Domestic horses routinely participate in vigorous and various athletic activities. This enables the horse to serve as a model for studying athletic physiology and immunology in other species, including humans. For instance, as a model of physical efforts, such as endurance rides (long-distance running/aerobic exercise) and races (anaerobic exercise), the horse can be useful in evaluating post-exercise response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreased training loads in both human and equine athletes are generally implemented to improve their physical performance. These loads are tolerated only within appropriate training periodization with regard to recovery time. Otherwise, training overload causes failure in the systemic adaptation, which at first leads to overreaching, and progressively to overtraining syndrome (OTS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute phase response is a nonspecific reaction to disturbances in homeostasis during which the production of some Acute Phase Proteins (APPs) is stimulated; they are sensitive but nonspecific markers of systemic inflammatory processes. The major positive APP in dogs is the C-reactive protein (CRP). The dynamic of its concentration changes fast, rising and decreasing rapidly with the onset and removal of the inflammatory stimulus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1996, when Dolly the sheep was born, a new, utopian era was expected to begin. Science fiction and popular culture instantly threatened the public with shortly upcoming human clones, portraying it as a very easy and instant procedure. Practice has proven otherwise; it exposed how little is known about the early development of mammals and epigenetic reprogramming.
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