Transport of farm animals gives rise to concern about their welfare. Specific attention has been given to the duration of animal transport, and maximum journey durations are used in legislation that seek to minimise any negative impact of transport on animal welfare. This paper reviews the relatively few scientific investigations into effects of transport duration on animal welfare in cattle, sheep, horses, pigs and poultry. From the available literature, we attempt to distinguish between aspects, which will impair welfare on journeys of any duration, such as those associated with loading, and those aspects that may be exacerbated by journey time. We identify four aspects of animal transport, which have increasing impact on welfare as transport duration increases. These relate to (i) the physiological and clinical state of the animal before transport; and -during transport -to (ii) feeding and watering; (iii) rest and (iv) thermal environment. It is thus not journey duration per se but these associated negative aspects that are the cause of compromised welfare. We suggest that with a few exceptions, transport of long duration is possible in terms of animal welfare provided that these four issues can be dealt with for the species and the age group of the animals that are transported.
Serum T4, T3, rT3, free T4, free T3 and TSH were measured during and after normal pregnancy in 20 women. Special methodological precautions were taken to avoid interference of other hormones and protein alterations in the assays. Serum T4 and T3 were steadily increasing during the last part of the 1st trimester, and remained high and nearly stable during the 2nd and 3rd trimester of the gestation period. The high levels were approximately 1.5 times the values measured 10 weeks post-partum. Serum rT3 was elevated already during the last part of the 1st trimester and remained high throughout pregnancy, compared to the post-partum value. Serum free T4 and free T3 were slightly elevated in early pregnancy. The values decreased gradually during pregnancy and were slightly depressed during the 3rd trimester. A gradual increase in serum TSH was observed during pregnancy and the 2nd and 3rd trimester values were significantly higher than the post-partum value.The mean values for serum TSH, free T4 and free T3 remained always well within the normal range. Thus small variations in serum free iodothyronines and TSH occur during normal pregnancy, the alterations observed in the last trimester of the gestation period resembling those of a slight thyroid insufficiency. These trends in variation of the reference values are worth to remember in the diagnosis of borderline hypo-or hyperthyroidism and in the balanced treatment of pregnant women with thyroid dysfunction.High levels of thyroid hormones in serum due to increased cirulating TBG is a well known feature during normal pregnancy. Various measures of free thyroid hormones have been introduced in order to aid the diagnosis and control of thyroid dysfunction during pregnancy. Earlier investiga¬ tors have claimed that the amounts of free circulat¬ ing hormones are little affected by pregnancy (Burrow et al. 1975;Pekonen & Lamberg 1978;Ekins 1979). Further, serum TSH has been found nearly unaltered too (Burrow et al. 1975;Pekonen & Lamberg 1978).However, due to high serum levels of hCG, FSH and LH possibly interfering in the TSH assay and methodological difficulties in measuring free T4 and free T3 it is still not firmly established whether minor variations in free hormones and TSH occur during normal pregnancy. It is generally accepted that it is important to keep thyroid function near to normality during pregnancy in patients treated for thyroid disease; it is therefore important to know the normal variations. In the present study we have obtained repeated blood samples from normal women during and after pregnancy and taken special methodological precautions to avoid inter¬ ference of other hormones and protein alterations in the assays. Materials and MethodsTwenty healthy pregnant women were asked to partici¬ pate in the investigation at their first visit to their general practitioner for pregnancy control. They constituted a consequtive series of healthy pregnant women contacting a suburb clinic with 4 general practitioners. Excluded were pregnant women who paid their firs...
We present reference intervals for total homocysteine and methylmalonic acid in plasma based on samples from 126 women (ages 20-85 years, median 49 years) and 109 men (ages 20-84 years, median 50 years). The central 0.95 interval for methylmalonic acid was 0.08-0.28 micromol/L. Supplementation with cyanocobalamin caused a nonsignificant decrease in methylmalonic acid. Supplementation with folic acid caused a decrease in homocysteine concentrations, with data analysis identifying two significantly different clusters: 182 subjects with the lowest initial concentrations (7.76 +/- 1.54 micromol/L, mean +/- SD) and the smallest decrease (1.26 +/- 0.96 micromol/L), and 53 subjects with the highest initial concentrations (12.33 +/- 2.04 micromol/L) and greatest decrease (4.14 +/- 1.32 micromol/L). We argue in favor of the age- and gender-specific central 0.95 intervals obtained for the 182 subjects before being supplemented with folic acid: 4.6-8.1 micromol/L for subjects at <30 years; 4.5-7.9 micromol/L for women, ages 30-59 years; 6.3-11.2 micromol/L for men, ages 30-59 years; and 5.8-11.9 micromol/L for subjects at >60 years.
Individual drinking patterns are a potential tool for disease monitoring in pigs. However, to date, individual pig drinking behaviour has not been described, and effects of external factors have not been examined. The aim of this study was to perform detailed quantification of drinking behaviour of growing pigs and to examine effects of period of day and effects of competition for access to the drinking nipple on the drinking behaviour, amount of water used and water wastage. In all, 52 cross-bred castrated male pigs (live weight 20.5 ± 1.7 kg; mean ± s.d.) maintained as either 3 (N3) or 10 (N10) pigs per pen and water nipple (four groups/ treatment) were used. All pigs were fitted with a transponder ear tag. A radio frequency identification reader recorded and time stamped visits at the nipple. In each pen, water flow was logged every second. The drinking behaviour was recorded for 4 consecutive days and analysed using a linear mixed model. Overall, the pigs spent 594 s at the nipple during 24 h distributed among 44 visits. During this period, 5 l of water were used, of which >30% was wasted. Social competition did not affect the drinking behaviour over 24 h, except for the proportion of interrupted visits where pigs, kept with recommended nipple availability (N10), showed an increased proportion of interrupted drinking bouts compared with pigs kept at very low level of competition (N3) (0.18 ± 0.01 v. 0.11 ± 0.01; P < 0.01). However, splitting data into 8-h periods (P1, P2, P3) starting from 0600 h revealed differences between treatments, showing that in N3, water use per visit was lower in P1 than P2 and P3 (110 ± 10 v. 126 ± 7 and 132 ± 7 ml; P < 0.05), whereas in N10, the water used per visit was higher during P3 than during the other periods (P1: 107 ± 14 ml, P2: 112 ± 10 ml v. P3: 151 ± 10 ml; P < 0.001). A similar pattern was found for visit duration. In N3, fewer nipple visits were observed in P2 than P1 (15.6 ± 1.2 v. 22.0 ± 1.2; P < 0.001), whereas no difference was found between P1 and P2 in N10. The results demonstrate that growing pigs at the two levels of competition maintained a comparable level of 24 h water intake by changing behavioural variables involved in drinking. This dynamic characteristic of drinking behaviour means that if individual drinking patterns are to be used as disease monitoring tools, it is important to consider effects of external factors and include data on period level to allow rapid detection of behavioural changes.
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