122 results on '"Kendall C"'
Search Results
2. Rapid quantification of cannabinoids in beef tissues and bodily fluids using direct-delivery electrospray ionization mass spectrometry
- Author
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Shubhashis Chakrabarty, Eric M. Serum, Thomas M. Winders, Bryan Neville, Michael D. Kleinhenz, Geraldine Magnin, Johann F. Coetzee, Carl R. Dahlen, Kendall C. Swanson, and David J. Smith
- Subjects
Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization ,Cannabinoids ,Plant Extracts ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Cannabinol ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Toxicology ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Animals ,Cannabidiol ,Cattle ,Dronabinol ,Cannabis ,Chromatography, Liquid ,Food Science - Abstract
Hempseed cake is a byproduct of hempseed oil extraction and is potentially a useful source of protein and fiber for use in ruminant diets. However, data are lacking on the appearance and/or clearance of cannabinoids in tissues of animals fed hempseed cake. To this end, a rapid method for quantifying cannabinol (CBN), cannabidiol (CBD), cannabinolic acid (CBNA), cannabidiolic acid (CBDA), cannabigerolic acid (CBGA), cannabichromenic acid (CBCA), cannabidivarin (CBDV), cannabidivarinic acid (CBDVA), tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA) in cattle tissues, plasma, and urine was developed using rapid screen electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (RS-ESI-MS). Regression coefficients of matrix-matched standard curves ranged from 0.9946 to0.9999 and analyte recoveries averaged from 90.2 ± 15.5 to 108.7 ± 18.7% across all compounds. Limits of detection and quantification ranged from 0.05 to 2.79 ng · mL
- Published
- 2022
3. NCCC308: Nutrition and Management of Feedlot Cattle to Optimize Performance, Carcass Value, and Environmental Compatibility – Feature Collection - Nutrition and Management of Finishing Cattle
- Author
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Kendall C Swanson, Alejandro E Relling, and Alfredo DiCostanzo
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Published
- 2023
4. Effects of hempseed cake on ruminal fermentation parameters, nutrient digestibility, nutrient flow, and nitrogen balance in finishing steers
- Author
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Thomas M Winders, Bryan W Neville, and Kendall C Swanson
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Rumen ,Fermentation ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cattle ,Digestion ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Nutrients ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,Zea mays ,Diet ,Food Science - Abstract
Five ruminally and duodenally cannulated red angus steers (n = 5; initial body weight [BW] = 542 kg, SD = 40 kg) were used in a three-period Youden square design consisting of three 21-d periods, three treatments, and five steers (one or two steers per treatment within each period) to evaluate the effect of feeding hempseed cake on ruminal fermentation parameters, organic matter (OM) intake, total tract nutrient digestion, and nitrogen (N) balance in steers fed finishing diets. The control (CON) diet contained 75% dry-rolled corn, 20% corn silage, and 5% supplement (DM basis). The dried corn distillers grains plus solubles (DDGS) and hempseed cake (HEMP) diets contained 55% dry-rolled corn, 20% corn silage, 20% dried corn distillers grains plus solubles or hempseed cake, and 5% supplement (DM basis). Total ruminal volatile fatty acid concentration was greater (P0.01) in steers fed the HEMP diet than in steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Ruminal fluid pH was not influenced (P = 0.93) by treatment. Organic matter intake tended (P = 0.07) to be greater and OM total tract digestibility was less (P = 0.03) in steers fed the HEMP diet compared with steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Ruminal true and total tract apparent N digestibility was greater (P0.01) in steers fed the HEMP diet than steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Duodenal flow of essential, nonessential, and total amino acids was not influenced (P ≥ 0.37) by dietary treatment, but the lack of response was likely because ruminally degradable protein (RDP) supply exceeded the RDP requirement. Steers fed the HEMP diet had greater (P0.01) N retention (g/d) than steers fed the DDGS diet, which was greater (P0.01) than steers fed the CON diet, suggesting that feeding hempseed cake improved utilization of N. Although inclusion of hempseed cake decreased total tract OM digestibility compared with dried corn distillers grains or corn, improvements in N utilization suggest that hempseed cake could be a useful alternative feed ingredient for finishing cattle diets.This experiment evaluated the effects of dietary inclusion of hempseed cake or dried corn distillers grains plus solubles on ruminal fermentation parameters, organic matter (OM) intake, total tract nutrient digestion, and nitrogen (N) balance in steers fed finishing diets. Steers were assigned to one of three dietary treatments (no byproduct [CON], 20% dried corn distillers grains plus solubles [DDGS], or 20% hempseed cake [HEMP]; dry matter basis). Hempseed cake had greater acid detergent fiber concentrations, which resulted in greater acid detergent fiber flow to the small intestine and reduced total tract organic matter digestibility in steers fed the HEMP diet than in steers fed the DDGS or CON diets. Steers fed the HEMP diet had greater ruminal and total tract N digestibility, and greater ruminal ammonia concentrations than steers fed DDGS or CON diets, suggesting that the crude protein in hempseed cake is degraded to a greater extent in the rumen and total tract. Although inclusion of hempseed cake decreased total tract OM digestibility compared with dried corn distillers grains or no byproduct, the observed greater ruminal and total tract N digestibility suggest that it could be a useful alternative feed ingredient for finishing cattle diets.
- Published
- 2023
5. Effects of long-term postgastric infusion of casein or glutamic acid on small intestinal starch digestion and energy balance in cattle
- Author
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Subash Acharya, Emily A Petzel, Kristin E Hales, Keith R Underwood, Kendall C Swanson, Eric A Bailey, Kristi M Cammack, and Derek W Brake
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Rumen ,Nitrogen ,Caseins ,Glutamic Acid ,Starch ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,Intestine, Small ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cattle ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Intestine, Large ,Food Science - Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to evaluate effects of postruminal flows of casein or glutamic acid on small intestinal starch digestion and to quantify changes in energy and nutrient balance. Twenty-four steers (body weight = 179 ± 4 kg) were duodenally infused with raw cornstarch (1.46 ± 0.04 kg/d) and either 413 ± 7.0 g casein/d, 121 ± 3.6 g glutamic acid/d or water (control). Measures of small intestinal starch digestion and nutrient excretion were collected across 4 d after 42 d of infusion and measures of respiration via indirect calorimetry were collected across 2 d after 48 d of infusion. Ileal starch flow was least among calves provided casein, but ileal starch flow was not different between glutamic acid or control. Small intestinal starch digestion tended to be greatest among calves provided casein, least for glutamic acid and intermediate for control. Casein increased ileal flow of ethanol soluble oligosaccharides compared to glutamic acid and control. Large intestinal starch digestion was not different among treatments. By design, N intake was greatest among cattle provided casein, intermediate among calves provided glutamic acid and least for control. Nitrogen retention was greater in response to casein compared to control and glutamic acid. Intake of gross energy from feed was similar across treatments, and gross energy from infusate was greatest for casein, intermediate for glutamic acid and least for control. Variation in gross energy intake from feed resulted in no difference in overall gross energy intake across treatments. Similar to measures of small intestinal starch digestion and N retention, casein increased calories of digestible energy and metabolizable energy, compared to glutamic acid and control, which did not differ. Postruminal infusions did not influence methane production, but heat production was greatest in steers infused with casein, intermediate for steers provided glutamic acid, and least for control. Overall, amounts of energy retained by casein tended to be nearly 34% greater than control, but glutamic acid had no impact on energy balance. Improvement in small intestinal starch digestion in response to casein increased energy and N retained; however, glutamic acid did not influence small intestinal starch digestion and energy or N balance in cattle, which seems to suggest that responses in small intestinal starch digestion to greater postruminal flows of glutamic acid become refractory across greater durations of time.Small intestinal digestion of starch can provide greater energy from dietary starch in comparison to ruminal fermentation, which can increase performance and improve feed efficiency in cattle fed starch-based diets; however, small intestinal starch digestion in cattle is restricted in comparison to nonruminant animals or to ruminal fermentation of starch. In this experiment, long-term increases in postruminal protein but not glutamic acid increased small intestinal starch digestion, and increases in small intestinal starch digestion resulted in improvements in nitrogen and energy balance. Responses in this study compared to previous reports may suggest effects of increased postgastric flows of glutamic acid in cattle are transient, but that effects of casein are not.
- Published
- 2023
6. Understanding the relationship between weather variables and intake in beef steers
- Author
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Mustapha Yusuf, Kendall C Swanson, Lauren L Hulsman Hanna, and Marc L Bauer
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
The relationship between weather variables and dry matter intake (DMI) in beef steers was examined using daily intake data from 790 beef steers collected through a computer-controlled feeding system in nonsummer months. Daily data were condensed into weekly averages (N = 13,895 steer-weeks). The variables considered to predict DMI (2.50 to 23.60 kg/d) were body weight (197 to 796 kg), dietary net energy for maintenance (NEm; 0.79 to 2.97 Mcal/kg), ambient temperature (−23.73 °C to 21.40 °C), range of temperature (2.79 °C to 19.43 °C), dew point (−27.84 °C to 14.34 °C), wind speed (2.08 to 6.49 m/s), solar radiation (30.8 to 297.1 W/m2), and 2-wk lag (average of previous 2 wk’s values) and monthly lag (average of previous 4 wk’s values) of each weather variable. Toeplitz variance-covariance structure for repeated measures was used to determine the model to predict DMI, while accounting for the effects of body weight, dietary NEm, and other variables in the model. Two-week lag of ambient temperature interacted (P ≤ 0.005) with 2-wk lag of range of temperature, monthly lag of wind speed, 2-wk lag of solar radiation, and dew point to predict DMI. Interactions (P = 0.0001) between 2-wk lag of range of temperature vs. dew point and monthly lag of wind speed vs. 2-wk lag of solar radiation were also detected. This study reports important weather variables associated with differences in DMI of growing and finishing steers and will help improve the accuracy of DMI prediction equations for beef cattle. Improvements in the accuracy of predicting DMI should give producers better tools to plan and execute efficient feeding management programs. The R2 of the overall model was 0.8891.
- Published
- 2022
7. Effects of Mid-Gestation Nutrient Restriction, Realimentation, and Parity on the Umbilical Hemodynamics of the Pregnant Ewe
- Author
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Manuel A. Vasquez-Hidalgo, Kendall C. Swanson, and Kimberly A. Vonnahme
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General Medicine - Abstract
Previous studies have reported that nutritional restriction from days 50 to 130 applied in young nulliparous ewes reduces umbilical blood flow (UBF). We hypothesized that during restriction, UBF and fetal and placentome dimensional measurements would decrease compared to adequately fed ewes, but upon realimentation, ewes would have similar UBF as ewes that were not restricted. We also hypothesized that multiparous ewes would be more resilient to nutrient restriction compared to nulliparous ewes. In experiment 1, second-parity Dorset ewes carrying singletons were assigned to an adequate nutrition group (CON, n = 7) or a restricted (60% of CON) group (RES, n = 8), from days 50 to 90 of gestation. In experiment 2, on day 50 of gestation, adult (15-month) nulliparous (NUL; n = 12) and multiparous (MUL; n = 16) Dorset ewes carrying singletons were randomly assigned to receive 100% of NRC recommendations (CON) or 60% of CON (RES). On day 90, all ewes were fed 100% of nutritional recommendations according to body weight. Ewe body weight and conceptus measurements via ultrasonography were recorded every 10 days from days 50 to 130 of gestation. We measured 10 random placentomes, fetal biparietal and abdominal length, and kidney length and width. Doppler mode was used to obtain UBF, pulsatility index (PI), and resistance index (RI). Lamb weight and parturition problems were recorded. In experiment 1, on day 80, UBF decreased (P ≤ 0.05 means separation of unprotected F test), placentome size tended to decrease (P ≤ 0.10), and PI and RI tended to increase in RES vs. CON ewes (P ≤ 0.10). In experiment 2, there were no three-way interactions or main effects of treatments on UBF, PI, RI, and placentome size (P ≥ 0.57). There was a parity-by-day interaction (P < 0.05) for RI, but UBF was not affected by parity or diet. After realimentation, there was no effect of treatment on ultrasound measurements in both experiments. At birth, lambs and placental measurements were not different (P ≥ 0.43). Restriction from days 50 to 90 does not seem to influence umbilical hemodynamics or conceptus growth in adult white face sheep, regardless of parity.
- Published
- 2022
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8. Influence of hempseed cake inclusion on growth performance, carcass characteristics, feeding behavior, and blood parameters in finishing heifers
- Author
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Thomas M Winders, Eric M Serum, David J Smith, Bryan W Neville, Golam K Mia, Samat Amat, Carl R Dahlen, and Kendall C Swanson
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Nitrogen ,General Medicine ,Feeding Behavior ,Animal Feed ,Zea mays ,Diet ,Genetics ,Animals ,Urea ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cattle ,Female ,Amino Acids ,Edible Grain ,Ruminant Nutrition ,Food Science - Abstract
As the hemp industry continues to develop in the United States, there is an increasing interest in feeding byproducts of industrial hemp production to livestock. A completely randomized design experiment using crossbred finishing heifers (initial body weight [BW] ± SE = 494 ± 10 kg) was conducted to determine the effects of feeding hempseed cake in a corn-based finishing diet (10% forage) formulated to meet or exceed ruminally degradable and metabolizable protein requirements on growth performance, carcass characteristics, feeding behavior, and plasma parameters. Dietary treatments were the inclusion of 20% (dry matter [DM] basis) of dried corn distillers grains plus solubles (DDGS, n = 16) or hempseed cake (HEMP, n = 15). Cattle were housed in two pens, had ad libitum access to feed and water, and individual intakes and feeding behavior were monitored using the Insentec feeding system. Cattle were fed treatment diets for 111 d, and every 14 d BW were measured and blood samples were collected. Blood plasma was analyzed for glucose, urea nitrogen, and individual amino acids, and results were analyzed using repeated-measures analysis in SAS. Final BW, average daily gain, gain:feed, and hot carcass weight decreased (P ≤ 0.05) by 2.3%, 7.7%, 7.7%, and 2.6%, respectively, in heifers fed the HEMP diet than in heifers fed the DDGS diet. Net energy for maintenance and gain (Mcal/kg of feed, DM basis), estimated based on heifer intake and performance, were greater (P = 0.02) for the DDGS diet than for the HEMP diet. All other performance and carcass characteristics were not different (P ≥ 0.20) between treatments. Heifers fed the HEMP diet had greater (P 0.05) plasma urea nitrogen concentration in samples from each collection day compared with heifers fed the DDGS diet, although there was a treatment-by-day interaction (P 0.01) because of variability in the magnitude of treatment differences over time. Plasma glucose concentration was not influenced (P = 0.17) by dietary treatment. Plasma concentrations of total amino acids, nonessential amino acids, and essential amino acids were not different between treatments (P ≥ 0.09), although there were several interactions between treatment and day (P ≤ 0.04) for individual amino acids. These data suggest that hempseed cake has a lower net energy for maintenance and gain relative to DDGS when adequate metabolizable protein is supplied, while still providing adequate nutrition to support the acceptable performance of finishing cattle.This experiment evaluated the effects of dietary inclusion of hempseed cake in comparison with dried corn distillers grains plus solubles (DDGS) on growth performance, feeding behavior, carcass characteristics, and blood parameters in finishing heifers. Angus-crossbred heifers were assigned randomly to one of two treatments (20% hempseed cake [HEMP] or 20% DDGS; dry matter basis) and were fed for 111 d until slaughter. Heifers receiving the DDGS treatment had greater final body weights, average daily gain, gain efficiency, dietary concentration of net energy for maintenance and gain, and carcass weight than heifers fed the HEMP treatment. All other carcass characteristics, as well as feeding behavior, were not influenced by treatment. Plasma urea nitrogen was greater in heifers fed the HEMP diet compared with the DDGS diet, while glucose was not influenced by treatment. Several plasma amino acid concentrations were influenced by treatment. Although the inclusion of hempseed cake decreased growth performance, it could be a viable alternative feed source for cattle.
- Published
- 2022
9. PSIII-6 Late-Breaking: Ground Hybrid Rye as a Partial or Sole Concentrate in Backgrounding Rations
- Author
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Colin Tobin, Zachary Carlson, Kendall C Swanson, and Karl Hoppe
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Cereal rye has been utilized in multiple ways within cropping systems in the northern Great Plains. Rye has traditionally not been utilized as a suitable grain for growing and finishing calves. Previously, recommendations have limited the use of rye due to the negative effects of ergot ingestion. Recent hybrid rye germplasms have shown increased yields with decreased incidence of ergot. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of ground hybrid rye inclusion rate on dry matter intake (DMI), growth performance, and feed efficiency in backgrounding beef steers. Two hundred crossbred steers were shipped to the Carrington Research Extension Center near Carrington, ND, stratified by weight, and assigned to one of twenty pens (n = 10 steers/pen). Four treatments were used in a completely randomized block design to evaluate animal performance during backgrounding when fed partial or complete replacement of corn with rye as the concentrate source. Ground hybrid rye was substituted for DRC as follows: a basal diet formulated with 20% DRC: 0% ground hybrid rye (CON), 13.5% DRC: 6.5% ground hybrid rye (RYE1), 6.5% DRC: 13.5% ground hybrid rye (RYE2), or 0% DRC:20% ground hybrid rye (RYE3) on a dry matter basis. Steers were fed for a total of 56 days beginning Oct. 25, 2021. Interim weights were taken on Nov. 22, 2021, and final weights were taken Dec. 20, 2021. At the conclusion of the feeding period, cattle were weighed on two consecutive days to determine final body weight. Performance data including animal live weights, ADG, DMI and G:F ratio were calculated. The use of rye within the diet did not influence steer weight throughout the study (P = 0.11). No differences in ADG were detected throughout the study (P = 0.68). Steers fed diets containing hybrid rye had higher DMI (P = 0.03) and higher F:G (P = 0.04) during the first month of the study. Increased DMI during the initial month of backgrounding may promote improved intake and growth. Results from the study suggest that steers fed rye as a partial or sole grain in a high forage backgrounding diet weighed similar to calves fed corn as the sole concentrate source.
- Published
- 2022
10. 346 Feeding Hempseed Cake Alters the Bovine gut, Respiratory and Reproductive Microbiota
- Author
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Thomas Winders, Devin Holman, Kaycie Schmidt, David J Smith, Bryan W Neville, Carl R Dahlen, Kendall C Swanson, and Samat Amat
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
A growing number of studies have investigated the viability of feeding hemp by-products as livestock feedstuffs; however, their impact on livestock microbiomes remains unexplored. Here, we evaluated the effects of feeding hempseed cake (HSC) on the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and reproductive microbiota in beef heifers. Angus-crossbred heifers [19-months old; initial body weight (BW) = 494 ± 10 kg] were fed a corn-based finishing diet (10% forage) containing either 20% HSC (n = 15) or 20% corn distillers grains (Control, n = 16) for 111 days until slaughter. Individual feed intake, feeding behavior and BW were measured throughout the study. Rumen fluid and deep nasopharyngeal swabs (days 0 7, 42, 70 and 98), and vaginal and uterine swabs (at slaughter) were collected, and the microbiota assessed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. HSC feeding resulted in reduced average daily gain (P = 0.05) without influencing feed intake and feeding behavior (P > 0.05) (reported elsewhere). Sampling time had a significant effect on both ruminal (PERMANOVA: R2 = 0.39; P < 0.001) and nasopharyngeal (R2 = 0.18; P < 0.001) microbial community structure. There was also a significant effect of diet on the ruminal (d7– 98; 0.06 ≤ R2 ≤ 0.12; P < 0.05), nasopharyngeal (d 42; R2= 0.18; P < 0.001), and vaginal (R2 = 0.06; P < 0.01) microbiota. Although microbial richness in the rumen, nasopharynx, vagina, and uterus was not affected (P > 0.05) by HSC feeding, microbial diversity (Shannon diversity) was increased in the rumen (d42-98) but reduced in the uterus of HSC heifers (P < 0.05). The relative abundance of five ruminal genera was enriched, while five vaginal genera were reduced in HSC heifers (P < 0.05). Overall, the results of our longitudinal study suggest that feeding hemp by-products can alter the bovine gut, respiratory and reproductive microbiota.
- Published
- 2022
11. Laparoscopic treatment of endometriosis and predictors of major complications: A retrospective cohort study
- Author
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Sarah L. Cohen, Monalisa Dmello, Kendall C. Griffith, Nisse V. Clark, Jon I. Einarsson, Xiangmei Gu, and Mobolaji O. Ajao
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Endometriosis ,Ureterolysis ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Salpingectomy ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Oophorectomy ,Postoperative complication ,General Medicine ,Bowel resection ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,Complication ,business ,Boston - Abstract
Introduction Patients with advanced endometriosis may be at an increased risk of surgical complications following laparoscopic treatment of endometriosis; however, this relationship has not been examined. We sought to identify predictors of major complications following laparoscopic treatment of endometriosis. Material and methods A retrospective cohort study of women who underwent laparoscopic treatment of suspected endometriosis between 2009 and 2016 within the Division of Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA. Predictors of major perioperative complications were assessed by comparing the characteristics of women who had any major intraoperative or postoperative complication with those of women who had no complication. Results A total of 397 women underwent laparoscopic treatment of suspected endometriosis including excision of superficial endometriosis (55.4%), excision of deep-infiltrating endometriosis (24.9%), fulguration of endometriosis (38.3%), hysterectomy (23.2%), ovarian cystectomy (35.5%), salpingectomy (18.6%), oophorectomy (15.1%), and bowel resection (1.0%). Women were followed for 60 days following surgery, over which time 18 women (4.5%) had a major perioperative complication. Patient characteristics and preoperative imaging were similar between women with and without complications. Women with advanced endometriosis, including stage III or IV endometriosis, deep-infiltrating endometriosis, or rectovaginal disease, were more likely to have a complication, though this did not reach statistical significance (77.8% of women with a complication versus 56.7% of women without a complication had advanced endometriosis, P = 0.077). Women who had a complication were more likely to have undergone adhesiolysis or ureterolysis (88.9% of women with a complication versus 52.5% without a complication underwent adhesiolysis, P = 0.002; and 61.1% of women with a complication versus 28.8% without a complication underwent ureterolysis, P = 0.003). The total number of procedures was greater for women who had a complication (4.3 ± 1.2 vs 3.2 ± 1.5, P = 0.003). All other procedure characteristics were similar between women with and without complications. Conclusions Complications following laparoscopic treatment of suspected endometriosis could not be predicted by preoperative patient characteristics or surgical findings of advanced endometriosis. Adhesiolysis, ureterolysis, and an increased number of total procedures may be predictive of perioperative complications, suggesting that surgical complexity as measured by the procedures performed, rather than the disease severity, may increase the risk of a complication compared with women who do not undergo these procedures.
- Published
- 2019
12. PSV-2 Maternal nutrient restriction and re-alimentation influences liver and muscle tissue development and gene expression
- Author
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Steven A. Zinn, Manuel A Vasquez-Hidalgo, Neha Mishra, Brandon I Smith, Kendall C Swanson, Anna T. Grazul-Bilska, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Kristen E Govoni, and Sarah A Reed
- Subjects
Muscle tissue ,genetic structures ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Andrology ,Poster Presentations ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Nutrient ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,sense organs ,Food Science - Abstract
To determine the effects of maternal nutrient restriction and re-alimentation on fetal liver and muscle development, 48 pregnant ewes with singletons, were fed a control diet [100% National Research Council (NRC) requirements (CON)] starting at the beginning of gestation. On day 50 of gestation, ewes (n = 7) were euthanized and fetal liver and skeletal muscle samples were collected. The remaining animals were fed either CON or 60% NRC requirements (RES), a subset were euthanized at day 90 of gestation (n = 7/treatment), and fetal samples obtained. Remaining ewes were maintained on the current diet (CON-CON, n = 6; RES-RES, n = 7) or switched to alternative diet (CON-RES, RES-CON; n = 7/treatment). On day 130 of gestation, remaining ewes were euthanized, and fetal samples collected. Fetal liver was analyzed for general tissue morphology, and fetal skeletal muscles were analyzed for lipid accumulation. mRNA expression of growth and metabolic factors were quantified in liver and muscle tissues. Hepatocellular vacuolation was increased in RES-CON and RES-RES compared with CON-CON and CON-RES (P < 0.01). In semitendinosus and triceps brachii, intramyocellular lipid content increased 19% and 15%, respectively, in RES-CON and RES-RES compared with CON-CON and CON-RES (P£0.02) and in longissimus dorsi, lipid content was decreased 7% in CON-RES and RES-RES compared with CON-CON and RES-CON (P=0.01). In liver, insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1, glycogen synthase 2, and pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 1 expression increased 1.92-fold, 1.45-fold, and 1.47-fold, respectively (P£0.03) in CON-RES and RES-RES compared with RES-CON and CON-CON. In LD, IGF1-R expression increased 3.19-fold in CON-RES and RES-RES compared with RES-CON and CON-CON (P = 0.05). These results demonstrate that maternal nutrient restriction followed by re-alimentation restores liver and muscle gene expression of growth and metabolic factors while negatively impacting liver composition and muscle lipid content potentially leading to altered tissue function and metabolism later in life. Supported by USDA-AFRI grants 2016-67016-24884 and 2017-67016-26568.
- Published
- 2021
13. 343 The Influence of Weather Variables on Average Daily Gain of Beef Steers
- Author
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Mustapha Yusuf, Lauren L Hulsman Hanna, Marc L Bauer, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Genetics ,Oral Presentations ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Average daily gain is one of the most important measures producers utilize to measure productivity of beef cattle. The objective was to examine how weather variables influence ADG. Data from 790 beef steers collected using an Insentec feeding system were utilized for this study. Intake data were condensed from daily data into weekly averages (n = 13,739 steer-weeks). The variables considered were ADG (-3.0 to 4.86 kg/d), DMI (2.50 to 21.77kg/d), BW (197.3 to 796.1 kg), dietary energy density (NEm; 1.2 to 2.5 Mcal/kg), average ambient temperature (-23.7 to 21.4 °C), range of temperature (2.8 to 19.4 °C), dew point (-27.8 to 14.3 °C), wind speed (2.08 to 6.49 km/h), solar radiation (30.8 to 297.1 W/m2), and two weeks lag (average of previous two weeks values) and monthly lag (average of previous four weeks values) of each weather variable. Relationship between weather variables were considered while developing the model, including controlling for confounding variables. Residuals of ADG generated after fitting week of year as a fixed effect were used in scatter plots with explanatory variables to identify if non-linear relationships existed. The MIXED procedure of SAS was used to assess the fit and regression parameters of explanatory variables as fixed covariates. Repeated measures were handled using the REPEATED statement and within-individual relationship was accounted for using the Toeplitz covariance structure. Body weight and energy density had linear and quadratic relationships with ADG (Table 1). Two weeks lag of wind speed and monthly lag of solar radiation had positive and negative associations with ADG, respectively, and there were several interactions between weather variables. These data indicate that weather variables influence ADG and should be considered in ADG prediction equations.
- Published
- 2021
14. 3 Impacts of Vitamin and Mineral Supplementation to Beef Heifers During Gestation on Performance Measures of the Neonatal Calf, Trace Mineral Status, and Organ Weights at 30 Hours After Birth
- Author
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Jennifer L Hurlbert, Ana Clara B Menezes, Friederike Baumgaertner, Kerri A Bochantin, James D Kirsch, Sheri T Dorsam, Kevin K Sedivec, Kendall C Swanson, and Carl R Dahlen
- Subjects
Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Objectives were to evaluate the effects of feeding a vitamin and mineral (VTM) supplement to beef heifers during gestation on calf performance, body measurements, trace mineral status, and organ weights at 30 h after birth. We hypothesized that VTM supplementation during gestation would improve mineral status in the neonatal calf but not impact calf performance parameters and body and organ weights at 30 hours after birth. Fourteen Angus-based heifers [initial body weight (BW)] = 273.7 ± 1.10 kg) were randomly assigned to receive either a basal diet (CON; n = 7) or a basal diet plus a VTM supplement (VTM; n = 7; 113 g•heifer-1•d-1, targeting gain of 0.45 kg/day) from 60 d pre-breeding through gestation. Immediately after parturition, blood samples were collected from dams and calves, then calves were separated from their dams. Calves were fed one feeding of colostrum replacer, followed by milk replacer every 12 h, then euthanized at 30 h. Body weight and measurements were recorded, then organs and viscera were removed, weighed, and sampled. Dam serum and neonatal serum, liver, and blood were analyzed for concentrations of minerals. Data were analyzed using the GLM Procedure of SAS with individual animal as the experimental unit. Dietary treatments did not impact calf weight (0 h or 30 h), calf body measurements, or body weight of the dam at calving (P ≥ 0.32). Further, neonatal organ weights were not influenced (P ≥ 0.21) by maternal VTM treatment. Concentrations of Se and Co in calf serum and Se in calf liver were increased (P ≤ 0.02) by VTM treatment; however, concentrations of Cu, Mn, Mo, and Zn in calf muscle, liver, and serum were not impacted (P ≥ 0.07) by VTM treatment. Concentrations of Co in serum of the dam was the only mineral affected by dietary treatments, being greater (P = 0.001) in VTM than CON dams. In the current experiment providing trace mineral supplementation throughout gestation did not impact calf weight or body measurements at birth. However, the implications of altered mineral status of the neonatal calves at birth, and presumably throughout gestation, may have additional postnatal effects that warrant further investigation.
- Published
- 2022
15. 370 Effects of the Vasoactive Intestinal Polypeptide (VIP) for the Efficient Ruminant Product
- Author
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Md Golam Kafi Afrose Mia, Emma Hawley, Mustapha Yusuf, Glenn Dorsam, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Feeding high-grain diets can result in reduced ruminal pH, inflammation of ruminal and other tissues, and subacute ruminal acidosis. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), a gut hormone with anti-inflammatory and other functions, could have a beneficial role in ruminants fed high-concentrate diets. To determine the effects of VIP injection on dry matter intake, average daily gain, gain:feed, and ruminal pH, wether lambs (n=16; BW=68.5 ±1.8 kg) were blocked by body weight and randomly assigned to VIP treatment (n=8) or control (n=8). All lambs were housed in individual pens, adapted to the same high concentrate diet (75% whole corn and 25% supplemental pellet; DM basis), and feed intake and average daily gain were measured from day 1 to 21 when lambs were placed in metabolism crates. Lambs in the treatment group were injected intraperitoneally with VIP (1.3 nmol/kg BW in 0.9% NaCl), whereas lambs in the control group were injected with 0.9% NaCl every second day over 28 days. Nutrient balance was measured over the final seven days (data will be reported elsewhere), and lambs then were slaughtered and ruminal fluid and tissues collected. The average daily gain was greater (p = 0.04) in VIP treated lambs than in control lambs. However, no difference (p > 0.05) in daily feed intake was observed between treatments. Ruminal fluid pH was not significantly influenced by treatment (5.2±0.11 vs 5.0±0.11 for the control and VIP treatments, respectively). These data indicate that VIP injection may increase ADG and gain:feed in lambs fed high concentrate diets. Further research is needed to verify these results and to delineate the mechanisms responsible for the observed increases in ADG and gain:feed.
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- 2022
16. 345 Evaluation of the Effects of Hempseed Cake on Ruminal Fermentation Parameters, Nutrient Digestibility, Nutrient Flow, and Nitrogen Balance in Finishing Steers
- Author
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Thomas Winders, Bryan W Neville, and Kendall C Swanson
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
There is interest in feeding industrial hemp production byproducts to livestock, but little is known about the digestibility and ruminal fermentation parameters associated with this feedstuff. A nutrient balance experiment using crossbred steers (n = 5; initial BW = 542 kg, SD = 40 kg) in a Youden square design was conducted to evaluate the effects of feeding hempseed cake (HEMP) or dried corn distillers grains plus solubles [DDGS; each included at 20% of diet dry matter (DM) in respective treatments] in comparison with a dry-rolled corn-based negative control treatment (CON) on ruminal fermentation parameters, nutrient digestibility, nutrient flow and nitrogen (N) balance. Organic matter (OM) tended (P = 0.07) to increase and OM total tract apparent digestibility decreased (P = 0.03) in steers fed the HEMP diet compared with steers fed the DDGS and CON diets. Total tract apparent N digestibility was greatest (P < 0.01) in steers fed the HEMP diet, while total tract apparent digestibility in all other nutrients was not influenced (P ≥ 0.13) by treatment. Furthermore, apparent ruminal digestibility of OM was greatest (P < 0.01) in steers fed the HEMP or CON diets, and neutral detergent fiber, acid detergent fiber (ADF), and true ruminal digestibility of N was greatest (P ≤ 0.04) in steers fed the HEMP diet. Ruminal total amino acid degradation and total ruminal VFA concentration was greatest (P < 0.01) in steers fed the HEMP diet. A treatment by hour interaction (P = 0.01) was observed for ruminal ammonia concentration. Nitrogen retention was greatest (P < 0.01) in steers fed the HEMP diet, suggesting that feeding hempseed cake improved utilization of N. These results suggest that although ruminal digestibility of all nutrients is greater in steers fed the HEMP diet, greater ADF concentration in hempseed cake negatively influences total tract apparent OM digestibility when fed to finishing steers.
- Published
- 2022
17. PSXI-20 Evaluation of the Effects of Hempseed Cake on Immune Parameters in Response to an Endotoxin Challenge in Finishing Steers
- Author
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Thomas Winders, Bryan W Neville, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Hempseed cake, a byproduct of industrial hemp and subsequent hempseed oil extraction processes, contains cannabinoids and fatty acids that could be potentially therapeutic for livestock, but little is known about the extent to which hempseed cake can influence immune response variables of cattle. An endotoxin challenge experiment using crossbred steers (n = 5; initial BW = 542 kg, SD = 40 kg) was conducted to evaluate the effects of hempseed cake treatment (HEMP) and dried corn distillers grains plus solubles treatment (DDGS; each included at 20% of diet DM in respective treatments) in comparison with a dry-rolled corn-based negative control treatment (CON) on plasma glucose, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), urea nitrogen (PUN), rectal temperature, twelve cytokine (IFNγ, IL-1α, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-36RA, IP10, MCP-1, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, TNFα, and VEGF-A), and amino acid concentrations at five timepoints after administration of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide; LPS). Steers were administered LPS at 0.25 μg/kg BW, and blood was collected via jugular venipuncture before and 1, 2, 4 and 6-hours post-bolus injection. Data were analyzed as repeated measures using the MIXED procedure of SAS, and pre-bolus values was used as a covariate. A treatment by hour interaction (P = 0.04) was observed for PUN, and pre-bolus PUN was greatest (P < 0.01) in steers fed the HEMP. Plasma IL-1α, IL-36RA, and TNF-α were least (P ≤ 0.02), while IL-10 and MIP-1α tended (P ≤ 0.10) to be less in steers fed the HEMP diet. Plasma isoleucine, leucine, tryptophan, and tyrosine concentrations were greatest (P ≤ 0.04) in steers fed the DDGS diet, plasma aspartic acid and glycine concentrations were greatest (P ≤ 0.02) for steers fed the DDGS and CON diets. Overall, these data suggest that hempseed cake has potential to reduce inflammation by influencing cytokine production, but more research is needed to further understand animal growth performance and health implications.
- Published
- 2022
18. PSVIII-12 Influence of Colostrum Insulin Supplementation on Brush Border Carbohydrase Activity in Neonatal Holstein Bulls
- Author
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Mustapha Yusuf, Koryn S Hare, Michael Nagorske, Katharine M Wood, Michael A Steele, and Kendall C Swanson
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Insulin concentrations are variable in bovine colostrum (5 to 263 µg insulin/L) and its effects on gastrointestinal function in neonatal calves are unknown. The objective of this study was to determine if varying concentrations of insulin in colostrum would influence intestinal carbohydrases in neonatal Holstein bulls. Calves (n = 26; 49.11 kg, SD = 3.24) were removed from their dams after calving. They were fed 3 meals of colostrum (7% BW or 3.10 ± 0.02 L) at 2, 14 and 26 hours after birth containing one of 3 insulin concentrations: basal (16.8 µg/L; n = 8), or supplemental colostrum containing either a 5× (83.4 µg/L; n = 10) or 10× (167.5 µg/L; n = 8) increase in colostrum insulin respective to basal concentrations. At 30 hours, the animals were killed, and the gastrointestinal tract was removed for mucosal scrapings of the duodenum, proximal jejunum, and ileum. Intestinal mucosal scrapings were assayed for the following brush border carbohydrases: maltase, isomaltase, lactase and glucoamylase. Data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS with treatment and dam parity modeled as fixed effects. There was no treatment effect (P > 0.05) on intestinal maltase, isomaltase and glucoamylase concentrations. However, there was a linear increase (P < 0.05) in jejunal lactase activity (Unit/g of jejunum and U/g of protein) with increasing amount of insulin inclusion. These data indicate that insulin supplementation has minimal effects on activities of brush border starch degrading enzymes, but increases lactase activity in the proximal jejunum of neonatal calves.
- Published
- 2022
19. PSIV-2 Dry Matter Intake in Beef Cows is Influenced by Weather Variables
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Yusuf, Mustapha, Swanson, Kendall C, Hanna, Lauren L Hulsman, and Bauer, Marc L
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,2022 MIDWEST SECTION POSTER ABSTRACTS ,Food Science - Abstract
Models that can predict dry matter intake (DMI) of cows will help in efficient allocation and management of feed resources. A study was undertaken to understand the relationship between weather variables and DMI of beef cows in the Northern Great Plains of North America. Data from 155 beef cows with 2,161 observations (cow - weeks) was utilized. The variables utilized for this study were BW (455 to 875 kg), DMI (9.03 to 27.69 kg/d), NEm intake (9.16 to 46.12 Mcal/d), ambient temperature (-18.9 to 23.9°C), range of temperature (4.54 to 13.82 °C), wind speed (2.29 to 5.39 m/s), solar radiation (30.97 to 292.61 W/m2) dew point (-21.4 to 19.2 °C), and 2-week lag (average of previous 2 weeks values) and monthly lag (average of previous 4 weeks values) of each weather variable. Residuals of DMI fitting week of the year (fixed), and treatment (random), were used to generate scatter plots to identify if linear relationships existed. BW and weather variables had a linear relationship with DMI, while NEm intake had both linear and quadratic relationships with DMI. For the model, MIXED linear regression of SAS was used using stepwise regression. Model fits were determined using P-values, AIC, and BIC values. Absolute ambient temperature and range of temperature were important (P < 0.05) weather predictors of DMI. Wind speed interacted (P < 0.05) with ambient temperature and range of temperature, and this accounted for additional variation in DMI of beef cows. These results improved our understanding of the relationship between weather variables and DMI in beef cows like what was previously reported in beef steers.
- Published
- 2022
20. 42 Genome-wide Association Study of Ovary Characteristics in Admixed Beef Heifers Through Comparative Bayesian Approaches
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Anas, Muhammad, Zhao, Bin, Bhowmik, Nayan, Ringwall, Kris A, Dahlen, Carl R, Swanson, Kendall C, and Hanna, Lauren L Hulsman
- Subjects
2022 ASAS MIDWEST SECTION MEETING ABSTRACTS ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Reproductive performance of heifers is a key indicator of herd productivity. The objective was to evaluate markers and genes associated with reproductive tract characteristics through a comparative approach. For this study, 295 admixed beef heifers were examined via transrectal ultrasonography at approximately 13 months of age. Exploratory factor analysis of antral follicular count (count per size, side, and total), length, height and diameter for left and right sides of ovaries, and uterine horn diameter revealed a latent variable that included total antral follicle count and ovary diameters per side (n = 3 traits), termed OVARY. Confirmatory factor analysis produced OVARY values per heifer. Quality controls left 116,133 SNP per heifer for association analyses. A marker window-based univariate approach with OVARY was conducted using an empirical Bayesian approach adjusting for nested population structure using marker frequency differences (Method 1) as well as an MCMC Bayesian approach identifying the fraction of SNP to be included with population structure as a fixed effect (Method 2). SNP with high genetic variance in important windows (PPAW > 0.75) were mapped to their closest gene for enrichment analysis. Using Method 1, 2 genes were found to be associated and enrichment analysis identified SMYD2 contributing generally to epigenetic and transcriptional regulatory pathways and GO terms (adjusted P < 0.05). Using Method 2, 11 genes were discovered to be associated with OVARY (adjusted P < 0.05). Three of 11 genes were involved in neural transduction, cornification, epithelial integrity, and adipogenic pathways and GO terms. Eight of 11 genes were involved in reproductive hormonal signaling, post-natal growth, sex determination and reproductive organs development, embryo implantation, and signaling transduction GO terms. Given this, Method 2 provides better insights towards the association of markers and genes for future selection of admixed beef heifers with overall better reproductive characteristics than Method 1.
- Published
- 2022
21. Mid- to late-gestational maternal nutrient restriction followed by realimentation alters development and lipid composition of liver and skeletal muscles in ovine fetuses
- Author
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Sarah A Reed, Steven A. Zinn, Anna T. Grazul-Bilska, Amanda E Liefeld, Neha Mishra, Kristen E Govoni, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Manuel A Vasquez-Hidalgo, Kendall C Swanson, and Brandon I Smith
- Subjects
Fetal Programming ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase ,Offspring ,Biology ,Andrology ,Fetus ,Pregnancy ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Sheep ,Skeletal muscle ,Lipid metabolism ,General Medicine ,Metabolism ,Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Nutrients ,Lipids ,Diet ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Hepatocyte ,Gestation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Female ,Food Science - Abstract
Maternal nutrient restriction during gestation adversely affects offspring growth and development of liver and skeletal muscle tissues. Realimentation following nutrient restriction may alleviate these negative impacts on development but may alter metabolism and tissue composition. Forty-eight ewes, pregnant with singletons, were fed to meet 100% National Research Council (NRC) recommendations starting at the beginning of gestation. On day 50 of gestation, seven ewes were euthanized (BASE), and fetal liver, skeletal muscles, and blood samples were collected. The remaining animals were fed either 100% of NRC recommendations (CON) or 60% NRC recommendations (RES), a subset were euthanized at day 90 of gestation (n = 7/treatment), and fetal samples were collected. Remaining ewes were maintained on the current diet (CON-CON, n = 6; RES-RES, n = 7) or switched to the alternate diet (CON-RES, RES-CON; n = 7/treatment). On day 130 of gestation, the remaining ewes were euthanized, and fetal samples were collected. At day 130 of gestation, maternal nutrient restriction during late-gestation (RES-RES and CON-RES) decreased fetal liver weight (P < 0.01) and cross-sectional area in triceps brachii (P = 0.01; TB), longissimus dorsi (P = 0.02; LM), and semitendinosus (P = 0.05; STN) muscles. Maternal nutrient restriction during mid-gestation increased hepatocyte vacuole size at day 130 of gestation. Late-gestational maternal nutrient restriction increased mRNA expression of insulin-like growth factor (IGF) binding protein-1 (P < 0.01), glycogen synthase 2 (P = 0.01; GYS2), and pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 1 (P < 0.01; PDHK1) in the liver and IGF receptor 1 (P = 0.05) in the LM. Lipid concentration in the LM was decreased by late-gestational nutrient restriction (P = 0.01) and increased by mid-gestational nutrient restriction in STN (P = 0.03) and TB (P < 0.01). Principal component analysis of lipidomics data demonstrated clustering of principal components by day of gestation and elastic net regression identified 50, 44, and 29 lipids that classified the treatments in the fetal liver, LM, and blood, respectively. In conclusion, restricting maternal nutrition impacts fetal liver and muscle morphology, gene expression, and lipid metabolism, whereas realimentation attenuated some of these effects. Therefore, realimentation may be a viable strategy to reduce the impacts of nutrient restriction, but can lead to alterations in lipid metabolism in sheep.
- Published
- 2021
22. PSV-3 Milk Lactose Concentration Is Altered in Multiparous Sows Supplemented with Sugar from Mid-gestation Through Lactation
- Author
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Kendall C Swanson, J. M. Young, Alexis M Siomka, Eric P. Berg, and Kimberly A. Vonnahme
- Subjects
Mid gestation ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Poster Presentations ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Lactation ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Lactose ,Sugar ,Food Science - Abstract
Using swine as a biomedical model, this study examined whether consumption of added protein (red meat) or free sugar (glucose) throughout gestation and lactation will affect milk composition. Multiparous sows were fed an isocaloric supplement in addition to their normal corn-soybean meal base diet starting on day 40 of gestation and throughout lactation: cooked ground beef (BEEF; n = 10); free sugar (SUG; n = 9); a mixture of the BEEF and SUG diet (BEEFSUG; n = 7); or a caloric equivalent of the base diet (CONTROL; n = 8). Milk samples (30 mL) were collected from each sow at days 0, 6, 12, and 18 of lactation by hand-milking teats after intramuscular injection of 1 cc of oxytocin. Milk was frozen at -20 °C until analyzed for percentage of fat, protein, lactose, total solids, other solids, and milk urea nitrogen (MUN). Analyses were conducted using the mixed procedure in SAS. For traits occurring over time, a repeated measures statement was used with sow as the subject and the best fit method based on AICC was chosen. There was a day × treatment interaction (P < 0.01) for fat and lactose. There were no significant treatment effects within a day for fat when evaluating mean separations. While percentages were similar across treatment groups on days 0, 6, and 12 for lactose, SUG sows had decreased lactose on day 18 compared to CONTROL and BEEFSUG sows (P = 0.02 and 0.04), with no other significant differences between treatments. There were no treatment or treatment ×day interactions for protein, MUN, total solids or other solids. There was a main effect of day where protein decreased from day 0 to 12; MUN decreased between days 6 and 18; total solids decreased from day 0 to 6; and other solids increased from day 0 to 6 and further increased on day 12. Consumption of a maternal supplementation may impact the percentage of lactose in milk.
- Published
- 2021
23. Effects of Shared Decision Making on Opioid Prescribing After Hysterectomy
- Author
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Sara R. Till, Kendall C. Griffith, Christina Ceci, Sawsan As-Sanie, Daniel J. Clauw, Chad M. Brummett, Michael J. Sahara, Bethany Skinner, Courtney S. Lim, Annmarie L Vilkins, Ryan Howard, and Jennifer F. Waljee
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Hysterectomy ,Article ,Decision Support Techniques ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient satisfaction ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Medical prescription ,Prospective cohort study ,Pain, Postoperative ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,General Medicine ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Opioid ,Emergency medicine ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Decision Making, Shared ,medicine.drug - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of shared decision making using a simple decision aid for opioid prescribing after hysterectomy. METHODS We conducted a prospective quality initiative study including all patients undergoing hysterectomy for benign, nonobstetric indications between March 1, 2018, and July 31, 2018, at our academic institution. Using a visual decision aid, patients received uniform education regarding postoperative pain management. They were then educated on the department's guidelines regarding the maximum number of tablets recommended per prescription and the mean number of opioid tablets used by a similar cohort of patients in a previously published study at our institution. Patients were then asked to choose their desired number of tablets to receive on discharge. Structured telephone interviews were conducted 14 days after surgery. The primary outcome was total opioids prescribed before compared with after implementation of the decision aid. Secondary outcomes included opioid consumption, patient satisfaction, and refill requests after intervention implementation. RESULTS Of 170 eligible patients, 159 (93.5%) used the decision aid (one patient who used the decision aid was subsequently excluded from the analysis owing to significant perioperative complications), including 110 (69.6%) laparoscopic, 40 (25.3%) vaginal, and eight (5.3%) abdominal hysterectomies. Telephone surveys were completed for 89.2% (n=141) of participants. Student's t-test showed that patients who participated in the decision aid (post-decision aid cohort) were discharged with significantly fewer oral morphine equivalents than patients who underwent hysterectomy before implementation of the decision aid (pre-decision aid cohort) (92±35 vs 160±81, P
- Published
- 2019
24. Comparison of Medical Cannabis Use Reported on a Confidential Survey vs Documented in the Electronic Health Record Among Primary Care Patients
- Author
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Gwen T. Lapham, Theresa E. Matson, David S. Carrell, Jennifer F. Bobb, Casey Luce, Malia M. Oliver, Udi E. Ghitza, Clarissa Hsu, Kendall C. Browne, Ingrid A. Binswanger, Cynthia I. Campbell, Andrew J. Saxon, Ryan Vandrey, Gillian L. Schauer, Rosalie Liccardo Pacula, Michael A. Horberg, Steffani R. Bailey, Erin A. McClure, and Katharine A. Bradley
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Primary Health Care ,Documentation ,Medical Marijuana ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Health Care Surveys ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Female ,Self Report ,Confidentiality ,Aged - Abstract
Patients who use cannabis for medical reasons may benefit from discussions with clinicians about health risks of cannabis and evidence-based treatment alternatives. However, little is known about the prevalence of medical cannabis use in primary care and how often it is documented in patient electronic health records (EHR).To estimate the primary care prevalence of medical cannabis use according to confidential patient survey and to compare the prevalence of medical cannabis use documented in the EHR with patient report.This study is a cross-sectional survey performed in a large health system that conducts routine cannabis screening in Washington state where medical and nonmedical cannabis use are legal. Among 108 950 patients who completed routine cannabis screening (between March 28, 2019, and September 12, 2019), 5000 were randomly selected for a confidential survey about cannabis use, using stratified random sampling for frequency of past-year use and patient race and ethnicity. Data were analyzed from November 2020 to December 2021.Survey measures of patient-reported past-year cannabis use, medical cannabis use (ie, explicit medical use), and any health reason(s) for use (ie, implicit medical use).Survey data were linked to EHR data in the year before screening. EHR measures included documentation of explicit and/or implicit medical cannabis use. Analyses estimated the primary care prevalence of cannabis use and compared EHR-documented with patient-reported medical cannabis use, accounting for stratified sampling and nonresponse.Overall, 1688 patients responded to the survey (34% response rate; mean [SD] age, 50.7 [17.5] years; 861 female [56%], 1184 White [74%], 1514 non-Hispanic [97%], and 1059 commercially insured [65%]). The primary care prevalence of any past-year patient-reported cannabis use on the survey was 38.8% (95% CI, 31.9%-46.1%), whereas the prevalence of explicit and implicit medical use were 26.5% (95% CI, 21.6%-31.3%) and 35.1% (95% CI, 29.3%-40.8%), respectively. The prevalence of EHR-documented medical cannabis use was 4.8% (95% CI, 3.45%-6.2%). Compared with patient-reported explicit medical use, the sensitivity and specificity of EHR-documented medical cannabis use were 10.0% (95% CI, 4.4%-15.6%) and 97.1% (95% CI, 94.4%-99.8%), respectively.These findings suggest that medical cannabis use is common among primary care patients in a state with legal use, and most use is not documented in the EHR. Patient report of health reasons for cannabis use identifies more medical use compared with explicit questions about medical use.
- Published
- 2022
25. Influence of amount and frequency of protein supplementation to steers consuming low-quality, cool-season forage: intake, nutrient digestibility, and ruminal fermentation
- Author
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S. J. Falck, Maria M Reis, Reinaldo F Cooke, Kendall C Swanson, David W Bohnert, and B. I. Cappellozza
- Subjects
Rumen ,Forage Based Livestock Systems ,Soybean meal ,Forage ,Eating ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animal science ,Latin square ,Genetics ,Animals ,Organic matter ,Dry matter ,030304 developmental biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Nutrient digestibility ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Nutrients ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Factorial experiment ,Animal Feed ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Neutral Detergent Fiber ,chemistry ,Dietary Supplements ,Fermentation ,Cattle ,Digestion ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Seasons ,Food Science - Abstract
This experiment evaluated the influence of protein supplementation frequency (SF) and amount offered on intake, nutrient digestibility, and ruminal fermentation by rumen-fistulated beef steers consuming low-quality [2.9% crude protein (CP); dry matter (DM) basis], cool-season forage. Seven Angus × Hereford steers (300 ± 27 kg) fitted with ruminal cannulas were randomly assigned to 1 of 7 treatments in an incomplete 7 × 4 Latin square. Treatments, in a 2 × 3 factorial design plus a non-supplemented control (CON), consisted of 2 levels of supplemental soybean meal, 100% (F) or 50% (H) of the estimated rumen-degradable protein requirement, provided daily (D), once every 5 d (5D), or once every 10 d (10D). Experimental periods were 30 d and dry matter intake (DMI) was measured from days 19 to 28. On days 21 (all supplements provided) and 30 (only daily supplements provided; day immediately prior to supplementation for 5D and 10D treatments) ruminal fluid was collected for ruminal pH, ammonia-N (NH3), volatile fatty acids (VFA), and determination of ruminal fermentation variables. Forage and total DM, organic matter (OM), and nitrogen (N) intake increased with supplementation (P ≤ 0.04). However, a linear effect of SF × amount of supplement interaction was observed for forage and total DM, OM, and N intake (P ≤ 0.04), with each variable decreasing as SF decreased, but the decrease being greater with F vs. H. Apparent total tract DM, OM, and neutral detergent fiber digestibility was not affected by supplementation or amount of supplement provided (P ≥ 0.10). In contrast, N digestibility increased with supplementation and for F vs. H (P < 0.01). Digestibility of DM, OM, and N increased linearly as SF decreased (P ≤ 0.03). When all supplements were provided, ruminal NH3, total VFA, and molar proportions of all individual VFA increased with supplementation (P ≤ 0.04), whereas acetate:propionate ratio decreased (P < 0.01). When only daily supplements were provided, none of the aforementioned fermentation parameters were affected (P ≥ 0.09). In summary, reducing the amount of supplemental CP provided to ruminants consuming low-quality forages, when supplementation intervals are >5 d, can be a management tool to maintain acceptable levels of DMI, nutrient digestibility, and ruminal fermentation while reducing supplementation cost.
- Published
- 2021
26. 335 Evaluation of Hempseed Cake on Cattle Performance, Carcass Characteristics and Feeding Behavior in Finishing Diets
- Author
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Eric Serum, David J. Smith, Thomas Winders, Samat Amat, Bryan W Neville, Carl R Dahlen, Kendall C Swanson, and Kafi Mia
- Subjects
Animal science ,Feeding behavior ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Food Science - Abstract
As cannabinoid production continues to increase, there is increasing interest in feeding byproducts of industrial hemp production to livestock. An experiment using crossbred heifers (n = 31; initial BW= 494 kg, SE = 10) was conducted to determine the effects of feeding hempseed cake in a corn-based finishing diet (10% forage) formulated to meet or exceed ruminally degradable and metabolizable protein requirements on growth, performance, carcass characteristics, and feeding behavior. Heifers were assigned randomly to one of two treatments: 1.) diet containing 20% dried distillers grains plus solubles (CON, n = 16), or 2.) diet containing 20% hempseed cake (HEMP, n = 15) on a dry-matter basis. Cattle were housed in two pens, had ad-libitum access to feed and water, and individual intakes and feeding behavior were captured using the Insentec BV feeding system across the feeding period (111 d). Final BW was not different (P = 0.28) between CON (696 kg, SE = 12) and HEMP (683 kg, SE = 12) heifers. Dry matter intake was not different between treatments (P = 0.99), while CON cattle had improved ADG and feed efficiency (G:F; P ≤ 0.04) compared to HEMP cattle. Carcass characteristics were not different (P ≥ 0.20) between treatments for all parameters measured. Control and HEMP cattle were not different (P ≥ 0.34) for number of meals, time spent eating, number of visits to the bunk per day, meal size, or eating rate. Feeding hempseed cake reduced ADG and G:F while having no effect on other performance measures, carcass characteristics, or feeding behavior. Overall, these data suggest hempseed cake could be a viable alternative feed source for ruminants depending on availability and cost. Further understanding of hempseed cakes’ nutrient utilization is critical to determining this products viability as a feedstuff for cattle.
- Published
- 2021
27. PSX-A-16 Late-Breaking: Maternal nutrient restriction and re-alimentation influences liver protein expression in fetal sheep
- Author
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Sarah A Reed, Brandon I Smith, Anna T. Grazul-Bilska, Jeremy L. Balsbaugh, Kristen E Govoni, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Manuel A Vasquez-Hidalgo, Xiaomeng Li, Kendall C Swanson, and Timothy E. Moore
- Subjects
Andrology ,Fetus ,Nutrient ,Liver protein ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Food Science - Abstract
To determine the effects of maternal nutrient restriction and re-alimentation on the fetal liver proteome, 48 pregnant ewes with singletons were fed a control diet [100% National Research Council (NRC) requirements (CON)] starting at the beginning of gestation. On day 50 of gestation, a subset of ewes were fed either CON or 60% NRC requirements (RES). A subset of ewes were euthanized at day 90 of gestation (n = 7/treatment), and fetal liver samples collected. Remaining ewes were maintained on the current diet (CON-CON, n=6; RES-RES, n = 7) or switched to alternative diet (CON-RES, RES-CON; n=7/treatment). On day 130 of gestation, remaining ewes were euthanized, and fetal samples collected. Fetal liver proteins were extracted, digested by trypsin and subjected to multiplexed, label-based quantitative mass spectrometry analysis integrating Tandem Mass Tags. Proteins were identified and quantified using Proteome Discoverer (v2.5, Thermo Scientific) and differential abundance analysis was performed using ANOVA and post hoc Tukey’s HSD test. Hierarchal clustering analysis showed clustering of treatments by day of gestation. However, differences were also observed between treatments. At day 90 of gestation, 23 proteins were differentially expressed in RES compared with CON among which glycyl tRNA synthetase and pyruvate carboxylase were increased 12% and 10%, respectively (P < 0.03). At day 130 of gestation, 24, 5, and 71 proteins were differentially expressed in CON-RES, RES-CON, and RES-RES, respectively, compared with CON-CON. Carnosine dipeptidase 2 was decreased 7% in CON-RES and rho associated protein kinase and glycogen synthase 2 were increased 20% and 26% in RES-CON and RES-RES, respectively, compared with CON-CON (P < 0.04). These results indicate that nutrient restriction during mid- and late-gestation impacts expression of proteins involved in gluconeogenesis, glycogenesis, and the formation of carnosine, an integral molecule in beta-oxidation, and that re-alimentation alters proteins involved in cell migration pathways. Supported by USDA-AFRI grants 2016-67016-24884 and 2017-67016-26568.
- Published
- 2021
28. 89 Relationships Among Measures of Efficiency with Body Weight, Frame Score, and Body Volume in Lactating Multiparous Crossbred Beef Cattle
- Author
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Nayan Bhowmik, Samuel Olorunkoya, Macie K Mosher, Kendall C Swanson, Kris A Ringwall, and Lauren L Hulsman Hanna
- Subjects
Animal science ,Frame (networking) ,Oral Presentations ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Beef cattle ,Body weight ,Body volume ,Crossbreed ,Food Science - Abstract
Sixty cows of varying frame scores (FS; 5.17 ± 1.38) were used to examine relationships between body size [BW, FS, and body volume (V)] and cow efficiency. Dry matter intake (DMI) and BW change were monitored over 64 days starting 1 month before bull turnout. Cows were fed a forage-based diet and DMI monitored using the Insentec system. Average BW (ABW; 662 ± 93.3 kg) was calculated by averaging 2-d beginning and end BW. Measurements (body length, hip height, hip width, and heart, mid, and flank girth) were collected at the beginning and end of the experiment and average V (628 ± 96.4 L) calculated. Calf BW was recorded at weaning (WW). Pearson partial correlations between body size characteristics and efficiency measures were determined using GLM (SAS) and the MANOVA/PRINTE statement. There was positive correlation (P < 0.001; r = 0.84, 0.74, 0.81) between DMI (kg) and ABW, FS, and V. There was a tendency for negative correlation (P = 0.08, 0.09; r = -0.24, -0.23) between DMI (% of BW) and ABW and V. There was positive correlation (P ≤ 0.05; r = 0.33, 0.28, 0.26) between WW (kg) and negative correlation (P < 0.001; r = -0.63, -0.57, -0.65) between WW (% of ABW) and ABW, FS, and V. There was positive correlation (P = 0.04; r = 0.26) between calf ADG and ABW, and a tendency for positive correlation (P = 0.09; r = 0.23) between calf ADG to weaning and FS. The observed correlations suggest that larger cows consume more kg of feed and wean heavier calves with greater ADG to weaning, whereas smaller cows tend to consume more feed as a percentage of BW and wean a greater percentage of cow BW. Further research is needed on the complex relationship between cow size and efficiency.
- Published
- 2021
29. 248 Maternal Nutrient Restriction During Mid-gestation Decreases Uteroplacental Release and Fetal Uptake of Essential Amino Acids in Sheep
- Author
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Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Ronald J Trotta, Kendall C Swanson, Brandon I Smith, Manuel A Vasquez-Hidalgo, Kristen E Govoni, and Sarah A Reed
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Andrology ,Fetus ,Nutrient ,chemistry ,Mid gestation ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Food Science ,Amino acid - Abstract
To examine the effects of maternal nutrient restriction on net uteroplacental flux during mid-gestation, 14 singleton ewes (48.2 ± 4.0 kg body weight) were fed 100% (control; CON; n = 7) or 60% of nutrient requirements (restricted; RES; n = 7) from day 50–90 (mid-gestation). On day 90, uteroplacental blood flow was measured via Doppler ultrasonography and blood samples were collected from the femoral artery, uterine vein, umbilical artery, and umbilical vein. Blood vessel glucose and amino acids (AA) concentrations were measured and arterial-venous (uterine, AV; fetal, va) differences and net fluxes were calculated. Data were analyzed using the GLM procedure of SAS for effects of treatment. Nutrient restriction during mid-gestation did not influence (P ≥ 0.17) uterine or umbilical blood flows. Uterine AV and fetal va differences of total, essential, and nonessential AA were not influenced (P > 0.10) by nutrient restriction. Nutrient restriction decreased (P ≤ 0.05) uterine and uteroplacental release of total AA and tended to decrease (P = 0.07) total AA uptake by the fetus. Uteroplacental release and fetal uptake of essential AA were decreased (P = 0.03) with RES by 53.4% and 45%, respectively. Uterine and uteroplacental release of nonessential AA were decreased (P = 0.03) with RES but, fetal uptake was not affected (P = 0.14). Nutrient restriction decreased (P ≤ 0.04) fetal uptake of methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, and valine and tended to decrease (P ≤ 0.10) fetal uptake of isoleucine, leucine, and tryptophan. Umbilical artery glucose concentrations were 32% lesser (P = 0.01) with RES and RES tended to increase (P = 0.08) fetal glucose uptake. Nutrient restriction during mid-gestation altered uteroplacental and fetal flux of AA in the current study. The results may indicate that fetal metabolism shifts to adapt to reduced AA supply which results in greater glucose utilization.
- Published
- 2021
30. 49 Solar radiation as a predictor variable for dry matter intake in beef steers
- Author
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Lauren L Hulsman Hanna, Marc L Bauer, Mustapha Yusuf, Ronald Degges, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Abstracts ,Animal science ,Genetics ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Dry matter ,Predictor variable ,General Medicine ,Radiation ,Food Science - Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to examine the relationship between ambient temperature and solar radiation with dry matter intake (DMI) in beef steers. Daily intake data from 790 beef steers collected from years 2011 to 2017 using an Insentec feeding system were used for this experiment. Data were condensed from daily data into weekly averages (n = 14250 steer-weeks). The variables considered for this experiment include DMI (2.50 to 23.60 kg/d), body weights (197.3 to 796.1 kg), energy density of diets (NEm; 0.7930 to 2.970 Mcal/kg), ambient temperature (-23.72 to 26.40 °C), two week lag of temperature, monthly lag of temperature, solar radiation (30.81 to 297.12 W/m2), two week lag of solar radiation and monthly lag of solar radiation. Residuals of DMI generated after fitting week of year as a fixed effect were used in scatter plots with explanatory variables to identify if non-linear relationships existed. Body weight and energy density were observed to have both linear and quadratic relationships, while the relationship for average temperature and solar radiation vs. DMI were observed to be linear. The MIXED procedure of SAS was used to assess the fit and regression parameters of explanatory variables as fixed covariates. Repeated measures were handled using the REPEATED statement and within-individual relationship were accounted for by autoregressive 1 covariance structure. Absolute average temperature (P = 0.0024) and monthly lag of average solar radiation (P = 0.0014) are the best predictor variables for ambient temperature and solar radiation based on p-values. An interaction (P < 0.001) between average temperature and monthly lag of solar radiation was also observed. The coefficient of determination (R2) for our model was 0.23. This study indicates that monthly lag of solar radiation interacts with ambient temperature in affecting DMI by beef steers and improves DMI prediction equations.
- Published
- 2020
31. PSIII-10 The association of genes involved in mitochondrial function with growth, size, and feed efficiency traits in developing beef heifers
- Author
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Samantha J Schmoker, Kendall C Swanson, Kris A Ringwall, Lauren L Hulsman Hanna, Carl R Dahlen, and Nayan Bhowmik
- Subjects
Genetics ,Abstracts ,Association (object-oriented programming) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Gene ,Feed conversion ratio ,Function (biology) ,Food Science - Abstract
The objective was to determine if genetic markers related to mitochondrial function are associated with growth and feed intake of Bos taurus heifers fed forage-based diets. Weight data collected at birth, weaning, and as yearlings were available on 373 heifers. As yearlings, feed intake was measured using an Insentec system. Primary ancestral breeds of heifers included 204 British, 66 Continental European, 68 American Aberdeen, 29 British mix, and 6 American Aberdeen mix. Traits included DMI, ADG, G:F, adjusted birth weight (BWT), adjusted 205 weaning weight (WW), and average of start and end feed trial weight (FWT) and body volume (VOL). Heifers were genotyped using Neogen GGP150HD for beef cattle. Markers (n=56) were extracted if located within or flanking AMPK, PPARGC1A, FGF2, and SIRT1 or on mitochondrial DNA using ARS-UCD1.2 coordinates. After quality checks (minor allele frequency and call rate), 44 markers remained. No mitochondrial markers passed quality checks. For each trait, each marker was fit independently as a fixed effect in a model including year and group based on frame score (n=4), ancestry (n=5), and dam age (n=4; non-adjusted traits only). Pairwise comparisons were done using Tukey-Kramer method. No markers within FGF2 or SIRT1 had significant associations. Two markers were found significant for PPARGC1A, where Hapmap24121-BTC-039009 (P=0.0344) showed the C allele increased DMI. For weight traits, significant markers surrounding AMPK and within PPARGC1A (n=5; 0.0009≤P≤ 0.0468) identified dominance gene actions that indicate certain variants of the AMPK and PPARGC1A increased weight across time-points. For VOL, 16 of 22 markers within PPARGC1A were significant (0.0068≤P≤0.0467). Of the 16 markers, 14 identified a recessive variant that increased volume, but did not translate to increased weight. Further research is needed to better understand the roles that genetic markers for AMPK and PPARGC1A have on tissue level mitochondrial function and energy metabolism.
- Published
- 2020
32. PSIV-16 Maternal Nutrient Restriction Followed by Re-alimentation Alters Distinct Metabolic Pathways in Sheep Offspring
- Author
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Kristen E Govoni, Sarah A Reed, Brandon I Smith, Kendall C Swanson, Manuel A Vasquez-Hidalgo, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Steven A. Zinn, and Anna T. Grazul-Bilska
- Subjects
Metabolic pathway ,Abstracts ,Nutrient ,genetic structures ,Offspring ,Genetics ,Physiology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,sense organs ,Biology ,Food Science - Abstract
To determine the effects of maternal nutrient restriction and re-alimentation on offspring metabolism, 48 pregnant ewes with singletons, were fed a control diet [100% National Research Council (NRC) requirements (CON)] starting at the beginning of gestation. On day 50 of gestation, ewes (n = 7) were euthanized and fetal liver, muscle, and blood samples were collected. The remaining animals were fed either CON or 60% NRC requirements (RES), a subset were euthanized at day 90 of gestation (n = 7/treatment), and fetal samples obtained. Remaining ewes were maintained on the current diet (CON-CON, n = 6; RES-RES, n = 7) or switched to alternative diet (CON-RES, RES-CON; n = 7/treatment). On day 130 of gestation, remaining ewes were euthanized, and fetal samples collected. Fetal liver, longissimus dorsi, and blood metabolites were analyzed using LC-MS/MS at Metabolon Inc. Pathway enrichment analysis was conducted using MetaboAnalyst 4.0. In liver, muscle, and blood, 64, 44, and 34 pathways were enriched between treatments at day 130 gestation and 10, 6, and 11 pathways were enriched at day 90 gestation, respectively. Arginine and proline metabolism; primary bile acid biosynthesis; and valine, leucine, and isoleucine biosynthesis were the most highly enriched pathways in RES compared with CON in liver, muscle, and blood, respectively. Additionally, the pentose phosphate pathway; valine, leucine, and isoleucine metabolism; and phenylalanine metabolism were the most highly enriched pathways in RES-CON compared with CON-CON in liver, muscle, and blood, respectively. In liver, ribulose 5-phosphate, xylulose 5-phosphate, and ribose 5-phosphate were decreased 1.82-, 1.54-, and 2.38-fold, respectively in RES-CON compared with CON-CON (P ≤ 0.05). Total triacylglycerols were increased 3.04-fold in muscle and decreased 1.57-fold in blood in RES-CON and RES-RES compared with CON-CON and CON-RES (P ≤ 0.05). Mid-gestational nutrient restriction and subsequent re-alimentation altered distinct metabolic amino acid, carbohydrate, and lipid pathways, potentially altering postnatal growth. Supported by USDA-AFRI grants 2016-67016-24884 and 2017-67016-26568.
- Published
- 2020
33. 143 Nutritional advances in fetal and neonatal development: amino acid supplementation
- Author
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Jessica N Reiners and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Fetus ,Abstracts ,Endocrinology ,Amino acid supplementation ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,business ,Food Science - Abstract
Nutrient requirements of grazing ruminants change throughout the production year. Also, pasture quality and quantity change throughout the year and are influenced by environment. Therefore, there commonly are times of the year where nutrient requirements are not met from the forage alone. We have long known the importance of nutrition during key development including the conception, fetal, neonatal, and weaning period. Altering nutrition during these periods can have lasting effects on health and productivity. Much of the research in ruminants examining nutritional effects on development has focused on large changes in diet, such as energy or protein restriction, rather than specific nutrients such as amino acids. Amino acids play an important role to meet requirements for lean growth but also have other physiological functions regulating metabolism and health that have important effects on development. Amino acid deficiencies during the fetal and neonatal period(s) can result in small-for-gestational age births or stunting, respectively. Diets that are deficient in protein or amino acids are also often deficient in dietary energy and other nutrients. Supplying specific amino acids (and other nutrients/energy) for absorption, signaling, and use by the animal could be an approach to help overcome negative developmental outcomes. Specific amino acids are thought to function by regulating protein synthesis, immune function, 1-C metabolism, intestinal development and health, blood flow, cellular proliferation, and behavior, to name a few. Some of the amino acids with potential for influencing developmental outcomes include leucine, arginine, glutamine, lysine, methionine, threonine, and tryptophan. Because of the varied functional roles of specific amino acids, there is great potential to develop targeted supplementation programs using amino acids to improve developmental outcomes.
- Published
- 2020
34. PSIV-35 The relationship between weather variables and dry matter intake in beef steers
- Author
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Mustapha Yusuf, Kendall C Swanson, Marc L Bauer, and Lauren L Hulsman Hanna
- Subjects
Abstracts ,Animal science ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Dry matter ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Food Science - Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to examine the relationship between weather variables and dry matter intake (DMI) in beef steers. Daily intake data from 790 beef steers collected from years 2011 to 2017 using an Insentec feeding system were used for this experiment. Data were condensed from daily data into weekly averages (n = 13,895 steer-weeks). The variables considered for this experiment include DMI (2.50 to 23.60 kg/d), body weight (197.3 to 796.1 kg), dietary energy density (NEm; 0.793 to 2.970 Mcal/kg), absolute ambient temperature (-23.7 to 21.4 °C), minimum ambient temperature (-28.2 to 15.7 °C), maximum ambient temperature (-19.3 to 27.3 °C), range of temperature (2.8 to 19.4 °C), dew point (-27.8 to 14.3 °C), wind speed (2.08 to 6.49 km/h), solar radiation (30.8 to 297.1 W/m2), and two weeks lag (average of previous two weeks values) and monthly lag (average of previous four weeks values) of each weather variable listed. Residuals of DMI generated after fitting week of year as a fixed effect were used in scatter plots with explanatory variables to identify if non-linear relationships existed. Body weight and energy density had both linear and quadratic relationships with DMI, while the relationship with DMI for other variables were tested linearly. The MIXED procedure of SAS was used to assess the fit and regression parameters of explanatory variables as fixed covariates. Repeated measures were handled using the REPEATED statement and within-individual relationship was accounted for using the Toeplitz covariance structure. There were some interactions between weather variables. Important variables in our model and their interactions are shown in table 1. This study shows the important weather variables (Table 1) that affect DMI of beef steers and will help in improving the accuracy of DMI prediction equations.
- Published
- 2020
35. 219 Effects of maternal nutrient restriction and rumen-protected arginine supplementation on post-ruminal digestive enzyme activities of lamb offspring
- Author
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Kendall C Swanson, F. E. Keomanivong, Ronald J Trotta, Joel S. Caton, and Jena L Bjertness
- Subjects
Rumen ,Abstracts ,Animal science ,Nutrient ,Arginine ,Offspring ,Digestive enzyme ,Genetics ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Food Science - Abstract
To determine the effects of maternal nutrient restriction and rumen-protected arginine supplementation on post-ruminal digestive enzymes in lambs, 31 multiparous, Rambouillet ewes were allocated to one of three dietary treatments at 54 d of gestation. Dietary treatments were 100% of nutrient requirements (control, CON; n=11), 60% of control (restricted, RES; n=10), or RES plus a rumen-protected arginine supplement dosed at 180 mg/kg BW once daily (RES-ARG; n=10). At parturition, lambs were immediately removed from dams and reared independently. Milk-replacer and alfalfa hay + creep feed was offered for ad libitum intake. At day 54 of age, lambs were slaughtered and the pancreas and small intestine were collected. Pancreatic (α-amylase, trypsin) and small intestinal (maltase, glucoamylase, sucrase, isomaltase, lactase) digestive enzyme activities were assayed. Data were analyzed using the GLM procedure of SAS with treatment and fetal sex included in the model statement. Contrast statements were used to determine differences between means for effects of restriction (CON vs. RES and RES-ARG) and rumen-protected arginine supplementation (RES vs. RES-ARG). There was no influence (P≥0.32) of maternal nutrient restriction or rumen-protected arginine supplementation on pancreatic or small intestinal protein concentrations. No treatment effects were observed (P≥0.14) for enzymes involved in starch digestion including pancreatic α-amylase and small intestinal maltase, glucoamylase, and isomaltase. Sucrase activity was undetected in the small intestine of lambs across all treatments. Maternal nutrient restriction tended to increase (P=0.09) pancreatic trypsin specific activity in lambs. Lactase specific activity in the small intestine of lambs tended to decrease (P=0.08) with maternal nutrient restriction. Rumen-protected arginine supplementation to gestating ewes did not influence (P≥0.19) digestive enzyme activities of lamb offspring. These data suggest that maternal nutrient restriction may result in increased pancreatic trypsin activity of lambs to potentially compensate for inadequate pre-natal nutrient supply.
- Published
- 2020
36. PSIX-7 Grazing toxic endophyte-infected tall fescue does not influence pancreatic or small intestinal digestive enzyme activities in beef steers
- Author
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Ronald J Trotta, James C. Matthews, James L. Klotz, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Abstracts ,Animal science ,biology ,Digestive enzyme ,Grazing ,Genetics ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Endophyte ,Food Science - Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to determine the influence of toxic endophyte-infected tall fescue exposure on pancreatic and small intestinal digestive enzyme activities in steers. Twelve fescue-naive beef steers [693 ± 42.7 kg of body weight (BW)] were stratified by BW and randomly assigned within BW ranks to graze non-toxic endophyte-infected tall fescue (NTE, n = 6; 0.01 ± 0.009 mg ergovaline + ergovalinine/kg) or toxic endophyte-infected tall fescue (TE, n = 6; 0.50 ± 0.048 mg ergovaline + ergovalinine/kg) pastures for 84 d. After the grazing period, steers were weighed and then slaughtered in three groups for tissue collection. A 1-m segment of the small intestine was collected 5-m distal to the pyloric sphincter. Subsamples of the small intestinal mucosa and pancreas were collected, homogenized in saline, and assayed for protein concentration. Pancreatic and small intestinal digestive enzyme activities were assayed. Data were analyzed using the GLM procedure of SAS as a randomized complete block design for effects of treatment and slaughter group (blocking factor). Steers grazing NTE pastures had a greater (P < 0.001) average daily gain (0.282 vs -0.631 kg/d) and final BW at slaughter (739 vs 620 kg) than steers grazing TE pastures. Small intestinal segment mass and mucosal density (P ≥ 0.16) were not influenced by treatment. Grazing TE pasture did not influence (P ≥ 0.21) pancreatic or small intestinal protein concentrations. Pancreatic α-amylase and trypsin activity per gram pancreas (P ≥ 0.21) or per gram pancreatic protein (P ≥ 0.30) were not influenced by fescue treatment. Small intestinal glucoamylase, isomaltase, and maltase activities did not differ between steers grazing NTE or TE pastures when expressed per gram of intestinal tissue (P ≥ 0.47) or per gram of intestinal protein (P ≥ 0.60). These data indicate that decreased gains observed in cattle consuming TE are not a result of decreased pancreatic or small intestinal digestive enzyme activities.
- Published
- 2020
37. 259 Effects of Late Gestation Energy and Protein Restriction in Beef Cows on Offspring Growth and Carcass Characteristics
- Author
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Naomi Waldon, Kirsten Nickles, Anthony J Parker, Kendall C Swanson, and Alejandro E Relling
- Subjects
Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Our objective was to conduct a systematic literature review and collate data to run a meta-regression on the effect of protein and energy restriction during the last third of gestation on offspring growth and carcass characteristics. The literature search was restricted to only using data from the last third of gestation in spring calving herds such that the last trimester coincided with winter months. Additionally, the search was limited to Bos taurus beef cattle and peer reviewed research articles; review articles and proceeding abstracts/papers were excluded. The search was conducted using the Web of Science. During this process we found contradictory results. As an example, some manuscripts indicate that energy and/or protein restriction during late gestation has a negative impact on offspring growth and/or carcass characteristics; however, there are also manuscripts that report no differences in similar growth and carcass variables (Table 1). Also, most of the studies reported no differences with maternal restriction on offspring body weight at calving and at weaning. One of the limitations in the data set is that most articles did not measure or report dry matter, net energy, or crude protein intake on the dam; therefore, making it difficult to predict the severity of maternal nutrient restriction and the effects on the offspring. Because of this gap in the literature, we suggest that net energy and crude protein intake should be reported in future studies to better determine the effects of maternal restriction during late gestation on offspring growth and carcass characteristics.
- Published
- 2022
38. Trauma Informed Guilt Reduction (TrIGR) therapy for guilt, shame, and moral injury resulting from trauma: Rationale, design, and methodology of a two-site randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Brittany Davis, James O. E. Pittman, Ariel J. Lang, M. Tracie Shea, Christy Capone, Paula P. Schnurr, Laura Westendorf, Sonya B. Norman, Carolyn B. Allard, Niloofar Afari, Kendall C. Browne, Moira Haller, and Shahrokh Golshan
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Shame ,law.invention ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,mental disorders ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Moral injury ,Suicidal ideation ,media_common ,Veterans ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Mental health ,Psychotherapy ,Guilt ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Psychosocial ,Military deployment ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Guilt, shame, and moral injury (MI) are common reactions following exposure to traumatic events and are associated with greater severity of several mental health problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, increased risk of suicidal ideation and poorer psychosocial functioning. Trauma-Informed Guilt Reduction (TrIGR) is a transdiagnostic psychotherapy to address guilt, shame, and MI stemming from traumatic events. The primary goals of TrIGR are to help patients accurately appraise their trauma and to re-engage with their values in order to lead a more meaningful life. This paper presents the rationale, design, and methodology of a two-site randomized controlled trial (RCT) examining the efficacy of TrIGR compared to Supportive Care Therapy (SCT) in a sample of U.S. veterans (N = 145) who endorse guilt related to a traumatic event that occurred during military deployment. This study is the first RCT powered to investigate TrIGR's efficacy on reducing posttraumatic guilt, as measured by the Trauma Related Guilt Inventory (TRGI), in comparison to an active control condition. In addition, the study will examine a range of secondary and exploratory outcomes including shame, quality of life, suicidal ideation, substance use, and PTSD and depression symptoms. Findings from this efficacy study will be essential in informing future efficacy and effectiveness trials.
- Published
- 2020
39. Fetal expression of genes related to metabolic function is impacted by supplementation of ground beef and sucrose during gestation in a swine model
- Author
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M. A. Nelson, Eric P. Berg, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, A. C. B. Menezes, Alison K Ward, Ashley S Hoyle, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Male ,Fetal Programming ,Litter (animal) ,Sucrose ,Swine ,Offspring ,Biology ,Fetal Development ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Insulin-Like Growth Factor II ,Pregnancy ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Sugar ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Fetus ,Meal ,Muscles ,Body Weight ,0402 animal and dairy science ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Diet ,Red Meat ,Liver ,chemistry ,Dietary Supplements ,Gestation ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food Science - Abstract
To determine the effects of maternal supplementation on the mRNA abundance of genes associated with metabolic function in fetal muscle and liver, pregnant sows (Landrace × Yorkshire; initial body weight (BW) 221.58 ± 33.26 kg; n = 21) fed a complete gestation diet (corn–soybean meal based diet, CSM) were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 isocaloric supplementation treatments: control (CON, 378 g/d CSM, n = 5), sucrose (SUGAR, 255 g/d crystalized sugar, n = 5), cooked ground beef (BEEF, 330 g/d n = 6), or BEEF + SUGAR (B+S, 165 g/d cooked ground beef and 129 g/d crystalized sugar, n = 5), from days 40 to 110 of gestation. Sows were euthanized on day 111 of gestation. Two male and 2 female fetuses of median BW were selected from each litter, and samples of the longissimus dorsi muscle and liver were collected. Relative transcript level was quantified via qPCR with HPRT1 as the reference gene for both muscle and liver samples. The following genes were selected and analyzed in the muscle: IGF1R, IGF2, IGF2R, GYS-1, IRS-1, INSR, SREBP-1C, and LEPR; while the following were analyzed in the liver: IGF2, IGF2R, FBFase, G6PC, PC, PCK1, FGF21, and LIPC. No effect of fetal sex by maternal treatment interaction was observed in mRNA abundance of any of the genes evaluated (P > 0.11). In muscle, the maternal nutritional treatment influenced (P = 0.02) IGF2 mRNA abundance, with B+S and SUGAR fetuses having lower abundance than CON, which was not different from BEEF. Additionally, SREBP-1 mRNA abundance was greater (P < 0.01) for B+S compared with CON, BEEF, or SUGAR fetuses; and females tended (P = 0.06) to have an increased abundance of SREBP-1 than males. In fetal liver, IGF2R mRNA abundance was greater (P = 0.01) for CON and BEEF than SUGAR and B+S; while FBPase mRNA abundance was greater (P = 0.03) for B+S compared with the other groups. In addition, maternal nutritional tended (P = 0.06) to influence LIPC mRNA abundance, with increased abundance in CON compared with SUGAR and B+S. These data indicate limited changes in transcript abundance due to substitution of supplemental sugar by ground beef during mid to late gestation. However, the differential expression of FBPase and SREBP-1c in response to the simultaneous supplementation of sucrose and ground beef warrants further investigations, since these genes may play important roles in determining the offspring susceptibility to metabolic diseases.
- Published
- 2020
40. Effects of Nutrient Restriction During Midgestation to Late Gestation on Maternal and Fetal Postruminal Carbohydrase Activities in Sheep
- Author
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Manuel A Vasquez-Hidalgo, Ronald J Trotta, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Fetal Programming ,Glycoside Hydrolases ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Andrology ,Random Allocation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pregnancy ,Intestine, Small ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Amylase ,Pancreas ,0303 health sciences ,Fetus ,Sheep ,biology ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Lactase ,Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Nutrients ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Small intestine ,Diet ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Digestive enzyme ,biology.protein ,Digestion ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Maltase ,Isomaltase ,Food Science - Abstract
To examine the effects of nutrient restriction during midgestation to late gestation on maternal and fetal digestive enzyme activities, 41 singleton ewes (48.3 ± 0.6 kg of BW) were randomly assigned to dietary treatments: 100% (control; CON; n = 20) or 60% of nutrient requirements (restricted; RES; n = 21) from day 50 until day 90 (midgestation). At day 90, 14 ewes (CON, n = 7; RES, n = 7) were euthanized. The remaining ewes were subjected to treatments of nutrient restriction or remained on a control diet from day 90 until day 130 (late gestation): CON-CON (n = 6), CON-RES (n = 7), RES-CON (n = 7), and RES-RES (n = 7) and were euthanized on day 130. The fetal and maternal pancreas and small intestines were weighed, subsampled, and assayed for digestive enzyme activity. One unit (U) of enzyme activity is equal to 1 µmol of product produced per minute for amylase, glucoamylase, lactase, and trypsin and 0.5 µmol of product produced per minute for maltase and isomaltase. Nutrient restriction during midgestation and late gestation decreased (P
- Published
- 2019
41. Response: Lack of preoperative predictors of surgical complications in patients undergoing endometriosis surgery may be due to lack of adequate preoperative imaging
- Author
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Jon I. Einarsson, Xiangmei Gu, Mobolaji O. Ajao, Nisse V. Clark, Monalisa Dmello, Kendall C. Griffith, and Sarah L. Cohen
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Endometriosis ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Surgery ,Postoperative Complications ,medicine ,Endometriosis surgery ,Humans ,In patient ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,business ,Preoperative imaging ,Retrospective Studies - Published
- 2019
42. 340 Effects of nutrient restriction during mid- to late-gestation on maternal and fetal pancreatic exocrine function in sheep
- Author
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Kendall C Swanson, Manuel A Vasquez-Hidalgo, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Ronald J Trotta, and Taylor M Czech
- Subjects
Andrology ,Fetus ,ORAL PRESENTATIONS ,Nutrient ,Late gestation ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Function (biology) ,Food Science - Abstract
To examine the effects of nutrient restriction on fetal and maternal ovine exocrine pancreatic function during mid- to late-gestation, 41 singleton ewes (48.3±0.6 kg BW) were randomly assigned to dietary treatments: 100% (control; CON; n = 20) or 60% of nutrient requirements (restricted; RES; n = 21) from day 50–90 (mid-gestation). At day 90, 14 ewes (CON, n = 7; RES, n = 7) were slaughtered. The remaining ewes were subjected to treatments of nutrient restriction or remained under a control diet from day 90–130 (late-gestation): CON-CON (n = 6), CON-RES (n = 7), RES-CON (n = 7), and RES-RES (n = 7) and were slaughtered at day 130. The pancreas was weighed, subsampled, and assayed for digestive enzyme activity. Enzyme activity was expressed as U/g, U/g protein, or U/pancreas (total content). Total protein content in the pancreas was expressed as g/pancreas. Differences between means were determined using contrasts in the MIXED procedure of SAS. Fetal and maternal pancreatic mass increased (P < 0.04) with day of gestation. Nutrient restriction during mid- (P = 0.01) and late-gestation (P = 0.01) decreased maternal pancreatic mass on d 130. Total fetal pancreatic α-amylase, trypsin, and protein content increased (P < 0.05) with day of gestation. Maternal nutrient restriction during late-gestation tended to decrease (P < 0.08) fetal pancreatic trypsin activity. Nutrient restriction during late-gestation tended to increase (P = 0.07) α-amylase:trypsin in fetal pancreas but tended to have the opposite response in maternal pancreas (P = 0.10). Total maternal pancreatic content of trypsin and protein tended to increase (P < 0.07) as gestation progressed. Nutrient restriction of gestating ewes decreased total content of a-amylase (P = 0.04) and tended to decrease total content of trypsin (P = 0.06) and protein (P = 0.06) in the maternal pancreas on d 90. Nutrient restriction during mid-gestation on d 90 and during late-gestation on d 130 decreased (P = 0.04) maternal α-amylase activity. Maternal nutrient restriction impairs pancreatic exocrine function by reducing maternal and fetal digestive enzyme activity.
- Published
- 2019
43. PSIV-11 The effect of a high sugar supplement versus a beef supplement during pregnancy on offspring hepatic gene expression in a swine biomedical model
- Author
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Alison K Ward, Jerica R Hall, Ashley S Hoyle, Kendall C Swanson, Mara Hirchert, and Kimberly A. Vonnahme
- Subjects
Andrology ,Pregnancy ,Offspring ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Sugar ,medicine.disease ,POSTER PRESENTATIONS ,Food Science - Abstract
Our objective was to investigate the effect of a maternal supplemental calorie source, (high protein or high sugar) on offspring developmental programming of metabolic gene expression. Multiparous sows (n = 35) were bred to one of two full-sibling boars. Sows were fed a corn and soybean meal-based diet and randomly assigned to one of four isocaloric supplement treatments: 126 g of the basal diet, (CON, n = 5); 85 g of crystalized sugar (SUGAR, n = 5); 110 g of cooked ground beef (BEEF, n = 6); or a combination of 55 g cooked beef and 43 g of crystalized sugar (B+S, n = 5). Supplements were fed three times daily from d 40 of gestation through d 18 of weaning. A male and female offspring of median weight from each sow were individually housed and phase fed standard production diets. Offspring were harvested at d 160 of age and a liver tissue sample collected. Expression of the following genes was quantified via qPCR with hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase 1 (HPRT1) as the reference gene: pyruvate carboxylase (PC); phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase 1 (PCK1); lipase C hepatic type (LIPC); fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21); glucose-6 phosphatase catalytic subunit (G6PC); and fructose 1, 6-biphosphate (FBFase). Genes were selected based on their function in hepatic metabolism. Data were analyzed using the GLM procedure of SAS with sex, treatment, and interaction as fixed effects. Sex influenced (P < 0.05) expression of PC and FBFase, with males having greater expression than females (1.38 vs. 0.63 ± 0.14 and 1.15 vs. 0.82 ± 0.09, respectively). However, there was no effect of treatment or sex by treatment interaction on hepatic expression of the genes studied (P > 0.05). Therefore, we conclude that supplemental caloric source during pregnancy does not alter developmental programming of the stated liver metabolic genes in peripubertal offspring.
- Published
- 2019
44. PSIV-1 Effects of nutrient restriction and realimentation of gestating ewes on fetal carbohydrase activities in the small intestine
- Author
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Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Ronald J Trotta, and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Fetus ,Carbohydrase ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Small intestine ,Animal science ,Nutrient ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Genetics ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,POSTER PRESENTATIONS ,Food Science - Abstract
The small intestine plays an important role in post-ruminal carbohydrate digestion and there is limited information on its function in response to nutritional adaptation. To examine the effects of nutrient restriction and realimentation on fetal small intestinal carbohydrase activities during mid- to late-gestation, 41 singleton ewes (48.3±0.6 kg BW) were randomly assigned to dietary treatments: 100% (control; CON; n = 20) or 60% of nutrient requirements (restricted; RES; n = 21) from day 50–90 (mid-gestation) of gestation. At day 90, 14 ewes (CON, n = 7; RES, n = 7) were slaughtered. The remaining ewes were subjected to treatments of nutrient restriction or remained under a control diet from day 90–130 (late-gestation): CON-CON (n = 6), CON-RES (n = 7), RES-CON (n = 7), and RES-RES (n = 7) and were slaughtered at day 130. The fetal small intestine was weighed, subsampled, and assayed for carbohydrase (maltase, isomaltase, glucoamylase, lactase, and sucrase) activity. Enzyme activity was expressed as U/g and U/g protein. Protein concentration was expressed as mg/g intestine. Differences between means were determined using contrasts in the MIXED procedure of SAS. Small intestinal mass increased (P < 0.001) with day of gestation. Sucrase activity was undetected in the small intestine. Day of gestation did not affect carbohydrase development in the fetal small intestine. Nutrient restriction did not affect glucoamylase, maltase, or isomaltase activities. There was a significant mid-gestation treatment × late-gestation treatment interaction for lactase activity (P < 0.05). Realimentation during late-gestation after nutrient restriction during mid-gestation increased lactase activity in the fetal small intestine. These data demonstrate that fetal mucosal carbohydrases are imprinted early in gestation and brush border α-glycohydrolases involved in starch digestion (maltase, isomaltase, glucoamylase) do not respond to maternal nutrient restriction in sheep. Nutrient restriction of ewes during mid-gestation followed by realimentation during late-gestation may be a programming strategy to increase fetal lactase activity.
- Published
- 2019
45. PSI-25 Effects of restricted maternal nutrition and realimentation during gestation on the fetal progenitor cell population in semitendinosus muscle of sheep
- Author
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Anna T. Grazul-Bilska, Kimberly A. Vonnahme, Kendall C Swanson, Sarah A Reed, Amanda E Liefeld, Steven A. Zinn, Michaela Mitchell, and Kristen E Govoni
- Subjects
Fetus ,education.field_of_study ,Population ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Andrology ,Genetics ,Gestation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Progenitor cell ,Semitendinosus muscle ,education ,POSTER PRESENTATIONS ,Food Science - Abstract
Satellite cells are muscle stem cells that contribute to postnatal growth. The satellite cell population is established during fetal muscle development, through the retention of Pax7-expressing myogenic progenitor cells. We hypothesized that realimentation during late gestation would ameliorate the negative effect of poor maternal nutrition during mid-gestation on the fetal myogenic progenitor cell population. To test this hypothesis, 47 ewes pregnant with singletons were fed a control diet of 100% of National Research Council (NRC) requirements (CON) starting at day 25 of gestation. At day 50 of gestation, six ewes were euthanized and the remainder were randomly assigned to one of two diets: CON or 60% of CON (RES). On day 90 of gestation, a subset of ewes were euthanized (n = 7 per treatment) and fetal semitendinosus samples were collected. The remaining ewes were maintained on the current diet (CON-CON, RES-RES) or switched to the alternative diet (CON-RES, RES-CON). On day 130 of gestation, all ewes were euthanized for fetal sample collection (n = 6–7 per treatment). Fetal semitendinosus was cryosectioned and immunostained for detection of Pax7(+) cells followed by image analysis. Data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure in SAS. Semitendinosus from RES lambs had a greater number of Pax7(+) cells but similar total cell numbers to CON offspring, resulting in a greater percentage of Pax7(+) cells at d90 of gestation (CON: 13.22 ± 0.74%; RES: 16.01 ± 0.74%, P = 0.01). At day 130, there was no difference in the percentage of Pax7(+) cells between dietary treatment groups (CON-CON: 7.88 ± 0.80%; CON-RES: 6.34 ± 0.74%; RES-RES: 7.82 ± 0.74%; RES-CON: 6.87 ± 0.74%; P > 0.17). The percentage of Pax7(+) cells decreased from day 90 to day 130, regardless of dietary treatment (P < 0.0001). In summary, restricted maternal nutrition may delay progenitor cell differentiation at mid-gestation.
- Published
- 2019
46. PSII-35 Melatonin supplementation and restricted nutrition do not affect chorionic somatomammotropin (CSH) concentration in ovine placenta from mid- to late- gestation
- Author
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Hanaa Mansour, Caleb O Lemley, Russell Anthony, Kendall C Swanson, and Anna T Grazul-Bilska
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Late gestation ,General Medicine ,Somatomammotropin ,Biology ,Affect (psychology) ,Melatonin ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,Placenta ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,POSTER PRESENTATIONS ,Food Science ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Melatonin plays a role as a vasodilator. Vasoactive and angiogenic factors are expressed by placental binucleate cells (BNC) and produce chorionic somatomammotropin (CSH), known to impact fetal and placental growth. We hypothesized that melatonin supplementation and restricted nutrition from mid- to late-gestation would alter CSH concentration and some characteristics of BNC in placenta. At day 50 of gestation, ewes carrying singletons were randomly assigned to a 2 × 2 factorial design and were fed either an adequate (ADQ; 100% NRC; n = 15) or restricted (RES; 60% NRC; n = 15) diet supplemented with 0 (CON, n = 14) or 5 mg of melatonin (MEL; n = 16). Placentomes were collected on day 130 of gestation and preserved in formalin for histological analysis. Cotyledon (COT) were snap frozen for western immunoblotting analyses. Tissue sections were stained using biotinylated Dolichos Biflurus (DBA; a marker of fetal membrane) lectin and fluorescein labeled Texas red-avidin and fluorescein labeled Griffonia Simplifolica (BS) lectin (a marker of BNC). The number, area, and diameter of BNC in COT were determined by image analysis. For immunoblotting, protein was extracted from COT in SDS phosphate buffer, loaded equally, and separated on 12.5% polyacrylamide gels. Protein was transferred to PVDF membranes and incubated with rabbit anti-CSH. Bands were visualized and imaged. Data were analyzed using Proc Mixed procedure of SAS. Melatonin supplementation and restricted nutrition did not affect BNC number, area, or diameter, or CSH protein expression. While we reject our hypothesis that melatonin supplementation and nutrient restriction would alter the CSH concentration and BNC characteristics in COT, we continue to evaluate if the BNC produce angiogenic or vasoactive factors that may influence placental and mammary gland functions in sheep.
- Published
- 2019
47. PSIX-41 The potential for different supplement sources to reduce frothy legume bloat based on in vitro degradation characteristics
- Author
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Ronald J Trotta and Kendall C Swanson
- Subjects
Genetics ,food and beverages ,Animal Science and Zoology ,In vitro degradation ,General Medicine ,Food science ,Biology ,Legume ,POSTER PRESENTATIONS ,Food Science - Abstract
Previous research has shown that supplementation of corn silage or grass hay can reduce the incidence of frothy legume bloat in cattle. However, forage-based supplements may not be the most feasible supplements due to the infrastructure required for harvest, storage, and feeding. The objective of this experiment was to evaluate the effects of different supplement sources, commonly available in the upper Midwest, on in vitro digestion kinetics and extent of digestion of alfalfa-based diets. Two ruminally-cannulated steers (928.1±25.5 kg BW) were fed alfalfa hay at 2.0% of BW and served as donors of rumen fluid. Treatments were early-bud alfalfa (CON) or a combination (DM basis) of 80% early-bud alfalfa with 20% of corn silage (CS), brome grass hay (BGH), soybean hulls (SBH), beet pulp (BP), corn grain (CORN), dried distillers’ grains with solubles (DDGS), or wheat middlings (MIDD). Tubes were incubated for 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 48, or 72-h and assessed for rate and extent of digestion. Samples were run in duplicate and replicated over 4 days. Data were analyzed using the GLM procedure of SAS. Measurements reported are from the 48-h incubation. Apparent DM and OM digestibility was increased (P < 0.001) with SBH, BP, CORN, and MIDD and decreased with BGH. True DM digestibility was increased (P < 0.001) with SBH, BP, CORN, and DDGS and decreased with BGH. All treatments besides BGH and MIDD reduced (P < 0.001) NDF digestibility in comparison to CON. All treatments besides BP reduced (P < 0.001) the absolute initial rate (3-h) of apparent DM digestion, and SBH had the lowest rate. These data show that SBH increases the extent of digestion, while reducing the initial rate of degradation, suggesting that SBH has potential to reduce the incidence of frothy legume bloat as an alternative to corn silage or grass hay.
- Published
- 2019
48. Influence of distiller’s dried grains with solubles on ram lamb growth and reproductive traits
- Author
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Matthew S Crouse, James D Kirsch, Christopher S. Schauer, Pawel P. Borowicz, R. R. Redden, Kendall C Swanson, J. E. Held, and Alison R Crane
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Animal feed ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Semen ,Semen analysis ,Biology ,Zea mays ,03 medical and health sciences ,Semen quality ,Animal science ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Completely randomized design ,media_common ,Sheep ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Normal sperm ,Reproduction ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,Spermatozoa ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Diet ,Semen Analysis ,030104 developmental biology ,Feedlot ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Edible Grain ,Ruminant Nutrition ,Food Science - Abstract
The hypothesis of this experiment was that increasing the inclusion level of distiller’s dried grains with solubles (DDGS) in the diets would decrease semen quality but have no negative effects on growth performance. Following the removal of DDGS from the diet, it was hypothesized that the ram lambs would recover and become reproductively sound, independent of treatment. To test this hypothesis, Suffolk and Hampshire ram lambs (n = 112) were allocated to 4 treatments (n = 4 pens per treatment; 7 rams per pen) in a completely randomized design. Dietary treatments were 60% corn, 25% oats, and 15% commercial lamb pellet (CON), 15% of the ration as DDGS substituted for corn (% DM basis; 15DDGS), 30% of the ration as DDGS substituted for corn (% DM basis; 30DDGS), and 45% of the ration as DDGS substituted for corn (% DM basis; 45DDGS). Lambs were fed for 112 d on their respective treatment, after which they were placed on the CON ration until day 168. Lambs were weighed on consecutive d at the beginning (days 0 and 1) and end (days 167 and 168) of the study. Scrotal circumference was measured on all lambs on days 84, 112, 140, and 168. Semen samples were collected on a subset of 64 rams (4 rams per pen) to evaluate semen quality on days 84, 112, 140, and 168. Blood samples were collected on the same subset of rams every 14 d throughout the study. A quadratic effect on BW on day 112 and overall BW (P = 0.03 and P = 0.005, respectively), ADG on day 112 and overall ADG (P = 0.02 and P = 0.02, respectively), DMI (P = 0.007) on day 112, and a cubic effect (P = 0.05) for overall G:F were observed. Overall and day 168 scrotal circumference had a quadratic (P = 0.05) response. A linear increase in spermatozoa concentration on day 168 was observed (P = 0.03) as DDGS concentration increased in the treatment diets, although rams in this stage of the study were no longer receiving DDGS. Overall, testosterone concentrations exhibited a linear decrease (P = 0.005) as DDGS increased in the diet. The linear increase (P = 0.04) on day 168 in morphologically normal sperm as DDGS increased in the diets indicated that all rams, regardless of treatment, would have passed a reproductive soundness exam. In the current study, no negative effects were observed in lamb feedlot or reproductive traits due to increasing DDGS in the diet, indicating that DDGS may be included at levels up to 45% of growing lamb diets.
- Published
- 2018
49. Prevalence of Medical Cannabis Use and Associated Health Conditions Documented in Electronic Health Records Among Primary Care Patients in Washington State
- Author
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Jennifer F. Bobb, Cynthia I. Campbell, Ingrid A. Binswanger, Gwen T. Lapham, Udi E. Ghitza, David Cronkite, Malia Oliver, David Carrell, Clarissa Hsu, Casey Luce, Theresa E Matson, Katharine A. Bradley, Kendall C. Browne, and Andrew J. Saxon
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Washington ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,MEDLINE ,Medical Marijuana ,Primary care ,Health records ,Logistic regression ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,Substance Use and Addiction ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Medicine ,Limited evidence ,Original Investigation ,Aged ,Primary Health Care ,biology ,business.industry ,Research ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Online Only ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,Family medicine ,Medical cannabis ,Female ,Cannabis ,Patient report ,business - Abstract
Key Points Question Among primary care patients, what is the prevalence of electronic health record documentation of medical cannabis use and health conditions for which cannabis use might have benefits and risks? Findings In this cross-sectional study of 185 565 patients, 2% had past-year medical cannabis use documented in their electronic health records. Among patients with documented medical cannabis use, 44.5% had documented health conditions for which cannabis use might confer benefits, and 54.5% had conditions for which it might confer risks. Meaning These findings suggest that primary care practitioners should be prepared to discuss potential risks as well as potential benefits of cannabis use with patients., Importance Many people use cannabis for medical reasons despite limited evidence of therapeutic benefit and potential risks. Little is known about medical practitioners’ documentation of medical cannabis use or clinical characteristics of patients with documented medical cannabis use. Objectives To estimate the prevalence of past-year medical cannabis use documented in electronic health records (EHRs) and to describe patients with EHR-documented medical cannabis use, EHR-documented cannabis use without evidence of medical use (other cannabis use), and no EHR-documented cannabis use. Design, Setting, and Participants This cross-sectional study assessed adult primary care patients who completed a cannabis screen during a visit between November 1, 2017, and October 31, 2018, at a large health system that conducts routine cannabis screening in a US state with legal medical and recreational cannabis use. Exposures Three mutually exclusive categories of EHR-documented cannabis use (medical, other, and no use) based on practitioner documentation of medical cannabis use in the EHR and patient report of past-year cannabis use at screening. Main Outcomes and Measures Health conditions for which cannabis use has potential benefits or risks were defined based on National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’s review. The adjusted prevalence of conditions diagnosed in the prior year were estimated across 3 categories of EHR-documented cannabis use with logistic regression. Results A total of 185 565 patients (mean [SD] age, 52.0 [18.1] years; 59% female, 73% White, 94% non-Hispanic, and 61% commercially insured) were screened for cannabis use in a primary care visit during the study period. Among these patients, 3551 (2%) had EHR-documented medical cannabis use, 36 599 (20%) had EHR-documented other cannabis use, and 145 415 (78%) had no documented cannabis use. Patients with medical cannabis use had a higher prevalence of health conditions for which cannabis has potential benefits (49.8%; 95% CI, 48.3%-51.3%) compared with patients with other cannabis use (39.9%; 95% CI, 39.4%-40.3%) or no cannabis use (40.0%; 95% CI, 39.8%-40.2%). In addition, patients with medical cannabis use had a higher prevalence of health conditions for which cannabis has potential risks (60.7%; 95% CI, 59.0%-62.3%) compared with patients with other cannabis use (50.5%; 95% CI, 50.0%-51.0%) or no cannabis use (42.7%; 95% CI, 42.4%-42.9%). Conclusions and Relevance In this cross-sectional study, primary care patients with documented medical cannabis use had a high prevalence of health conditions for which cannabis use has potential benefits, yet a higher prevalence of conditions with potential risks from cannabis use. These findings suggest that practitioners should be prepared to discuss potential risks and benefits of cannabis use with patients., This cross-sectional study describes the prevalence and clinical characteristics of primary care patients with cannabis use documented in their electronic health records.
- Published
- 2021
50. Effects of dried distiller's grains and lasalocid inclusion on feedlot lamb growth, carcass traits, nutrient digestibility, ruminal fluid volatile fatty acid concentrations, and ruminal hydrogen sulfide concentration1
- Author
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K.R. Maddock-Carlin, Kendall C Swanson, T. J. Frick, R. R. Redden, B. M. Howard, A. R. Crane, and Christopher S. Schauer
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Animal breeding ,Chemistry ,Animal feed ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Excretion ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Rumen ,030104 developmental biology ,Animal science ,Agronomy ,Feedlot ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Digestion ,Completely randomized design ,Food Science ,Lasalocid - Abstract
Our hypothesis was that increasing the inclusion level of dried distiller's grains with solubles (DDGS) to feedlot lambs would increase growth and the inclusion of lasalocid (LAS; Bovatec, Alpharma, LLC, Bridgewater, NJ) would increase ADG and G:F, while not affecting digestibility, ruminal VFA concentration, and ruminal pH. Furthermore, we hypothesized that rations containing LAS and higher levels of DDGS would cause increased ruminal hydrogen sulfide gas (HS) concentrations. Two hundred forty crossbred (Suffolk × Rambouillet) lambs (31.9 ± 5.87 kg BW; approximately 90 d of age) were allocated to 6 treatments in a completely randomized design with a 3 × 2 factorial arrangement of treatments. Lambs were placed into 24 feedlot pens (4 pens/treatment; 10 lambs/pen) for a 111 d finishing study. Main effects included concentration of DDGS (0, 15, or 30% DM basis) and inclusion of LAS (0 or 22.05 g/metric ton LAS) resulting in treatments of: 1) 0% DDGS without LAS (0DDGS-NL), 2) 0% DDGS with LAS (0DDGS-L), 3) 15% DDGS without LAS (15DDGS-NL), 4) 15% DDGS with LAS (15DDGS-L), 5) 30% DDGS without LAS (30DDGS-NL), and 6) 30% DDGS with LAS (30DDGS-L). Two-day weights were taken at the beginning and end of the experiment. Two-hundred-eighteen lambs (64.8 ± 7.99 kg BW) were slaughtered on d 112 at a commercial abattoir and carcass data collected. The inclusion of LAS increased ( ≤ 0.02) final BW, ADG, G:F, and HCW. As DDGS in the ration increased to 30%, DMI decreased linearly ( = 0.03) while G:F increased linearly ( = 0.03). A second study was conducted utilizing the same treatments to evaluate N and S balance, ruminal VFA and H2S concentration, and ruminal pH in 24 crossbred wethers (Suffolk × Rambouillet; 41.2 ± 12.23 kg BW). Daily urinary sulfur excretion and ruminal H2S concentration were linearly increased ( < 0.001) as DDGS increased in the ration. Total ruminal VFA concentration linearly decreased ( = 0.002) as DDGS increased in the ration. The inclusion of LAS increased ( = 0.02) ruminal pH. The results confirm our hypothesis that LAS increased overall growth and increasing DDGS increased ruminal HS concentration but did not influence growth. We reject the hypothesis that the combined effects of LAS and DDGS would have no effect on rumen pH and VFA concentrations.
- Published
- 2017
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