Analyze Diet

Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

Periodical
Veterinary Medicine
Publisher:
[American Veterinary Medical Association,. Schaumburg, Ill. : American Veterinary Medical Association (1975)
Frequency: Semimonthly
Country: United States
Language: English
Author(s):
American Veterinary Medical Association.
Start Year:1915 -
Identifiers
ISSN:0003-1488 (Print)
1943-569X (Electronic)
0003-1488 (Linking)
NLM ID:7503067
(OCoLC):01084791
(DNLM):J12340000(s)
Coden:JAVMA4
LCCN:16022549
Classification:W1 JO911J
Clinical outcome of horses with guttural pouch infection following transpharyngeal fenestration.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 5, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 10 1211-1215 doi: 10.2460/javma.22.01.0041
Koch DW, Ericksen KA, Easley JT, Hackett ES.To report the clinical outcomes of horses with chronic guttural pouch infection characterized by accumulation of mucopurulent material following transpharyngeal diode laser fenestration. 13 client-owned horses. Horses undergoing diode laser fenestration for chronic guttural pouch infection were identified by medical record search. Signalment, disease history, presence of mucopurulent empyema or chondroids, and pre- and postoperative therapy were recorded. Owners were contacted for follow-up information at a minimum of 6 months following surgery. 13 horses underwent laser fenestration for chron...
Theriogenology Question of the Month.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 27, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 10 1181-1183 doi: 10.2460/javma.22.02.0087
Stewart JL, Clark SG, Claffey E, Cardona G, Helms A, Hassebroek AM.No abstract available
The existence of intertransverse joints in young warmblood foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 27, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 10 1206-1210 doi: 10.2460/javma.22.02.0051
Spoormakers TJP, Bergmann W, Veraa S, van Weeren PR, Brommer H.To verify the existence of intertransverse joints (ITJs) in young foals. 11 warmblood foals. Postmortem examination of the lumbar area in foals < 200 days old using CT, MRI, dissection, and histomorphology. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics. Age of foals varied between 1 and 200 days (median, 11 days). Ten foals had 6 lumbar (L) vertebrae, and 1 foal had 5. All 11 foals, irrespective of age, had ITJs between the first sacral and last lumbar vertebrae and between the last and second-to-last lumbar vertebrae. In 6 foals (all with 6 L vertebrae), ITJs also existed between the four...
Dorsally placed commercially available subpalpebral lavage systems have low complication rates in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 9 1057-1062 doi: 10.2460/javma.22.01.0007
Stewart RM, Lack AC, Telle MR, Ellis JK, Betbeze CM.To retrospectively evaluate the complication rate following dorsal placement of a commercially available 1-hole subpalpebral lavage system (SPL) at a veterinary teaching hospital. 102 client-owned horses with ophthalmic disease. Medical records of horses (2010 to 2020) with ophthalmic disease were reviewed to determine whether a commercially available SPL system was dorsally placed. Data collected from the medical record included signalment, presenting complaint(s), diagnosis, ophthalmic procedures performed, SPL laterality, hospital service that placed the SPL, anesthetic technique for placem...
Anesthesia Case of the Month.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 16, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 12 1-4 doi: 10.2460/javma.21.07.0327
Bartholomew KJ, Loeber SJ, Johnson RA.No abstract available
What Is Your Diagnosis?
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 8, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 10 1167-1169 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.09.0512
Jucker JM, Johnson LC, Young AA, Yaxley PE, Hostnik ET, Tinga S.No abstract available
Critically important antimicrobials are frequently used on equine racetracks.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 3, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 7 774-779 doi: 10.2460/javma.22.01.0022
Dorph K, Haughan J, Robinson M, Redding LE.To characterize antimicrobial use on four racetracks in the eastern US during the peak racing 2017-2018 seasons. Handwritten daily treatment sheets provided by attending veterinarians who listed treatments administered to horses stabled at the racetrack were obtained. Information contained in the treatment sheets included the date, name of the horse and its trainer, type of treatment, and a brief (usually 1-word) indication for treatment. The handwritten data listed on the racetrack treatment sheets were manually transcribed and analyzed. A total of 2,684 antimicrobial prescriptions were recor...
What Is Your Diagnosis?
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 28, 2022   Volume 259, Issue S1 1-3 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.08.0451
Hsuan LY, Lipitz L, Sage JE.In collaboration with the American College of Veterinary Radiology.
Pathology in Practice.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 2, 2022   Volume 260, Issue 8 1-3 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.09.0497
de Cecco BS, Sasaki E, Nevarez JG, Cummings CO, Langohr IM, Piero FD.No abstract available
Osteochondral necrosis of the femoral condyles in Thoroughbred foals: eight cases (2008-2018).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 27, 2021   Volume 260, Issue 3 341-349 doi: 10.2460/javma.21.03.0166
Pye J, Spriet M, Dow P, Katzman S, Murphy BG.To describe clinical, imaging, gross, and histopathological abnormalities associated with osteochondral necrosis of the femoral condyles in foals and identify features suggestive of a common pathogenesis. 8 Thoroughbred foals euthanized with a presumptive diagnosis of necrosis of the femoral condyles. Postmortem CT was performed on all distal femoral epiphyseal samples. The articular epiphyseal cartilage complex (AECC) of affected distal femurs was examined grossly and histologically, focusing on lesions of interest identified on CT images. 7 foals were between 9 and 23 days old at the time of...
Geographic distribution of Pythium insidiosum infections in the United States.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 27, 2021   Volume 260, Issue 5 530-534 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.10.0595
Nguyen D, Vilela R, Miraglia BM, Vilela G, Jasem-Alali N, Rohn R, Glass R, Hansen RD, Mendoza L.To describe the geographic distribution of infections caused by Pythium insidiosum in dogs, horses, and other animal species in the US. For the last 20 years, we have collected data from cases of pythiosis in 1,150 horses, 467 dogs, and other species (59) from various geographic locations in the US. Due to lost data (from 2006 to 2016), the selected cases include years 2000 to 2005 and 2016 to 2020. The selection of cases was based on infected host clinical features, serum samples demonstrating strong positive anti-P insidiosum IgG titers in serologic assays, and positive results on ≥ 1 of t...
Prevalences of lumbosacral articulation anatomic variants identified on nuclear scintigraphy and transrectal ultrasonography of Selle Français Warmbloods, French Standardbred Trotters, and Thoroughbreds and agreement between results from the imaging modalities.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 26, 2021   Volume 260, Issue 1 115-123 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.08.0428
Vautravers G, Audigié F, Denoix JM.To describe scintigraphic and transrectal ultrasonographic anatomic variants of the lumbosacral (LS) articulation in horses and to determine the agreement between results obtained with each imaging modality. 243 horses (81 Selle Français Warmbloods, 81 French Standardbred Trotters, and 81 Thoroughbreds). A retrospective search of clinical records was conducted to identify horses that had undergone nuclear scintigraphy and transrectal ultrasonography of the LS region of the vertebral column between January 2016 and December 2019. Scintigraphic images were evaluated by 2 observers blinded to th...
Computed tomographic myelography for assessment of the cervical spinal cord in ataxic warmblood horses: 26 cases (2015-2017).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 3, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 10 1188-1195 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.11.0614
Rovel T, Zimmerman M, Duchateau L, Adriaensen E, Mariën T, Saunders JH, Vanderperren K.To quantify the degree of dural compression and assess the association between site and direction of compression and articular process (AP) size and degree of dural compression with CT myelography. 26 client-oriented horses with ataxia. Spinal cord-to-dura and AP-to-cross-sectional area of the C6 body ratios (APBRs) were calculated for each noncompressive site and site that had > 50% compression of the subarachnoid space. Site of maximum compression had the largest spinal cord-to-dura ratio. Fisher exact test and linear regression analyses were used to assess the association between site an...
Computed tomographic examination of the articular process joints of the cervical spine in warmblood horses: 86 cases (2015-2017).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 3, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 10 1178-1187 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.03.0105
Rovel T, Zimmerman M, Duchateau L, Delesalle C, Adriaensen E, Mariën T, Saunders JH, Vanderperren K.To describe articular process joints (APJs) of the cervical spine in horses on the basis of CT and to determine whether abnormalities were associated with clinical signs. 86 client-owned warmblood horses. Horses that underwent CT of the cervical spine between January 2015 and January 2017 were eligible for study inclusion. Medical records were reviewed for age, body weight, breed, sex, history, clinical signs, and CT findings. Horses were divided into 3 case groups and 1 control group on the basis of clinical signs. 70 warmblood horses were cases, and 16 were controls. Abnormalities were more ...
Combination of end-to-end jejuno-ileal anastomosis and side-to-side incomplete ileocecal bypass (hybrid jejuno-ileo-cecal anastomosis) following subtotal ileal resection in seven horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 11 1337-1343 doi: 10.2460/javma.20.10.0577
Gandini M, Giusto G.7 horses (3 geldings, 2 mares, and 2 stallions) were examined because of acute colic caused by small intestinal obstruction involving the aborad portion of the jejunum and orad portion of the ileum. All horses underwent a routine colic examination on arrival and had a diagnosis of strangulating obstruction of the small intestine. All horses underwent emergency exploratory laparotomy, in which the affected aborad portion of the jejunum and orad portion of the ileum were resected; in 5 horses, a hand-sewn end-to-end jejuno-ileal anastomosis was combined with a hand-sewn incomplete ileocecal bypa...
Treatment of shoulder joint luxation with glenoid ostectomy in a miniature donkey.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 9 1043-1046 doi: 10.2460/javma.259.9.1043
Skelton JA, Hawkins JF, Rochat MC.A 13-year-old 128-kg miniature donkey gelding was evaluated for right forelimb lameness of 7 weeks' duration. Muscular atrophy of the infraspinatus and supraspinatus muscles over the right scapula with a palpable bony prominence over the point of the shoulder was evident. At the walk, the cranial phase of the stride was reduced with adduction of the distal aspect of the limb, dragging of the toe, and lameness (grade, 4/5). Lateral and craniocaudal radiographs of the right shoulder joint revealed lateral luxation of the humerus in relation to the scapula with bony proliferation and remodeling o...
Effects of forelimb instrumentation on lameness detection in horses using a portable inertial sensor-based system.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 6, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 8 892-898 doi: 10.2460/javma.259.8.892
Lopes MAF, Nichols JT, Dearo ACO, Nelson SR.To investigate the effects of a small sensor attached to the pastern region of a forelimb on lameness detection and quantification with a portable inertial sensor-based system (PISBS) for lameness detection and quantification in horses. 20 adult horses (body weight, 410 to 650 kg) with no visible lameness at the walk. In a crossover study design, horses were evaluated at the trot twice using the PISBS with the gyroscope alternately attached to the right forelimb pastern region (as recommended by the manufacturer) or to the left forelimb pastern region (with the sensor flipped 180° on the fron...
Survey of self-reported radiation safety practices among North American veterinary technicians involved in equine radiography using portable x-ray equipment.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 6, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 8 919-926 doi: 10.2460/javma.259.8.919
Belotta AF, Mayer MN, Koehncke NK, Carmalt J, Freitas FP, Waldner CL.To describe self-reported radiation safety practices by equine veterinary technicians in North America and identify factors associated with these practices. 154 equine technicians. An electronic questionnaire regarding radiation safety practices during the use of portable x-ray equipment was sent to 884 members of the American Association of Equine Veterinary Technicians and Assistants. Data were summarized, and various factors were evaluated for associations with reported safety practices. 221 of 884 (25.0%) questionnaires were completed, including 154 by equine technicians who had been invol...
Effect of intravenous tiludronate disodium administration on the radiographic progression of osteoarthritis of the fetlock joint in Standardbred racehorses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 28, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 6 651-661 doi: 10.2460/javma.259.6.651
Bertuglia A, Basano I, Pagliara E, Bottegaro NB, Spinella G, Bullone M.To compare the effects of tiludronate disodium and 3 other medical treatments on clinical and radiographic findings and biomarkers of disease progression in horses with osteoarthritis of the fetlock joint. 100 Standardbred racehorses with spontaneous traumatic injury of the fetlock joint. Horses were retrospectively grouped by whether they received tiludronate IV or triamcinolone acetonide and hyaluronan, polysulfated glycosaminoglycan, or interleukin-1 receptor antagonist protein intra-articularly. Data were collected on clinical, radiographic, and ultrasonographic findings and results for se...
Treatment of temporohyoid osteoarthropathy in horses with a basihyoid-ceratohyoid disarticulation technique: 6 cases (2018-2019).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 10, 2021   Volume 259, Issue 3 300-305 doi: 10.2460/javma.259.3.300
Hall NP, Ragle CA, Farnsworth KD, Caffey SR, Sanclemente JL.To describe a technique for basihyoid-ceratohyoid disarticulation (BCD) in standing sedated horses affected by temporohyoid osteoarthropathy (THO) and report outcomes for horses that underwent the procedure. Methods: 6 client-owned horses. Methods: Electronic medical records of a veterinary teaching hospital were searched to identify horses that underwent BCD for treatment of THO from 2018 to 2019. Signalment, clinical data, use of the horse, and complications were recorded. Follow-up data obtained by telephone interview with owners included the clinical outcome and time to improvement after s...
Postmortem diagnoses of spinal ataxia in 316 horses in California.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 2, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 12 1386-1393 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.12.1386
Hales EN, Aleman M, Marquardt SA, Katzman SA, Woolard KD, Miller AD, Finno CJ.To determine period prevalences of postmortem diagnoses for spinal cord or vertebral column lesions as underlying causes of ataxia (spinal ataxia) in horses. Methods: 2,861 client-owned horses (316 with ataxia [ataxic group] and 2,545 without ataxia [control group]). Methods: The medical records database of the University of California-Davis Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital was searched to identify horses necropsied between January 1, 2005, and December 31, 2017. Results were compared between the ataxic and control groups and between various groups of horses in the ataxic group. Period pre...
Type, prevalence, and risk factors for the development of orthopedic injuries in endurance horses during training and competition.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 5, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 10 1109-1118 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.10.1109
Paris A, Beccati F, Pepe M.To report the type, prevalence, and risk factors for the development of orthopedic injuries in endurance horses. Methods: 235 endurance horses. Methods: Medical records of horses examined between January 2007 and December 2018 were reviewed. Recorded data were birth; breed; sex; dates of first and last examinations; presence of any conformation fault, lameness, positive flexion test result, and orthopedic injury; starts in endurance competitions; level of athletic activity; professional status of trainer or rider; and whether an orthopedic injury developed in > 1 limb or during or within 2 day...
Midbody penile urethrocutaneous fistula repaired by fistulectomy and urethral anastomosis in a stallion.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 16, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 9 1007-1010 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.9.1007
Sanclemente JL, Ragle CA, Lund CM.A 12-year-old Friesian stallion was examined because of a 1-year history of preputial injury and urination through a urethrocutaneous fistula located at the midbody of the ventral aspect of the penis. Results: Physical examination revealed an opening with a clearly apparent mucocutaneous junction 12 cm from the distal opening of the urethra on the ventral left side of the penis. Endoscopic examination of the distal portion of the urethra confirmed a blind pouch with no communication with the fistula or proximal portion of the urethra. Results: A temporary perineal urethrostomy was performed wi...
Prevalence of extended-spectrum cephalosporin-, carbapenem-, and fluoroquinolone-resistant members of the family Enterobacteriaceae isolated from the feces of horses and hospital surfaces at two equine specialty hospitals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 24, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 7 758-766 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.7.758
Adams RJ, Mollenkopf DF, Mathys DA, Whittle A, Ballash GA, Mudge M, Daniels JB, Barr B, Wittum TE.To estimate the prevalence of extended-spectrum cephalosporin-, carbapenem-, and fluoroquinolone-resistant bacteria of the family Enterobacteriaceae in the feces of hospitalized horses and on hospital surfaces. Methods: Fecal and environmental samples were collected from The Ohio State University Galbreath Equine Center (OSUGEC) and a private referral equine hospital in Kentucky (KYEH). Feces were sampled within 24 hours after hospital admission and after 48 hours and 3 to 7 days of hospitalization. Methods: Fecal and environmental samples were enriched, and then selective media were inoculate...
Clinical features, treatment, and outcome of aural hematomas in horses: 7 cases (2008-2019).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 9, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 6 654-660 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.6.654
Boorman S, Boone LH, White A.To characterize the clinical features, treatment, and outcome of aural hematomas in horses. Methods: 7 horses with 1 or 2 aural hematomas (8 ears in total) treated at a veterinary teaching hospital in 2008 through 2019. Methods: Data retrieved from medical records included signalment, pertinent historical information, clinical signs, diagnostic procedures (including dermatologic assessment), and treatments. Case outcome was determined from documentation in the medical record or via telephone communication with owners or referring veterinarians. Results: 3 horses were presented after recurrence...
Subconjunctival enucleation with orbital implant placement in standing horses: 20 cases (2014-2017).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 9, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 6 661-667 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.6.661
Betbeze CM, Dray SM, Fontenot RL.To develop a protocol for subconjunctival enucleation and orbital implant placement in standing horses and to document short- and long-term complications, cosmesis, and client satisfaction. Methods: 20 horses with nonneoplastic ocular disease requiring enucleation. Methods: A standardized protocol of surgical suite cleaning, patient preparation, sedation, local nerve blocks, surgical procedure, and postoperative care was performed. Owners were required to provide follow-up information at 1 year after surgery during a phone questionnaire. Additionally, some owners provided follow-up information...
Association between antimicrobial treatment of subclinical pneumonia in foals and selection of macrolide- and rifampicin-resistant Rhodococcus equi strains at horse-breeding farms in central Kentucky.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 9, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 6 648-653 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.6.648
Huber L, Giguère S, Hart KA, Slovis NM, Greiter ME, Dailey CA, Cohen ND.To compare soil concentrations of macrolide- and rifampicin-resistant strains (MRRE) on horse-breeding farms that used thoracic ultrasonographic screening (TUS) to identify foals with subclinical pneumonia combined with subsequent administration of macrolides and rifampin to affected foals (TUS farms) versus soil concentrations on farms that did not (non-TUS farms), determine whether the combined use of TUS and antimicrobial treatment of subclinically affected foals was associated with soil concentration of MRRE, and assess whether there were temporal effects on soil concentrations of MRRE du...
Effectiveness of a digital interactive multimedia tutorial for preparing veterinary students to perform ultrasonography in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 7, 2021   Volume 258, Issue 2 165-169 doi: 10.2460/javma.258.2.165
Navas de Solis C, Gilmour LJ, Coleman MC, Watts AE, Bevevino KE, Glass KG, Hardy J, Chaney KP.To determine the effectiveness of a digital interactive multimedia tutorial (DIMT) for preparing veterinary students to perform ultrasonography in horses. Methods: 42 third-year veterinary students. Methods: Students were randomly assigned to 3 instructional methods: independent study (ie, 45 minutes to read a highlighted textbook chapter), lecture (ie, 45-minute lecture by a faculty member), or digital interactive multimedia tutorial (DIMT; ie, 45-minute narrated, interactive module). Written and practical tests were administered after each instruction session. For the practical test, each st...
Association between the administration of phenylbutazone prior to racing and musculoskeletal and fatal injuries in Thoroughbred racehorses in Argentina.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 29, 2020   Volume 257, Issue 6 642-647 doi: 10.2460/javma.257.6.642
Zambruno T, Georgopoulos SP, Boden LA, Parkin TDH.To examine the association between prerace administration of phenylbutazone and the risk of musculoskeletal injury (MSI) and fatal injury in Thoroughbred racehorses that raced between 2006 and 2015 at 2 of the 4 official racetracks in Argentina. Methods: Data from racetrack databases and veterinary reports on 283,193 race starts. Methods: Data were collected relating to race performance and injury outcomes for starts at these tracks. The incidence of MSI and fatal injury was calculated for each year, stratified by the declared prerace administration of phenylbutazone. Univariable logistic regr...
Outcome and complications following transrectal and transabdominal large intestinal trocarization in equids with colic: 228 cases (2004-2015).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 1, 2020   Volume 257, Issue 2 189-195 doi: 10.2460/javma.257.2.189
Schoster A, Altermatt N, Torgerson PR, Bischofberger AS.To describe outcome and complications after large intestinal trocarization in equids with colic and identify factors associated with nonsurvival and clinically relevant peritonitis (CRP). Methods: 228 (198 horses, 24 ponies, and 6 donkeys and mules) equids with colic that underwent large intestinal trocarization. Methods: Medical records from 2004 through 2015 were reviewed for equids with colic that underwent large intestinal trocarization. Factors associated with nonsurvival in all (ie, surgically and medically treated) equids and with CRP in medically only treated equids were identified. Me...
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