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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2307
    Keywords: Osteonecrosis ; Serum sickness ; Immune reaction ; Animal model
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Osteonecrosis (ON) was produced experimentally in rabbits by intravenous injection of horse serum. Eighty adult rabbits were used: 16 were injected twice with isotonic saline (Group A), 24 were injected once with saline and once with horse serum (Group B), and 40 were injected twice with horse serum (Group C). Both femurs of each rabbit were obtained from 2 h to 7 weeks after the final injection an were subjected to histological examination. No pathological changes were seen in Groups A and B. In Group C, 5 of 15 rabbits (33%) showed ON (necrosis of trabecula and bone marrow) in the femoral metaphysis. In Group C, the early major pathological findings in bone marrow are extravasation of erythrocytes in sinusoidal spaces and microthrombi in small arteries and arterioles near the lesion of extravasation. Immune complexes were demonstrated in the kidney within 24 h of the final injection of horse serum. The present study suggests that immunological reaction associated with serum sickness may play an important role in inducible ON and this model will contribute toward clarifying the pathogenesis of ON.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Behavioral ecology and sociobiology 38 (1996), S. 31-41 
    ISSN: 1432-0762
    Keywords: Key words California sea lion ; Maternal investment ; Sexual dimorphism ; Growth rate ; Metabolic rate
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Proximal mechanisms underlying a faster growth rate in male compared to female California sea lion pups were investigated. Males are significantly larger at birth than females. Specifically, we asked if differential maternal investment contributed to enhanced male growth via: (1) larger mothers having disproportionately more male pups, (2) more time and energy put into foraging by mothers of male pups, and (3) greater milk production in mothers of male pups. We also considered four aspects of differential energy utilization and acquisition by male and female pups: (1) male pups attempting to save energy for growth by changes in behavior, (2) longer suckling bouts with mother and more sneak suckling of non-filial females by male pups, (3) lower maintenance costs in males via a lowered resting metabolic rate, and (4) increased assimilation efficiency in males. Our study showed that there are no differences in the size of females or length of foraging trips for mothers of male and female pups. Male pups received more milk from their mothers, but the difference was no longer significant when the larger body size of males was considered. There were no differences in either the activity budgets or suckling behavior of male and female pups. Male pups, however, did have lower resting metabolic rates than females. We conclude that enhanced male perinatal growth is a consequence of a larger size at birth, proportionally more milk from mothers to support the greater demands of larger body size, and lower maintenance costs due to a lower resting metabolic rate.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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