Publications by authors named "Ron Sicsic"

Studies in recent years indicate that reproductive tract microbial communities are crucial for shaping mammals' health and reproductive outcomes. Following parturition, uterine bacterial contamination often occurs due to the open cervix, which may lead to postpartum uterine inflammatory diseases, especially in primiparous individuals. However, investigations into spatio-temporal microbial transitions in the reproductive tract of primigravid females remain limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Endometritis is a uterine disease of dairy cows causing substantial negative effects on reproductive performance and inflicting considerable economic losses. It is typically diagnosed by endometrial cytology evaluation and commonly named cytological endometritis (CEM). In most previous studies, cows were defined as CEM positive if the proportion of polymorphonuclear cells (%PMN) in their endometrial cytology was above a pre-set threshold.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Post-partum metritis is among the most prevalent disease in dairy cows affecting animal welfare and inflicting considerable economic loses. While post-partum contamination of the uterus is rife in dairy cows, only a fraction of these animals will develop metritis. Our main objective was to compare the bacterial communities and the inflammatory response in the endometrium of healthy and metritic dairy cows.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Low molecular mass organogels are nonconventional polymeric structures in which a minute amount of low molecular weight compound can reversibly gelify the whole solution without forming covalent bonds between the monomers. In this article, we demonstrate that certain electron acceptors (taking dinitrobenzoates as model compounds) that are incapable of gelifying the solvent on their own can assemble as much as a 15-16-fold larger amount of polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and form two-component donor-acceptor organogels in different solvents. At the core of the long-range order stand donor-acceptor pairs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF