Male woodchucks (Marmota monax) were maintained in northern vs. southern hemisphere photoperiods, provided feed and water ad libitum, and evaluated every 2 wk for 23 mo for body weight, absolute and relative food intake, body temperature, serum testosterone, and serum concentrations of leptin measured using an anti-mouse leptin enzyme-linked immunoassay. During late spring and summer, body weight increased 56 +/- 4% above winter nadirs, and during the autumn and early winter weights decreased 27 to 43% below midsummer maxima. Serum leptin initially increased during increases in body weight, in the late spring, reached peak values (490 +/- 32 pg/ml) in summer during the initial decline in body weight, and later decreased along with body weight to reach basal values (20 +/- 5 pg/ml) in late winter. Spontaneous declines in food intakes in summer began 2-6 wk before resulting declines in body weight and occurred during increases in leptin >100 pg/ml. The rate of decline in food intakes was greatest when serum leptin was at or near peak values. Food intake increased in late winter when leptin was low and 7-10 wk before resulting increases in body weight. Testis recrudescence occurred when leptin was declining to near basal levels. The results suggest that leptin is involved in the hormonal regulation of the circannual cycle in the drive for voluntary food intake in this species.
Because acid/base physiology is a difficult subject for most medical and veterinary students, the first author designed a software program, Acid/Base Primer, that would help students with this topic. The Acid/Base Primer was designed and evaluated within a conceptual framework of basic educational principles. Seventy-five first-year veterinary students (of 81; 93% response rate) participated in this study. Students took both a pre- and posttest of content understanding. After completing the Acid/Base Primer in pairs, each student filled out a survey evaluating the features of the program and describing his/her use and experience of it. Four pairs of students participated in interviews that elaborated on the surveys. Scores improved from 53 +/- 2% on the pretest to 74 +/- 1% on an immediate posttest. On surveys and in interviews, students reported that the program helped them construct their own understanding of acid/base physiology and prompted discussions in pairs of students when individual understandings differed. The case-based format provided anchors and a high degree of relevance. Repetition of concepts helped students develop a more complex network of understanding. Questions in the program served to scaffold the learning process by providing direction, accentuating the relevant features of the cases, and provoking discussion. Guidelines for software development were generated on the basis of the findings and relevant educational literature.
The clearest indication of writing development came from students' augmented ability to use medical terminology in appropriate ways. This is an important observation, given that each Question of the Week covered a separate body system, characterized by distinctly different terms and jargon. We concluded that students need much more practice to attain the level of proficiency outlined by our rubric.
Oxygen consumption (VO2) and concentration of venous blood metabolites were measured in donkeys trained to run and to pull loads on a treadmill. VO2 in two donkeys running at maximal speed on a 9.8% slope was 110 +/- 2 ml.min-1.kg-1, approximately 22 times preexercise VO2. Average heart rate at maximal VO2 (VO2max) was 223 +/- 2 beats/min, five times the preexercise heart rate. Blood lactate increased 14-fold, and blood glucose did not change (P > 0.05). Animals running up a 4% incline and incremental draft loading of five donkeys walking on the level were also studied. The total energy cost of walking unloaded was 2.86 +/- 0.06 J.m-1.kg live wt-1. During low- to medium-intensity draft work for 25 min, glucose fell below preexercise values (P < 0.05), whereas plasma hematocrit and cortisol increased (P < 0.05). Blood lactate remained unchanged up to approximately 40% VO2 max but increased 170% at approximately 60% VO2max. The responses in donkeys are similar to those of exercising horses except for the rapid decline in blood glucose observed during low-intensity exercise and the lower lactate levels at both the high-intensity exercise and the apparent anaerobic threshold.
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