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Institution

University of Veterinary Science

EducationPyinmana, Myanmar
About: University of Veterinary Science is a education organization based out in Pyinmana, Myanmar. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Receptor. The organization has 597 authors who have published 650 publications receiving 14262 citations.


Papers
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Journal Article
TL;DR: Results indicate that storage of blood samples at 4 C for up to 48 hours, despite appreciable acid-base changes, is associated with less than 1.5% change in equine, bovine, and ovine blood Ca2+ concentrations.
Abstract: The stability of blood ionized calcium (Ca2+) and acid-base variables in equine, bovine, ovine, and canine venous blood samples (n = 15, in each group) stored at 4 C for 3, 6, 9, 24, or 48 hours was studied. Variables included blood Ca2+ and standard ionized calcium (Ca2+ corrected to pH 7.4) concentrations, pH, blood carbon dioxide and oxygen tensions, base excess, bicarbonate concentration, and total carbon dioxide content. Results indicate that storage of blood samples at 4 C for up to 48 hours, despite appreciable acid-base changes, is associated with less than 1.5% change in equine, bovine, and ovine blood Ca2+ concentrations. Similar changes were observed in canine blood during the first 9 hours' storage. After 24 and 48 hours' storage, clinically relevant decrease (10.5 and 15.5%) in canine blood Ca2+ concentration was measured. Therefore, Ca2+ concentration in equine, bovine, and ovine venous blood samples stored up to 48 hours, and in canine blood samples stored up to 9 hours at 4 C is of diagnostic use.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A fairly good relationship between resistance status and control practices used on farms was revealed and populations originating from those farms where the application of adulticides had been frequent or regular and where high resistance was shown to most chemicals could be separated from the others.
Abstract: Samples of 24 house fly (Musca domestica L.) populations were collected from animal farms in Hungary in 1990 and kept in the laboratory to determine their susceptibility to different types of insecticide: organochlorines, organophosphates, carbamates, pyrethroids, macrocyclic lactone and insect growth regulators. The adulticides were tested with topical bioassay in all 24 populations, the larvicides were studied with treated larval medium in 16 populations. The data were expressed as LD50 and LC50 values (ng fly −1 and mg kg −1 larval medium respectively). The percentages of populations which had resistance ratios > 10 at LD50 or LC50 were: 63% to DDT, 50% to methoxychlor, 13% to lindane, 83% to malathion, 63% to trichlorfon, 4% to propetamphos, 96% to dioxacarb, 46% to propoxur, 4% to methomyl, 13% to pyrethrum, 96% to bioresmethrin, 63% to permethrin, 58% to cypermethrin, 79% to SK-80, 79% to deltamethrin, 38% to invermectin, 0% to diflubenzuron, 0% to cyromazine. Correlation analysis showed a high degree of positive correlation among the adulticides except for ivermectin, bioresmethrin and SK-80. No cross-resistance was found between the larvicides and the conventional adulticides. Differences of insecticide resistance levels among the populations surveyed were studied by principal component and factor analysis. A fairly good relationship between resistance status and control practices used on farms was revealed. The populations originating from those farms where the application of adulticides had been frequent or regular and where high resistance was shown to most chemicals could be separated from the others.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Both flies were unable to complete their development at higher and lower moisture levels, however both species were from laboratory strains that have been selected for development at optimum moisture levels.
Abstract: Hydrotaea aenescens (Wiedemann) and Musca domestica L. were reared separately and successfully in poultry and pig manure with moisture levels of 50–80%. H. aenescens produced more pupae in poultry manure, but heavier pupae in pig manure. The reverse was true for M. domestica. Both flies were unable to complete their development at higher and lower moisture levels, however both species were from laboratory strains that have been selected for development at optimum moisture levels. Implications for biological control are discussed.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The amylase activity demonstrable in the liquid intestinal contents of the chick embryo indicates the presence of pancreatic secretion, and the trypsin inhibitor probably suppresses the proteases not only directly, but also through prevention of the activation of zymogens.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that energy deficiency, a well-known phenomenon in ruminants, affects not only the metabolic parameters of the blood but its lipid peroxidative status as well.

33 citations


Authors

Showing all 602 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Gottfried Brem6544815998
Mathias Müller6534717042
János Fodor4730111327
Balázs Gereben39755840
Christine Aurich362545048
Ingrid Walter311412796
Sándor Hornok311552744
Imre Kacskovics30712594
Jörg Aurich301313062
Margit Kulcsár27812332
Péter Sótonyi262285397
Dieter Klein25712819
Levente Kovács243612672
Marta Kankofer211031426
J. Reiczigel21432321
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20232
20229
202116
202023
201913
201811