Publications by authors named "MCCLARY D"

The use of negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT) has become the new standard of care for complex wounds. NPWT with instillation (NPWTi) has been shown to assist wound progression in a variety of wound types in an acute hospital setting with increased progression toward healing.  We present the case of a 70-year-old male with Crohn's disease, who had post-operative life-threatening complications following hernia repair.

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The obesity epidemic is heightening chronic disease risk globally. Online weight management (OWM) communities could potentially promote weight loss among large numbers of people at low cost. Because little is known about the impact of these online communities, we examined the relationship between individual and social network variables, and weight loss in a large, international OWM programme.

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Objective: To determine associations between in vitro minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of tilmicosin against Mannheimia haemolytica and Pasteurella multocida and in vivo tilmicosin treatment outcome among calves with clinical signs of bovine respiratory disease (BRD).

Design: Observational, retrospective, cohort study.

Animals: 976 feeder calves with clinical signs of BRD enrolled in 16 randomized clinical trials.

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The lactational effect of somidobove (recombinant bST) injections on dairy cows in a full lactation was measured in 193 primiparous and 159 multiparous Holsteins. Experimental animals, distributed across six study sites, were administered a sustained-release formulation of somidobove by subcutaneous injection every 28 d beginning 36 to 49 DIM. Randomization at each site determined which of the following somidobove treatments cows received: 0 mg (control), 160 mg (primiparous only), 320 mg, 640 mg, or 960 mg (multiparous only).

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Eighty Holstein dairy cows were treated with 25 mg of prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF2alpha) on Days 14 to 16 post calving. Eighty-four herd mates served as saline controls in the double blind study. The reproductive parameters used to measure fertility were mean days to first service on all cows and mean days open, first service conception rates and services per pregnancy on cows that became pregnant.

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Five mature Holstein cows and 6 first-lactation Holstein cows were administered 100 mg of glucose/kg of body weight, IV, over a 20-minute period on postpartum day 30. A series (preinfusion, glucose infusion, and postinfusion) of blood samples was collected at -15, -10, -5, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 45, 60, 75, 90, 105, and 120 minutes from the start of the infusion. Serum was obtained and was assayed for glucose, immunoreactive insulin (IRI), growth hormone (GH), and free fatty acid concentrations.

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Altered concentrations of metabolic hormones have been suggested as important mediators of energy partitioning during early lactation. This study was initiated to determine the effects of propionate (1.0 mmol/kg body weight) infusion on plasma concentrations of glucagon, insulin, growth hormone, propionate and glucose at 14 days ante-partum (AP) and days 5 and 30 postpartum (PP).

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Penicillin concentrations were quantitated in milk from cows after intrauterine infusions of various amounts of penicillin. Six healthy lactating Holsteins were assigned to 3 treatment groups in a complete randomized block design. Postestrual (12 to 48 hours) intrauterine infusions of potassium penicillin G in sterile diluent were given at 1 of 3 dosage levels: 2 X 10(6) IU (group I), 1.

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Auxotrophic mutants of C. albicans obtained by the method described by Henson and McClary (1979) were conditioned in a tris buffered EDTA-dithiothreitol solution then converted to protoplasts by suspension in osmotically stabilized buffer containing beta-glucuronidase. Complementary protoplasts were mixed in an osmotically stabilized polyethylene glycol solution and at appropriate times were plated respectively in osmotically stabilized minimal and complete agar media.

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Growth studies were conducted on C. albicans in a glucose - salts - biotin (GSB) medium in the presence of folate inhibitors. Sulfanilamide inhibited growth which was restored by PABA or tetrahydrofolate (THF).

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Comparative studies were made on the destructive effects of certain basic proteins on a strain of Candida albicans and two of its respiration-impaired mutants. Both by direct plate counts of survivors and by quantitative ultraviolet spectrophotometric analyses of released cellular constituents, the respiration-impaired mutants were less vulnerable to the destructive actions of the basic proteins than were ordinary wild-type cells. The lethal incidence and the ultraviolet absorbing cellular substances released from wild-type cells by the proteins were markedly decreased in the presence of the oxidative phosphorylation uncouplers sodium azide, 2,4-dinitrophenol, and salicylanide and approximately equal to the effects produced on an oxidative phosphorylation mutant not treated with the uncouplers.

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Usual concentrations of antimycin A, rotenone and EDTA, individually or in combination, reduced aerobic growth rate and cell yield of Candida albicans to about half its normal level and to about the levels of previously-described acetate-negative, cytochrome-complete and aa3-deficient variants which were little affected by the inhibitors. Anaerobic conditions (not affected by antimycin A) reduced growth rate and cell yield of all cultures-including that of a nonrespiring aa3, b-deficient mutant-to low, equal levels. Antimycin A but not rotenone prevented growth of the normal strain on ethanol medium.

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A number of acriflavine-induced mutants of Candida albicans, characterized by their inability to grow on acetate as a source of energy, were screened for their cytochrome absorption spectra. Three mutants with different spectra, along with their parent, were selected for comparative studies of their growth, respiratory activities and cellular structure. The spectrum of one of the mutants was the same as that of the wild-type, but the growth rate and yield of cells on glucose medium were only about 60% of the wild-type's; those of a second mutant deficient in cytochromes aa3 were 50%, and those of a third mutant deficient in cytochromes aa3 and b were less than 5% of those of the wild-type.

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Miller, Glendon R. (Southern Illinois University, Carbondale), Dan O. McClary, and Wilbert D.

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McClary, Dan O. (Southern Illinois University, Carbondale), Wilbert D. Bowers, Jr.

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