The effectiveness of different interventions on body weight and fat of obese adult females

Author(s):  
Sally Ezzat ◽  
◽  
Ashraf Wahdan ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 399-418 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Pradhan ◽  
S. C. Bhatia

The relationship was studied between susceptibility of a number of different species of insects to HCN fumigation and the recovery of HCN from them immediately after fumigation.The test insects used were Tribolium castaneum, seventh stage caterpillars of Corcyra cephalonica, first-and second-instar nymphs of Drosicha sp., third-and fourthinstar nymphs of Drosicha sp. and adult females of Drosicha sp.The apparatus and methods used in the fumigation and in the recovery of HCN from the fumigated insects are fully described.Preliminary expsriments showed that the processes of distillation and redistillation did not affect the recovery of HCN but that the result obtained for recovery from distillation could be affected if some volatile reducing substance were produced and carried over to the distillate. It was found that this did actually take place in the case of one of the test insects—T. castaneum—but that redistillation got rid of the impurity.In the main experiments it was shown that, on the assumption that the concentration of HCN to which insects are exposed is the effective dosage, the susceptibility of the test insects varied in the following descending order : firstand second-stage nymphs of Drosicha sp. > third- and fourth-stage nymphs of Drosicha sp.>C. cephalonica> T. castaneum>the adult females of Drosicha sp.When the same insects were arranged in descending order of the quantities of HCN recovered per 100 gm. of body weight, the order was identical except for the nymphs of Drosicha sp. which occupied a different relative position. The two categories of nymphs of Drosicha sp. were found to occupy a different relative position again with regard to the other three test insects when exposed to a superlethal concentration and assessed for recovery of HCN per 100 gr. body weight.Parallel batches of T. castaneum and C. cephalonica were fumigated and the HCN was recovered from the dead and survivors. More HCN was recovered from the dead insects than from those that survived.Both recovery and sorption of HCN were estimated separately in parallel batches of insects (adult females of Drosicha sp. and C. cephalonica). Recovery was found to be less than sorption showing that a part of the HCN absorbed is converted into a non-recoverable state. Further, that the weight of HCN sorbed per gram body weight of adult females of Drosicha sp. is much less than in the case of C. cephalonica under similar conditions of fumigation and that the amount of HCN converted into non-recoverable products is less in Drosicha adults than in C. cephalonica.A comparison of the water content of T. castaneum, C. cephalonica and Drosicha sp. (adults) showed that there was a positive correlation between water content and higher susceptibility to HCN and greater recovery of HCN was also indicated. It is suggested that this may be a factor in the “ Surface Resistance ” of an insec to a fumigant.The observations of previous workers that larger amounts are sorbed by or recovered (after fumigation) from more susceptible species than for those less susceptible was corroborated by the results obtained with C. cephalonica, T. castaneum and adult females of Drosicha sp. but not with those from nymphs of Drosicha sp.When dosage-mortality graphs were prepared by taking the amount of HCN recovered per gram body weight as an index of internal dose, the order of resistance of different test insects based on this new criterion was found to be entirely different from that based on the usual criterion of the concentration of HCN in the fumatorium being the index of effective dosage.These apparently anomalous observations may be explained by assuming that the resistance shown by an insect in an actual fumigation operation, i.e., to the concentration of HCN to which it is exposed (external dose) is what may be called the total “ Effective Resistance ” and that this “ Effective Resistance ” is the resultant of (a) “ Surface Resistance ” to the entry of fumigant and (b) “ Internal Resistance ” to the amount of HCN which actually gains entry into the body in some way or other. Thus the “Effective Resistance ” of an insect may be due to a combination either of low “ Surface Resistance ” and high “ Internal Resistance ”, giving a very low “ Effective Resistance ” as in the case of C. cephalonica, or vice versa giving the maximum “ Effective Resistance ” as in adult females of Drosicha sp. The lower recovery of HCN from the nymphs of Drosicha sp., although they were more susceptible to fumigation than C. cephalonica, is explained by their higher “ Surface Resistance ” combined with a very much lower “ Internal Resistance ”, leading to a lower “ Effective Resistance ”.


1958 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 771-776 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary L. Petermann ◽  
Mary G. Hamilton

Rat liver was homogenized in 0.88 M sucrose. The DNA and total RNA were determined, and the homogenate was fractionated by differential centrifugation. The pellets obtained between 30 minutes at 20,000 g and 180 minutes at 105,000 g were analyzed for RNA and nitrogen. The ribonucleoproteins were determined in the analytical ultracentrifuge. The non-pellet RNA was calculated by difference. The results are reported as amounts per 6.7 x 10-9 mg. of DNA. In young, growing male rats the amounts of microsomal protein and ribonucleoprotein B (83S) increased with age. Non-pregnant adult females showed less non-pellet RNA and much more ribonucleoprotein C (63S) than did adult males. During pregnancy both of these cell constituents reverted to levels characteristic for male animals. Starvation for 5 days resulted in a reduction in the mass of liver tissue, the non-pellet RNA, the microsomal protein, and ribonucleoproteins B and C. During recovery from starvation the return of the liver to normal paralleled the rate at which body weight was restored. Treatment with cortisone, 25 mg. per rat per day for 5 days, caused an increase in microsomal protein and a decrease in ribonucleoprotein B. Treatment with 6-mercapto-purine, 50 mg. per kilo per day for 5 days, caused little change in liver composition in either males or females.


2009 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Goldschmidt ◽  
A. Mota-Marinho ◽  
C. Araújo-Lopes ◽  
MA. Brück-Gonçalves ◽  
D. Matos-Fasano ◽  
...  

Causes and implications of sexual dimorphism have been studied in several different primates using a variety of morphological characters such as body weight, canine length, coat color and ornamentation. Here we describe a peculiar coat color characteristic in the squirrel monkey that is present only in adult females over five years old and which increases with age. Neither males nor young animals manifest this phenomenon, which is characterized by a spot of black hairs located anteriorly to the external ear (pinna). This characteristic could be used to discriminate adult females of Saimiri sciureus in the wild without the need of capture techniques.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 213-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald C. P. Wypkema ◽  
C. Davison Ankney

We compared mean body weights, nutrient reserves (fat and protein), and an index of feeding of lesser snow geese arriving at and leaving southern James Bay in spring and fall 1976. Feeding increased in spring and decreased in fall. Body weight and protein of adults increased in spring, and fat reserves were maintained. The protein increase of adult females was equivalent to the protein in one egg. Ovarian follicular development in adult females appeared to proceed as reserves became available. Juvenile males had completed body growth by the end of the fall staging period but juvenile females had not. Fat and protein reserves of adults arriving on James Bay in the fall were significantly larger than those of adults after wing molt on the breeding grounds. Fat reserves of adults and juveniles increased significantly during the fall; body weight of juvenile females increased also. The fat gain greatly increases the theoretical maximum flight range of the geese and we suggest it is an important determinant of normal fall migration.


1984 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
pp. 657-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank S. Guillot ◽  
Fred C. Wright

AbstractIvermectin injected subcutaneously into calves at the rate of 200 μ/kg body weight completely eliminated females of Psoroptes ovis (Her.) in 22 days. Injection of ivermectin also adversely affected the number and hatch of eggs and the proportion of adult males forming attachment pairs. The reduced number of eggs recovered in skin scrapings was apparently the result of a significantly lower fecundity among females that temporarily survived on treated calves. Females that were exposed to ivermectin for only three days did not recover their full reproductive potential even though they were transferred to calves not injected with ivermectin. The proportion of ovigerous females among survivors was not significantly affected five days after injection. Since the number of eggs recovered in skin scrapings was substantially reduced after only three days, the effect of ivermectin on female fecundity was not primarily gonadal. Reduction in the number of P. ovis eggs three days after treatment probably occurred because of a combination of mortality of adult females and reduced oviposition by ovigerous females surviving in the population.


1976 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. 752-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Vigouroux

ABSTRACT The thyroid function in development was investigated in post-natal rats. The thyroid iodine content rapidly increased from birth (137 ± 26 ng iodine/mg thyroid) up to day 10 (338 ± 42 ng iodine/mg thyroid) then increased more slowly up to day 30 (425 ± 34 ng iodine/mg thyroid). The maximal plasma concentration of thyroxine was observed on day 16 (56.9 ± 3.5 ng T4/ml) and of iodide on day 10 (110.2 ± 12.6 ng I−/ml). The turnover rate constant of extrathyroidal thyroxine was higher at birth (8.0 ± 2.3 %/h) than at any older age studied (average 6 %/h). Thyroxine secretion by the thyroid was more intense before weaning (37 ng hormonal iodine/h/100 g body weight on days 10 and 20) than after weaning (22 ± 6 ng hormonal iodine/h/100 g body weight in 30 days old rats). The peripheral deiodination rate of thyroxine represented about 90 % thyroxine secretion rate in newborn and 10 days old rats and only 40% in adult females. In pre-weaning rats, after a single injection of both [131I]L-T4 and [125I]Na, extrathyroidal radioactivity disappeared more slowly than in 30 days old rats and adult animals. This suggests that iodide concentrations of extrathyroidal tissues are higher before than after weaning.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shirley Telles ◽  
Sachin K. Sharma ◽  
Niranjan Kala ◽  
Sushma Pal ◽  
Ram K. Gupta ◽  
...  

1964 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 975-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin Newson ◽  
Antoon de Vos

The age structure and body weight of two snowshoe hare populations, just at or passing a cyclical peak in numbers, were studied over 3 years. The survival of the young was poor. Each winter, the young of the previous summer were already too few to replace all the normally expected losses of adults. Numbers therefore decreased from year to year. Shot samples were biased towards adult females in the breeding season. It appeared that they were feeding more heavily than the males as their gut weights at this time were markedly increased. There was a clear annual cycle in body weight with females consistently heavier than males. Immature hares were lighter than adults during their first winter and remained so until they were at least a year old.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document