Results 241 to 250 of about 183,524 (300)

Heat Stress in Quail: Impacts on Health and Productivity, and Mitigation Strategies

open access: yesAnimal Research and One Health, EarlyView.
Heat stress disrupts physiological homeostasis in quail, inducing oxidative stress, immune dysregulation, and metabolic imbalance, which impair growth, reproduction, product quality, and welfare. Integrating nutritional, environmental, and genetic–epigenetic strategies enhances thermotolerance, sustains productivity, and supports climate‐smart quail ...
T. A. Eletu   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

Developmental Characteristics of the Embryonic Liver Tissue and Long‐Term Culture of Primary Hepatocytes in Duck

open access: yesAnimal Research and One Health, EarlyView.
Liver development was investigated at different embryonic ages (EAs). Furthermore, numerous hepatocyte media were formulated and evaluated. These results could elaborate the developmental characteristics of duck liver tissue and determine the most suitable medium for the proliferation and characteristic maintenance of hepatocytes in vitro, which would ...
Jie Wei   +7 more
wiley   +1 more source

Breast-feeding multiples

Seminars in Neonatology, 2002
Human breast milk is the best nutrition for human infants. Its advantages over the milk of other species, such as cows, include both a reduced risk for infections, allergies and chronic diseases, together with the full nutritional requirements for growth and development. Breast-feeding is as important for multiples as for singletons.
O, Flidel-Rimon, E S, Shinwell
openaire   +2 more sources

BREAST-FEEDING

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1974
A number of studies have shown that breast-feeding not only supplies the infant with nourishment but gives him immunologic protection against infection as well. Breast-fed infants are less likely to develop respiratory and gastrointestinal infections and allergic reactions. Infants slowly develop their own immunologic defenses in the months after birth,
openaire   +2 more sources

Successful Breast-feeding

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1981
Failure to thrive during breast-feeding is a dilemma that has plagued mankind for centuries. It is not a common occurrence, and only scattered reports of a few cases have been published, while millions of infants worldwide are successfully breast-fed each year. An increasing number of mothers are breast-feeding their infants, however.
openaire   +2 more sources

Breast feeding research

Nursing Standard, 1988
Feeding is the major concern of new mothers in the first few weeks postpartum.
openaire   +2 more sources

Supporting Breast-Feeding

Pediatrics, 1979
For those interested in another approach to breast-feeding, Jelliffe and Jelliffe have recently published an elegant paper titled " Breast Is Best."4 Developing skills that enhance breast-feeding can be learned by reading the books listed at the end of this article.
openaire   +2 more sources

To Breast-Feed or Not to Breast-Feed?

Postgraduate Medicine, 1972
For the infant's well-being, breastfeeding is preferable to formula-feeding, but for the mother, breast-feeding has both advantages and disadvantages.
openaire   +2 more sources

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