PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rubber slat mats could improve animal well-being

Mats could help pregnant sows stay healthy

2013-08-01
(Press-News.org) New research shows that rubber slat mats could improve swine health. In a new study in the Journal of Animal Science, researchers in Europe studied how different types of flooring affects claw and limb lesions, locomotion and flooring cleanliness.

According to the researchers, flooring is one of the main factors in production systems that cause locomotory problems in swine. Locomotory problems can be caused by joint injuries or by circulatory problems in the legs and feet.

Julia Calderón-Díaz, a PhD candidate at University of College Dublin, said pregnant sows placed on cushioned flooring would have a lower risk of being lame compared with sows placed on concrete.

In this experiment, researchers studied the effects of two types of flooring on pregnant gilts in Ireland. One hundred sixty-four pregnant gilts were divided into two groups. One group was housed on concrete slatted floors, and the other group was housed on concrete slatted floors covered in rubber slat mats.

The researchers scored locomotion and claw and limb lesion of the replacement gilts and flooring cleanliness periodically. The replacement gilts were observed from the time they were bred until 110 days into their pregnancy.

Dr. Alan Fahey, a lecturer at the University College Dublin said the gilts were studied during two pregnancies. The results were similar during both pregnancies. Sows housed on rubber mats had a reduced risk of swelling and wounds on the limbs. However, the rubber mats increased the risk of sole and heel lesions.

Calderón-Díaz said these lesions were possibly caused by slurry accumulation over the rubber mats. She said these lesions were not severe and could be addressed through modifications of the rubber slat mats.

In the European Union, pregnant sows must be group housed four weeks after breeding until one week before farrowing. This rule has been in effect since January. Calderón-Díaz said other countries are likely to use group housing for pregnant sows in the near future.

INFORMATION:

This article is titled "Longitudinal study of the effect of rubber slat mats on locomotory ability, body, limb and claw lesions and dirtiness of group housed sows." It can be read in full at the journalofanimalscience.org.

Scientific contact:

Julia Calderón-Díaz
University College Dublin
julia.calderon-diaz@teagasc.ie

Media contact:

Laci Jones
American Society of Animal Science
lacij@asas.org / 217-689-2435

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ancient whale coprolites, fault slickensides, shergottites, Ediacara, and Cascadia

2013-08-01
Boulder, Colo., USA - Two new Geology articles this month are open access: "Steady rotation of the Cascade arc" and "Silica gel formation during fault slip: Evidence from the rock record." Other new articles cover everything from the discovery of fossilized whale "intestinal products" in central Italy to flooding as a result of the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull volcano eruption to new findings via the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) to using microfossils to reconstruct massive earthquakes in Cascadia. Highlights are provided below. Geology articles ...

New 3-D colonoscopy eases detection of precancerous lesions

2013-08-01
Cambridge-- MIT researchers have developed a new endoscopy technology that could make it easier for doctors to detect precancerous lesions in the colon. Early detection of such lesions has been shown to reduce death rates from colorectal cancer, which kills about 50,000 people per year in the United States. The new technique, known as photometric stereo endoscopy, can capture topographical images of the colon surface along with traditional two-dimensional images. Such images make it easier to see precancerous growths, including flatter lesions that traditional endoscopy ...

FASD impacts brain development throughout childhood and adolescence not just at birth

2013-08-01
Medical researchers at the University of Alberta recently published findings showing that brain development is delayed throughout childhood and adolescence for people born with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD). Christian Beaulieu and Carmen Rasmussen, the two primary investigators in the research study, recently published the results of their work in the peer-reviewed journal, The Journal of Neuroscience. Their team scanned 17 people with FASD, and 27 people without the disorder, who were between 5 and 15 years old. Each participant underwent two to three scans, ...

BMJ editorial: India's research participant protection policy

2013-08-01
In an editorial published online today in BMJ, Johns Hopkins bioethicist Jeremy Sugarman and other experts warn that action is urgently needed to deal with possible unintended consequences of India's new policy protecting research participants. Passed earlier this year, the Drugs and Cosmetics Act (First Amendment) Rules, was meant to mitigate ethical concerns with potential serious consequences for public health, as well as India's viability as a continued global leader in clinical research. However, Sugarman and his co-authors highlight specific concerns that could ...

Figuring out flow dynamics

2013-08-01
Turbulence is all around us—in the patterns that natural gas makes as it swirls through a transcontinental pipeline or in the drag that occurs as a plane soars through the sky. Reducing such turbulence on say, an airplane wing, would cut down on the amount of power the plane has to put out just to get through the air, thereby saving fuel. But in order to reduce turbulence—a very complicated phenomenon—you need to understand it, a task that has proven to be quite a challenge. Since 2006, Beverley McKeon, professor of aeronautics and associate director of the Graduate ...

Understanding the effects of genes on human traits

2013-08-01
This news release is available in French. Recent technological developments in genomics have revealed a large number of genetic influences on common complex diseases, such as diabetes, asthma, cancer or schizophrenia. However, discovering a genetic variant predisposing to a disease is only a first step. To apply this knowledge towards prevention or cure, including tailoring treatment to the patient's genetic profile –also known as personalized medicine – we need to know how this genetic variant affects health. In a study published today in Nature Communications, ...

Chanel, UCSB's corpse flower, blooms and causes a big stink

2013-08-01
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Chanel, UC Santa Barbara's corpse flower, has finally spread her odiferous wings, broadcasting a stench that smells like a cross between rotting flesh and Limburger cheese. "It's disgusting," said UCSB junior Connor Way, who visited Wednesday morning. "It's pretty nasty." Other visitors said Chanel smelled like "French cheese" or "a dead rat in a wall." Alex Feldwinn, a computer technician in the Life Science Computing Group at UCSB said, "It really smells like a dead animal –– not just a dead animal, but a rotting one." Edith Ogella, a longtime ...

Therapy for severe vasculitis shows long-term effectiveness

2013-08-01
Administering the drug rituximab once weekly for one month provides the same benefits as 18 months of daily immunosuppressive therapy in people with severe forms of vasculitis, or inflammation of the blood vessels, a study has found. Researchers from the Immune Tolerance Network (ITN), an international clinical trials group funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), found that rituximab is as effective as the standard therapy at inducing and maintaining disease remission. The findings appear ...

Fertility therapy not associated with long-term cardiovascular disease

2013-08-01
Women who gave birth following fertility treatment had no long-term increased risk of death or major cardiovascular events compared to women who gave birth without fertility therapy, according to new research by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) and Women's College Hospital. The findings, published today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, are the first to show fertility medications, which can cause short-term pregnancy complications, are not associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease later in life. "The speculated ...

New Explorer mission chooses the 'just-right' orbit

2013-08-01
Principal Investigator George Ricker likes to call it the "Goldilocks orbit" — it's not too close to Earth and her Moon, and it's not too far. In fact, it's just right. And as a result of this never-before-used orbit — advanced and fine-tuned by NASA engineers and other members of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) team — the Explorer mission led by Ricker will be perfectly positioned to map the locations of more than 500 transiting exoplanets, extrasolar planets that periodically eclipse each one's host star. When the two-year mission begins in the 2017-2018 ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Otago experts propose fiber as first new essential nutrient in 50 years

Auburn Physics PhD student earns prestigious DOE Fellowship

AI tool helps you learn how autistic communication works

To show LGBTQ+ support, look beyond Pride Month

Using artificial intelligence to understand how emotions are formed

Exposure to wildfire smoke late in pregnancy may raise autism risk in children

Breaking barriers in lymphatic imaging: Rice’s SynthX Center leads up to $18 million effort for ‘unprecedented resolution and safety’

Dhaval Jadav joins the SETI Institute Board to help spearhead novel science and technology approaches in the search for extraterrestrial life

Political writing retains an important and complex role in the national conversation, new book shows

Weill Cornell Medicine receives funding to develop diagnostic toolbox for lymphatic disease

It started with a cat: How 100 years of quantum weirdness powers today’s tech

McGill researchers identify a range of unexpected chemical contaminants in human milk

Physical therapy research highlights arthritis’ toll on the workforce — and the path forward

Biomedical and life science articles by female researchers spend longer under review

Forgetting in infants can be prevented in mice by blocking their brain’s immune cells

Blocking immune cells in the brain can prevent infant forgetting

AI-driven ultrafast spectrometer-on-a-chip: A revolution in real-time sensing

World enters “era of global water bankruptcy”; UN scientists formally define new post-crisis reality for billions

Innovations in spatial imaging could unlock higher wheat yields

A twitch in time? Quantum collapse models hint at tiny time fluctuations

Community water fluoridation not linked to lower birth weight, large US study finds

Stanford University’s Guosong Hong announced as inaugural recipient of the SPIE Biophotonics Discovery’s Impact of the Year Award

Ice, ice, maybe: There’s always a thin layer of water on ice — or is there?

Machine learning lends a helping ‘hand’ to prosthetics

Noninvasive brain scanning could send signals to paralyzed limbs

Community water fluoridation and birth outcomes

SGLT2 inhibitors vs GLP-1 receptor agonists for kidney outcomes in individuals with type 2 diabetes

Long-term exposure to air pollution and risk and prognosis of motor neuron disease

Five-year absolute risk–based and age-based breast cancer screening in the US

Study finds elevated alcohol involvement in suicides of lesbian, gay and bisexual women

[Press-News.org] Rubber slat mats could improve animal well-being
Mats could help pregnant sows stay healthy