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Ruminant Coccidiosis

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 2006
Coccidiosis is a protozoan disease of wild and domestic ruminant animals in every country of the world. This article provides basic information regarding the terminology, biology, epidemiology, pathology, diagnosis and control methods applicable to the causative agents and their interaction with host animals.
William R, Jolley, Katherine D, Bardsley
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Sleep in Ruminants

Nature, 1955
DURING digestion experiments with cattle, it was observed that the animals never appeared to sleep and always used the same lying position. In recent years the behaviour of cattle and sheep has been carefully studied by numerous workers, particularly under grazing conditions; the subject has been reviewed by Tribe1 and Hancock2.
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Ruminant Coccidiosis

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 2020
Ruminant coccidiosis, caused by Eimeria species, is a significant and widespread enteric disease in young livestock worldwide. High morbidities and significant mortalities may be observed. For disease diagnosis, fecal samples from clinically ill animals should be analyzed for both, identity (ie, pathogenicity) of Eimeria species and excreted oocyst ...
Berit, Bangoura, Katherine D, Bardsley
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Ruminant Pharmacology

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 1991
Aspects of drug disposition, metabolism, and toxicity in the ruminant animal are discussed, and illustrative examples are provided. The effects of the reticulo-rumen on drug disposition in the ruminant are highlighted.
K W, Hinchcliff   +3 more
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Selenosis in Ruminants

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 2020
Selenium (Se) is a metalloid that exists as a red amorphous powder, reddish crystal, silver-gray crystal, or brown-black solid. Its potency as a nutrient and a toxicant is such that few people have seen the pure element. It is easy to lose sight of the narrow margin between too little and too much.
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Ruminations on Ecclesiasticus

American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 2006
I was not raised in the Catholic church, but I have been learning many remarkable and wonderful things from that tradition. The stress of third-year pharmacy school and the pressures of having to answer life’s big questions about the future have been weighing on me heavily, and I have found ...
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Ruminal Hyperkeratosis and Ruminitis in Young Calves Due to Ruminal Drinking

American Association of Bovine Practitioners Conference Proceedings, 1992
As early as 1982, Dutch authors (2) pointed out that loss of contraction of the esophageal groove of initially healthy veal calves causes chronic indigestion (latent chronic ruminal acidosis), so-called "ruminal drinking syndrome." In subsequent years, the etiology of the disease has been studied intensively (6, 7).
Haenichen, T.   +3 more
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Ribonucleases in Ruminants

Science, 2002
In the recent review by S. A. Benner et al. (“Planetary biology—paleontological, geological, and molecular histories of life,” 3 May, p. [864][1]), Fig. 4 shows an evolutionary tree, which was previously published by the authors ([1][2]) and which was reproduced from a 1986 paper of ours ([2][
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Rumination Syndrome

Gastroenterology Clinics of North America
Rumination syndrome is a disorder of gut-brain interaction characterized by regurgitation of food and/or fluid shortly after ingestion. While medical management for stabilization of nutrition/weight and hydration and comorbid gastrointestinal symptoms is pertinent, behavioral intervention is the primary treatment to address rumination syndrome.
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Seroepidemiology of peste des petits ruminants virus in small ruminants in selected districts in Northwest Ethiopia

Veterinary Medicine and Science, 2023
Haileyesus Dejene   +2 more
exaly  

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