Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 36 in total

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  1. Retnasabapathy A, Joseph PG
    Vet Rec, 1966 Jul 16;79(3):72-3.
    PMID: 4959292
  2. Wong WT
    Vet Rec, 1984 Sep 15;115(11):273-4.
    PMID: 6495579
    A survey of 61 canine and 26 feline fractures diagnosed between January 1980 and June 1983 at a veterinary teaching hospital was conducted. More than 80 per cent of the fractures occurred in animals less than two years old. Male animals were more frequently involved. In the dog, the femur, tibia, pelvis, radius and ulna were most often affected while in the cat, the femur, mandible, pelvis and spine were more often involved. All the findings were consistent with other reports in the literature.
  3. Vanselow BA
    Vet Rec, 1980 Jul 05;107(1):15-8.
    PMID: 7434536
    A severe epizootic of bovine malignant catarrh occurred from November 1976 until June 1977 in cattle at an agricultural institute in peninsular Malaysia. In a group of 82 Kedah-Kelantan cattle the morbidity rate was 47.6 per cent with a fatality rate of 89.7 per cent. In a group of 43 local Indian dairy cattle the morbidity rate was 23.3 per cent with a fatality rate of 100 per cent. Although evidence suggested that sheep acted as a common source of infection, the disease occurred in one animal which had no contact with sheep but had contact with infected cattle and carcases.
  4. Robertson K
    Vet Rec, 2017 12;181(23):631.
    PMID: 29222157 DOI: 10.1136/vr.j5679
  5. Dorny P, Claerebout E, Vercruysse J, Jalila A, Sani R
    Vet Rec, 1993 Oct 23;133(17):423-4.
    PMID: 8279113
  6. Chooi KF, Chulan U
    Vet Rec, 1985 Mar 30;116(13):354.
    PMID: 4002545
  7. Routh J, Paramasivam SJ, Cockcroft P, Wood S, Remnant J, Westermann C, et al.
    Vet Rec, 2023 Nov 18;193(10):e3504.
    PMID: 37955283 DOI: 10.1002/vetr.3504
    BACKGROUND: The alignment of student and workplace supervisors' perspectives on student preparedness for veterinary workplace clinical training (WCT) is unknown, yet misalignment could negatively impact workplace learning. The aim of this study was to quantify the relative importance of WCT preparedness characteristics according to students and supervisors and to identify differences.

    METHODS: A survey was completed by 657 veterinary students and 244 clinical supervisors from 25 veterinary schools, from which rankings of the preparedness characteristics were derived. Significant rank differences were assessed using confidence intervals and permutation tests.

    RESULTS: 'Honesty, integrity and dependability' was the most important characteristic according to both groups. The three characteristics with the largest rank differences were: students' awareness of their own and others' mental wellbeing and the importance of self-care; being willing to try new practical skills with support (students ranked both of these higher); and having a clinical reasoning framework for common problems (supervisors ranked higher).

    LIMITATIONS: Using pooled data from many schools means that the results are not necessarily representative of the perspectives at any one institution.

    CONCLUSION: There are both similarities and differences in the perspectives of students and supervisors regarding which characteristics are more important for WCT. This provides insights that can be used by educators, curriculum developers and admissions tutors to improve student preparedness for workplace learning.

  8. Rahman WA
    Vet Rec, 1994 Mar 05;134(10):235-7.
    PMID: 8197681
    Fourteen goat kids of the local indigenous breed naturally infected with Eimeria species were divided into two equal groups. The first group was superinfected with 500,000 Eimeria species oocysts and the second group was treated with amprolium. Sixty days later both groups were infected with 5000 third-stage caprine Haemonchus contortus larvae. The goats experimentally superinfected with eimeria shed more H contortus eggs and gained weight more slowly.
  9. Hassan Z, Daniel RC, O'Boyle D, Frost AJ
    Vet Rec, 1999 Nov 27;145(22):635-9.
    PMID: 10619609
    Quarter milk samples were taken from 150 cows from three dairy farms in south-east Queensland at drying off, two, four and six weeks after drying off, at calving, and one, two and three weeks after calving. In each of the herds, the cows were randomly allocated to three groups of approximately equal size. One group had all the quarters of all the cows treated at drying off with a dry cow antibiotic infusion containing cloxacillin; the second group was given no treatment, and the third group had selected quarters treated on the basis of their high activity of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase at drying off. Dry cow treatment resulted in a marked reduction in the number of infected quarters at two and four weeks after drying off, so that the comprehensively treated group had significantly less infected quarters at these times (P<0.02). Twelve dinical cases of mastitis were detected two weeks after drying off in the untreated groups, 10 in the untreated quarters of the selectively treated groups, and no cases in the comprehensively treated groups. These cases were due mainly to Streptococcus uberis and Streptococcus dysgalactiae. The number of infected untreated quarters increased markedly between drying off and two weeks later, but in all three groups there was a marked decrease in the number of infected quarters between six weeks after drying off and calving, suggesting that the mammary glands were more able to overcome infections at this time.
  10. Effendy AW, Zamri-Saad M, Puspa R, Rosiah S
    Vet Rec, 1998 Apr 18;142(16):428-31.
    PMID: 9595632
    A trial was conducted to compare the efficacy of intranasal vaccination in protecting goats against pneumonic pasteurellosis with intramuscular vaccination using an oil adjuvant vaccine, and a combination of the two methods. Forty goats were divided into four equal groups. Group 1 was vaccinated twice intranasally with formalin-killed Pasteurella haemolytica A2, group 2 was vaccinated twice intramuscularly with an oil adjuvant vaccine containing P haemolytica A7, and group 3 was initially vaccinated intranasally with the formalin-killed P haemolytica A2 followed by intramuscular vaccination with the oil adjuvant vaccine. In each group the two vaccinations were carried out four weeks apart. Group 4 was the unvaccinated control group. All goats were challenged intratracheally with 4 ml of an inoculum containing live P haemolytica A2 at a concentration of 1.3 x 10(7) colony forming units/ml two weeks after the last vaccination and were killed 14 days after the challenge. Although group 2 showed the highest clinical score following the challenge, deaths were observed only in group 3. Three goats in group 1 had pneumonic lung lesions, compared with six goats in group 2 and all the goats in groups 3 and 4. The lung lesions in group 1 were significantly (P < 0.05) less severe than in groups 3 and 4. Similarly, the lesions in group 2 were markedly less severe than in groups 3 and 4, although the differences were not significant. The difference between the extent of the lung lesions in the goats in groups 1 and 2 was not significant. Antibody against P haemolytica A2 in group 1 reached peak levels and was significantly (P < 0.01) higher than in the control group one week after the second vaccination, before declining.
  11. Rafidah O, Zamri-Saad M, Shahirudin S, Nasip E
    Vet Rec, 2012 Aug 18;171(7):175.
    PMID: 22815208 DOI: 10.1136/vr.100403
    The efficacy of an intranasal haemorrhagic septicaemia vaccine containing live gdhA derivative Pasteurella multocida B:2 was tested in buffaloes in Sabah. Sixty buffaloes, kept grazing in the field with minimal human intervention were devided into three groups of 20 buffaloes per group. Buffaloes of group 1 were exposed intranasal to 5 ml vaccine containing 10(6) CFU/ml of live gdhA derivative P multocida B:2. Buffaloes of group 2 were not exposed to the vaccine but exposed to PBS and were allowed to commingle and graze in the same field as the buffaloes of group 1 while buffaloes of group 3 were similarly exposed to PBS and were grazing separately. Booster was on group 1, two weeks later. Twelve months after the first vaccination, three buffaloes from each group were brought into the experimental house and challenged subcutaneously with 10(9) CFU/ml of live wild-type P multocida B:2. All challenged buffaloes of groups 1 and 2 survived with only mild, transient signs while all control unvaccinated buffaloes developed severe signs of haemorrhagic septicaemia and were euthanased between 28 hours and 38 hours postchallenge with signs and lesions typical of haemorrhagic septicaemia. These data showed that the gdhA mutant strain, given intranasally as two doses two weeks apart, successfully induced systemic immunity in exposed buffaloes and also led to spread of vaccine strain to the in-contact animals, where it acted as an effective live vaccine to protect both exposed buffaloes and in-contact buffaloes against challenge with the virulent parent strain.
  12. Demeter Z, Gál J, Palade EA, Rusvai M
    Vet Rec, 2009 Feb 14;164(7):213-6.
    PMID: 19218594
  13. Zamri-Saad M, Salmiyah TS, Jasni S, Cheng BY, Basri K
    Vet Rec, 1990 Nov 10;127(19):480.
    PMID: 2270639
  14. Retnasabapathy A, San KT
    Vet Rec, 1976 Jan 24;98(4):68-9.
    PMID: 943885
    A total of 764 adult dogs were examined for microfilariae and adult worms of D immitis and 197 (25-8 per cent) were found to be infected. Direct blood examinations revealed only 47-2 per cent of the infected dogs whereas the blood serum examination detected 57-8 per cent of them. These results showed that the absence of circulating microfilariae could not be relied upon to be an accurate indication of the absence of patent heartworm infection. The average number of heartworms per dog was 5-5 with a range of one to 50.
  15. Sheikh-Omar AR, Mutalib AR
    Vet Rec, 1985 Mar 23;116(12):330-1.
    PMID: 3992849
  16. Ibrahim A, Saw SP, Fatimah I, Saharee AA
    Vet Rec, 1983 Mar 26;112(13):303-4.
    PMID: 6302973
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