Publications by authors named "Thomlinson J"

In many countries where the economy has shifted from mainly agricultural to industrial, abandoned agricultural lands are lost to urbanization. For more than 4 centuries the Puerto Rican economy depended almost entirely on agriculture, but sociopolitical changes early in the 20th century resulted in a shift to industry. This shift in the economy, and an increase in population, has resulted in an increase in urban areas.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We describe the cases of two young women who died due to air embolism during sexual intercourse early in the puerperium.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects on apparent digestibility of increasing dietary fibre concentrations in barley-based diets by substituting for barley either bran, oatmeal by-product, guar gum or pectin were studied using 72 pigs. Increasing substitutions of bran up to a maximum of 300 g kg-1 gave progressive decreases in apparent digestibility of dry matter, ether extract and gross energy fractions and in digestible and metabolisable energy contents, progressive increases in apparent digestibility of modified acid detergent fibre but had no consistent effect on either nitrogen or extract free of nitrogen fractions. Increasing substitution of oatmeal by-product up to the same maximum gave significant linear decreases in apparent digestibility of dry matter, extract free of nitrogen and gross energy, significant depressions in apparent digestibility of modified acid detergent fibre and significant increases in ether extract.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Six experiments were made in growing pigs to investigate the effects of substituting bran, oatmeal byproduct, pectin and guar gum for barley on gastric emptying rate, pH and dry matter of digesta and on the dry matter content and rate of passage of digesta to the terminal ileum and overall. Twelve pigs with cannulas sited at the pyloric/fundic junction of the stomach were used to measure gastric emptying. Seventy-two pigs were kept in metabolism cages for the total collection of faeces and nine pigs were fitted with simple cannulas 150 mm cranial to the ileo-caecal junction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of parakeratotic lesions and ulcers of the oesophagogastric epithelium was studied in pigs from a variety of sources and of ages ranging from 10 to 22 weeks. In general, the severity, as assessed by gross appearance, paralleled the depth to which parakeratotic change extended into the epithelium. However, some early degenerative change and erosion was observed in epithelium graded as macroscopically normal.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The rate of development of parakeratotic lesions in the gastric pars oesophagea was investigated in three experiments using 360 pigs, initially aged 10 to 11 weeks and weighing about 30 kg, of differing genotype and with some differences in previous rearing method, given a diet based on finely ground barley which was known to predispose to lesion formation. Lesions were found in some pigs at 10 to 11 weeks old but the incidence and severity increased progressively indicating development as quickly as one month after first giving the finely ground diet. There were indications that different genotypes and different diets given previously in rearing may have influenced the results obtained.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In four experiments a total of 288 individually fed pigs were given barley-based diets for about 100 days from about 20 kg liveweight. Fine grinding of barley increased the number and severity of oesophagogastric lesions. Pelleting a diet based on coarsely ground barley had a similar effect.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The multiplication rates of 70 porcine Escherichia coli strains were compared in minimal medium and in medium supplemented with aspartic acid, lysine, serine and threonine, which were the amino acids taken up during multiplication of porcine E. coli in a complex medium. The effects of these amino acids singly or in combinations and the amino acids norleucine and norvaline on the growth of porcine E.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Commensal strains of Escherichia coli derived from pigs had a broad spectrum of in vitro colicin acitivity against pathogenic serotypes. Of eight pathogenic serotypes tested, only three were colicinogenic and were active against relatively few commensal strains. Colicin activity was influenced by temperature, pH and oxygen tension as well as by the availability of certain nutrients and the presence of trypsin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This investigation describes some of the husbandry factors influencing the occurrence of colibacillosis in calves. Diarrhoea and mortality were usually associated with an increase in the proportion of "pathogenic" to total E coli to about 50 per cent in the faeces although there were occasions when the proportion of "pathogenic" E coli increased but no disease occurred. These increases often followed changes of diet which appeared to be more important than environmental conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF