Endogenous Origin (endogenous + origin)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


The role of selective angiographic embolization of the musculo-skeletal system in haemophilia

HAEMOPHILIA, Issue 4 2009
E. C. RODRIGUEZ-MERCHAN
Summary., The incidence of haemarthrosis as a result of a spontaneous periarticular aneurysm in haemophilia is very low. In these circumstances, angiographic embolization might be considered as a promising therapeutic and coagulation factor saving option in joint bleeds not responding to replacement of coagulation factor to normal levels. Moreover, embolization should be considered as a possible treatment for postoperative pseudoaneurysms complicating total knee arthroplasty in haemophilia. However, the pathological process of aneurysmal bleeding and clotting factor replacement is entirely different. While embolization is the treatment of choice for some periarticular complications that may occur, it is by no means a panacea for all resistant periarticular bleeds in haemophilia or for postoperative bleeding which usually settles with clotting factor replacement. Another use of arterial embolization is for the treatment of haemophilic tumours of the pelvis, because they can act as a focus for infection and cause cutaneous fistulas. When they present perforations and infections of endogenous origin, their course is usually fatal. Suitable treatment has been investigated on numerous occasions, most of the literature agreeing that the only curative treatment is surgical resection. However, surgical resection after performing arterial embolization to reduce the vascularization of the pseudotumour is a good alternative, thereby reducing the size of the pseudotumour and the risk of bleeding complications during surgery. It is important to bear in mind that despite its efficacy, arterial embolization is an invasive procedure with a reported rate of complications up to 25% (16% minor, 7% serious, 2% death). [source]


Estimating the digestibility of Sahelian roughages from faecal crude protein concentration of cattle and small ruminants

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY AND NUTRITION, Issue 9-10 2006
E. Schlecht
Summary Studies on diet selection and feed intake of ruminants in extensive grazing systems often require the use of simple approaches to determine the organic matter digestibility (OMD) of the ingested feed. Therefore, we evaluated the validity of the one-factorial exponential regression established by Lukas et al. [Journal of Animal Science 83 (2005) 1332], which estimates OMD from the faecal crude protein (FCP) concentration. The equation was applied to two sets of data obtained with free grazing and pen-fed cattle, sheep and goats ingesting low and high amounts of green and dry vegetation of Sahelian pastures as well as millet leaves and cowpea hay. Data analysis showed that the livestock species did not influence the precision of estimation of OMD from FCP. For the linear regression between measured and estimated OMD (%) across n = 431 individual observations, a regression coefficient of r2 = 0.65 and a residual standard deviation (RSD) of 5.87 were obtained. The precision of estimation was influenced by the data set (p = 0.033), the type of feed (p < 0.001) and the feeding level (p = 0.009), and interactions occurred between type of feed and feeding level (p = 0.021). Adjusting the intercept and the slope of the established exponential function to the present data resulted in a compression of the curve; while r2 remained unchanged, the RSD of the regression between measured and estimated OMD was reduced, when compared with the results obtained from the equation of Lukas et al. (2005). Estimating OMD from treatment means of FCP greatly improved the correlation between measured and estimated OMD for both the established function and the newly fit equation. However, if anti-nutritional dietary factors increase the concentration of faecal nitrogen from feed or endogenous origin, the approach might considerably overestimate diet digestibility. [source]


Small intestinal digestibility of microbial and endogenous amino acids in dairy cows

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY AND NUTRITION, Issue 1-2 2001
M. Larsen
The small intestinal digestibility of microbial amino acids and the apparent re-absorption of endogenous amino acids were estimated in three ruminal, duodenal and ileal fistulated lactating dairy cows. The cows were assigned to a 3 × 3 Latin square and fed diets low in amino acids, composed of straw, starch, molasses and urea. The treatments were three straw to concentrate ratios. The digestibilities and re-absorptions were estimated from duodenal and ileal flows of amino acids from feed, microbial and endogenous sources. The duodenal distribution of amino acids between different origins was determined by the difference method and by the amino acid profile method. The ileal distribution was estimated by a simple method where the feed fraction was estimated by the mobile bag method, the endogenous fraction as the water soluble fraction and the microbial fraction as the rest. In ileal samples, 8.0 ± 1.1, 52.2 ± 2.9 and 39.8 ± 2.6% of total amino acid nitrogen (AAN) were of feed, microbial and endogenous origin, respectively, compared with 5.1 ± 0.9, 61.6 ± 6.6 and 32.7 ± 6.9% in duodenal samples. The small intestinal digestibility of microbial AAN was estimated to be 75.1 ± 1.8% and the apparent re-absorption of endogenous AAN to be 62.3 ± 11.1%. [source]


Isotopic evidence for endogenous protein contributions to greylag goose Anser anser flight feathers

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
Anthony D. Fox
Feather stable isotope composition may not reflect local isoscapes in which they were grown if supplemented with protein of endogenous origin. Thus, feather isotope analysis, combined with knowledge of local isoscapes can be used to infer endogenous nutrient composition to feathers in cases where birds travel to moult. We investigated this possibility in a study of flightless moulting greylag geese Anser anser on the Danish island of Saltholm, which are known to mobilise endogenous protein stores (acquired at previous terrestrial staging locations in Sweden) to reconstitute muscle blocks and organs whilst feeding on a saltmarsh (i.e. marine-influenced) diet with contrasting stable isotope ratios. We used stable isotope (,13C, ,15N) measurements to test the prediction that new-grown flight feathers would have stable isotope values intermediate between those derived from a purely terrestrial C3 diet and one composed purely of saltmarsh plants. Feather ,13C and ,15N values were intermediate between those expected for feather material derived from local saltmarsh (i.e. exogenous) food items and Swedish terrestrial (endogenous muscle) sources, suggesting a mixing of endogenous and exogenous sources. These results confirm that moult migrant Anatidae exploit body stores to meet specific protein needs during the flightless period of remige regrowth and caution against the use of feather stable isotope ratios as direct indicators of the isotopic environment in which they were regrown, where endogenous contributions may occur. [source]


Rodlet cells in teleosts: a new insight into their nature and functions

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2004
M. Manera
The nature of rodlet cells (RCs) and their functions is subject to a number of different interpretations. This review provides a detailed analysis of the parasitic and endogenous origin of these cells. Two new functional aspects of RCs are considered in detail. The possible function of RCs as immune cells was derived from studies that reported an increase in the number of RCs in fish infected with protozoan and metazoan parasites, particularly at the site of the pathogen infection and/or attachment. Accordingly, RCs represent inflammatory cells, with a similar role to eosinophile granule cells, epithelioid cells and mesothelial cells. Rodlet cells may potentially act as biomarkers. Experimental studies that examined the response of RCs in fish exposed to chemical substances such as metals and herbicides reported an increase in the number of RCs in the tissues of the fish. Fish exposed to these substances expressed myelinic figures in the cytoplasm of the RCs and various degrees of rodlet degeneration and high vacuolization of RC cytoplasm were often noticed. Further lines of research are suggested that might elucidate the true function of these enigmatic cells. [source]