24 research outputs found

    Negotiating Value: Comparing Human and Animal Fracture Care in Industrial Societies

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    At the beginning of the twentieth-century, human and veterinary surgeons faced the challenge of a medical marketplace transformed by technology. The socio-economic value ascribed to their patients – people and domestic animals – was changing, reflecting the increasing mechanisation of industry and the decreasing dependence of society upon non-human animals for labour. In human medicine, concern for the economic consequences of fractures “pathologised” any significant level of post-therapeutic disability, a productivist perspective contrary to the traditional corpus of medical values. In contrast, veterinarians adapted to the mechanisation of horse-power by shifting their primary professional interest to companion animals; a type of veterinary patient generally valued for the unique emotional attachment of the owner, and not the productive capacity of the animal. The economic rationalisation of human fracture care and the “sentimental” transformation of veterinary orthopaedic expertise indicates how these specialists utilised increasingly convergent rhetorical arguments to justify the application of innovative fracture care technologies to their humans and animal patients. Keywords: Fracture care, Industrialisation, Veterinary History, Human/animal relation

    Stilboestrol toxicity in a dog

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    A case of stilboestrol toxicity is described in a dog which was treated for prostatic hyperplasia with stilboestrol dipropionate (10 mg) daily for 5 days. An initial anaemia and thrombocytopaenia of 19,500/ÎĽl was recorded on day 11, and a severe leukocytosis of 125,300/ÎĽl on day 15 was followed by a precipitous drop to 8,400/ÎĽl on day 21. The dog received antibiotic treatment for concurrent peritonitis and prostatitis/cystitis between days 7 and 15. The dog died on day 41 with marrow aplasia

    Plasma and tear concentrations of antibiotics administered parenterally to cattle

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    Chloramphenicol, erythromycin, gentamicin, oxytetracycline, penethamate and procaine benzyl penicillin were administered parenterally to cattle and the concentrations of these antibiotics in plasma and tears were assayed microbiologically. Concentrations in plasma and tears were significantly correlated for all antibiotics tested but the concentration of antibiotic in tears and the tear flow rate were not correlated. Lipophilic drugs diffused into the tears in higher concentrations than did drugs which were not lipophilic. Concentrations of lipophilic but not hydrophilic antibiotics in tears could be predicted from the Henderson-Hasselbach equation. In cattle, it is possible through parenteral administration of chloramphenicol, erythromycin, gentamicin or oxytetracycline to achieve antibiotic concentrations in the tears which are bacteriostatic to Moraxella bovis, a primary aetiological agent of infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis

    Retinal vessls of canine eyes at different ages—A qualitative and quantitative study

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    Diameter and number of cells per unit length of vessel wall and endothelial cell frequency were determined in capillaries of trypsin-digested Foxhound retinas from different age groups. Capillary diameters increased and number of cells per unit length of capillary wall decreased with age and distance from the optic disc. Endothelial cell frequency was constant at approximately 79% of the total cells in capillary walls in all areas measured. Peripheral cystoid degeneration and peripheral annular and focal degeneration were found in aged dog retinas. Sclerosis of retinal arterioles was observed ophthalmoscopically, histologically, and in trypsin-digested retinas from aged dogs. The significance of this change in relation to the peripheral retinal degeneration is undetermined. It is proposed that thickening of basement membranes observed in peripheral capillaries of retinas causes chronic, low-level hypoxia leading to peripheral retinal degeneration in aged retinas
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