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CIDRs are approved for use in both beef cattle and dairy heifers in Canada and the United States. [2] CIDRs contain 1.9g of progesterone in Canada and 1.38g in the United States. [2] The CIDR-S is licensed for use in sheep and goats in New Zealand and Australia. [1] The CIDR-G is also suitable for use in ewes, lambs and goats. [4]
Treatment of pain through baking patients alive Wagner–Jauregg treatment: Julius Wagner Jauregg: Infectious diseases: Treatment of general paresis of the insane by infecting the patient with malaria: Wagner–Jauregg therapy at Whonamedit? Williams Flexion Exercises: Paul C. Williams: Orthopedics: Treatment of low back pain by enhancing ...
ovarian cancer, malignant ascites, gastric cancer cBR96-doxorubicin immunoconjugate: mab: humanized: Lewis-Y antigen: cancer Cedelizumab [47] mab: humanized: CD4: prevention of organ transplant rejections, treatment of autoimmune diseases Cemiplimab [32] Libtayo: mab: human: PD-1: Y: cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma Cergutuzumab amunaleukin ...
The majority of drugs used in cancer chemotherapy are cytostatic, many via cytotoxicity. A fundamental philosophy of medical oncology , including combination chemotherapy, is that different drugs work through different mechanisms, and that the results of using multiple drugs will be synergistic to some extent.
Sheep and goats are both small ruminants with cosmopolitan distributions due to their being kept historically and in modern times as grazers both individually and in herds in return for their production of milk, wool, and meat. [1] As such, the diseases of these animals are of great economic importance to humans.
A 2024 systematic review of the literature found that chemoradiation with 5-FU and mitomycin C, as used in the Nigro Protocol, improves outcomes like colostomy-free survival in anal cancer patients compared to alternatives like cisplatin. However, it can lead to more severe side effects, especially blood-related toxicity. [7]
First described in 1954 by Bjorn Sigurdsson in Iceland, [6] Maedi-visna virus was the first lentivirus to be isolated and characterized, accomplished in 1957 by Sigurdsson. [6] [7] [8] Maedi (Icelandic mæði 'dyspnoea') and visna (Icelandic visna 'wasting' [9] or 'shrinking' of the spinal cord) refer to endemic sheep herd conditions that were only found to be related after Sigurdsson's work.
JSRV is the virus that is the cause of the contagious lung tumors in sheep called ovine pulmonary adenocarcinoma (OPA). The disease has also been called "jaagsiekte", after the Afrikaans words for "chase" (jaag) and "sickness" (siekte), to describe the respiratory distress observed in an animal out of breath from being chased, indicating the breathing difficulty experienced by infected sheep.