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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Dynamic finite element analysis of hip resurfacing arthroplasty and the influence of resting periods

Jimenez-Bescos, Carlos January 2013 (has links)
The third generation of hip resurfacing commenced in the U.K. in the 1990’s with the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing system and is now becoming more commonplace as an attractive alternative for young and active patients due to premature failure in total hip replacement in this patient group. However the Swedish National Hip Arthroplasty Register (2010) suggests that premature failure of resurfacing arthroplasty may be more prevalent than first expected. The aim of this study is to investigate, through Finite Element Analysis, the short, medium and long term performance of Poly Methyl Methacrylate (PMMA) bone cement of the femoral component in hip resurfacing arthroplasty. The study takes a forensic engineering approach, analysing the performance of PMMA bone cement in order to provide understanding, awareness and an insight into lifestyle options. Finite Element Analysis explores and models the effect of resting periods during daily activities, patients’ bone quality and PMMA bone cement Young’s modulus on the PMMA bone cement stresses within the femoral hip resurfacing component. Mechanical tests are used to illustrate the use of the Finite Element Analysis results. Contributing to knowledge, this study verifies the significance of high metal-on-metal friction due to resting periods, developing a dynamic FEA model to quantify the premature fatigue failure of PMMA bone cement, within the femoral component of hip resurfacing arthroplasty. A decrease in bone quality added to the effect of resting periods increase the risk of PMMA fatigue failure and PMMA-metal interface failure due to an increase of PMMA tensile and shear stresses, suggesting that patients with low bone quality should avoid hip resurfacing procedures. The use of low PMMA Young’s modulus could greatly enhance the long term success of hip resurfacing arthroplasty generally and specifically reduce the risk of interface failure and PMMA bone cement failure due to resting periods and patient bone quality. Moreover, this study shows that the consequence of PMMA fatigue failure and PMMA-metal interface failure must be included in the design, patient selection, screening process, post-operative rehabilitation and long term lifestyle attributes. This study suggests that occupational therapists and patients with hip resurfacing arthroplasty should be aware of high metal-on-metal friction situations, which could lead to early failure indicated by this research. The deleterious effect of resting periods indicated by this research could be alleviated by appropriate re-initiation of synovial lubrication by movement prior to full loading. Recommendations for further work include the compilation of a PMMA bone-cement fatigue properties database and further development of the FEA modelling technique for application upon other arthroplasty procedures.
52

Effects of past grazing management on songbirds and plants in rested pastures: the potential for grazing management to influence habitat in the landscape following livestock exclusion

Fischer, Samantha 20 September 2016 (has links)
Grasslands are the most threatened terrestrial ecosystem in the world, and as they decline the species that depend on them also decline. Variable stocking rates and resting rangeland could be used by range managers to manipulate plant cover and create wildlife habitat. I used generalized linear mixed-models to evaluate how effects of rest on vegetation and songbirds varied based stocking rates previously applied from 2006-2014 in Grasslands National Park, Canada. My results indicate, in the mixed-grass prairie, succession is retrogressive following rest, and both vegetation and songbirds are resilient to grazing. Recovery of songbirds was linked to the recovery of habitat structure. Songbirds with flexible habitat requirements, such as Savannah and grasshopper sparrows, responded rapidly to livestock exclusion. The retrogressive nature of succession in mixed-grass prairie offers managers an opportunity to take chances when attempting to create wildlife habitat with livestock grazing, as risk of irreversible change is relatively low. / October 2016
53

Distinct Functional Connectivities Predict Clinical Response with Emotion Regulation Therapy

Fresco, David M., Roy, Amy K., Adelsberg, Samantha, Seeley, Saren, García-Lesy, Emmanuel, Liston, Conor, Mennin, Douglas S. 03 March 2017 (has links)
Despite the success of available medical and psychosocial treatments, a sizable subgroup of individuals with commonly co-occurring disorders, generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) and major depressive disorder (MDD), fail to make sufficient treatment gains thereby prolonging their deficits in life functioning and satisfaction. Clinically, these patients often display temperamental features reflecting heightened sensitivity to underlying motivational systems related to threat/safety and reward/loss (e.g., somatic anxiety) as well as inordinate negative self-referential processing (e.g., worry, rumination). This profile may reflect disruption in two important neural networks associated with emotional/motivational salience (e.g., salience network) and self-referentiality (e.g., default network, DN). Emotion Regulation Therapy (ERT) was developed to target this hypothesized profile and its neurobehavioral markers. In the present study, 22 GAD patients (with and without MDD) completed resting state MRI scans before receiving 16 sessions of ERT. To test study these hypotheses, we examined the associations between baseline patterns of intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) of the insula and of hubs within the DN (anterior and dorsal medial prefrontal cortex [MPFC] and posterior cingulate cortex [PCC]) and treatment-related changes in worry, somatic anxiety symptoms and decentering. Results suggest that greater treatment linked reductions in worry were associated with iFC clusters in both the insular and parietal cortices. Greater treatment linked gains in decentering, a metacognitive process that involves the capacity to observe items that arise in the mind with healthy psychological distance that is targeted by ERT, was associated with iFC clusters in the anterior and posterior DN. The current study adds to the growing body of research implicating disruptions in the default and salience networks as promising targets of treatment for GAD with and without co-occurring MDD.
54

Reverse Engineering the Human Brain: An Evolutionary Computation Approach to the Analysis of fMRI

Allgaier, Nicholas 01 January 2015 (has links)
The field of neuroimaging has truly become data rich, and as such, novel analytical methods capable of gleaning meaningful information from large stores of imaging data are in high demand. Those methods that might also be applicable on the level of individual subjects, and thus potentially useful clinically, are of special interest. In this dissertation we introduce just such a method, called nonlinear functional mapping (NFM), and demonstrate its application in the analysis of resting state fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) from a 242-subject subset of the IMAGEN project, a European study of risk-taking behavior in adolescents that includes longitudinal phenotypic, behavioral, genetic, and neuroimaging data. Functional mapping employs a computational technique inspired by biological evolution to discover and mathematically characterize interactions among ROI (regions of interest), without making linear or univariate assumptions. Statistics of the resulting interaction relationships comport with recent independent work, constituting a preliminary cross-validation. Furthermore, nonlinear terms are ubiquitous in the models generated by NFM, suggesting that some of the interactions characterized here are not discoverable by standard linear methods of analysis. One such nonlinear interaction is discussed in the context of a direct comparison with a procedure involving pairwise correlation, designed to be an analogous linear version of functional mapping. Another such interaction suggests a novel distinction in brain function between drinking and non-drinking adolescents: a tighter coupling of ROI associated with emotion, reward, and interceptive processes such as thirst, among drinkers. Finally, we outline many improvements and extensions of the methodology to reduce computational expense, complement other analytical tools like graph-theoretic analysis, and possibly allow for voxel level functional mapping to eliminate the necessity of ROI selection.
55

Transcranial stimulation to enhance cortical plasticity in the healthy and stroke-affected motor system

Amadi, Ugwechi January 2012 (has links)
This thesis investigated transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) as applied to the motor system, and its ability to modulate underlying cortical processes and resultant motor behaviours. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) were employed to assess the extent to which tDCS induces quantifiable changes in neural structure and function in controls and stroke patients. Modifications in the connectivity of intrinsic functional networks following tDCS application were examined using resting state fMRI. Polarity-specific changes were found: cathodal (inhibitory) tDCS increased the strength of the default mode network and increased functional coupling between major nodes within the motor network. No significant effects were found following anodal (excitatory) tDCS. Although anodal tDCS elicited only subtle changes in resting activity, it is known to produce robust modifications of behaviour. Single and paired-pulse TMS were used to investigate the neurophysiological underpinnings of these changes. Consistent with the theory of homeostatic plasticity, anodal tDCS applied prior to task performance increased GABAA-mediated cortical inhibition and worsened behaviour. The specificity of these changes suggests a central role for the mechanism of surround inhibition. A longitudinal clinical trial in chronic stroke patients was conducted to determine the utility of tDCS as an adjunct in motor rehabilitation. Serial MRI scans revealed that, when combined with motor training, anodal tDCS increased functional activity and grey matter in primarily ipsilesional motor areas. These brain changes were correlated with behavioural improvements in the stroke-affected upper limb. The laterality of connectivity at baseline, as measured by resting state activity and corticospinal tract integrity, was predictive of response to the rehabilitation program, particularly in those stroke patients who received tDCS. Asymmetry favouring the contralesional hemisphere predicted greater behavioural gains. Such results underscore the importance of re-normalisation of structure and functional activity toward the lesioned hemisphere in stroke rehabilitation.
56

THE ORGANIZATION OF FUNCTIONAL AND EFFECTIVE CONNECTIVITY OF RESTING-STATE BRAIN NETWORKS IN ADOLESCENTS WITH AND WITHOUT NEURODEVELOPMENTAL AND/OR INTERNALIZING DISORDERS

Rickels, Audreyana Cleo Jagger 01 May 2019 (has links)
The development of functional connectivity is often described as changing from local to distributed connections which give rise to the functional brain networks observed in adulthood. In contrast to the well-explored pattern found in functional connectivity, no research has been published describing effective connectivity development. Also, there is a plethora of literature describing functional connectivity patterns in a variety of neurodevelopmental and internalizing disorders, but there is little consistency in the connectivity patterns discovered for each disorder. Hence, this study aimed to describe functional and effective resting-state connectivity during adolescent development in a typically developing adolescent (TDA) group (n = 128) and to determine how adolescents with comorbid neurodevelopmental disorders (CND) (n = 46) differed. This was accomplished through functional and effective connectivity analysis within and between four networks: the Default Mode Network (DMN), the Salience Network (SN), the Dorsal Attention Network (DAN), and the Frontal Parietal Control Network (FPCN). The results from this study indicate that within-network connectivity decreased across age in the TDA group, which is in opposition to previous work which suggests strengthening within-network connectivity. The CND group displayed hyper-connectivity compared to the TDA group in between-network connectivity with no effect of age. The effective connectivity in the TDA group displayed decreasing connectivity within networks with increasing age, a novel effect not previously reported in the literature. The CND group’s effective connectivity was overall hyper-connected (for within- and between-networks). The functional connectivity patterns in the TDA group suggest that functional connectivity has subtle developmental change during adolescence. Further, the CND group consistently displayed hyper-connectivity in functional and effective connectivity. The CND group, and perhaps similar comorbid groups, may have less efficient networks which could contribute to their disorder(s).
57

Probing resting-state functional connectivity in the infant brain: methods and potentiality

Mongerson, Chandler Rebecca Lee 13 July 2017 (has links)
Early brain development is characterized by rapid growth and perpetual reconfiguration, driven by a dynamic milieu of heterogeneous processes. Moreover, potent postnatal brain plasticity engenders increased vulnerability to environmental stimuli. However, little is known regarding the ontogeny and temporal manifestations of inter- and intra-regional functional connectivity that comprise functional brain networks. Recently, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) emerged as a promising non-invasive neuroinvestigative tool, measuring spontaneous fluctuations in blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal at rest that reflect baseline neuronal activity. Its application has expanded to infant populations in the past decade, providing unprecedented insight into functional organization of the developing brain, as well as early biomarkers of abnormal/ disease states. However, rapid extension of the resting-state technique to infant populations leaves many methodological issues need to be resolved prior to standardization of the technique. The purpose of this thesis is to describe a protocol for intrinsic functional connectivity analysis, and extraction of resting-state networks in infants <12 months of age using the data-driven approach independent component analysis (ICA). To begin, we review the evolution of resting-state fMRI application in infant populations, including the biological premise for neural networks. Next, we present a protocol designed such that investigators without previous knowledge in the field can implement the analysis and reliably obtain viable results consistent with previous literature. Presented protocol provides detailed, albeit basic framework for RSN analysis, with interwoven discussion of basic theory behind each technique, as well as the rationale behind selecting parameters. The overarching goal is to catalyze efforts towards development of robust, infant-specific acquisition and preprocessing pipelines, as well as promote greater transparency by researchers regarding methods used. Finally, we review the literature, current methodological challenges and potential future directions for the field of infant resting-state fMRI.
58

The effect of Methylphenidate on Energy Expenditure in Individuals with Obesity: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Controlled Pilot Trial

Hafizi, Kaamel 31 May 2019 (has links)
Objectives: Most weight loss medications target reductions in energy intake while neglecting energy expenditure, a critical predictor of weight loss/regain. This pilot study examined the effect of short-acting methylphenidate (MPH) on resting energy expenditure (REE), thermic effect of food (TEF), physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE), and how changes in energy expenditure relate to changes in body composition in youth and adults living with obesity. Methods: This study was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled two-parallel arm study. In total, 19 participants were screened, of which 14 participants were randomized into the study, but complete data was only collected for 12, and only analyzed for 10 participants. Those 10 participants aged 28.8 ± 6.9 yrs. (5 Male, 5 Female) were randomized to receive either MPH (0.5 mg/kg) (n = 5) or placebo (n =5) twice daily for 60 days. Participants’ REE and TEF (indirect calorimetry), were measured at baseline (no drug/placebo), and day 60 post-treatment (drug/placebo). Participants’ PAEE (Actical) was measured between screening and baseline for a 1-week period (no drug/placebo), and on day 53 for a 1-week period (drug/placebo). Participants’ anthropometrics were measured using DEXA at baseline, and day 60 post-treatment. Results: From baseline to day 60, MPH showed a relative difference to placebo in relative REE (Relative REE: F(1, 8) = 4.235, p = 0.074, d = 0.83, 2 = 0.346) of 10%, evidenced by a 6% increase in relative REE kcal/kg (18.53 ± 1.97 Kcal/day/kg at baseline, 19.71 ± 2.52 Kcal/day/kg at final) for the MPH group, and a 4% decrease (19.08 2.36 Kcal/day/kg at baseline, 18.26 ± 2.04 Kcal/day/kg at final) in placebo, translating to moderate-effect size (Cohen’s d=0.63) favouring MPH. From baseline to day 60, there were no significant differences between groups on changes in TEF (TEF AUC: F(1, 8) = 0.079, p = 0.785, d = 0.15, 2 = 0.010) or any PAEE variables such as sedentary behavior (SB: F (1, 8) = 0.455, p = 0.52, d = 0.02, 2 = 0.054), light physical activity (LPA: F (1, 8) = 0.504, p = 0.50, d = 0.16, 2 = 0.059), moderate physical activity (MPA: F (1, 8) = 0.281, p = 0.61, d = 0.19, 2 = 0.034), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA: F (1, 8) = 0.120, p = 0.74, d = 0.15, 2 = 0.015), or vigorous physical activity (VPA: F (1, 8) = 3.495, p = 0.098, d = 0.91, 2 = 0.304) . Mean change in body weight (kg) resulted in a weight loss of roughly -2.66 ± 2.00 kg in the MPH group and -1.64 ± 1.41 kg in the placebo group, differences that were not statistically significant. Mean change in both groups for body fat% of -0.33 ± 2.08 %, mean change in fat mass of -1.05 ± 2.59 kg, and finally a mean change in fat-free mass of -0.06 ± 1.19 kg was reported. Changes in relative REE were inversely correlated with changes in body weight (r = -0.599, p = 0.067), body fat (r = -0.524, p = 0.12) and fat mass (r = -0.599, p = 0.096). These associations were stronger in the MPH group. Conclusions: Our data suggests that MPH administration may lead to a meaningful increase in relative REE, and these suggested changes were associated with reductions in adiposity among individuals with obesity. These preliminary findings suggest that MPH should be further examined using a larger sample size and study duration to determine its effectiveness in promoting weight loss and maintenance of weight loss in individuals with obesity, a population at high risk of morbidity and premature mortality.
59

Bem-estar e qualidade de carne de ovinos submetidos à suplementação com cromo orgânico e diferentes manejos pré-abate / Welfare and meat quality of lambs undergoing organic chromium supplementation and different pre-slaughter managements

Leme, Thays Mayra da Cunha 13 December 2013 (has links)
Este estudo foi desenvolvido para investigar os efeitos da suplementação dietética de cromo, da densidade no transporte para o frigorífico e da duração do descanso pré-abate sobre os indicadores de bem-estar, desempenho e qualidade de carne de ovinos confinados. Sessenta e quatro ovinos cruzados White Dorper x Santa Inês, foram divididos em dois grupos no confinamento: grupo controle e grupo que recebeu suplementação de 2 mg cromo orgânico diariamente. Durante as pesagens foram avaliados o ganho de peso, a reatividade dos animais por meio velocidade de fuga e da movimentação, intensidade de respiração e vocalização durante o manejo em balança, além do registro de variáveis climáticas. O transporte ao frigorífico foi realizado com duas densidades distintas, 0,2 m2 por animal e 0,3 m2 por animal. Foram aplicados dois períodos de descanso, de 7 e 14 horas, após o desembarque, antes do abate. Durante as pesagens do confinamento e o manejo pré-abate foram colhidas amostras de sangue para análise de cortisol, glicose e insulina. No frigorífico foram classificadas as carcaças quanto à presença de contusões, medidas as temperaturas e pH das carcaças às 1h e 24h, além de serem retiradas amostras do músculo Longissimus dorsi para análise da qualidade de carne. Para análise dos dados dessa etapa foi utilizado o procedimento Mixed do SAS utilizando-se tratamento, tempo, transporte e tempo de espera como efeito fixo e o sexo como efeito aleatório, assim como suas interações. Em caso de resultados significativos (P &lt; 0,05) para as fontes de variações avaliadas nas análises de variância, foi adotado como procedimento para comparações múltiplas o Teste t de Student. Não foi verificado efeito significativo (P &gt; 0,05) dos tratamentos estudados sobre os valores de desempenho, reatividade, contusão, características de carcaça, glicogênio muscular, extrato etéreo, características L* e a* da cor e perdas totais ao cozimento. Para as características de croma b* houve efeito significativo (P &lt; 0,05) da suplementação de cromo, onde os animais que receberam cromo diariamente apresentaram um valor menor de b*. Para a maciez houve interação entre a suplementação de cromo e o tempo de espera. Os animais que receberam a suplementação diária de cromo apresentaram uma melhor maciez com o menor tempo de espera, diferente dos animais que não receberam a suplementação de cromo, que apresentaram uma melhor maciez com o maior tempo de espera. Para as análises de bilirrubina, fosfatase alcalina, insulina avaliadas durante o confinamento, não foi verificado efeito (P &gt; 0,05) da suplementação de cromo diário, mas foi encontrado efeito (P &lt; 0,0001) do tempo de confinamento sobre as médias de insulina. Além disso, foi encontrada uma interação (P &lt; 0,0001) da suplementação de cromo com o tempo de confinamento para as médias de glicose. Para o cortisol verificou-se uma interação significativa (P = 0,0046) entre a suplementação de cromo e o tempo de confinamento, onde os animais que receberam a suplementação de cromo apresentaram menores valores de cortisol sanguíneo. Ainda, durante o manejo pré-abate foi observado efeito (P &lt; 0,05) da densidade de transporte, onde os animais que foram transportados em menor densidade (0,3 m2.animal-1) apresentaram menores valores de cortisol. Após 7 horas de espera no abatedouro não houve diminuição da concentração dos níveis séricos de cortisol (P &gt; 0,05), porém, após 14 horas de espera observou-se uma queda significativa desses níveis (P &lt; 0,001). Com esses resultados podemos concluir que a suplementação de cromo não influenciou nas características de desempenho e reatividade, porém, melhorou a maciez em um menor tempo de espera. A densidade de transporte não alterou a qualidade da carne, mas influenciou no bem-estar dos animais. O período de descanso de 14 horas antes do abate diminui o estresse e os níveis séricos de cortisol. / The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of chromium supplementation, the density in transport to the slaughterhouse and the duration of resting periods before slaughter, on the indicators of welfare, growth and meat quality of individual feedlot lambs. Sixty four crossbred White Dorper breed with Santa Ines were divided into two groups in confinement: control group and the group that received daily supplementation of 2 mg organic chromium. During the weighing weight gain were evaluated, as the reactivity of the animals through the flight velocity and movement, intensity of respiration and vocalization during handling in balance, as well as recording of climatic variables. The transport to the slaughterhouse was performed with two different densities, 0.2 m2 and 0.3 m2 per animal. Two resting periods of 7 and 14 hours were applied after transport, before slaughter. During confinement weighing and the pre-slaughter management blood samples were collected for cortisol, glucose and insulin analysis. Carcasses were classified for the presence of bruises and measurement of the temperature and pH at 0 and 24 hours, and samples of the Longissimus dorsi muscle were collected for meat quality analysis. Data analysis used mixed procedure of SAS using treatment, time, transportation and resting period as fixed effect and random effect the sex as well as their interactions. In case of significant results (P &lt; 0.05) of data evaluated in the procedure of analysis of variance it was adopted for multiple comparisons the Student t test. No effect was observed (P &gt; 0.05) for the treatments on the values of performance, reactivity, contusion, carcass characteristics, muscle glycogen, lipids, and features L* color a* and total cooking losses. For the characteristics of b* it was found a significant effect (P &lt; 0.05) for chromium supplementation, with lower values of b*. To the tenderness it was found an interaction between supplementation and resting period, and the animals that received daily supplementation of chromium showed better tenderness with shorter resting periods, different from animals that received no supplementation which showed better tenderness with longest resting periods. For the analysis of bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, insulin evaluated during confinement, no significant effect was observed (P &gt; 0.05) of daily supplemental chromium, but no effect of insulin was found (P &lt; 0.0001) over time confinanent. Furthermore, it was found an interaction (P &lt; 0.0001) of supplementation time for glucose values. For cortisol, there was a significant interaction (P = 0.0046) between chromium supplementation and confinement time, where animals that received supplementation had lower levels of blood cortisol. Still, during the pre-slaughter management it was observed a significant effect (P &lt; 0.05) of the density of transport, where the animals that were transported in smaller density (0.3 m2.animal-1) showed lower values of cortisol. After 7 hours of resting period in the slaughterhouse, there was no decrease in the concentration of serum cortisol (P &gt; 0.05 ), but after 14 hours it was observed a significant decrease in these levels (P &lt; 0.001). With these results it can be conclude that chromium supplementation did not affect the performance characteristics and reactivity, however, improved tenderness in a shorter resting period. The density of transport did not alter the meat quality, but influenced the welfare of animals. The resting period before slaughter decreases stress and serum cortisol levels when the period is higher than 7 hours.
60

Causas de morte em suínos no período pré-abate / Causes of death in pigs during pre-slaughter

Jühlich, Luciane Maria January 2016 (has links)
O presente trabalho avaliou a mortalidade de suínos no pré-abate através de análises anatomopatológica a fim de identificar as causas envolvidas. O estudo foi realizado durante os períodos de verão e inverno do ano de 2015 em um frigorífico do estado do Rio Grande do Sul que conta com Serviço de Inspeção Federal e está localizado na região do Vale do Taquari. No verão, foram contabilizadas 141 mortes do total de 117.260 (0,12%), enquanto que, no inverno, foram 75 mortes do total de 127.286 (0,05%). Dos 216 suínos mortos nos dois períodos, 170 foram submetidos a necropsia. Amostras foram examinadas no laboratório do Setor de Patologia Veterinária da Faculdade de Veterinária da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul. Entre as causas de morte diagnosticadas, as úlceras gástricas na região do quadrilátero esofágico e piloro foram as mais frequentes, sendo 29,2% (31/106) no verão e 32,8% (21/64) no inverno. As alterações pulmonares, como pneumonia enzoótica, influenza, broncopneumonia bacteriana e pleurite, foram o segundo diagnóstico mais frequente, sendo observado 15,1% (16/106) no verão e 18,8% (12/64) no inverno. A insuficiência cardíaca, incluindo pericardite bacteriana, endocardite bacteriana, cardiomiopatia hipertrófica, miocardite, infarto do miocárdio e neoplasia, apresentou-se em uma frequência de 14,2% (15/106) no verão e 9,4% (6/64) no inverno. A dilatação gástrica aguda causada pelo excesso de ração no estômago também foi um importante diagnóstico obtido, sendo 8,5% (9/106) no verão e 4,7% (3/64) no inverno. Rupturas de fígado foram observadas em 5,7% das mortes (6/106) no verão e 7,8% (5/64) no inverno, enquanto que rupturas de baço foram observadas em 0,9% das mortes (1/106) no verão e 1,6% (1/64) no inverno, representando diagnósticos importantes, mas pouco descritos na literatura como causa de morte. A enteropatia proliferativa foi diagnosticada em 5,7% dos casos (6/106) no verão e 4,7% (3/64) no inverno. A torção de mesentério foi responsável por 3,8% (4/106) das mortes ocorridas no verão e 6,2% (4/64) no inverno. Em menor frequência observaram-se as polisserosites, presente em 2,8% (3/106) dos suínos mortos no verão e 3,1% (2/64) no inverno. Já a fratura de fêmur somente foi observada em 0,9% dos casos (1/106) no período de verão. Casos inconclusivos representaram 13,2% (14/106) no verão e 10,9% (7/64) no inverno. Também se observou que a mortalidade pré-abate nas duas épocas do ano avaliadas ocorre mais em suínos que estão no período de descanso (64,5% (139/216) do que durante o transporte (35,5% (77/216). / The present study evaluated the mortality of pigs just prior to slaughter through histopathological analysis in order to identify the causes of death. The study was conducted during the summer and winter of 2015 in a slaughter that has Federal Inspection Service in Rio Grande do Sul State located in Taquari Valley. During the summer, 141 deaths were accounted from the total deaths of 117 260 (0.12%), while, in the winter, it were 75 deaths from the total of 127.286 (0.05%). Of the 216 carcasses of dead animals in both periods, 170 were analyzed. Samples were examined in the laboratory of the Veterinary Pathology Sector of the Veterinary School of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul. Among the causes of death diagnosed, gastric ulcers in the esophageal quadrilateral region and pylorus were the most frequent, which represented 29.2% (31/106) in the summer and 32.8% (21/64) in winter. Pulmonary disorders such as enzootic pneumonia, influenza, bacterial pneumonia and pleuritis, were the second most frequent diagnosis, observed in 15.1% (16/106) in the summer and 18.8% (12/64) in the winter. Heart failure, including bacterial pericarditis, bacterial endocarditis, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, myocardial infarction and neoplasia, had a frequency of 14.2% (15/106) in the summer and 9.4% (6/64) in the winter. Acute gastric dilatation caused by excess food in the stomach was also an important diagnosis, with 8.5% (9/106) in the summer and 4.7% (3/64) in the winter. Liver ruptures were observed in 5.7% of deaths (6/106) in summer and 7.8% (5/64) in the winter, while spleen ruptures were observed in 0.9% of deaths (1/106 ) in summer and 1.6% (1/64) in the winter, representing important diagnoses, however it is rarely reported in the literature as a cause of pig death. Proliferative enteropathy was diagnosed in 5.7% of the cases (6/106) in the summer and 4.7% (3/64) in the winter. Mesenteric torsion was diagnosed in 3.8% (4/106) of deaths in the summer and 6.2% (4/64) in the winter. Polyserositis were observed in lower frequency, 2.8% (3/106) of dead pigs in the summer and 3.1% (2/64) in the winter. Femur fracture was only observed in 0.9% of cases of death (1/106) in the summer period. Inconclusive cases accounted for 13.2% (14/106) in the summer and 10.9% (7/64) in the winter. It was also noted that pre-slaughter mortality in both seasons of the evaluated year occurs more in pigs that are in the rest period (64.5% (139/216) than during transportation (35.5% (77/216).

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