Results 181 to 190 of about 17,815 (220)
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Acceleration of scrapie in neonatal Syrian hamsters
Neurology, 1989Prions cause Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, Gerstmann-Sträussler syndrome, and kuru of humans as well as scrapie of animals. Prolonged incubation periods, from months to decades, precede clinical disease. In studies on the biochemical characteristics of prions, weanling Syrian hamsters have been used extensively because they have relatively short ...
M P, McKinley +4 more
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Number of Histocompatibility Loci in Syrian Hamsters
The Journal of Immunology, 1975Abstract Syrian hamsters descended from animals captured in the summer of 1971 have been utilized to obtain some estimate of the number of histocompatibility loci in this species. The survival of skin grafts on two F2 populations derived from these animals and two isogenic stocks indicates considerably more histocompatibility loci than ...
W K, Silvers, D L, Gasser, M R, Murphy
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Developmental toxicity of fumonisin in Syrian hamsters
Mycopathologia, 1994The effects of fumonisin on development of Syrian hamster fetuses were studied using fumonisin B1 and B2 extracted from Fusarium moniliforme corn-culture and purified fumonisin B1. A significant increase in litters with fetal deaths occurred with the high doses of purified (18 mg FB1/kg) and culture-extracted (18 mg FB1 plus 4.5 mg FB2) fumonisin.
J L, Floss +4 more
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2013
A spontaneous genetic model of cerebellar ataxia in the Syrian hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) is described. The homozygous mutant hamsters are smaller than the unaffected littermates but have a normal appearance. They develop progressive, but moderate ataxia beginning at 7 weeks of age.
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A spontaneous genetic model of cerebellar ataxia in the Syrian hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) is described. The homozygous mutant hamsters are smaller than the unaffected littermates but have a normal appearance. They develop progressive, but moderate ataxia beginning at 7 weeks of age.
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Periodontal lesions in the syrian hamster
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1955Paul H. Keyes, Harold S. Gold
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An evaluation of ventilation in dystrophic Syrian hamsters
Journal of Applied Physiology, 1984Ventilatory responses of 10 control and 10 dystrophic male hamsters to air, hypercapnia, and hypoxia were evaluated at four ages (40, 70, 100, and 140 days). Tidal volume (VT), frequency (f), minute ventilation (VE) as well as inspiratory and expiratory time of awake animals were measured with a plethysmograph. There was a small increase of VT in both
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Cholangiofibrosis in the Syrian golden hamster
Veterinary Record, 1983J M, Hamilton, T, Reynolds, P G, Saluja
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Protection against reinfection with D614- or G614-SARS-CoV-2 isolates in golden Syrian hamster
Emerging Microbes and Infections, 2021Marco Brustolin +2 more
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