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Ricardo Romão Guerra

Researcher at Federal University of Paraíba

Publications -  89
Citations -  508

Ricardo Romão Guerra is an academic researcher from Federal University of Paraíba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Feed conversion ratio. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 78 publications receiving 396 citations. Previous affiliations of Ricardo Romão Guerra include Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources & University of São Paulo.

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Progranulin is a stress-response factor in fibroblasts subjected to hypoxia and acidosis.

TL;DR: Fibroblasts in culture were exposed to two physiologically and clinically relevant microenvironmental stresses; hypoxia and acidosis, both of which increase progranulin expression, and it is proposed that proganulin is part of a fibroblast stress response and is cytoprotective to acidotic stress.
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High Incubation Temperature and Threonine Dietary Level Improve Ileum Response Against Post-Hatch Salmonella Enteritidis Inoculation in Broiler Chicks

TL;DR: High temperature during incubation and high threonine level act independently to reduce the negative effects associated to Salmonella Enteritidis infection on intestinal morphology and performance, with results similar to sham-inoculated birds.
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Biometria, histologia e morfometria do sistema digestório do cachorro-do-mato (Cerdocyon thous) de vida livre

TL;DR: Os cachorros do mato estudados era maiores do que a media descrita para especie, possuiam um sistema digestorio menor que de outros carnivoros, alem de apresentar outras caracteristicas anatomicas e histologicas diferentes das encontradas na literatura.
Journal Article

A novel chronic cirrhosis TAA-induced model in rats.

TL;DR: The cirrhotic protocol used 200 mg of TAA in 4% aqueous solution per kg of body weight applied intraperitoneally three times per week for 14 weeks in Wistar rats and caused low mortality rate.
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Glutamic acid improves body weight gain and intestinal morphology of broiler chickens submitted to heat stress

TL;DR: Dietary glutamic acid supplementation (1%) improved body weight and intestinal integrity of birds submitted to heat stress when compared with non-supplemented and heat-stressed birds.