Analyze Diet

American journal of veterinary research.

Periodical
Veterinary Medicine
Publisher:
American Veterinary Medical Assn.. Schaumburg, Ill. : American Veterinary Medical Association
Frequency: Monthly
Country: United States
Language: English
Author(s):
American Veterinary Medical Association.
Start Year:1940 -
Identifiers
ISSN:0002-9645 (Print)
1943-5681 (Electronic)
0002-9645 (Linking)
NLM ID:0375011
(DNLM):A25065000(s)
(OCoLC):01480202
Coden:AJVRAH
LCCN:42050041
Classification:W1 AM53
Serum thyroxine and triiodothyronine concentrations in neonatal foals and mature horses.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 8 1415-1417 
Chen CL, Riley AM.Serum thyroxine (T-4) and triiodothyronine (T-3) concentrations were assayed in neonatal foals (1.5 to 4 months) and mature horses (2 to 25 years old) by a modified radioimmunoassay procedure. Blood was collected from 52 clinically healthy foals and horses of various breeds (Thoroughbreds, Quarter Horses, American Saddle Horses, and a single cross-bred horse). Neonatal foals had high serum concentrations of T-4 (mean, 4.02 microgram/dl) and T-3 (192.9 ng/dl) as compared with the values in mature horses (T-4, mean of 1.76 microgram/dl; T-3, mean of 98.69 ng/dl). Stallions had slightly higher T-...
Pharmacokinetics of a single, orally administered dose of digoxin in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 8 1412-1414 
Pedersoli WM, Ravis WR, Belmonte AA, McCullers RM.Digoxin (elixir, 0.022 mg/kg) was administered via stomach tube to healthy horses of mixed breeding and sexes. Serum digoxin concentrations reached a peak (2.21 +/- 0.6 ng/ml) at approximately 1 hour after dosing and had a half-life of 28.8 +/- 10.7 hours. Digoxin kinetics followed a triexponential curve, indicating that at least a 2 compartmental model is required to characterize the serum concentration-time curve after this route of administration. It was calculated that to achieve average serum concentrations of 1.1 ng/ml, an oral dose of 17.4 microgram of digoxin elixir/kg/day and an IV do...
Diagnosis of eastern equine encephalomyelitis by immunofluorescent staining of brain tissue.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 8 1418-1421 
Monath TP, McLean RG, Cropp CB, Parham GL, Lazuick JS, Calisher CH.Brain tissues were obtained from 5 horses with clinical encephalomyelitis during an epizootic in southwestern Michigan in August-September 1980. These tissues were tested for virus by intracerebral inoculation of suckling mice and by examination of frozen sections and impression smears by the indirect fluorescent antibody (FA) technique. Eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus was isolated and detected by FA technique in brains of 3 horses which died or were euthanatized within approximately 24 hours of onset of the disease but not from 2 horses at 2 and 3 days after onset. The latter 2 animals...
Controlled evaluation of ivermectin in Shetland ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 8 1422-1424 
Craig TM, Kunde JM.Ivermectin was injected IM into 12 yearling Shetland ponies. The following reactions in percentages of parasites recovered from ponies given 200 microgram/kg or 300 microgram/kg, as compared with the parasitic population in those given the vehicle at 1 week after injection, were as follows: Otobius megnini nymphs--no reduction; Gasterophilus intestinalis--100% and 99.9%; G nasalis--100% and 99.9%; Parascaris equorum adults--100% and 96%; Strongylus vulgaris adults--100% and 100%; S edentatus adults--100% and 100%; cyathostome adults of the genera Gyalocephalus, Cylicocyclus, Cyathostomum, Cyli...
Experimental evidence of reciprocal temperature relationship between the parietofrontal region and the orbital emissary vein in the pony.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 7 1221-1224 
Magilton JH, Swift CS, Ghoshal NG.The heads of 5 ponies were embalmed and the vessels were double injected with latex. Dissection of these specimens revealed venous pathways (1) from the nasal area to the cavernous sinus and (2) from the parietofrontal region to the ventral petrosal sinus. Thermistors were chronically implanted near the orbital emissary veins of 3 additional ponies. Hot and cold packs were applied alternately to the parietofrontal regions. The temperature near the orbital emissary veins increased during the 5 trials with cold application and decreased during the 5 trials with hot application. The authors were ...
Experimental induction of Proteus mirabilis cystitis in the pony and evaluation of therapy with trimethoprim-sulfadiazine.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 7 1203-1205 
Divers TJ, Byars TD, Murch O, Sigel CW.Proteus mirabilis cystitis was induced in 9 ponies by chemically eroding the bladder mucosa before the organism was inoculated. Comparisons were made in the treatment of P mirabilis cystitis between ponies treated daily for 13 days with a trimethoprim-sulfadiazine (TMP-SDZ) paste and both positive and negative controls. Urine cultures from ponies treated with TMP-SDZ became negative for P mirabilis between days 3 and 9 after the start of the treatment, whereas positive controls remained infected until day 13. Urine cultures from all ponies were negative for P mirabilis on day 28. Urine concent...
Pathologic features of horses given avirulent equine arteritis virus intramuscularly.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 7 1218-1220 
McCollum WH.Twenty horses that were seronegative for equine arteritis virus antibodies were inoculated IM with live equine arteritis virus vaccine. The inoculation did not cause clinical signs of disease. A mild, transient febrile reaction developed in 6 horses, 3 of which were in poor condition before inoculation. Six horses, 2 of which were in poor condition before inoculation, experienced mild lymphopenia. Necropsy revealed mild lesions in the lymph nodes of 6 horses (3 of which were in poor condition before inoculation). Maximum concentrations of virus were detected in the lymph nodes and were consist...
Apparent inactivity of several antiparasitic compounds against the eyeworm Thelazia lacrymalis in equids.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 1046-1047 
Lyons ET, Drudge JH, Tolliver SC.Activity of 15 compounds, given alone or in mixtures [butamisole, cambendazole, caviphos, febantel (alone or with trichlorfon), fenbendazole, ivermectin, levamisole-piperazine, oxfendazole, oxibendazole, pyrantel pamoate (alone or with piperazine-carbon disulfide complex), thiabendazole (alone or with piperazine or with trichlorfon), tioxidazole, and trichlorfon], against Thelazia lacrymalis was evaluated in 102 equids. Determination of activity was based on comparison of infection rate in treated animals examined at necropsy with infection rate of dead equids in our contemporary surveys. None...
Controlled tests of ivermectin against migrating Strongylus vulgaris in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 1050-1051 
Slocombe JO, McCraw BM.Twelve pony foals were reared worm-free and inoculated with Strongylus vulgaris. On day 7 after inoculation, 6 ponies were given ivermectin IM at a dose of 200 micrograms/kg of body weight and on day 28 were necropsied. Ivermectin was effective in eliminating early 4th-stage S vulgaris larvae and reducing clinical signs associated with acute arteritis. After administrative ivermectin was effective against early 4th-stage Strongylus vulgaris larvae in ponies when administered at 100, 300, or 800 micrograms/kg of body weight. The purpose of the present study was to report on a more extensive tri...
Haloxon: critical tests of antiparasitic activity in equids.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 1043-1045 
Lyons ET, Drudge JH, Tolliver SC.Critical tests were conducted in 14 naturally infected equids (13 horses and 1 pony) to evaluate the antiparasitic activity of haloxon. Single doses were administered by stomach tube to 3 horses and 1 pony (60 mg/kg of body weight), by addition to the feed of 3 horses (60 mg/kg), and intraorally by powder gun to 7 horses (65 mg/kg). Haloxon was efficacious (99% to 100%) against infections of Parascaris equorum, Oxyuris equi (mature and immature), and Strongylus vulgaris at both dosage levels. Probstmayria vivipara parasites were removed in 1 horse treated at 60 mg/kg by stomach tube and S equi...
Pharmacokinetic analysis of intravenously and orally administered quinidine in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 938-942 
McGuirk SM, Muir WW, Sams RA.A pharmacokinetic study was made, using 7 healthy adult horses (weighing between 400 and 560 kg) given quinidine gluconate IV and quinidine sulfate orally. The apparent volume of distribution of quinidine base was 3.10 +/- 0.79 L/kg, total body clearance was 5.49 +/- 2.40 ml/minute/kg, and plasma half-life was 6.65 +/- 3.00 hours. The systemic availability of quinidine sulfate after oral administration of a 10 mg/kg dose was 48.5 +/- 20.4%. Oral administrations of quinidine sulfate in doses of 10 mg/kg and 10 g produced peak plasma concentrations of 0.79 microgram/ml at 146 minutes and 1.47 mi...
Effect of excessive exposure to sodium fluoride on composition and crystallinity of equine bone tumors.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 1040-1042 
Shupe JL, Eanes ED, Leone NC.Sodium fluoride (5 mg/kg of body weight) was fed for 20 months to horses with hereditary multiple exostoses (HME), a skeletal disorder that primarily affects endochondral bones during skeletal development. Rib biopsies were performed on both HME horses not fed fluoride (control) and HME horses that were fed fluoride to obtain comparable specimens for chemical analyses and x-ray diffraction. Fluoride content of the rib from a horse fed fluoride for 20 months was approximately 20 to 30 times higher than that from a control horse. Fluoride content of the bone tumors was higher than those of norma...
Separation and identification of equine leukocyte populations and subpopulations.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 1037-1039 
Dutta SK, Bumgardner MK, Scott JC, Myrup AC.Various methods of separation and identification of major equine leukocyte populations and subpopulations were used. The purity of T and B lymphocytes separated in Sephadex anti-equine F(ab')2 columns was 87% to 99% and 83% of 97%, respectively. The purity of T lymphocytes separated in nylon-wool columns was 89% to 98%. Preparations of B lymphocytes separated in glass-bead columns were 68% to 79% pure. The presence (or absence) of surface immunoglobulin by immunofluorescence was the most consistent and reliable method for the identification of B or T lymphocytes, respectively. However, the ery...
Tioxidazole: evaluation of antiparasitic activity of a micronized formulation in horses by the critical test method.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 1048-1049 
Lyons ET, Drudge JH, Tolliver SC.Antiparasitic activity of a micronized formulation of the benzothiazole compound, tioxidazole, at the dose rate of 11 mg/kg, was evaluated by the critical test method. Drug was given by stomach to 3 horses and on feed to 3 horses. Excellent removal activity was found for Strongylus vulgaris (100%) in 5 naturally infected horses, S edentatus (91% to 100%) in 5 horses, small strongyles (88% to 99%) in 6 horses, immature Oxyuris equi (100%) in 5 horses, and Parascaris equorum (100%) in 5 horses (a 6th horse had 10 small specimens present at necropsy). There was no measurable activity against bots...
Decalcified bone grafts in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 943-948 
Fackelman GE, von Rechenberg B, Fetter AW.The need for early postoperative weight bearing following fracture repair in the horse has led to investigation of various means of expediting the healing process. Bone grafting represents one means of accomplishing this, and the transplantation of autologous tissues has proven to be most useful in equine orthopedics. Acid-decalcified, frozen, allogeneic bone for grafting is easy to prepare, readily contoured, osteogenic, and elicits no obvious immune or rejection response. The most compelling reason for the use of the substance is the elimination of the need of a harvesting operation on a pat...
Surgical technique and considerations for implantation of electromagnetic blood flow transducer and occluder onto the coronary arteries.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 892-895 
Tranquilli WJ, Manohar M, Thurmon JC, Benson GJ, Shawley RV, Feller DL.A technique was developed for the implantation of an electromagnetic flow probe and vascular occluder onto the right and left coronary arteries in the calf and pony. Surgical manipulation was well tolerated in the animals. The subcutaneous housing on the peripheral ends of these devices of the lateral thoracic wall served as a maintenance-free technique for chronic exteriorization of these devices. Implantation onto the coronary arteries required a surgical technique which accomplished the prerequisites for proper flow probe function. A reactive hyperemic response was elicited in each animal b...
Pharmacokinetics and behavioral effects of methylphenidate in Thoroughbred horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 722-726 
Shults T, Kownacki AA, Woods WE, Valentine R, Dougherty J, Tobin T.In horses given (rapid IV) methylphenidate (Ritalin, alpha-phenyl-2-piperidinacetic acid methyl ester; 0.70 mg/kg), plasma concentrations of the drug decreased rapidly at first, with an apparent alpha half-life of about 19 minutes, and then more slowly, with an apparent beta half-life of about 2.4 hours. These data were well fitted by a 2-compartment open model. In blood, about 40% of the methylphenidate present was in the plasma fraction, and of this, about 80% was plasma-protein bound. If given by subcutaneous or IM injection, plasma concentrations of methylphenidate peaked in about 1 hour a...
Origin an importance of increased alkaline phosphatase activity in peritoneal fluids of horses with colic.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 888-891 
Froscher BG, Nagode LA.The origin of increased alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity in peritoneal fluid (PF) of horses with clinical signs of abdominal pain was investigated to determine the usefulness of measuring ALP in PF in the diagnosis of small intestinal injury. The ALP isoenzymes in PF from 10 clinically normal horses and from 50 horses with clinical signs of acute abdominal pain were analyzed for their sensitivities to inhibition by L-phenylalanine, L-homoarginine, and levamisole and to inactivation by heat (56 C, 15 minutes). The enzymes also were discriminated by their patterns of migration during polyacry...
Acid-base and electrolyte alterations associated with salivary loss in the pony.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 733-737 
Stick JA, Robinson NE, Krehbiel JD.Esophageal fistulas were made in 6 ponies to evaluate whole blood acid-base values and serum and salivary electrolyte alterations associated with salivary depletion. Acid-base and electrolyte values remained within normal ranges for 15 days in 3 control ponies fed a pelleted diet through nasogastric tubes. In 6 ponies with esophageal fistulas that were fed the same diet through esophagostomy tubes, hypochloremia and hyponatremia developed during the same period. Serum K concentrations were only marginally depleted, probably because of dietary replacement. Salivary depletion resulted in transie...
Exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage in racing thoroughbreds: a preliminary study.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 703-707 
Pascoe JR, Ferraro GL, Cannon JH, Arthur RM, Wheat JD.Of 235 Thoroughbred racehorses examined with a flexible fiberoptic endoscope within 2 hours of racing to determine the frequency of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH), 103 (43.8%) had various degrees of hemorrhage in the tracheal lumen. Two of these horses (0.8%) subsequently had blood flow from the nostrils. Blood seemed to originate from the lung. Statistical analysis of frequency data for 191 horses which finished in 1st, 2nd, and 3rd places did not show any relationship between EIPH and horse's age, sex, or finishing position. However, a trend toward an increased frequency of EIP...
Equine cervical esophagostomy: complications associated with duration and location of feeding tubes.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 727-732 
Stick JA, Derksen FJ, Scott EA.Cervical esophagostomy for tube feeding was evaluated in 11 ponies. Minor complications responded to supportive therapy in 8 ponies. Two died of complications, and 1 pony had a permanent fistula because of persistent infection. There was a positive correlation between the duration of tube feeding and the event of closure of the esophageal stoma after the tube was removed. There was no difference in the frequency of complications related to duration of tube feeding. When the distal end of the feeding tube was located in the thoracic portion of the esophagus, instead of in the stomach, tubes wer...
Pharmacology of narcotic analgesics in the horse: selective blockade of narcotic-induced locomotor activity.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 716-721 
Combie J, Shults T, Nugent EC, Dougherty J, Tobin T.The locomotor responses of horses given morphine and fentanyl were blocked or lessened by administration of naloxone or acepromazine. Naloxone given at the dosage of 0.015 mg/kg completely blocked the locomotor activity induced in horses given fentanyl (0.020 mg/kg of body weight). The locomotor stimulation produced by morphine given at the dosage of 2.4 mg/kg was reduced by 75% of naloxone (0.020 mg/kg). Acepromazine partially blocked the locomotor responses to fentanyl and morphine. This blockade activity reached its peak about 30 minutes after acepromazine was given (IV) and lasted more tha...
Procedure for granulokinetic studies in the horse with chromium-51.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 620-622 
Carakostas MC, Moore WE, Smith JE.A procedure with chromium-51 (51Cr) as the cell label that maintains high-cell viability for studying granulocyte kinetics in horses is described. The procedure combines and modifies several methods for isolating leukocytes and granulocytes for use in the horse when a large volume of labeled cells is required. Also described is an improved technique for measuring granulocyte specific activity in large serial blood samples, using a Ficoll-sedimentation method. The procedure should be useful for determining granulocyte kinetics in the horse, the only major domestic species for which such data ar...
Intravascular neutrophilic granulocyte kinetics in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 623-625 
Carakostas MC, Moore WE, Smith JE.Intravascular granulocyte kinetics in 4 healthy horses were determined with chromium-51 as the cell label. The disappearance rate of labeled granulocytes was an exponential function. Mean total blood granulocyte pool (+/- 1 SD) was 5.65 +/- 1.514 X 10(8) granulocytes/kg of body weight, of which 2.71 +/- 0.715 X 10(8) granulocytes/kg were circulating and 2.94 +/- 0.876 X 10(8) granulocytes/kg were marginated along blood vessel walls. The mean disappearance half-life (T1/2) was 10.5 +/- 1.33 hours and the mean granulocyte turnover rate was 8.84 +/- 1.495 X 10(8) granulocytes/kg/day. A granulokin...
Oxibendazole: anthelmintic activity in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 685-686 
Lyons ET, Drudge JH, Tolliver SC.No abstract available
Effects of etiocholanolone and prednisolone on intravascular granulocyte kinetics in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 626-628 
Carakostas MC, Moore WE, Smith JE, Johnson D.The functional capacity of the marrow granulocyte reserve (MGR) in 4 adult horses was studied, using 51Cr-labeled leukocytes. The mean increase in the peripheral granulocyte count following injections of etiocholanolone (0.3 mg/kg) was 870 granulocytes/mm3, and the mean increase following prednisolone administration (200 mg) was 5,880 granulocytes/mm3. Etiocholanolone failed to mobilize the MGR and decreased the rate of granulocyte egress from the blood. Prednisolone rapidly mobilized the MGR and markedly decreased the granulocyte specific activity during the first 3 hours after injection.
Effects of xylazine and ketamine hydrochloride on the electroencephalogram and the electrocardiogram in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 615-619 
Purohit RC, Mysinger PW, Redding RW.A continuous series of electroencephalograms (EEG) was obtained from each of 6 mature horses which had been given xylazine and ketamine hydrochloride IV. Electrocardiograms and respiratory rates were also obtained. The EEG of the unsedated standing adult horse displayed a dominant fast activity in the range of 25-35 Hz, 5-30 microV superimposed over slower 1-4 Hz, 10-50 microV activity with occasional 10-14 Hz, 10-40 microV spindle-type activity. The xylazine-sedated horse displayed hypersynchronous EEG patterns, with the dominant activity being 1-3 Hz, 10-70 microV with overlying mixed freque...
Potential blood supply to muscles in horses and dogs and its relation to athletic ability.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 679-684 
Gunn HM.A modification of the histochemical reaction to demonstrate myosin adenosine triphosphatase activity in skeletal (striated) muscle was used to define the density of capillaries in transverse sections of 3 muscles (semitendinosus, diaphragm, and pectoralis transversus) of horses and dogs. Thoroughbred horses and Greyhound dogs, breeds noted for their speed in running, were compared with other members of their respective species. Thoroughbred cross horses were grouped with non-Thoroughbreds for comparison with Thoroughbreds. The area of muscle supplied by a capillary was remarkably similar in mu...
Aqueous procaine penicillin G in the horse: serum, synovial, peritoneal, and urine concentrations after single-dose intramuscular administration.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 629-631 
Stover SM, Brown MP, Kelly RH, Farver TB, Knight HD.Six adult mares were given a single dose of aqueous suspension procaine penicillin G (300,000 IU/ml) IM at a dosage of 22,000 IU/kg of body weight (15.4 mg of penicillin G/kg). Serum, synovial fluid, peritoneal fluid, and urine penicillin concentrations were measured serially over a 48-hour period. The mean peak serum penicillin concentration was 1.42 microgram/ml at 3 hours. Penicillin was detected in synovial fluid and peritoneal fluid, which obtained mean peak penicillin concentrations of 0.62 microgram/ml and 0.58 microgram/ml, at 4 hours and 3 hours, respectively. These concentrations ste...
Variations of plasma enzymes in the pony and the dog after carbon tetrachloride administration.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 4 674-678 
Noonan NE.Adult female dogs or pony mares were subjected to a nonlethal dose of CCl4 (0.5 ml/kg of body weight). Amounts of several plasma enzymes thought to be indicative of hepatic disease were monitored. Plasma enzymes alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), arginase, gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT), and iditol dehydrogenase (ID), as well as total plasma bilirubin, were determined in these animals before and after the administration of the CCl4. In the dog, GGT was not significantly increased, whereas ALP values were increased during days 1 to 6. In the...
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