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Seminal Plasma: Its Function And Importance For Pig Artificial Insemination, Kampon Kaeoket, Padet Tummaruk Dec 2002

Seminal Plasma: Its Function And Importance For Pig Artificial Insemination, Kampon Kaeoket, Padet Tummaruk

The Thai Journal of Veterinary Medicine

The objective of this review is to update information concerning the function of seminal plasma on the pig reproductive system, as well as its importance in artificial insemination (AI). It has been shown that seminal plasma advances ovulation in gilts by an average time of 10-14 hours, improves sperm motility, sustaines sperm viability during uterine transport, suppresses immune activities (chemotaxis of neutrophils), improved sperm transport, improves fertilisation rate, improves litter size in gilts and indirectly enhances fertility. The hormone estrogen, within the seminal plasma, causes a release of prostaglandins from the pigs endometrium to the utero-ovarian veins and lymphatic vessels. …


Optimisation Of Bile Production During Normothermic Preservation Of Porcine Livers., Charles J. Imber, Shawn D. St Peter, Inigo Lopez De Cenarruzabeitia, Hugh Lemonde, Mike Rees, Andrew Butler, Peter T. Clayton, Peter J. Friend Aug 2002

Optimisation Of Bile Production During Normothermic Preservation Of Porcine Livers., Charles J. Imber, Shawn D. St Peter, Inigo Lopez De Cenarruzabeitia, Hugh Lemonde, Mike Rees, Andrew Butler, Peter T. Clayton, Peter J. Friend

Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers

Machine perfusion of livers may provide a mechanism for extended preservation of marginal donor organs before transplantation, as well as a method for viability assessment. It has proved possible in a series of experimental porcine liver perfusions to maintain liver viability for up to 72 h. However, a reduction in bile production with associated histological evidence of cholestasis was seen after 10 h of perfusion, damaging the biliary canaliculi during the preservation period and leaving these organs in an unacceptable condition for transplantation. It was proposed that reduction in bile production was the result of a relentless depletion of available …


Extended Preservation Of Non-Heart-Beating Donor Livers With Normothermic Machine Perfusion., Shawn D. St Peter, C J. Imber, I Lopez, D Hughes, P J. Friend May 2002

Extended Preservation Of Non-Heart-Beating Donor Livers With Normothermic Machine Perfusion., Shawn D. St Peter, C J. Imber, I Lopez, D Hughes, P J. Friend

Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers

BACKGROUND: Non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) livers represent an important organ pool, but are seldom utilized clinically and require rapid retrieval and implantation. Experimental work with oxygenated perfusion during preservation has shown promising results by recovering function in these livers. This study compared sanguinous perfusion with cold storage for extended preservation of the NHBD liver in a porcine model.

METHODS: Porcine livers were subjected to 60 min of in vivo total warm ischaemia before flushing, after which they were preserved by one of two methods: group 1 (n = 4), University of Wisconsin (UW) solution by standard cold storage for 24 h; …


Beta-Galactosidase As A Marker Of Ischemic Injury And A Mechanism For Viability Assessment In Porcine Liver Transplantation., Shawn D. St Peter, Charles J. Imber, Inigo Lopez De Cenarruzabeitia, James Mcguire, Tim James, Richard Taylor, Peter J. Friend Jan 2002

Beta-Galactosidase As A Marker Of Ischemic Injury And A Mechanism For Viability Assessment In Porcine Liver Transplantation., Shawn D. St Peter, Charles J. Imber, Inigo Lopez De Cenarruzabeitia, James Mcguire, Tim James, Richard Taylor, Peter J. Friend

Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers

Glycohydrolases are a group of enzymes contained predominantly within lysosomes, which are released during Kupffer cell activation or death. One of these, beta-galactosidase, has been proposed as a marker of ischemia-reperfusion injury in the liver because Kupffer cell activation represents a primary event in the injurious reperfusion cascade. In this study, we compared B-galactosidase with more traditional indicators of liver injury and function in a porcine model of liver preservation. Porcine livers were allocated into two groups: group C (n = 5), preserved in University of Wisconsin solution by standard cold storage for 24 hours, and group W (n = …