All lambs included in the study were provided access to pelleted creep from 10 days of age to weaning. |
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The sippy cup should be introduced at six months of age in preparation for weaning from the bottle or breast at 12 months. |
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The other payback is the obvious reduction in weaning stress experienced by calves already eating creep. |
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The calf will suckle for up to 13 months and may remain with the mother for another 2-3 months after weaning. |
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Male calves were castrated either at birth, at time of initial vaccination, or at weaning. |
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Of the 169 litters born during the study period, 73 failed to produce any offspring to weaning. |
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I had only just stopped weaning my baby off bottle milk and this has left us all very shocked. |
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A 35-foot by 85-foot hoop building houses boars and the sows from weaning through midterm gestation. |
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These results were independent of other factors such as mother's background, birth weight, weaning age and breastfeeding. |
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She's had several that have come up either night blind or one foal who was moon-blind at weaning but she never knew. |
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This low yield grade for cattle with high quality grades is most likely a result of early weaning and Wagyu genetics. |
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But Calderwood saw this as a transitional phase, while he was weaning his players to his new style of play. |
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This situation may be worsened upon weaning or when sows are grouped together or mated to a large boar. |
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It was following the weaning of the lambs from the ewes during the second week of August, when we also weaned Daisy's two lambs. |
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During the developmental period from birth through weaning, the intestinal microbiota undergoes a rapid ecological succession. |
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We may assume that decreasing this dose stepwise after exposure to high altitude further decreases the risk of adverse effects from weaning. |
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A weaning trial with a PEEP of zero lasted about 5 minutes before she became diaphoretic, tachypneic and tachycardic. |
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From changing nappies to breastfeeding, weaning to teething, there are 101 things to learn when you have a new baby. |
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In their weaning study, Fisher and his colleagues analyzed a juvenile woolly mammoth tusk from Wrangel Island in northern Siberia. |
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They reach weaning age while still consuming a diet mostly composed of milk, while their mothers graze on grass. |
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Selling calves at weaning provided the most variation in the decision-making outcomes. |
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When I mentioned that I was weaning Leta cold turkey I got about 200 emails from The Cabbage People. |
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The clinic specializes in digital detox, weaning the dependent off their gadgets. |
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The big processors, he notes, use soybean to boost the protein content of baked goods, breakfast cereals, weaning foods, and dairy products. |
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The hospitals had become so dependent on state subsidies, they said, that weaning them too fast could be ruinous. |
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Computerized records are used to keep track of birth, breeding, weaning and yearling information. |
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University of Guelph researchers evaluated the genetic relationship between actual milk yield and maternal weaning gain of the beef cow. |
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Further research is warranted to clarify the role of pulmonary mechanics as correlates of weaning outcomes in patients with and without pulmonary disease. |
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At the end of the VLCKD, they started a weaning phase, to go out from ketogenesis. |
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After weaning, the littermates should stay together in their breeding enclosure as long as possible. |
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Ideally rabbits for group housing should be littermates that have been kept together since weaning. |
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For babies from 6 to 12 months of age, it can be turned into a highchair to help baby through the weaning phase. |
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Some parents find that the use of a bottle containing only water is helpful in weaning their child from use of a feeding bottle. |
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Even in today's societies there are many different weaning practices dependent upon history, religious taboos, and the availability of nourishing foods suitable for infants. |
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It is currently partway through weaning its pigs off ractopamine, a lean-muscle-promoting drug that has already been banned in China. |
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Whether selection is at weaning or some time later, picking the keepers will impact the future profitability of your cowherd. |
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The mother nursing her baby knows that the time of weaning will come. |
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The study included rearing of the offspring until weaning in order to determine the postnatal effects of prenatally administered flumazenil. |
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New mothers are particularly encouraged to eat kefir and kefir is often used as a weaning food for Russian babies. |
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After weaning, they were placed in protective custody until the mother was released from prison. |
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In the case of early weaning, hypoallergenic milk is often chosen because of its proteins, which are more similar to those in mother's milk. |
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It also provides additional security and peace of mind during and after the weaning process. |
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Abrupt weaning is traumatic for the infant, uncomfortable for the mother, and may result in blocked ducts, mastitis or breast abscesses. |
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Spray-dried plasma protein from swine or cattle blood is equally effective and has been a major contribution to the success of early weaning programs. |
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Calcium is high in milk during the entire nursing period but continues to increase as weaning nears. |
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Some Somalis originally welcomed it for bringing order and for weaning locals off foreign aid. |
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This means reducing subsidies and handouts, and weaning the economy off its dependence on oil. |
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Lactating subantarctic fur seals can promote similar growth rate and body mass at weaning to their pups in different ways, i.e., using different provisioning patterns. |
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Many doctors of the time attributed the difference to poverty and early weaning. |
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Even small amounts can make a major impact on their nutritional status, notably at the time of weaning. |
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Selected beef cuts obtained from steers, young steers or heifers having been exclusively fed through pasture grazing since their weaning. |
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A major challenge in the ICU is determining whether a patient is capable of weaning from the ventilator. |
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The programme will also improve child feeding practices by passing on messages about correct weaning and feeding procedures for infants. |
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Stress during birthing and weaning or caused by transport and handling appears to contribute to development of the disease. |
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They are not separated from their mothers before being taken from the holding but suckle until natural weaning, and are never fed formula milk. |
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It is licensed as a single shot vaccine recommended for convenient vaccination around weaning. |
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Minke whales appear to be in the habit of weaning their calves before returning to their feeding grounds. |
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It also incorporates feeding and grazing systems and key variables such as feed and cattle prices, weaning rates and selling weights. |
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Partial weaning is an option for the mother who wishes to continue with some breastfeeding. |
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Once the time has come to start final weaning, it should be a gradual process. |
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The sale consists of quality in-calf, maiden and weaning breeding heifers. |
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During the actual weaning, calves will expire more fluids through their constant pacing and bawling. |
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The sow's milk production limits the growth of pigs prior to weaning. |
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Also, the process of weaning foals in stalls, either singly or in pairs, results in elevated plasma cortisol when compared with unweaned controls. |
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Compensatory gain during the postweaning stocker phase can be anticipated if calves were reared on endophyte-infected tall fescue pastures prior to weaning. |
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He said I needed to keep taking the medication for another three months, and after that we could start reducing the dosage and weaning me off them. |
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The first step was shunning sugar and weaning herself from wheat, an experience Beals reckons is similar to the experience of withdrawing from drugs. |
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Indeed, a child growing up in an endemic community can expect be infected soon after weaning, and to be infected and constantly reinfected for the rest of her or his life. |
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Planned weaning occurs when the mother decides to wean without receiving cues from the infant that he is ready to stop breastfeeding. |
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Early and subsequent use of pacifiers, water, glucose water and formula supplementation have been shown to promote early weaning and nipple confusion. |
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Twelve unacquainted multiparous sows were mixed in pairs after weaning. |
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Assist in overcoming the negative effects of weaning, stress, disease, medicants or unpalatable or mal-flavor feedstuffs. |
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Dwomoh was said to be obsessed with Diamond's weight and poured liquidised food into her mouth when she was weaning her. |
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The mothers nurse for over a year before weaning, but the young can spend up to five years with the mothers. |
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Waterers should be placed in several places in the cattle yard. No matter which method of weaning is selected, the environment should have areas that allow calves to stay dry and sheltered. |
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Within a minimum of 4 to 6 weeks prior to weaning, calves should be adequately vaccinated, dehorned, supplemented feed, adjusted to water, and all male calves castrated. |
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Conversely, the disaccharide lactose is rapidly hydrolyzed by newborn animals, but most species even some humans stop secreting the enzyme lactase after weaning. |
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Extra effort during the weaning process and in the weeks afterward will pay dividends as the pups mature into bold, easily trained hunting or field trial dogs. |
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Like any dietary transition, weaning must be a gradual operation which enables switching slowly from the lacteal diet to a diet suited to the growth stage. |
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Make sure that in early weaning, feeding spoons are soft as babies have a tendency to chomp down on the spoon tip and may damage their soft gums if hard plastic or metal spoons are introduced too early. |
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Marero LM, Pagumo EM, Aguinaldo AR and S Homma Nutritional characteristics of weaning foods prepared from germinated cereals and legumes. |
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A good way of gradually instigating the separation between the baby and their mother, and thus encouraging weaning, is to express milk so that dad can give the baby their bottle. |
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Lower birth weight not only reduces the chance of piglet survival in the first days after birth and up to weaning, but also affects growth rate after weaning and during fattening as well as carcass and meat quality. |
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While the level of arts funding was miserly in Thatcher's Britain, the principle of weaning the arts of public subsidy to the greatest possible extent was surely right. |
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An abrupt weaning will likely cause the mother some discomfort, especially if this occurs during the early postpartum period when her milk production is high. |
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The information in the below provides a good rule of thumb for weaning. |
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Through decades of experience and the use of differentiated weaning concepts, ventilated patients can be weaned from the ventilator during the day or even altogether. |
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While most owners were rarely seen on the factory floor, Williams-Ellis, weaning an old-fashioned overall, was happy to be among the turners, fettlers and glazers turning a new shape on the lathe. |
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Such standards are ensured by not subjecting the animals to the stress of transport or rehousing in the weaning, growing-finishing or fattening phases. |
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Up to eight littermates may be kept in the breeding enclosure from weaning until seven weeks old, and five littermates may be kept on the minimum floor area from eight to ten weeks of age. |
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This is why it is advisable to vaccinate the squabs against paramyxovirus infection prior to weaning in order to guard against outbreaks of paramyxovirosis. |
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After 30 days of incubation in the expression medium, Adansonia digitata plantlets that had well rooted were submitted to weaning conditions. |
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The animals must be suckled for at least the first four month of their life and, after, weaning, their feed must consist of cereals, legumes and concentrated feed authorised by the Regulating Council. |
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Formulae and weaning foods for infants and young children may contain E 1450 starch sodium octenyl succinate resulting from the addition of vitamin preparations or polyunsaturated fatty acid preparations. |
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Results are based on a European Multicenter Randomized Trial with 144 patients demonstrating improved respiratory condition, with stable hemodynamic and neurologic status, and no ARDS prior to initiating weaning. |
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Unfortunately, puppy losses do occur during growth and development and mainly during specific times, including in utero, at birth, immediately after birth, and immediately after weaning. |
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It may be used as a replacement for breast milk should this not be available, or as weaning food if the quantity of breast milk no longer meets the infant's needs. |
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Oil use is now concentrated in a sector that simply cannot live without it. There is clearly a strong case for governments to start weaning their economies off oil. |
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Generally, weaning is gradually introduced one month before the return to work, replacing one feed by a bottle and increasing this approximately every week. |
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Shedding of bacteria is associated with a variety of factors including stress such as that caused by weaning, visiting catteries, travelling to cat exhibitions, overcrowding in catteries or poor hygiene. |
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Proponents say that it would help, that in fact weaning the Colombian people off the narcotic economy with real economic opportunities is essential to moving forward. |
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An optimised weaning food was developed and analysed. |
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It is important to maintain optimum levels of protein during the period of rapid growth, and particularly after weaning from replacement milk that is high in protein. |
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In collaboration with the University of Ghent a study was designed to improve infant feeding practices and weaning foods to safeguard the growth of children. |
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Proponents say it could help, that in fact weaning the Colombian people off the narco-economy with real economic opportunities is essential to moving forward. |
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The calf suckles for 18 months to up to 8 years, and continues to closely associate with its mother for several years after weaning. |
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Under natural conditions, calves stay with their mother until weaning at 8 to 11 months. |
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Prior to second and third observations, the same pigs that had already been mixed at weaning were randomly re-marked and re-mixed. |
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The ringed seal is wholly reliant on the ice for birthing, weaning and housing its young in ice lairs. |
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Effect of weaning diet and weaning age on growth, body composition and caecal fermentation of young rabbits. |
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Dwomoh from Waltham Forest, east London, was said to be obsessed with her child's weight and poured liquidised food down her throat with a jug while she was weaning her. |
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Seventh, this study was conducted when our knowledge of the best practice for the weaning method in tracheostomised patients with prolonged MV had remained undetermined. |
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This was most likely due to low body fat, infanticide, women regularly engaging in intense endurance exercise, late weaning of infants, and a nomadic lifestyle. |
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They are misguided by misinformation, and talking the Undisputed Truth is a physical means of weaning these little lambies from their childish and sheep like behaviour. |
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However, these outsiders spot the first signs of trouble when the babymoon refuses to wane, as they recognize this as an indication that weaning has not yet begun. |
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Maintenance of villous height and crypt depth, and enhancement of disaccharide digestion and monosaccharide absorption, in piglets fed on cows' whole milk after weaning. |
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He found himself up at all hours weaning the five-week-old Australian cattle dogs before getting them new homes and keeping one, he called Rufus, for himself. |
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A female will mate again immediately following the weaning of her pup. |
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Traditionally, weaning a baby involves spoon-feeding pureed foods. |
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Puppies are usually immunized with intranasal vaccine before weaning. |
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