagusPressuremedicineAnimalsHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrySuture TechniquesGastroenterologyEquipment DesignHydrogen-Ion Concentrationmedicine.diseaseEndoscopySurgeryDisease Models AnimalTreatment OutcomeTherapeutic endoscopyGastroesophageal RefluxGERDFemalemedicine.symptombusinessEsophagitisFollow-Up StudiesGastrointestinal Endoscopy
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Quantification of Regional Intrapulmonary Oxygen Partial Pressure Evolution during Apnea by 3He MRI

1999

We present a new method to determine in vivo the temporal evolution of intrapulmonary oxygen concentrations by functional lung imaging with hyperpolarized (3)Helium ((3)He-->). Single-breath, single-bolus visualization of (3)He--> administered to the airspaces is used to analyze nuclear spin relaxation caused by the local oxygen partial pressure p(O(2))(t). We model the dynamics of hyperpolarization in the lung by rate equations. Based hereupon, a double acquisition technique is presented to separate depolarization by RF pulses and oxygen induced relaxation. It permits the determination of p(O(2)) with a high accuracy of up to 3% with simultaneous flip angle calibration using no additional …

AdultMaleNuclear and High Energy PhysicsApneaSwinePartial PressureBiophysicsAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementHyperpolarized Helium 3HeliumBiochemistryOxygenNuclear magnetic resonanceIsotopesFlip angleAnimalsHumansHyperpolarization (physics)LungPhantoms ImagingRelaxation (NMR)DepolarizationPartial pressureCondensed Matter PhysicsMagnetic Resonance ImagingOxygenchemistryLimiting oxygen concentrationJournal of Magnetic Resonance
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