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1.
J Therm Biol ; 123: 103931, 2024 Aug 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39137569

RESUMEN

Heat stress is one of the primary environmental factors that harm both the productivity and health of buffaloes. The current study was conducted to estimate the threshold of temperature humidity index (THI)1 and genetic features for milk yield of first-lactation Mehsana buffaloes using an univariate repeatability test-day model. The data included 130,475 first lactation test-day milk yield (FLTDMY) records of 13,887 Mehsana buffaloes and the daily temperature and humidity. The statistical model included herd test day as fixed effects, days-in-milk (DIM) classes, age of the animal, as well as random factors such as the additive genetic effect (AGE) of animal in general conditions (intercept), AGE of the buffaloes subjected to heat stress (slope), permanent environmental effect of animal in general conditions (intercept), permanent environmental effect of animal under heat stress conditions (slope) and random residual effect. It was expected that the general effects and the heat-tolerance effects would be correlated, represented by the present investigation's repeatability models. The variance components of FLTDMY in the present study were computed using the REML method. The threshold for THI was 78. At the THI below the threshold, the heritability estimated for the FLTDMY trait was 0.29, and the additive genetic variance (AGV) for heat stress conditions was 0. At THI of 83, AGV for heat stress conditions was highest for FLTDMY. The genetic correlation of general AGE to heat-tolerant AGE was -0.40. The results indicated that a consistent selection for milk production, avoiding the thermal tolerance, may diminish the thermal tolerance capacity of Mehsana buffaloes.

2.
Case Rep Nephrol Dial ; 14(1): 110-115, 2024.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39015128

RESUMEN

Introduction: Anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease is a rare cause of glomerulonephritis usually mediated by IgG antibodies and is associated with ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis in up to 50% of cases. IgA-mediated anti-GBM disease is extremely rare and presents diagnostic difficulties as circulating IgA antibodies will not be detected by standard serological tests for anti-GBM disease. Case Presentation: We present the case of a 67-year-old man with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis requiring haemodialysis at presentation. Serological testing was positive for anti-myeloperoxidase and negative for IgG anti-GBM antibodies. Kidney biopsy revealed necrotizing crescentic glomerulonephritis with linear staining of IgA along the GBM. He was treated with a combination of immunosuppression and plasma exchange and was able to become dialysis-independent. Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first documented "double-positive" IgA anti-GBM disease and ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis.

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