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Note on the composition of a fluid obtained from the udders of virgin heifers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

Herbert Ernest Woodman
Affiliation:
Institute for the Study of Animal Nutrition, School of Agriculture, Cambridge University.
John Hammond
Affiliation:
Institute for the Study of Animal Nutrition, School of Agriculture, Cambridge University.

Extract

The secretion of milk by the mammary glands normally follows a period of pregnancy, but numerous cases have been cited in the literature of secretion which takes place in animals that have never borne young. Non-pregnant bitches frequently secrete milk several weeks after oestrus (1), and a secretion, apparently similar to milk, takes place after pseudo-pregnancy in rabbits (2). No quantitative analyses have been made of these secretions to show whether they possess the characteristics of true milk or colostrum.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1922

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References

REFERENCES

(1)Marshall, and Halnan, . Proc. Royal Soc. B., 89, 1917.Google Scholar
(2)Hammond, and Marshall, . Proc. Royal Soc. B., 87, 1914.Google Scholar
(3)Woodman, . Bioch. J., 15, 187, 1921.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(4)Marshall, . The Physiology of Reproduction, London, 1910.Google Scholar
(5)Lane-Claypon, and Starling, . Proc. Royal Soc. B., 77, 1906.Google Scholar
(6)Plimmer, . Practical Organic and Bio-Chemistry, p. 466.Google Scholar