Analyze Diet

The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice.

Periodical
Veterinary Medicine
Publisher:
W.B. Saunders,
Frequency: Three no. a year
Country: United States
Language: English
Start Year:1985 -
ISSN:
0749-0720 (Print)
1558-4240 (Electronic)
0749-0720 (Linking)
Impact Factor
4.1
2022
NLM ID:8511905
(DNLM):SR0053813(s)
(OCoLC):11078622
Classification:W1 VE929G
Vesicular Stomatitis Virus.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice    February 23, 2024   Volume 40, Issue 2 251-259 doi: 10.1016/j.cvfa.2024.01.005
Pelzel-McCluskey AM.Vesicular stomatitis (VS) is a vector-borne livestock disease caused by either VS New Jersey virus or VS Indiana virus. The disease circulates endemically in northern South America, Central America, and Mexico and only occasionally causes outbreaks in the United States. During the past 20 years, VS outbreaks in the southwestern and Rocky Mountain regions occurred periodically with incursion years followed by virus overwintering and subsequent expansion outbreak years. Regulatory response by animal health officials prevents spread from lesioned animals and manages trade impacts. Recent US outb...
Ultrasonography of bovine urinary tract disorders.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice    October 15, 2009   Volume 25, Issue 3 651 doi: 10.1016/j.cvfa.2009.07.008
Floeck M.Ultrasonography is a helpful diagnostic tool in cattle with urinary tract disorders. It can be used to diagnose pyelonephritis, urolithiasis, hydronephrosis, renal cysts, renal tumors, amyloidosis, cystitis, bladder paralysis, bladder rupture, bladder neoplasms, and, occasionally, nephrosis, glomerulonephritis, and embolic nephritis. This article describes the anatomy, scanning technique, indications, limitations, normal and pathologic sonographic appearance of the bovine urinary tract. References from horses and humans are included, especially when the sonographic findings in these species ma...
Vesicular stomatitis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice    November 22, 2002   Volume 18, Issue 3 453-viii doi: 10.1016/s0749-0720(02)00031-2
Schmitt B.Vesicular stomatitis is an infrequent yet important vesicular disease of cattle, horses, and swine. Periodic outbreaks of this disease in the United States have caused economic losses in cattle herds because of decreased production, movement restrictions, and trade embargoes. Vesicular stomatitis causes clinical signs indistinguishable from those of foot-and-mouth disease. It is of utmost importance that appropriate samples are collected from clinical cases of vesicular disease in cattle and swine so a rapid laboratory diagnosis can be made.
Brewing by-products: their use as animal feeds.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice    September 19, 2002   Volume 18, Issue 2 233-252 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0720(02)00016-6
Westendorf ML, Wohlt JE.Brewers grains, a by-product of beer production, are often used as a livestock feed. Because brewers grains provide protein, fiber, and energy, they can be useful in a variety of diets. Protein in brewers grains can meet a significant portion of supplemental protein requirements; in addition, they provide fiber and needed bulk in the diets of ruminants and horses. Brewers grains and other brewers by-products have also been fed to pigs, sheep, and poultry. Currently, the primary market for wet brewers grains is as a dairy cattle feed; however, some may be fed to beef cattle in feedlots. Brewers...
The use of postmortem radiography as an aid in diagnosing, documenting, and understanding disease in animals.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice    August 12, 1999   Volume 15, Issue 2 231-vi doi: 10.1016/s0749-0720(15)30180-8
Allen AL.Postmortem radiography can be a valuable supplement to traditional necropsy. This article provides examples where postmortem radiographs have been useful in diagnosing and documenting lesions in animals, and have helped demonstrate important principles of the pathology and the pathogenesis of lesions identified at necropsy. This article also discusses additional circumstances where the application of postmortem radiography might be worthwhile.
Tremorgenic syndromes in livestock.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice    July 1, 1989   Volume 5, Issue 2 291-300 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0720(15)30977-4
Nicholson SS.Grasses that are essential components of livestock grazing programs sometimes are the source of tremorgenic toxicants to the animals consuming them. Morbidity can be high but mortality need not be if management closely observes the cattle daily and removes them at first sign of trouble. Specific treatment generally is not available nor needed. Survivors recover completely within a few days or weeks, except in chronic phalaris poisoning, where sheep and cattle may die after prolonged illness--or at least not make an economical recovery. Certain poisonous plants are responsible for tremorgenic s...
Nonsystemic causes of the downer cow syndrome.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice    July 1, 1988   Volume 4, Issue 2 413-433 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0720(15)31057-4
Cox VS.Traditionally, the downer cow has been considered a metabolic problem. This viewpoint cannot account for the pelvic limb predilection of the condition. Whatever the primary cause of recumbency, all recumbent animals are susceptible to pressure damage. The extensive literature on pressure damage in human beings and horses is reviewed. Miscellaneous causes of and contributing factors to bovine recumbency are reviewed. Concepts and details of diagnosis, prevention, management, and therapy are discussed.