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Ionophores

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We learn about ionophores as a treatment, I've seen em given in the field, and I've heard complaints about em by animal rights people.  I know what ionophores are, but I don't know exactly how they work. 

Ionophores are commonly used feed additives in production medicine and they protect against one of the most devastating illnesses I saw in late/heavy animals on a beef feedlot - the dreaded "bloat", also known as rumen acidosis.  (We'd find em dead with little to no signs of illness - they marked a huge loss for the producer, and I imagine death by upset stomach toxins or respiratory compression is painful.  Everyone involved wanted to prevent those deaths.)  They're used in small ruminants and camelids (and for the same reason, though the disease isn't called bloat, it's called acidosis). 

They're also a current topic in the press and I've heard several lectures at veterinary conferences recently that bring them up as a hot topic in both the area of antibiotic resistance and animal rights (and the laws, constitutional amendments, propositions, and policy discussions that are the outgrowth of this discussion). 

I believe that they help.  They work to prevent a devastating and painful disease from occurring at the high levels that it might otherwise, and the animals on them are healthier and don't walk around with persistently upset stomachs.  In my opinion this is a good thing.  I don't like to see animals in pain under any circumstances and I appreciate that we can give em something to modify their rumen bacterial function.  Producers and consumers appreciate that the side benefit of their use is increased average daily gain and greater feed conversion/efficiency.  Also, I appreciate that there's no question that they work.  It's easier for me if there's a direct linear relationship between use of ionophores and decreased disease - being able to prevent disease is the ideal situation and this is, thankfully, one of those cases.

So what I found was these two papers, one published and one by a student, and both answer my question:

Ionophores reduce protein degradation in the rumen thus aiding in post ruminal digestion (Horton, 1992). Ionophores also increase production of the VFA propionate by modifying the microbial fermentation in the rumen (Gates et al, 1989). from http://animalscience.tamu.edu/ansc/beef/ANSC406/Prince,S.pdf

So ionophores (which are in the antibiotic family, though not in the way that we give antibiotics for most diseases) somehow protect protein that is made by the rumen bacteria and protozoa from being broken down by different rumen bact/protozoa (allowing the animal to then "eat" this protein rather than loosing it), and then they increase volatile fatty acid propionate production by altering fermentation (these VFAs are what the animals are "eating" after their food has been fermented by bacteria and protozoa and proprionate is the best one for conversion to glucose, the body's preferred food source).  That's an OK answer, but I'd like pathogenesis (which we may not know). 

The basic affect of ionophores is to alter the flow of cations across cell membranes (Kirk et al., 1989). This leads to a reduction in gram-positive bacteria (Oheme and Pickrell, 1999). Gram-positive bacteria are known as the cause of bloat and other digestive problems associated with high carbohydrate diets. 

Ah-ha!  This is what I was looking for.  So ionophores preferentially kill off G+ bacteria, which are the problem in acidosis.  They have other effects (decreasing methane and ammonia losses, both desirable in my understanding).

The second paper is published but including quotes would require re-typing those segments.  It's conclusions are very similar to above, with more detail, with antibiotic resistance defense, and in more academic language.  It is available and highly recommended, here: http://www.horizonpress.com/ciim/v/v4/05.pdf

I won't address here the complaint about their use, period.  I feel that given our production system as it stands, they're necessary and not using them would be painful and cruel for those animals.  However, complaints about our current production systems are warranted, though the rebuttal is by now standard. 

I don't know of a way to decrease the use of high-concentrate diets except through governmental regulation and increased food prices for the consumer.  While this is a fine solution in my mind (I lived in Sweden for 6mo and appreciated their high food prices directly!), there's no way to raise prices while remaining competitive and not-bankrupt without doing it across the whole agricultural industry. 

That's a huge undertaking.

Pix.

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Purpose

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This weekend, I took a small roadtrip with friends.  During this trip we spent a lot of time listening to the radio. 

Much of what we were listening to was pop and dance music with occasional forays into oldies, 80s, classic rock and one country song. 

The pop/dance radio reminded me of the time I spent in Canada this summer (I drove a lot and listened to the same five songs on endless repeat).  I had a great time, met wonderful people, learned a ton, and I'd go back tomorrow if I could. 

Thing is, when I was there, it wasn't fun all the time.  I mostly worked.  Early (5a early), on something I didn't always find fascinating, and late, on stuff I found interesting but hard (and I got lost a lot).  In between then I looked things up, went over cases, wrote up findings, and enjoyed as much coffee as I could stand. 

I didn't talk to my friends.  I didn't email anyone.  I didn't log onto facebook for the whole time I was there.  For the first two weeks I didn't even write - all I did was work and sleep. 

On no planet does that sound like a good time.  But I liked the environment, the people, and the challenge. 

I miss it. 

Pix.

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Reading about border disease in lambs (lambs infected in-utero are born weak, shaking, and with hair rather than wool and do not recognize the border disease virus as non-self). 

It has similar pathogenesis and antigenicity to BVD in cattle.  The is transmitted in-utero to calves if their dam was infected at a specific stage of their development (it's 45-80d in sheep).  Those calves are born sickly, weak, and immunotolerant of this virus.  They're walking virus factories and serve to contaminate the environment and other cattle until they run into a different strain of the BVD virus, which kills them.  It's a horrible way to go and an impossible way to live. 

I saw a lecture on friday about BVD virus in deer.  Specifically, the lecture was about the discovery of two wild deer found infected with a cattle strain of BVD.  Interestingly, the virus isolated from one of the deer was very highly related to the BVD vaccine strain given to cattle.  No one has any idea how the deer were infected (the virus is called Bovine Viral Diarrhea - it usually affects only cattle).  No one is sure if it's significant that these deer were found in the wild, affected with a cattle disease, or if it's an infrequent-enough occurrence to be insignificant. 

I don't have an answer.  However, I found the connection among these three diseases interesting, in that they're all one related virus, different hosts, and with similar but not identical disease expression.

My feeling is that we'll be seeing more cross-species viral transfers or jumps in the coming years (this is just my personal feeling not a scientific opinion).  Changing environmental pressures, changed vector populations, differing weather patterns, and susceptible populations of densely-packed stressed domestic animals housed in overlapping habitats with wild animals, pressured by habitat encroachment and monoculture growth.

Pix.

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Snow&Climate change

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Drove to PA yesterday afternoon, once the turnpike opened.  It was a long white-knuckle drive.  

I was feeling pretty glad to have arrived and settled in but then read the news about Chile.  

I'm sorry for their devastation.  

Pix

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I picked a guy up today.

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I picked a guy up today. 

He was walking in my neighborhood and I'd seen him before, walking in the same direction I do on my way to class.  I was running late so I was driving three blocks closer (it means I'll be on time even if I'm running late; lame, but those three blocks are slushy and muddy). 

So I stopped, rolled my window down and invited him to join me.  After a moment of surprise, he did.  I asked his major and his name and talked about the stupidity of driving three blocks closer just to skip the slush and mud and gain 5min to avoid being late.  We talked about our respective majors (his is actuarial science), the weather, and the need for a sidewalk to connect our neighborhood to the well-traveled path to school. 

It was pleasant. 

Pix
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Family

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I hate the phone and almost never use it for talking (texting OTOH is a useful way to make plans with someone I'm seeing soon).  An exception to that rule, however is talking to my father (and less frequently, my sister). 

That connection is a reliable and valued reminder of family, to lives different from my own, to perspectives on work, dating and socialization that don't fit with my chosen social circle's norms. 

I'm thankful for their warm, friendly, and easy ability to "catch up" for my 10m walk to school or the library.  It's a warming way to spend a very cold winter walk. 

Pix.

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Today

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Really, this is it. 

I've been feeling busy and scattered lately, always behind.  I realized that today is it - there are ebbs and flows of work and outside requirements, but it all comes down to this being normal.  There's never going to be another point in my life when I have more time (thank god I don't have children!). 

If I'm itching to start doing something, barring some truly seasonal work heavy periods (ag is a seasonal beast), there's always going to be long days, sleep deprivation, and "never enough done".  Mind you, this isn't a new realization, and far from original material, but it was an epiphany of sorts today. 

There's nothing to be done but getting to it (whatever "it" is).

Pix.

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Qs for you


Random inquiries:

  1. Food
  • Do you forage? Tell me about it! (What? When? Where are you? How do you cook it?)
  • What do you eat most frequently? What can't you live without? (I'm currently obsessed by grapefruit).
  • Do you garden? What? Where? How?
  • Have you ever made sausage/ground meat? Advice?
  • I'm corn and gluten reactive. Do you have any fav recipes or advice?
  1. Music suggestions, given this list?
  • Kassaban, *16 Horsepower, *Explosions in the Sky, *Andrew Bird, *Zoe Keating, Fatboy Slim, Ludacris, POS, Atmosphere, *K'naan, Kayne West, Jr Sr, Matt + Kim, Mondo Generator, Porcupine Tree, Action Action, *Klezmer (various), Calexico, Desert Sessions, *Eagles of Death Metal, Experimental Dental School, Fall out Boy, *God is an Astronaut, James Hyman, John Cage, MadelinePeyroux, *Madrugada, Movits, *Queens of the Stoneage, *Ray LaMontagne, Satie, Riceboy Sleeps, Sam Philips, Sharon Jones and dap kings, *Black Keys, Cat Empire, *Killers, Magnetic Fields, Weezer, *William Elliot Whitmore.
  • While I love blogs for everything, I only read one music blog: aurgasm, and can't rec it highly enough.
  1. Sleep: Obsessed. Occasional insomniac. If I had to complete "Health=____", I'd say sleep.  You?
Need a hairstyle, motivation and most immediately: more sleep.

Pix.

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One health

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Protecting human health via protecting animals sounds like a self-congratulatory inflation of veterinary medicine's importance.  

However, it's a direct relationship in places where dead livestock mean lack of food, where unhealthy animals spread disease either directly (zoonotically) or indirectly (via food contamination) and where livestock are a living breathing 'bank' - cash held in reserve, available to pay for a sick family member's treatment, school fees, or produce at the market if the harvest is bad.  

We hear a lot about the important role veterinarians play in public health, but it's a non-intuitive role, and the importance wasn't clear to me until I considered that last role of livestock.  

It's one we grapple with indirectly in this country - the importance is economic and the families are no less devastated, but there's fewer of them providing food for more of us.  The difference is one of scale but the impact is no less dilute for it being invisible to the consumer.  

Pix.

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Today: not moving, but contemplating movement.  Does that count as progress?

I've added a bunch of yoga to my RSS feed, and a few tri bloggers (most are too far along in the process/too tech-focused/numbers-based for me to enjoy, but if you have pointers or reccs, I'd love em!) and runners (my complaint about advanced competitors in both sports stands). 

If enjoyment of life is based on making enough money to be able to have hobbies and vacations and visits to family and friends in far-flung locales then part of that enjoyment is in being fit enough to enjoy the hard physical work that can accompany adventures. 

Pix.

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