Charles A. Holmberg
University of California, Davis
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Featured researches published by Charles A. Holmberg.
Journal of Dairy Science | 1993
Wolfgang Zaremba; W.M. Guterbock; Charles A. Holmberg
Abstract The efficacy of a dried colostrum powder, DCW Concentrate™, as a colostrum supplement or substitute was tested using four groups of 15 calves. Physical condition and IgG status were examined during the first 30 d of life. Calves were fed the dried colostrum powder (group A), pooled colostrum (group C), or both (groups B and D) 2h after birth. Calves fed 85g of the dried colostrum powder dissolved in 3kg of whole milk (group A) had significantly lower IgG concentrations 24h after birth than calves of the other groups. Administration of 85g of the dried colostrum powder plus 3kg of colostrum (group C) did not lead to significantly higher IgG concentrations 24h after birth than did administration of 3kg of colostrum alone (group B). Calves fed 85g of the dried colostrum powder plus 1.5kg of colostrum (group D) had an IgG concentration at 24h of age that was not significantly different from that of calves given 3kg of colostrum (group B). Morbidity and mortality rates were not significantly different among groups. One calf died in each of groups A and B; no losses occurred in groups C and D. Body weight increase was not significantly different among groups.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2001
Gilles Fecteau; John M. Fairbrother; Robert Higgins; David C. Van Metre; Julie Paré; Bradford P. Smith; Charles A. Holmberg; Spencer S. Jang
Twenty-five Escherichia coli isolates from the blood of critically ill bacteremic calves sampled in two separate studies on a calf-rearing farm housing over 15,000 calves, in the San Joaquin Valley, California were studied. Isolates were characterized for O serogroups and for pathotypes as determined by the presence of specific virulence factors including heat-labile enterotoxin (LT), heat-stable enterotoxins a and b (STa, STb), verotoxins 1 and 2 (VT1, VT2), cytotoxic necrotizing factor (CNF), aerobactin, intimin Eae and P, F17 and CS31A fimbrial adhesins, and resistance to bactericidal effects of serum. These isolates constituted a heterogeneous group. However, isolates were mostly aerobactin positive and often resistant to the bactericidal effects of serum. Isolates of pathotypes O78 (n=6), O119:CS31a (n=3), and P positive but O non-typeable (n=3) were associated with a high mortality rate. The remaining isolates belonged to diverse pathotypes, often possessing the adhesins P, F17, CS31A and Eae but belonging to O serogroups other than O78 and O119, and were less frequently associated with mortality. Although no virulence factor common to all isolates was identified, the capacity to use iron by the presence of aerobactin which is important to the capture of iron was a predominant factor. Moreover, certain pathotypes appear to be associated with primary colisepticemia whereas other pathotypes may cause a bacteremia without necessarily leading to septicemia.
Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2002
Dale A. Moore; William M. Sischo; David M Festa; James P. Reynolds; E. Robert Atwill; Charles A. Holmberg
On a yearly basis, large calf ranches rear thousands of neonatal cattle for replacement heifers, veal or dairy beef. Dairy beef ranches obtain bull-calves from multiple sources and with questionable colostrum intake histories. Such ranches accumulate large amounts of data that could be used to help them with calf purchasing and on-farm management practices to avoid losses. Our purpose was to describe some calf purchase factors associated with mortality in neonatal calves raised on a single large calf ranch. Computerized records describing 120,197 bull-calves purchased between January 1997 and November 1998 were used in a survival analysis. Risk factors for mortality within the first 4 weeks after arrival on the ranch included body weight on arrival, month of arrival, and the calf supplier. The strength of the effects was conditional on the week after arrival to the ranch.
Journal of Medical Primatology | 1978
Charles A. Holmberg; Dave Sesline; Bennie I. Osburn
A female Macaca mulatta was observed for 31 months after the initial surgical removal of an ovarian tumor. Solitary metastatic lesions were surgically removed 26 and 28 months after excision of the primary tumor. The animal was killed after 31 months because of additional metastatic lesions. Histological evaluation by light microscopy was not conclusive in determining the origin of neoplasm. Transmission electron microscopy, lymphocyte marker studies, and hormone assays were utilized to confirm the diagnosis of dysgerminoma.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1981
Larry R. Ellingsworth; Linda G. Hayashi; Bennie I. Osburn; Charles A. Holmberg
Normal pregnancy serum from the rhesus monkey was found to have immunosuppressive activity. Using two-way stimulation, the mixed lymphocyte response was suppressed as much as 80%. Control serum from nonpregnant females was not suppressive. The inhibiting factor was found to have the following characteristics: (1) it was nonspecific in activity; (2) it inhibited the mixed lymphocyte response 20% at in vitro concentrations of 1%; (3) it was heat stable (56 degrees C for 30 minutes) and nondialyzable; (4) it was present in both the IgM- and IgG-containing fractions of pregnancy serum; (5) it was detected in postpartum and second and third trimester serum; and (6) it was at low levels or absent from the serum of two pregnancies which terminated in unexplained stillbirths.
Journal of Dairy Science | 1993
W.M. Guterbock; A. L. Van Eenennaam; R.J. Anderson; Ian A. Gardner; James S. Cullor; Charles A. Holmberg
Journal of Dairy Science | 2003
J.E.P. Santos; M. Villaseñor; P.H. Robinson; E.J. DePeters; Charles A. Holmberg
Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association | 2002
John H. Kirk; Charles A. Holmberg; J. S. Jeffrey
Canadian Veterinary Journal-revue Veterinaire Canadienne | 1997
Gilles Fecteau; D C Van Metre; Julie Paré; Bradford P. Smith; Robert Higgins; Charles A. Holmberg; Spencer S. Jang; W Guterbock
International Journal of Cancer | 1980
Thomas G. Kawakami; George V. Kollias; Charles A. Holmberg