1.Hormone residues in some domestic food stuffs of livestock origin
Journal of Preventive Medicine 2003;13(2):25-29
From June 2001 to August 2002, 210 samples of fresh meat (including 100 samples of pork and 110 samples of chicken) were tested for steroid hormone residues (testosterol, oestrogen, and diethyl stybestrol). Results showed that 8.5% of samples contained hormone residues, in which, 72% contained oestrogen, 28% contained testosterol, and 11 samples (5.2%) contained diethyl stybestrol - these hormone were forbidden for use in cattle and poultry breeding
Hormones
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Food
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Animals, Domestic
2.Three Cases Report of Suggestive Rabies.
Jae Kyu LEE ; Bae Sik LIM ; Kwee Sik JANG ; Dong Choon SHIN
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1977;20(11):893-901
There was decreasment of the domestic animal rabies, but increasment of the sylvatic animal rabies now a days in the world. We could see stable statistics of the ministry of health and social affairs annuala report, however, only rabies we could occationally find out suggestive human rabies by domestic animal for the slight more incidence in Korea. Now, we report on the three cases of sugg. Rabies in our children and review of literature. We think the improvement should be needed for postmortem examination that isn't taking by the Korean custom.
Animals
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Animals, Domestic
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Autopsy
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Child
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Humans
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Incidence
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Korea
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Rabies*
3.Streptococcus Dysgalactiae Subspecies Dysgalactiae Infection after Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Case Report
Man Jun PARK ; Il Soo EUN ; Chul Young JUNG ; Young Chul KO ; Young June KIM ; Chang Kyu KIM ; Eun Jin KANG
The Journal of Korean Knee Society 2012;24(2):120-123
Streptococcus dysgalactiae subspecies dysgalactiae (SDSD), Lancefield group C streptococcus, is an animal pathogen which often causes pyogenic infection in domestic animals. Human infection by SDSD has been reported as a cellulitis on the upper arm, but a prosthetic joint infection caused by SDSD after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) has not yet been reported in the literature demonstrating that its clinical manifestation and management have not been well established. In this case report, we aimed to present a case of SDSD prosthetic joint infection after TKA, which was successfully treated by two-stage re-implantation with an application of antibiotic-impregnated cement spacer.
Animals
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Animals, Domestic
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Arm
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Arthroplasty
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Cellulitis
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Humans
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Joints
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Knee
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Streptococcus
4.Biological Rhythm in Livestock.
Piccione GIUSEPPE ; Caola GIOVANNI
Journal of Veterinary Science 2002;3(3):145-157
The animal time structure is a basic fact of life, no matter if one wants to study it or not. The time- dependent, mostly rhythmic, and thus to a certain degree predictable, variations of biochemical and physiological functions and of sensitivity and resistance to many environmental agents are often quite large and offer not only new insight into animal physiology and pathology but also diagnostic possibilities and therapeutic advantages. Chronobiology, chronophysiology and its subspecialities, like chronopharmacology and chronotherapy, will certainly play an important role in the clinical medicine of the future. Successful application of chronobiology to veterinary clinical medicine, however, depends critically on a thorough knowledge of its basic principles.
Animals
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Animals, Domestic/*physiology
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Behavior, Animal/*physiology
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Biological Clocks/*physiology
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Circadian Rhythm/*physiology
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Humans
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Photoperiod
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Seasons
5.A study of animal bones excavated from the shell mound of Jeju Jongdali 1819 archaeological site.
Yoonhyoung KANG ; Jihwan MOON ; Meejung AHN ; Moon Bae BANG ; Taekyun SHIN
Korean Journal of Veterinary Research 2014;54(1):13-19
Animal bones excavated with earthenware from the shell mound at the Jeju Jongdali 1819 archeological site, where three consecutive chronological layers covering the Neolithic (B.C. 15C-B.C. 10C), early Tamra, and late Tamra periods have been identified, were morphologically classified. The majority of the bones from all three periods were broken or split. The major fauna of the mammalian bones in all periods were Cervus spp., Sus scrofa, and Bos taurus. In the early and late Tamra periods, bones of small animals including Mustela sibirica coreana, Meles meles, Rodentia, and Aves were also found in small number. The excavated bones were from all parts of the animal bodies, including head, trunk, forelimb, and hindlimb. Collectively, these findings suggest that the major fauna from the Neolithic to late Tamra periods consisted of Cervus spp., Sus scrofa, and Bos taurus and that the fauna was dissected and carried to the shell mound site after hunting. Information from the bone remains in the shell mound are useful data for study of the wildlife and domestic animals living during the prehistoric period of Jeju Island.
Animals*
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Animals, Domestic
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Birds
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Cattle
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Forelimb
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Head
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Hindlimb
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Rodentia
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Sus scrofa
6.First isolation of Salmonella I 4,5,12:i:- from domestic animals in Korea.
Deog Yong LEE ; Min Su KANG ; Yong Kuk KWON ; Byung Ki AN ; Young Jo KIM ; Eun Jeong HEO ; Jin San MOON ; Esther LEE ; Hyemin PARK
Korean Journal of Veterinary Research 2012;52(4):285-288
Salmonella I 4,[5],12:i:- was a monophasic variant of Salmonella (S.) Typhimurium and notorious for re-emerging candidate which would replace S. Typhimurium DT104 for antibiotic resistance. Recently, isolation rate was increased on human and industrial animals but there was no case in domestic animals but human in Korea. This was first isolation case from domestic animals in Korea. The five isolates from feces of duck (n = 3), chicken (n = 1), and wild bird (n = 1) showed antibiotic resistance against cephems and aminoglycosides. These means that the spread of emerging bacterial pathogens to domestic animals and the need of systemic management for Salmonella I 4,[5],12:i:-.
Aminoglycosides
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Animals
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Animals, Domestic
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Birds
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Chickens
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Drug Resistance, Microbial
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Ducks
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Feces
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Humans
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Korea
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Poultry
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Salmonella
7.Immune responses in pigs and cattle vaccinated with half-volume foot-and-mouth disease vaccine.
Min Eun PARK ; Su Hwa YOU ; Seo Yong LEE ; Kwang Nyeong LEE ; Mi Kyeong KO ; Joo Hyung CHOI ; Byounghan KIM ; Jong Soo LEE ; Jong Hyeon PARK
Journal of Veterinary Science 2017;18(S1):323-331
With the current commercial foot-and-mouth disease vaccine, inoculating twice increases the formation of denatured meat due to granuloma or residual adjuvant at the injection site in pigs, resulting in economic loss. Therefore, we investigated protective antibody levels after reducing the amount of adjuvant in the vaccine. Field applicability of the experimental vaccine, made with a new adjuvant ISA 201, was tested by vaccinating farm animals with half-volume doses (1 mL/animal) of commercial vaccine and monitoring their immunogenicity. Among pigs, the group that received a half-volume dose showed similar or higher titers of structural protein antibody and neutralizing antibody than those receiving the standard dose (2 mL). In pigs, the durable effects of antibody titer of the reduced vaccine volume did not diminish up to the time of slaughter. Among cattle, boosting with a second 1 mL vaccine increased virus neutralizing antibody for the protective effects. The boosting effects were more marked in cattle than in pigs. The immune responses differed between species with the effect of the half-volume vaccination being lower in cattle than in pigs. In conclusion, the immune response to the half-volume vaccine was similar to that from the standard volume vaccine in pigs, but not in cattle.
Animals
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Animals, Domestic
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Antibodies, Neutralizing
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Cattle*
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Foot-and-Mouth Disease*
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Granuloma
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Meat
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Swine*
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Vaccination
9.Importance of ticks and their chemical and immunological control in livestock.
Zahid Iqbal RAJPUT ; Song-hua HU ; Wan-jun CHEN ; Abdullah G ARIJO ; Chen-wen XIAO
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2006;7(11):912-921
The medical and economic importance of ticks has long been recognized due to their ability to transmit diseases to humans and animals. Ticks cause great economic losses to livestock, and adversely affect livestock hosts in several ways. Loss of blood is a direct effect of ticks acting as potential vector for haemo-protozoa and helminth parasites. Blood sucking by large numbers of ticks causes reduction in live weight and anemia among domestic animals, while their bites also reduce the quality of hides. However, major losses caused by ticks are due to their ability to transmit protozoan, rickettsial and viral diseases of livestock, which are of great economic importance world-wide. There are quite a few methods for controlling ticks, but every method has certain shortcomings. The present review is focused on ticks importance and their control.
Animals
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Animals, Domestic
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immunology
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parasitology
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Humans
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Insecticides
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Parasitic Diseases
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prevention & control
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Ticks
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immunology
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Vaccines
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therapeutic use
10.Epidemiological Investigation of Tick Species from Near Domestic Animal Farms and Cattle, Goat, and Wild Boar in Korea
Jeong Byoung CHAE ; Young Sun CHO ; Yoon Kyoung CHO ; Jun Gu KANG ; Nam Shik SHIN ; Joon Seok CHAE
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2019;57(3):319-324
This study aimed to investigate the tick species and give background for tick-borne investigations in Korea. Ticks were collected from the area within 2 km radius of the 4 domestic animal farms, where they were located in mountainous areas and raising animals on pasture, and from animal bodies in 2014 and 2015. In total, 7,973 nymphal and adult ticks were collected from the farms
Adult
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Agriculture
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Animals
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Animals, Domestic
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Cattle
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Ecosystem
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Goats
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Humans
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Ixodes
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Korea
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Radius
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Sus scrofa
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Ticks