(1) Bacteriological examination of the pus of mammary lesions showed the presence of Brucella suis, which confirmed the diagnosis of brucellic mammitis in the sows.
(2) AC-1370 was effective in 20 out of 21 cases (95.2%) with gynecoobstetrical infections such as intrauterine, intrapelvic infection and mammitis, administered with 1 approximately 2 g twice a day.
(3) Thirteen patients with obstetric and gynecological infections (intrauterine infection 2 cases, adnexitis 7, 1 case each of abscess of adnexa uteri, abscess of the vaginal wall, pyelonephritis, and mammitis) were treated with CZON.
Mastitis
Definition:
(n.) Inflammation of the breast.
Example Sentences:
(1) Such an approach to investigations into subclinical mastitis is not feasible by means of either single- or double-parameter techniques.
(2) Mastitis in its complexity has managed to forestall all efforts of eradication in spite of years of research, antibiotics and practical control measures.
(3) When estimates of milk loss were replaced by estimates based on bulk tank somatic cell counts, milk loss accounted for over 80% of the total cost of mastitis.
(4) The differential diagnosis has to include fibroadenoma, fibrocystic disease, mastitis, abscess, and medullary carcinoma.
(5) The respiratory burst activity of neutrophil leukocytes from bovine peripheral blood was studied before and during an experimentally induced Escherichia coli mastitis.
(6) Tubercolous mastitis is an uncommon lesion even in countries where the incidence of pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis is still very high.
(7) Lactation mastitis disturbs the function of the manmary glands and decreases the quality of the milk.
(8) Most recommended mastitis control practices were estimated to be economically beneficial; however, using a sanitizer in the washing solution and having a company change the milking machine inflations were not economical.
(9) Incidence of clinical mastitis was highest in the 1st month of lactation.
(10) Recent research concerning systemic therapy of subclinical mastitis is highlighted and critically reviewed.
(11) Ultrasonography was conducted in 66 patients with postinjection infiltrations, abscesses, postoperative scar suppurations, mastitis and other inflammatory conditions.
(12) The modulation of lymphocyte stimulation as demonstrated here in vitro, has great significance regarding aspects of local immunostimulation related to modern treatment of mastitis.
(13) In infant mice with E coli-induced lethal diarrhea and in mice with S aureus and E coli-induced mastitis, ceftiofur was comparable or more active than was ampicillin.
(14) We report a case of definite TSS due to postpartum staphylococcal mastitis which evolved over a period of 3 weeks to a breast abscess, recurring after 2 months.
(15) Milk progesterone levels were lowered due to mastitis.
(16) The alpha 2M preparation from mastitis whey migrated essentially as native alpha 2M, representing the 'slow' form of the molecule.
(17) The distribution of BoLA-A antigens among these relative mastitis-resistant cows was compared to that in the other half of the material (51), which comprised animals with at least one recorded treatment for mastitis.
(18) Among 1498 biopsy specimens examined during this period, there were 27 cases of mastitis (1.8 per cent: 5 acute mastitis, 12 chronic diffuse, 10 granulomatous (one of them tuberculous), 2 lipogranulomas and 7 foreign type granulomas.
(19) The explanation is that a single bacteriological culture is not reliable for detecting mastitis, because there are temporary causes of tissue irritation other than bacteria that may be identified during standard bacteriologic examination.
(20) Current recipients of SCC data used the data more frequently than did past recipients of the SCC data to evaluate mastitis treatment or control, choose cows to cull, identify cows to dry off early, indicate herd infection, and evaluate mastitis control.