The relationship between organ weights and body weights, facial dimensions, and dental dimensions in a population of olive baboons (Papio cynocephalus anubis)

1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. R. Gest ◽  
M. I. Siegel
2002 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. Christian ◽  
R. G. York ◽  
A. M. Hoberman ◽  
L. C. Fisher ◽  
W. Ray Brown

Bromodichloromethane (BDCM) was tested for reproductive toxicity in a two-generation study in CRL SD rats. Thirty rats/sex/group/generation were continuously provided BDCM in drinking water at 0 (control carrier, reverse osmosis membrane-processed water), 50, 150, and 450 ppm (0,4.1 to 12.6, 11.6 to 40.2, and 29.5 to 109.0 mg/kg/day, respectively). Adult human intake approximates 0.8 μg/kg/day (0.0008 mg/kg/day). P and F1 rats were observed for general toxicity (viability, clinical signs, water and feed consumption, body weights, organ weights [also three weanling F1 and F2 pups/sex/litter], histopathology [10/sex, 0-and 450-ppm exposure groups]) and reproduction (mating, fertility, abortions, premature deliveries, durations of gestation, litter sizes, sex ratios, viabilities, maternal behaviors, reproductive organ weights [also three weanling F1 and F2 pups/sex/litter], sperm parameters, and implantations. F1 rats were evaluated for age at vaginal patency or preputial separation. Ten P and F1 rats/sex from the 0-and 450-ppm exposure groups and rats at 50 and 150 ppm with reduced fertility were evaluated for histopathology (gross lesions, testes, intact epididymis, all F1 dams for number of primordial follicles). Developmental parameters in offspring included implantation and pup numbers, sexes, viabilities, body weights, gross external alterations, and reproductive parameters (F1 adults). Toxicologically important, statistically significant effects at 150 and/or 450 ppm included mortality and clinical signs associated with reduced absolute and relative water consumption, reduced body weights and weight gains, and reduced absolute and relative feed consumption (P and F1 rats). Significantly reduced body weights at 150 and 450 ppm were associated with reduced organ weights and increased organ weight ratios (% body and/or brain weight). Histopathology did not identify abnormalities. Small delays in sexual maturation (preputial separation, vaginal patency) and more F1 rats with prolonged diestrus were also attributable to severely reduced pup body weights. Mating, fertility, sperm parameters, and primordial ovarian follicular counts were unaffected. The no-observable-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) and the reproductive and developmental NOAELs for BDCM were at least 50 ppm (4.1 to 12.6 mg/kg/day), 5125 to 15,750 times the human adult exposure level, if delayed sexual maturational associated with severely reduced body weights is considered reproductive toxicity. If considered general toxicity, reproductive and developmental NOAELs for BDCM are greater than 450 ppm (29.5 to 109.0 mg/kg/day), or 36,875 to 136,250 times the human adult exposure level. Regardless, these data indicate that BDCM should not be identified as a risk to human reproductive performance or development of human conceptuses.


1984 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 681-689 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.K. Thompson ◽  
J.K.G. Kramer ◽  
E.R. Farrworth ◽  
A.H. Corner ◽  
H.W. Hulan

1958 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Heroux ◽  
N. T. Gridgeman

In experiments in which two groups of animals of different mean body weight are compared, individual organ weights of the animals can be expressed as absolute weights, as fractional weights, or as absolute weights statistically regressed onto constant body weights. The second, and commonest, mode of expression involves the assumption that the part is directly proportional to the whole, and this is shown to be unlikely for all organs except the muscle mass. Practical as well as theoretical justifications for the use of regressed weights (which utilize the actual slope of the line relating the organ weight to the whole) are given.The experimental data are from white rats kept for 4 weeks in a warm (30 °C.) or a cold (6 °C.) environment. It is shown that cold adaptation had no effect on brain, genitals, and lung weights, but that it reduced the growth of muscle, pelt, fat, skeleton, spleen, and thymus, and that it hypertrophied the liver, intestine, kidney, heart, and adrenals. Apparently cold acclimated rats are smaller than the controls mainly because they have a smaller muscle mass.


1965 ◽  
Vol 208 (5) ◽  
pp. 1021-1025 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. H. Marks ◽  
A. N. Bhattacharya ◽  
Joan Vernikos-Danellis

Body weights, organ weights, and blood and pituitary ACTH concentrations were determined in rats exposed continuously to 20.9, 15.0, or 10.0% O2 atmospheres at normal barometric pressure for periods ranging from 3 to 120 hr. Hypoxia resulted in some loss of body weight, and loss of weight of the thymus and the ovary. The weight of the adrenals increased. Blood ACTH rose rapidly after exposure to hypoxic conditions, remaining elevated for the duration of the experiment. Control animals (20.9% O2) placed in the same chamber had detectable blood ACTH only at the 3-hr sampling time. Pituitary ACTH also rose rapidly during hypoxia, the elevation being greatest with the most severe hypoxic state. The rate of ACTH synthesis and secretion in the resting state and during the stress of hypoxia is discussed.


Parasitology ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 103 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. A. Connors ◽  
B. B. Nickol

Although the relationship between intestinal parasitism, the ingestion and use of energy, and host survival is expected, little work has been done to outline the effect of such organisms upon their host's nutritional requirements in an ecological context. This study is the first to demonstrate that an intestinal helminth previously reported to be of little or no histopathological consequence, Plagiorhynchus cylindraceus, has a significant detrimental impact upon the flow of food energy through a definitive host, the European starling, Sturnus vulgaris. Within both male and female adult European starlings reductions in standard metabolic rates occurred as the result of initial infection, indicating that the host's basal metabolism/thermal regulatory abilities were altered. Moreover, initially infected male starlings, but not females, had an increased consumption and excretion of energy and maintained lower average daily body weights versus controls when temperature stressed. These results appear to be due to either a parasite-mediated alteration in host activity and/or to the disruption of host-digestive abilities. Additionally, these data indicate that, overall, male and female S. vulgaris respond differently to infection and that intestinal helminths normally thought to be of little or no pathological consequence to the host are factors that should be addressed in future studies regarding animal energetics, ecology, and behaviour.


1994 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 376-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonard Friedman ◽  
Dennis W. Gaines ◽  
Richard F. Newell ◽  
Arlen O. Sager ◽  
Roger N. Matthews ◽  
...  

As part of a larger study designed to characterize the early developmental stages of the Hormel-Hanford strain miniature pig, whole body, brain, kidney, liver, pancreas and spleen from male animals were examined for weight increases from one to 196 days, the approximate age of maturity. At 196 days, body weights had increased to 82.5 times the weight at day 1; increases in organ weights were greatest for spleen, less and similar for kidney, liver and pancreas, and the least for brain. Little change in relative organ weights was noted, except for the brain where an almost steady decrease occurred starting from 7 days after birth.


1978 ◽  
Vol 3 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 179-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Coates ◽  
Robert W. Jeffery ◽  
Rena R. Wing

1982 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 229-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel S. Mitchell ◽  
Janis R. Graham ◽  
V. Daniel Castracane

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