In order to optimise the storage and handling of experimental data obtained on multicatheterised animals, a database was created with Microsoft Access using the MERISE method. An experiment carried out using 6 lambs catheterised at the portal drained viscera, liver and hindlimb levels was used for this construction. First, the available data were inventoried as manuscript documents or Microsoft Excel files: the timetable, feed composition and intake, animal growth, blood flow measurements, results of blood metabolite concentrations and rumen fluid characteristics. The number of Excel equivalent worksheets amounted to nearly 3 407 and the total disk volume to 42 Mega Bytes. Subsequently, a data model was established with 10 entities and 15 r...
Research was undertaken to investigate whether data maintained within a veterinary hospital database...
Pre-clinical research builds on a large variety of in vivo and ex vivo tools such as non-invasive im...
In order to generate an atlas of the functional elements driving genome expression in domestic anima...
In order to optimise the storage and handling of experimental data obtained on multicatheterised an...
A database of the clinical chemistry results from unwell animals referred to Glasgow University Vete...
With the advent of animal-side biochemistry analysers in veterinary practice, the requirement for re...
INTRODUCTION: Physiological approaches to pharmacokinetic analysis require data on organ sizes and o...
Contains fulltext : 224919.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
International audienceIn in vivo metabolic studies, quantifying the flux of a nutrient and/or the ca...
The metabolic profiling of an animal involves analysis of blood to evaluate internal functions and h...
Interest is growing in developing integrated postabsorptive metabolism models for dairy cattle. An i...
This work set out to establish the response equations for hepatic blood flows in sheep and the contr...
This is a database built in the frame of the Smartcow H2020 Eu project (N°730924) and gathering indi...
This issue of Animal Frontiers, “Farm animals are im- portant biomedical models,” describes several ...
The Feeding Experiments End-user Database (FEED) is a research tool developed by the Mammalian Feedi...
Research was undertaken to investigate whether data maintained within a veterinary hospital database...
Pre-clinical research builds on a large variety of in vivo and ex vivo tools such as non-invasive im...
In order to generate an atlas of the functional elements driving genome expression in domestic anima...
In order to optimise the storage and handling of experimental data obtained on multicatheterised an...
A database of the clinical chemistry results from unwell animals referred to Glasgow University Vete...
With the advent of animal-side biochemistry analysers in veterinary practice, the requirement for re...
INTRODUCTION: Physiological approaches to pharmacokinetic analysis require data on organ sizes and o...
Contains fulltext : 224919.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
International audienceIn in vivo metabolic studies, quantifying the flux of a nutrient and/or the ca...
The metabolic profiling of an animal involves analysis of blood to evaluate internal functions and h...
Interest is growing in developing integrated postabsorptive metabolism models for dairy cattle. An i...
This work set out to establish the response equations for hepatic blood flows in sheep and the contr...
This is a database built in the frame of the Smartcow H2020 Eu project (N°730924) and gathering indi...
This issue of Animal Frontiers, “Farm animals are im- portant biomedical models,” describes several ...
The Feeding Experiments End-user Database (FEED) is a research tool developed by the Mammalian Feedi...
Research was undertaken to investigate whether data maintained within a veterinary hospital database...
Pre-clinical research builds on a large variety of in vivo and ex vivo tools such as non-invasive im...
In order to generate an atlas of the functional elements driving genome expression in domestic anima...