This study aimed to evaluate whether feeding calves with replacers instead of cow's milk interferes with complete blood count, biochemistry variables, survival, and weight gain, and the cost-benefit of these feeds in the suckling phase. We used 16 calves of the Holstein breed with an average of 8±4 days and 39±6 kg of average body weight, randomly divided into two groups: Replacer Group (N=8), receiving four liters of replacer milk during the 60 experimental days; and the Milk Group (N=8), calves receiving four liters of cow's milk. We observed that animals fed with cow's milk had higher body weight and weight gain at all weightings compared to those who consumed the dairy replacer. There was no calve death during the study. The cost (R$) of the diet of the calves that consumed replacer was lower. However, if we consider the weight gain during the experiment, the cost to produce 1 kg of body weight was similar between the treatments, because the calves that consumed milk were weaned with an average of 19kg more body weight. In conclusion, the use of dairy replacers as a replacer for cow's milk caused calves to have an overall lower performance compared to those who received cow's milk during the suckling phase.
The objective of this work was to determine whether preventive consumption of a homeopathic product via drinking water would protect mouse kidneys from a challenge with the nephrotoxic antibiotic gentamicin. We used 40 Swiss mice divided into four groups with ten animals each. The homeopathic product was supplied through water for 30 days in a preventive manner and gentamicin for 10 days to induce an experimental renal failure. The groups were as follows: Negative-CT (homeopathic and gentamicin was not provided), Positive-CT (did not receive homeopathic, but received gentamicin 40 mg/kg), T2 (received 0.002 ml of the product per animal/day, and received gentamicin 40 mg/kg), and T4 (0.004 ml of the product per animal/day and received gentamicin 40 mg/kg). On days 12 and 20, blood and tissue samples were collected from five animals in each group. No histopathological lesions were found in mouse kidneys. However, levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, reactive oxygen species, and nitrite/nitrate ratios in the kidney of the Positive-CT group were higher compared to the other groups. As for glutathione S-transferase, on the 20th day, the groups that used the homeopathic product (T2 and T4) had higher activities than the positive TC. Therefore, the results suggest that prophylactic consumption of the hepatoprotective homeopathic product can decrease lipid peroxidation, nitrous stress, and oxidative stress at the renal level when consecutive doses of gentamicin induce insufficiency.
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