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1.
Trop Anim Health Prod ; 45(1): 231-7, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22678494

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to assess the effect of different supplements on the behavior variables of crossbred dairy cows that were in pasture that comprised two 4 × 4 Latin squares (four periods, four treatments, and four animals). Each experimental period lasted 15 days (10 days to adapt animals to treatments and 5 days for data collection). The animals were supplemented twice a day, with different forage (corn silage and cactus pear) and concentrate sources (soy mea + wheat meal + corn meal + cotton seed together and soy meal as a single constituent of the concentrate). A significant difference (p < 0.10) was observed for the percentage of time spent consuming the supplement and for idleness, rumination, and bite rate at the time of supplementation. The supplement intake period was greater for the cactus pear-based supplements due to the lower dry matter content. Those based on corn silage resulted in longer rumination periods than those consisting of cactus pear; however, the opposite was observed for supplements based on the cactus, which showed higher percentages of time for idleness. The supplementation influenced the ingestive behavior of crossbred dairy cows.


Subject(s)
Breeding/methods , Dairying/methods , Dietary Supplements/statistics & numerical data , Digestion/physiology , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Animal Feed/analysis , Animals , Brazil , Cattle , Female , Observation , Opuntia , Silage , Time Factors
2.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg ; 134(5): 1171-8, 2007 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17976445

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Patients with a coronary artery arising from the wrong sinus are susceptible to ischemia and sudden death. Risk is higher when the artery courses interarterially--between the pulmonary artery and aorta--has an intramural course, or has an abnormal orifice. In single coronary ostium without intramural course, unroofing and coronary reimplantation are inappropriate, and coronary artery bypass grafting is suboptimal. For this variant, we have devised pulmonary artery translocation. METHODS: A retrospective review of 18 patients undergoing repair between January 1999 and March 2005 was performed. Mean age was 8.1 years (range 6 weeks-16 years). All anomalous arteries coursed interarterially. Ten patients had a right coronary artery from the left coronary sinus; 8 had a left coronary artery from the right sinus. Eleven had an intramural course, and 4 had a single coronary ostium without an intramural course. Ten (56%) patients had symptoms: chest pain (9/10), syncope (3/10), or dyspnea (2/10). Repair was implemented by unroofing (n = 11), reimplantation (n = 3), or pulmonary artery translocation (1 lateral, 3 anterior). All patients were followed up clinically and echocardiographically. RESULTS: At a mean of 2.2 years (2 weeks-5 years), there was no mortality. Symptoms improved and function remained normal in all but 1 patient. He had sustained multiple infarcts in the anomalous artery's distribution and required transplantation despite repair. CONCLUSIONS: Repair is indicated in all patients with coronary insufficiency and in asymptomatic patients with high-risk morphologic abnormalities. We recommend unroofing when an intramural component (or slit-like orifice) is present, reimplantation for separate ostia without an intramural course, and pulmonary artery translocation for single ostium without an intramural course. Coronary artery bypass grafting is thus avoided.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Surgical Procedures/methods , Coronary Vessel Anomalies/surgery , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Retrospective Studies
3.
Inorg Chem ; 44(16): 5696-705, 2005 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16060620

ABSTRACT

We wish to report the first measurements of (199)Hg NMR chemical shift data for a series of homoleptic Hg(II) complexes with thiacrown ligands and related aza and mixed thia/aza macrocycles. In mercury(II) complexes containing trithiacrown through hexathiacrown ligands, we observed (199)Hg NMR chemical shifts in the range of -298 to -1400 ppm. Upfield chemical shifts in these NMR spectra are seen whenever (a) the number of thioether sulfur donors in the complex is decreased, (b) a thioether sulfur donor is replaced by a secondary nitrogen donor, and (c) the size of the macrocycle ring increases without a change in the nature or number of the donor atoms. Changes in noncoordinating anions, such as hexafluorophosphate and perchlorate, have little effect on the (199)Hg chemical shift. For several complexes, we observed (3)J((199)Hg-(1)H) coupling in the range of 50-100 Hz, the first example of proton-mercury coupling through a C-S thioether bond. Also, we obtained unusual upfield (13)C NMR chemical shifts for methylene resonances in several of the thiacrown complexes which correspond to distortions within the five- and six-membered chelate rings bound to the mercury ion. We report the X-ray crystal structure of the complex [Hg(18S6)](PF(6))(2) (18S6 = 1,4,7,10,13,16-hexathiacyclooctadecane). The molecule crystallizes in the rare trigonal space group Pm1 with hexakis(thioether) coordination around the Hg(II) center confirming previous X-ray photoemission spectroscopic data on the compound. The lack of an observable (199)Hg NMR signal for the complex is the result of the identical length (2.689(2) Angstroms) of all six Hg-S bonds. We additionally report the X-ray structure of the complex [Hg(9N3)(2)](ClO(4))(2) (9N3 = 1,4,7-triazacyclononane) which shows hexakis(amine) coordination of the 9N3 to form a distorted trigonal prismatic structure. Solution dissociation of the one of the 9N3 ligands from the mercury ion is confirmed by multinuclear NMR experiments. For six-coordinate macrocyclic Hg(II) complexes, N6 donor sets have a preference for trigonal prisms while S6 donor sets favor octahedral structures.

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