Alcohol taken regularly over a lengthy period of time has been claimed to cause the loss of neurons in both the adult and developing brain. However, it remains uncertain whether acute, as opposed to chronic, exposure to alcohol at specified periods can also cause disruption in the neuronal population of the developing brain. This question was investigated by exposing Wistar rat pups to 7.5 g/kg body weight of ethanol administered as a 10% solution via an intragastric cannula over an 8 hour period either on the 5th (PND5) or the 10th (PND10) postnatal day of age. Gastrostomy controls received a 5% sucrose solution substituted isocalorically for the ethanol. Another set of pups raised by their mothers was used as "suckle controls." All surgical procedures were carried out under halothane vapour anaesthesia. After the artificial feeding regimes, all pups were returned to the lactating dams and weaned at 21 days of age. Between 52 and 54 days of age, the rats were anaesthetised with an intraperitoneal injection with Nembutal and killed by intracardiac perfusion with 3% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. The relatively unbiased stereological procedure known as the "fractionator" method was used to estimate the total number of Purkinje cells in the cerebellum of each animal. The Purkinje cell nucleolus was used as the counting unit; it was assumed that each Purkinje cell contained only one nucleolus. PND10 ethanol-treated rats and gastrostomy and suckle controls had between about 210,000-232,000 Purkinje cells in the cerebellum. However, the PND5 ethanol-treated rats had only about 137,000 Purkinje cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Serum gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) levels in blood samples taken from normal calves which bad suckled colostrum were much higher than those found in healthy adult cattle. Levels of over 60 times the normal adult level were observed. These high levels of GGT took approximately 5 weeks to decline to adult values. Calves which appeared to have not received or absorbed colostrum had GGT levels which would be considered normal in adult cattle. A calf with serum gamma globulin levels which indicated an intermediate amount of colostrum absorption had a level of GGT which was intermediate between that expected for normal adult cattle and that found in calves which had more fully absorbed colostrum. The mean GGT level observed in colostrum from 6 newly-calved cows was over 800 times the mean serum GGT level of the same 6 cows. It therefore appears most likely that GGT is concurrently absorbed with colostrum by calves and this gives rise to the very high levels seen in normal calves. Calves with very high levels of serum GGT also had raised levels of alkaline phosphatase (AP) which slowly declined but never reached normal adult levels within the 53-day period of observation. It therefore appears that high levels of both GGT and AP are achieved by calves at the time of colostrum absorption and it is concluded that clinical interpretation of serum GGT and AP levels in young calves is closely dependent upon parallel knowledge of their serum gamma globulin levels.
Approximately 100 farmed male and female red deer aged three months and over were blood-sampled and haematological parameters were measured. The deer were sampled by jugular venepuncture without tranquilization. Mean values were haemoglobin (16.0 g/dl), packed cell volume (44.6%), mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration (35.8 g/dl), total plasma protein (66.0 g/l). fibrinogen (4.8 g/l) and white blood-cell numbers (5.80 x 10(9)/l). Differential white blood-cell counts were neutrophils (53.9%), eosinophils (4.8%), basophils (3.0%), lymphocytes (37.2%) and monocytes (1.1%). There were no significant differences in any parameter measured between sexes or between age groups three to eight months, nine to eighteen months, or older.
Serum gamma glutamyl transferase (GGT) levels in blood samples taken from normal lambs which had suckled colostrum were found to be up to 140 times normal adult levels. These high serum levels declined rapidly reaching a stable level approximately 60% higher than normal adult values by 24 days of age. Newborn lambs which had not yet consumed colostrum had GGT levels which would be considered normal in adult sheep. The GGT concentration in ewes' colostrum was up to 470 times normal serum levels. There was a significant positive correlation between serum GGT and gamma globulin levels in blood samples taken from lambs within 24 hours of birth. Lambs' serum alkaline phosphatase (AP) and serum glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase (SGOT) levels also rose concurrently with the absorption of colostral gamma globulin, with the day 1 AP values being significantly correlated with the serum gamma globulin levels. Serum AP levels declined gradually but were still well above normal adult levels at 45 days of age while SGOT levels returned to normal adult levels by two to three days after birth. It is concluded therefore that, as previously shown in calves, lambs acquire high levels of serum GGT activity from their mothers' colostrum in proportion to the amount of gamma globulin absorbed and also show a concurrent rise in serum AP activity. However the rise in SGOT levels at this time has not been observed in calves.
Approximately 80 farmed male and female red deer aged three months and over were blood sampled and biochemical parameters measured. The deer were sampled by jugular venepuncture without tranquillization. Mean values recorded were serum gamma-glutamyltransferase (19.5 IU/l), glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (43.0 IU/l), creatine phosphokinase (197.9 IU/l), plasma pepsinogen (0.91 IU/i), blood urea nitrogen (8.56 mmol/l), serum glucose (6.9 mmol/l), phosphorus (1.75 mmol/l), calcium (2.13 mmol/l), magnesium (0.74 mmol/l), potassium (4.43 mmol/l) and sodium (138.5 mmol/l). There were no significant differences in any parameter between sexes or between age groups 3-8 months, 9-18 months, or older.
The clinical, clinicopathological and pathological findings are described in three Bull Terrier bitches with advanced renal disease. The bitches were less than four years old and showed variable presenting signs but anorexia, lethargy and polydipsia were the most frequent. All three dogs were azotaemic and isosthenuric. Urinary protein was measured in two of the three cases. Both were proteinuric. At necropsy all dogs had shrunken kidneys. Histological examination revealed nephron loss, atrophy of glomerular tufts, interstitial fibrosis, and mineralisation of basement membranes. The progressive renal disease in these dogs was similar to the condition reported in Bull Terriers in Australia, and is probably familial and inherited.
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