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Equine veterinary journal.

Periodical
Veterinary Medicine
Horse Diseases
Publisher:
Equine Veterinary Journal, Ltd. Hobokken, NJ : Wiley (2009)
Frequency: 8 issues per year, 2009-
Country: United States
Language: English
Author(s):
British Equine Veterinary Association.
Start Year:1968 -
ISSN:
0425-1644 (Print)
2042-3306 (Electronic)
0425-1644 (Linking)
Impact Factor
2.2
2022
NLM ID:173320
(DNLM):E11740000(s)
(OCoLC):01568146
Coden:EQVJAI
LCCN:sn 83005310
Classification:W1 EQ967
Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma: an unusual cause of lameness in a pony.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 547-549 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03012.x
Clegg PD, Coumbe A.No abstract available
Incarceration of the large colon through the epiploic foramen in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 550-551 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03013.x
Steenhaut M, Vandenreyt I, Van Roy M.No abstract available
Are equine 1 influenza viruses still present in horses?
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 537-538 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03009.x
Webster RG.No abstract available
Use of ultrasonography to evaluate the degree of ossification of the small tarsal bones in 10 foals.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 539-543 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03010.x
Ruohoniemi M.No abstract available
Massive iron overload and liver fibrosis resembling haemochromatosis in a racing pony.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 552-554 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03014.x
Lavoie JP, Teuscher E.No abstract available
Ocular medulloepithelioma in a thoroughbred.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 558-561 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03017.x
Ueda Y, Senba H, Nishimura T, Usui T, Tanaka K, Inagaki S.No abstract available
Treatment and pathogenesis of navicular disease (‘syndrome’) in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 477-481 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02997.x
Leach DH.The future directions of navicular disease research are unclear. Often researchers investigate only one of the multitude of factors likely to be important in understanding the disease. Two exceptions to this is work done by Wright in this issue of EVJ and by MacGregor (1988) who compared a number of the treatment regimens (e.g. rest, warfarin, isoxsuprine, shoeing with egg bars) and found that approximately 75% of the horses improved in their performance. Perhaps this percentage of 'recovered' horses from this disease is what can be realistically expected, as often horses with navicular diseas...
Muscular pathology in equine laryngeal neuropathy.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 510-513 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03002.x
Lopez-Plana C, Sautet JY, Ruberte J.Three adductor muscles of the larynx, the cricoarytenoideus lateralis (CAL), the arytenoideus transversus (AT) and the ventricularis (Ve), from 36 horses were examined histologically. The neurogenic changes seen in each muscle were evaluated qualitatively. In addition, in 6 horses with clinical and subclinical signs of neurogenic atrophy, measurements of muscle fibre area were performed. Neurogenic changes observed in the Ve were less than in CAL and AT. Measurements of muscle fibre area also demonstrated that CAL and AT showed a wider range of pathological changes than did Ve. The results sho...
Review of 115 cases of colic in the pregnant mare.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 518-521 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03004.x
Boening KJ, Leendertse IP.The medical records of pregnant mares over a 3-year period were reviewed. In all cases persistent pain or progressive abdominal distension were the main reason for referral. The overall survival rate for the 115 mares treated for colic was 73.9% (85 cases). The abortion rate was 20.5% in surgical patients (34 cases), 40% (5 cases) for mares with uterine torsions and 10.8% (46 cases) after medical treatment. The total abortion rate was 16.4%. Clinical evidence of endotoxaemia was, except for 1 mare, present in all the aborting mares after colic treatment. Anaesthesia did not appear to be a prob...
A review of cytological specimens from horses with and without clinical signs of respiratory disease.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 523-526 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03006.x
Freeman KP, Roszel JF, McClure JM, Mannsman R, Patton PE, Naile S.Thirty-six transtracheal washing (TTW) and 12 bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) specimens collected in clinical practice from horses with and without respiratory disease were reviewed. Cytological features were considered in accordance with the presenting complaint, clinical signs, clinical diagnoses, microbiological, radiographic and/or endoscopic findings, therapy, and response to therapy. The trichrome-stained TTW and BAL specimens were useful in interpreting the results of concurrent microbiological cultures, and determining whether a condition was present based on occurrence of typical cytolog...
A study of 118 cases of navicular disease: clinical features.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 488-492 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02999.x
Wright IM.The clinical features are reported from 118 horses (mean age 9.2 years) which were diagnosed as suffering from navicular disease using predetermined criteria. The animals were used for a variety of purposes and had been lame for periods between 1 and 72 months. The majority of cases (84.7%) had been treated using various techniques before evaluation. The severity of lameness was related to the duration of clinical signs: 78% of horses were bilaterally affected but there was no left:right limb predominance. Broken foot/pastern axes were recorded in 75% of horses while 45% also exhibited mediola...
A study of 118 cases of navicular disease: treatment by navicular suspensory desmotomy.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 501-509 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03001.x
Wright IM.The 118 horses diagnosed as suffering from navicular disease by prospective criteria were treated by desmotomy of the ligamenta sesamoidea collateralia (navicular suspensory desmotomy). Three techniques were used and a standard post-operative programme was followed with clinical and radiological evaluations at 6-monthly intervals for periods of 6-36 months after surgery. At 6 and 36 months after treatment, 76% and 42.9% of horses were sound respectively. The clinical features of age, period of lameness, severity of lameness and angular limb deformities adversely affected response to surgery. T...
Training-induced modifications in cardiorespiratory and ventilatory measurements in thoroughbred horses.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 532-536 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03008.x
Art T, Lekeux P.The effects of training and detraining on ventilation during a standardised exercise test were investigated. Ten healthy Thoroughbred horses underwent 5 standardised treadmill exercise tests (SET): SET1, at the start of the experimental period; SET2, after 3 weeks acclimatisation; SET3, after 3 week of aerobic training; SET4 after 3 weeks of anaerobic (i.e. interval) training; and SET5, after 3 weeks of detraining. The SETs were carried out in an air-conditioned laboratory on a treadmill inclined at 6 degrees. Respiratory airflow, tidal volume (VT), respiratory frequency (RF) and expired minut...
Age-related characteristics of gastric squamous epithelial mucosa in foals.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 514-517 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03003.x
Murray MJ, Mahaffey EA.Specimens of grossly normal gastric stratified squamous epithelial mucosa adjacent to the margo plicatus on the right side and along the greater curvature were obtained from 7 foetuses, 10 term foals and 12 foals 2-35 days old. Gastric squamous epithelium from the foetuses changed markedly during gestation. At 150-270 days, the epithelium was 8-10 cells thick, with a single layer of basal cells. Epithelial cells were polyhedral and had abundant clear or slightly stained cytoplasm. In the 300-day foetus the basal layer was thicker, epithelial cells were polyhedral, and there was a flattened 1 c...
Metabolic response to standardised exercise test in standardbred trotters with red cell hypervolaemia.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 527-531 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03007.x
Pösö AR, Essén-Gustavsson B, Persson SG.Plasma concentrations of lactate, amino acids, ammonia and products of purine catabolism were studied before, during and after a standardised incremental exercise test in 29 Standardbred trotters admitted to the clinic for exercise tolerance testing. According to their red cell volume the horses were divided into red cell normovolaemic and red cell hypervolaemic (polycythaemic) groups. The exercise-response curve for taurine differed significantly in the two groups, whereas all the other amino acids behaved similarly. The [branched-chain amino acid]/[alanine] ratio, a proposed indicator for th...
A study of 118 cases of navicular disease: radiological features.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 493-500 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03000.x
Wright IM.Dorsoproximal-palmarodistal oblique, lateromedial and palmaroproximal-palmarodistal oblique radiographic projections were used with standard techniques to examine 118 horses with clinical signs of navicular disease. All radiological features which have previously been reported as significant changes in the navicular bones of horses with navicular disease were recorded. Comparisons were made between these features in lame limbs and sound limbs in unilaterally lame horses and most lame limbs and least lame limbs in bilateral but asymmetrically lame animals. Their relationship to the degree of la...
Failure of intra-articular anaesthesia of the antebrachiocarpal joint to abolish lameness associated with chip fracture of the distal radius.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 458-461 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02991.x
Shepherd MC, Pilsworth RC.No abstract available
A prospective study of septicaemia in colostrum-deprived foals. Julie A. Robinson, G. K. Allen, Eleanor M. Green, W. H. Fales, W. E. Loch and Christina G. Wilkerson. Equine Vet. J. (1993) 25 (3), 214-219.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 475 
Baldwin JL.No abstract available
Immune-mediated haemolytic disease after penicillin therapy in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 462-465 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02992.x
Robbins RL, Wallace SS, Brunner CJ, Gardner TR, DiFranco BJ, Speirs VC.No abstract available
Aortic origin of the right pulmonary artery and patent ductus arteriosus in a pony foal with pulmonary hypertension and right-sided heart failure.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 466-468 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02993.x
Reimer JM, Marr CM, Reef VB, Saik JE.No abstract available
The significance of cardiac auscultatory findings in horses: insight into the age-old dilemma.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 393-394 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02979.x
Reef VB.No abstract available
Viruses, tumours and the MHC.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 395 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02980.x
Gerber H, Antczak DF.No abstract available
Malignant histiocytosis in an Arabian filly.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 471-473 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02994.x
Lester GD, Alleman AR, Raskin RE, Mays MB.No abstract available
Report of the first international workshop on equine sarcoid.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 397-407 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02981.x
Marti E, Lazary S, Antczak DF, Gerber H.No abstract available
Hypochoeris-associated stringhalt in North America.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 456-457 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02990.x
Gay CC, Fransen S, Richards J, Holler S.No abstract available
A survey of cardiac auscultatory findings in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 409-415 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02982.x
Patteson MW, Cripps PJ.Auscultation was used to examine 545 horses for cardiac murmurs and some arrhythmias. The most significant finding was the high prevalence of right-sided holosystolic or pansystolic plateau-type murmurs compatible with a diagnosis of tricuspid regurgitation in National Hunt racing Thoroughbreds of all ages (16.4%). This condition was found in 4.7% of flat-racing Thoroughbreds, 3.7% of non-racing Thoroughbreds and Thoroughbred crosses, and in none of the ponies examined. High prevalences of left-sided early systolic murmurs (53%), left-sided early diastolic murmurs (23%), right-sided early dias...
Correlation of racing performance with blood lactate and heart rate after exercise in thoroughbred horses.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 441-445 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02987.x
Evans DL, Harris RC, Snow DH.At 2 and 5 mins after an 800-m gallop, venous blood was collected from 26 Thoroughbred racehorses for measurement of blood lactate concentration, packed cell volume (PCV) and haemoglobin concentration. In addition, 14 racehorses were given a strenuous submaximal treadmill exercise test. Heart rates during and after exercise at 10 m/sec on a treadmill inclined at 5 degrees were recorded. Blood samples at 2 and 5 mins after exercise were used to measure PCV, blood and plasma lactate and ammonia concentrations. Results of each exercise test were compared with the retrospective performance of hors...
Measurement of 24-h gastric pH using an indwelling pH electrode in horses unfed, fed and treated with ranitidine.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 417-421 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02983.x
Murray MJ, Schusser GF.A glass combined pH-reference electrode was placed in the stomachs of 5 adult horses and pH was recorded every 6 mins for 24 h while (1) feed and all bedding materials were withheld for 24 h (unfed), (2) horses had free access to Timothy grass hay for 24 h (fed), and (3) horses had free access to Timothy grass hay and were treated with ranitidine, 6.6 mg/kg body weight, orally, every 8 h for 48 h (fed + ranitidine). There was a significant (P = 0.007) difference in median 24-h gastric pH amongst the 3 protocols, the value being 3.1 in fed horses and 1.55 in unfed horses (P = 0.05) and 4.6 in f...
Immunocytochemical and lectin histochemical study of neuronal lesions in autonomic ganglia of horses with grass sickness.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 446-452 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02988.x
Griffiths IR, Kyriakides E, Smith S, Howie F, Deary AW.Equine grass sickness (EGS) is a primary dysautonomia characterised pathologically by lesions in autonomic ganglia, enteric plexi and specific nuclei in the CNS. Immunocytochemistry and lectin histochemistry of the autonomic ganglia were used to determine whether abnormalities can be detected in specific proteins or cellular organelles. EGS ganglia contained a mixture of morphologically normal and abnormal neurons, the former appearing identical to cells from control animals. Affected cells showed marked disturbances in neurofilament (NF) proteins and beta-tubulin, major components of the cyto...
Radiographic evaluation of ossification of the collateral cartilages of the third phalanx in Finnhorses.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 5 453-455 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02989.x
Ruohoniemi M, Tulamo RM, Hackzell M.Of 462 Finnhorses (age 1-20 years) evaluated and graded (scale 0-5) radiographically for ossification of the collateral cartilages of the 3rd phalanx of the front feet, 22.9% were totally free from sidebones (Grade 0), and 49.1% had minimal or mild ossification (Grade 1 or 2) at the base of 1 or more of the cartilages. Moderate ossification (Grade 3) was present in 10.2% of the horses, whereas ossification was advanced (Grade 4) or extensive (Grade 5) in 17.8%. In most horses > 1 cartilage was affected and 7.6% of the horses had separate centres of ossification in 1 or more of the cartilages. ...