Local and systemic factors both required for full renewal of deer antlers, and systemic factors only for generic cutaneous regenerative healing. [PDF]
Wang W, Guo Q, Li C.
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Blood in Capsules: Multi-Technique Forensic Investigation of Suspicious Food Supplement. [PDF]
Rudnicki-Velasquez P +7 more
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CRISPR/Cas9-Mediated Overexpression of <i>HGF</i> Potentiates Tarim Red Deer Antler MSCs into Osteogenic Differentiation. [PDF]
Qi Y +6 more
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When Antlers Grow Abnormally: A Hidden Disease Behind Common Cervid Trophy Deformities, Introducing Pedunculitis Chronica Deformans. [PDF]
Sükösd F +15 more
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An ingenious design from nature to accelerate the repair of long-bone critical defects: the longitudinal tubular transverse interconnection structure of deer antlers. [PDF]
Wang C +12 more
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Optimizing protein yield from growing deer antlers. [PDF]
Alegría-Aravena N +10 more
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Related searches:
Chemical analgesia for velvet antler removal in deer
New Zealand Veterinary Journal, 2002There is a legal requirement to provide analgesia for velvet antler removal in New Zealand. Currently, this is achieved using local anaesthetic blockade, with or without systemically administered sedative/analgesic agents, or by compression in 1-year-old stags. Lignocaine hydrochloride 2% is most commonly used and is most effective when administered as
V P, Walsh, P R, Wilson
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Reclassification of velvet antler portions following transcriptomic analysis
Animal Production Science, 2020Context Commercially, velvet antlers along the longitudinal axis are divided into four portions, namely, wax-like (WL), blood-colour (BC), honeycomb-like (HL) and bone (B) slices from the top to the base. However, there is no evidence at a molecular level showing the accuracy of this classification.
Tao Qin +5 more
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Xylazine (Rompun) levels in deer antler velvet
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1983Abstract Xylazine residue levels were measured in velvet antlers from red deer anaesthetised with Rompun. Levels ranged from 70 to 220 ng of drug per g of antler and are not considered to be of pharmacological significance to consumers of so-called ‘human health beverages’.
S.J. Dickson, H.M. S, E.A. Querée
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Regrowth of amputated velvet antlers with and without innervation
Journal of Experimental Zoology, 1985AbstractThe influence of removing portions of the growing antler of yearling red deer stags on subsequent regeneration of the antler in the same season was studied. The influence of the innervation of the antler on such regeneration was the subject of a further study.
J M, Suttie, P F, Fennessy
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