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1 nti-FeLV antibodies were not detected in any kitten.
2 transient in the adult and sustained in the kitten.
3 three queens, two queens produced 11 viable kittens.
4 s, refining the interaction predominantly to kittens.
5 oadherent EPEC in the intestines of deceased kittens.
6 gene for intimin (eae) in feces from 42% of kittens.
7 s seizure susceptibility in amygdala-kindled kittens.
8 ger in older kittens and adults than younger kittens.
9 ea, dehydration, and associated mortality in kittens.
10 , requiring euthanasia at 11 weeks PI of the kittens.
11 gnals together with single-unit recording in kittens.
12 LC ipsilateral to the kindled amygdala in 6 kittens.
13 ransmission occurred in approximately 20% of kittens.
15 conception transmitted FIV to 59 of 83 (71%) kittens; 50.6% were virus positive on the day of birth.
18 and summer in 2012 from all pens containing kittens and a random sample of those housing adult cats.
19 e findings identify aEPEC to be prevalent in kittens and a significant primary or contributing cause
21 months, n=30) are far more likely than older kittens and adults to exhibit spontaneous epilepsy, inde
22 with a high viral load at 5 weeks PI of the kittens and developed a similar disease syndrome, requir
23 opposing effects on kindling development in kittens and is the first report to show contrasting effe
24 ic nerve discharge of rat pups, like that of kittens and piglets, is in the MFO range, and suggest th
25 erent bacterial infection in pre-weaning-age kittens and should be considered in the differential dia
26 determine the prevalence and type of EPEC in kittens and whether infection was associated with diarrh
32 al responses to a single dose of morphine in kittens at postnatal (P) ages 7, 15, 30, 60, 90, and 120
33 main effect was behavioral depression; i.e., kittens, away from the litter, laid sprawled as if with
35 ts transfused with anti-Bartonella serum and kittens born to antibody-positive queens with Bartonella
36 density in layer 4 is not present in newborn kittens, but becomes apparent at about 5 weeks of age.
37 e tested these hypotheses in critical period kittens by labeling ODCs in layer IV of primary visual c
40 es at birth with those at 6 months of age in kittens delivered by cesarean and surrogate raised demon
42 Two days of monocular deprivation (MD) of kittens during a critical period of development is known
46 intestinal tissue obtained from age-matched kittens euthanized for reasons unrelated to intestinal d
47 es and females, and females with and without kittens, exhibited distinctly different movement pattern
49 correlated with increased rates of mother-to-kitten FIV transmission, paralleling observations in hum
50 dings suggest a 'critical period' in kindled kittens for onset of spontaneous temporal lobe epilepsy
51 ransmission of FIV-Pco from mothers to their kittens, for coinfection of individuals by two different
53 these fleas to specific-pathogen-free (SPF) kittens housed in a controlled, arthropod-free Universit
54 o separate experiments; however, control SPF kittens housed with highly bacteremic kittens in the abs
56 identified in this manner produced affected kittens in prospective breedings, and a feline MPS VII b
57 ol SPF kittens housed with highly bacteremic kittens in the absence of fleas did not become infected.
58 ery cats transmitted B. henselae to five SPF kittens in two separate experiments; however, control SP
59 ncies of newly matured behaviors (in control kittens) including Sniffing and Licking (increased), and
60 f the deprived eye of a monocularly deprived kitten is simply reopened, there is substantial physiolo
63 f barbiturate-anaesthetized, critical-period kittens (n = 8) revealed a profound shift in favour of t
68 he deep layers of the superior colliculus of kittens ranging in age from 3 to 135 d postnatal (dpn).
71 e protocol was followed except that half the kittens received microinfusions (1 mul) of the alpha2 ag
72 from E. coli- and Enterococcus spp.-infected kittens revealed coccobacilli adherent to intestinal epi
76 of cerebral protein synthesis metabolism in kittens, starting at birth and through postnatal age (P)
77 y versus cesarean-delivered surrogate-nursed kittens suggested that intrapartum transmission may occu
83 f enteroadherent bacteria in seven unrelated kittens that were presumptively diagnosed with enteropat
87 ater depression of deprived-eye responses in kitten visual cortex than does treatment with tetrodotox
89 effect of genetic restoration on survival of kittens was primarily responsible for the substantial gr
93 s between females with and without dependent kittens were caused solely by variation in state occupan
94 hree weeks after the final immunization, the kittens were challenged by the intraperitoneal inoculati
98 f FIV transmission from mother to offspring, kittens were delivered via either vaginal or cesarean bi
104 the feline CAD gene in a 4-month-old Bengal kitten with intractable seizures and abnormal behavior.
109 the geniculocortical connectivity in normal kittens with that following brief (4 days and 6-7 days)
110 niculocortical afferents of postnatal day 40 kittens with the anterograde neuronal tracer Phaseolus v