Foot Pads
Mostrando 1-12 de 19 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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1. Cama de casca de café tratada com condicionadores químicos e sua influência na qualidade do coxim plantar de frangos de corte / Coffee hull litter treated with chemical conditioners and its influence on quality of foot pads broilers
Along with the opening of new markets for feet of broiler exportation there has been a bigger concerning to the identification of injuries that lead to the cutting. Because of this, the present study had as its aim evaluate the influence of coffee hull litter treated with chemical conditioners on foot pads broilers, on the animal performance of the broilers
Publicado em: 2009
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2. Avaliação da resposta humoral a antígenos de Lacazia loboi utilizando soros de pacientes com lacaziose
Jorge Lobos disease is a mycosis of the skin and subcutaneous tissue caused by Lacazia loboi, a fungus that presents phenotypic similarities to Paracoccidioides brasiliensis. Because it resists culture, research to characterize and isolate its DNA and antigenic proteins has been a problem. Thence, most previous serological studies have used antigens from P.
Publicado em: 2008
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3. Dissociation between vasodilation and Leishmania infection-enhancing effects of sand fly saliva and maxadilan
In this study, the ability of maxadilan and Lutzomyia longipalpis salivary gland lysate to enhance the infection of CBA mice by Leishmania major and of BALB/c mice by L. braziliensis was tested. No difference was observed between sizes of lesion in CBA mice infected with L. major and treated or not with salivary gland lysate or maxadilan, although they were
Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Publicado em: 2001-10
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4. Early Response of Mouse Foot Pads to Mycobacterium Leprae
The purpose of these experiments was to study the early response of mouse foot pads to Mycobacterium leprae. To accomplish this, mice were inoculated in both foot pads with large and small numbers of organisms. The animals were sacrificed at intervals from 2 hr to 27 days after inoculation. The microscopical results, which utilized normal BALB/c and thymecto
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5. Spatial patterns of reflex evoked by pressure stimulation of the foot pads in cats.
1. The spatial patterns of reflexes elicited by localized pressure stimulation of the foot skin were analysed by recording electromyographic activities of various hindlimb muscles or muscle nerve discharges in cats anaesthetized with sodium pentobarbitone. 2. Reflex discharges evoked by stimulation of the central pad occurred mainly in physiological toe exte
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6. Connective tissue abnormalities in MRL/1 mice.
Pathological changes in the connective tissue of the limbs of MRL/1 mice are described. Focal infiltrates of polymorphs or large mononuclear cells, or both, were seen both in synovial lining and subcutaneous tissue. Infiltrates were associated with vasculitis in some cases. Deposits of amorphous material were seen in and around joints and in foot pads. The m
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7. Temperature Optimum of Mycobacterium leprae in Mice
Shepard, Charles C. (Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta, Ga.). Temperature optimum of Mycobacterium leprae in mice. J. Bacteriol. 90:1271–1275. 1965.—Mycobacterium leprae multiplied most rapidly in foot pads of mice kept at an air temperature of 20 C. At air temperatures of 15 and 25 C, bacillary multiplication was slightly slower; at 10 and 30 C, dist
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8. A neuropathic deficit, decreased sweating, is prevented and ameliorated by euglycemia in streptozocin diabetes in rats.
Decreased sweating, especially of feet and legs, occurs in human diabetic neuropathy. It might be studied in experimental diabetes to characterize it, elucidate its mechanisms, and determine whether it can be prevented or treated. The pilocarpine-induced sweat responses (SR) in the hind foot pads of groups of control and streptozocin diabetic rats, in good (
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9. Hereditary Characteristic that Varies Among Isolates of Mycobacterium leprae
Isolates of Mycobacterium leprae in mouse foot pads were found to differ in two related properties, the average rate of growth between inoculation and harvest (G) and the number of bacilli in the harvest (H). For “fast” strains the median values for G were less than 25 days per generation, and the median values for H were above 106.1. For “slow” stra
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10. Immunity to Mycobacterium leprae infections in mice stimulated by M. leprae, BCG, and graft-versus-host reactions.
Infections of mice with Mycobacterium leprae in one rear foot pad immunized them against a second infection in the other rear foot pad. Purified bacilli harvested from the first infection also produced immuniy when injection into the foot pads of previously uninfected mice. Injections of BCG afforded similar protection, but had no adjuvant effect on M. lepra
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11. Stand tall and they still get you in your Achilles foot-pad.
The free-living first-instar larvae of Strepsiptera (Insecta) are the infective stage of the parasitoid. They normally enter the host via the abdominal cuticle, and there have also been reports of entry via the egg of the host. The first-instar larvae of Stichotrema dallatorreanum Hofeneder in Papua New Guinea were found to enter the host orthopteran via the
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12. The effects of isolation on the mechanics of the human heel pad.
In previous studies on the mechanical properties of the human heel pad (Bennett & Ker, 1990; Aerts et al. 1995) the fat pad and part of the calcaneus was removed from amputated test specimens. The present study tested whether this procedure influences the mechanical behaviour of the sample. Intact amputated feet were therefore mounted on steel rods driven th