Analyze Diet

Veterinary research communications.

Periodical
Veterinary Medicine
Publisher:
Elsevier,. [Cham] : Springer
Frequency: Eight no. a year
Country: Switzerland
Language: English
Start Year:1980 -
ISSN:
0165-7380 (Print)
1573-7446 (Electronic)
0165-7380 (Linking)
Impact Factor
2.2
2022
NLM ID:8100520
(DNLM):V06070000(s)
(OCoLC):06845473
Coden:VRCODX
Classification:W1 VE934M
Culicoides (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) associated with horses at Mogoditshane, Gaborone, Botswana.
Veterinary research communications    October 21, 1998   Volume 22, Issue 5 295-297 doi: 10.1023/a:1006152500642
Mushi EZ, Isa JF, Chabo RG, Binta MG, Kapaata RW.No abstract available
Catecholamine and cortisol responses of horses to incremental exertion.
Veterinary research communications    May 1, 1998   Volume 22, Issue 2 107-118 doi: 10.1023/a:1006027429526
Jimenez M, Hinchcliff KW, Farris JW.The responses of the plasma concentrations of catecholamines and cortisol in horses to varied relative intensities of exertion were examined. The plasma concentrations of cortisol, epinephrine and norepinephrine increased significantly (p < 0.05) with exertion. The plasma cortisol concentrations at relative work intensities of 48.3% +/- 1.4%, 82.3% +/- 2.0% and 99.6% +/- 0.4% of VO2max were 114%, 124%, and 126%, respectively, of those at rest, whereas the plasma epinephrine concentrations were 239%, 772% and 3483%, and the norepinephrine concentrations were 138%, 255%, and 1121% of the valu...
In vitro responses to noradrenaline of small intestine taken from normal and grass sickness-affected horses.
Veterinary research communications    January 28, 1998   Volume 21, Issue 8 571-585 doi: 10.1023/a:1005923015366
Murray A, Pearson GT, Cottrell DF.Small intestine was taken from the caudal flexure of the duodenum and the terminal ileum proximal to the ileocaecal fold of 25 horses, 9 with acute grass sickness (AGS), 12 with subacute grass sickness (SAGS) and 12 with chronic grass sickness (CGS). The motility in the samples was measured isometrically either within 1 h of death or after storage for 24 h at 4 degree C. In control tissue, noradrenaline produced contractions of muscle strips which did not involve a muscarinic cholinergic mechanism and which were unaffected by the alpha 1 antagonist prazosin but were blocked by the alpha 2 anta...
Failure of lipopolysaccharides to directly trigger the chemiluminescence response of isolated equine polymorphonuclear leukocytes.
Veterinary research communications    November 5, 1997   Volume 21, Issue 7 477-482 doi: 10.1023/a:1005938319482
Benbarek H, Deby-Dupont G, Caudron I, Deby C, Lamy M, Serteyn D.Divergent results have been reported on the effects of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) on the activation of equine polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). We therefore attempted to determine whether LPS alone can stimulate equine PMN or whether plasma factors are necessary. PMN were isolated from citrated blood on a discontinuous density gradient of Percoll. The luminol (10(-3) mol/L)-enhanced chemiluminescence (CL) of 1.25 x 10(6) cells was measured after addition of Escherichia coli LPS (0.001-10 micrograms/ml) alone or after incubation in autologous plasma (1 h, 37 degrees C). After direct stimulatio...
Light microscopy of the enteric nervous system of horses with or without equine dysautonomia (grass sickness): its correlation with the motor effects of physostigmine.
Veterinary research communications    November 5, 1997   Volume 21, Issue 7 507-520 doi: 10.1023/a:1005998505369
Murray A, Pearson GT, Cottrell DF.Light microscopy was undertaken on sections from the caudal flexure of the duodenum and the terminal ileum proximal to the ileocaecal fold in 5 control horses, 5 horses with acute grass sickness (AGS), and 5 horses with chronic grass sickness (CGS). With the exception of the ileal submucous plexus of the CGS group, the AGS group had the lowest number of neurons as measured using a subjective scoring scheme. The proportion of abnormal neurons in the AGS group was similar in both plexuses and both regions, whereas the values for the CGS group were much higher in the duodenal region than in the i...
Variations of equine urinary volatile compounds during the oestrous cycle.
Veterinary research communications    August 1, 1997   Volume 21, Issue 6 437-446 doi: 10.1023/a:1005859419574
Ma W, Klemm WR.Equine urine was analysed by capillary gas chromatography. The volatile profiles from oestrous and dioestrous samples were compared to establish any qualitative or quantitative difference that may have potential value in olfactory communication. Forty-five different volatile compounds were detected. Of these, 17 major compounds were common to all chromatograms. The chemical profile of oestrous urine was distinguished by the presence of a unique peak that was not present in dioestrous samples. Numerous constituents exhibited endocrine dependence: while the concentrations of seix peaks increased...
The effect of the acute-phase response on in vitro drug metabolism and plasma protein binding in the horse.
Veterinary research communications    July 1, 1997   Volume 21, Issue 5 361-368 doi: 10.1023/a:1005816422279
Mills PC, Ng JC, Auer DE.The effect of the acute-phase response (APR) on the activity of the hepatic drug-metabolizing system (DMS) and on the binding of phenylbutazone to plasma proteins was investigated in the horse. An APR was induced by intramuscular injections of Freund's complete adjuvant in five horses and, five days later, these horses together with five clinically normal horses were shot and the right ventral lobe of each liver removed. The hepatic microsomal fractions from the liver samples were isolated and significantly lower (p < 0.01) concentrations of cytochromes P450 and b5 and activities of aniline...
Relationship of plasma lactate production to cortisol release following completion of different types of sporting events in horses.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 4 371-379 doi: 10.1007/BF00366544
Desmecht D, Linden A, Amory H, Art T, Lekeux P.Fifty-eight healthy horses were studied during five sporting events of various intensities and durations, namely show-jumping (n = 6), cross-country in a three-day event (n = 30), trotting races (n = 7), galloping races (n = 7) and endurance rides (n = 8). Venous blood samples were collected at rest and immediately after exercise and analysed for plasma cortisol (CORT) and lactate (LA) levels. The experimental procedure was the same throughout the investigation so as to permit a reliable comparison between the five types of exercise. The type of event significantly affected both the resting (p...
The effect of arthritis in the carpal joint on performance in Norwegian cold-blooded trotters.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 6 505-512 doi: 10.1007/BF00396293
Dolvik NI, Klemetsdal G.The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of arthritis of the carpal joint on performance of Norwegian cold-blooded trotters. Two performance variables were used in the analyses. The first was the start status, for which horses that had started in one or more races within a certain age received the value 1, and horses that had not raced were correspondingly assigned the value 0. The second variable was the accumulated, transformed and standardized earnings (ATSE), which is the power transformation of earnings (earnings .2, with unraced horses assigned a value of zero) expressed as a...
The vasomotor effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine on equine basilar arteries in vitro.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 1 61-70 doi: 10.1007/BF00346578
Miyamoto A, Obi T, Nishio A.The vasomotor effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) on isolated equine basilar arteries were studied. 5-HT induced contractions of equine basilar arteries in a concentration-dependent manner, with a pEC50 value (with 95% confidence limits) of 7.35 (7.08-7.62). Similar results were obtained with endothelium-denuded basilar arteries. Contractions were not competitively inhibited by the 5-HT2 receptor antagonist ketanserin at low concentrations of 5-HT. Conversely, at high concentrations of 5-HT, contractions were inhibited by ketanserin in a concentration-dependent manner, with a pA2 value of 8....
Lymphoid leukosis viruses, their recognition as ‘persistent’ viruses and comparisons with certain other retroviruses of veterinary importance.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 1 83-108 doi: 10.1007/BF00346580
Darcel C.Diseases caused by lymphoid leukosis virus (LLV), a retrovirus, take a long time after infection to develop and have a wide variety of pathological manifestations. This long latent period is characteristic of 'persistent virus infections'. Disease produced by LLV infection and its underlying mechanisms is compared with 'persistent' infections caused by other retroviruses in birds and mammals of veterinary importance. The diseases considered for comparison are those caused by reticuloendotheliosis, feline leukaemia, bovine leukosis and equine infectious anaemia viruses. There are significant ch...
The effects of three models of airway disease on tidal breathing flow-volume loops of thoroughbred horses.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 6 517-527 doi: 10.1007/BF01839340
Guthrie AJ, Beadle RE, Bateman RD, White CE.The effects of histamine and methacholine aerosols and of a fixed inspiratory resistance on tidal breathing flow-volume loops (TBFVL) were investigated using 18 unsedated, standing, healthy thoroughbred horses. The data were first analysed using traditional flow-volume loop indices and then reduced using standardized factor scoring coefficients obtained in a previous study in this laboratory using similar experimental techniques. On the basis of resting TBFVL analysis, the degree of pulmonary dysfunction caused by inhalation of histamine and methacholine aerosols with concentrations of 10 and ...
Genotyping of isolates of Taylorella equigenitalis from thoroughbred brood mares in Japan.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 4 265-271 doi: 10.1007/BF01839309
Miyazawa T, Matsuda M, Isayama Y, Samata T, Ishida Y, Ogawa S, Takei K, Honda M, Kamada M.Profiles of the genomic DNA of 104 strains of T. equigenitalis isolated from brood mares with contagious equine metritis in Hokkaido during the breeding seasons from 1980 to 1993, as well as those of five strains (SS28, EQ56, EQ59, EQ70 and HH139) previously isolated in Japan were examined after restriction digestion and crossed-field gel electrophoresis. These profiles were essentially identical to each other and the various isolates and strains appeared to have a common genotype, designated 'genotype J', with respect to two restriction enzymes, ApaI and NotI. These results suggest a common s...
Training-induced modifications in some biochemical defences against free radicals in equine erythrocytes.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 3 179-184 doi: 10.1007/BF01839296
Avellini L, Silvestrelli M, Gaiti A.Oxidative stress develops when the generation of free radicals exceeds the antioxidant capacity of cells or extracellular fluids. It can also occur as a result of physical exercise, and the pathogenesis of exercise-induced myopathies and haemolysis in horses may be related to changes in lipid peroxidation caused by free radicals. Cells have developed biochemical protection against oxidative stress and, as tissues seem to increase their antioxidant defences under chronic activation, training may be one of the ways of increasing antioxidant defences. Accordingly, we tested some enzymatic antioxi...
The equine enteric nervous system–neuron characterization and distribution in adults and juveniles.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 6 433-449 doi: 10.1007/BF01839331
Doxey DL, Pearson GT, Milne EM, Gilmour JS, Chisholm HK.A study of myenteric and submucosal plexuses was undertaken in the jejunum and ileum of horses and ponies in which no clinical or pathological evidence of intestinal abnormality was apparent. Complete transverse sections of the intestine, stained by a modified haematoxylin and eosin method, were examined using up to 20 sequential sections per animal. Information was gathered from adult, juvenile and fetal equidae. In adults, the longitudinal muscle layers were thinner than the circular muscle layers and the ileum had thicker layers compared to the jejunum. In adults, the submucosal plexus had ...
Small intestine and small colon neuropathy in equine dysautonomia (grass sickness).
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 6 529-543 doi: 10.1007/BF01839341
Doxey DL, Milne EM, Woodman MP, Gilmour JS, Chisholm HK.The number of neurons in the coeliacomesenteric ganglia and the myenteric and submucosal plexuses of the jejunum, ileum and small colon, and the pathological changes induced in them, were studied in various types of equine dysautonomia. In all forms of dysautonomia, severe and extensive neuron loss and damage occurred in the ileum. In acute and subacute dysautonomia, jejunal neuron loss and damage were severe, but in chronic cases significantly less loss or damage occurred. The damage followed the same pattern in the small colon but it was always less obvious than in the jejunum. The distribut...
Characterization of normal tidal breathing flow-volume loops for thoroughbred horses.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 4 331-342 doi: 10.1007/BF01839315
Guthrie AJ, Beadle RE, Bateman RD, White CE.The purpose of this study was to characterize the normal equine tidal breathing flow-volume loop (TBFVL). The study was performed using 18 healthy Thoroughbred horses. TBFVLs constructed from data collected from resting horses had a typical biphasic inspiratory and expiratory phase. The interindividual variability of the indices used to describe TBFVLs was in the range 16-32%, which is comparable to the variability of other measures of equine pulmonary mechanics. The large variability of these data probably limits the value of resting TBFVL indices for detecting subclinical respiratory conditi...
The prevalence and epidemiology of Anoplocephala perfoliata infection in Norway.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 6 487-494 doi: 10.1007/BF01839337
Ihler CF, Rootwelt V, Heyeraas A, Dolvik NJ.The caecum and the adjacent 30 cm lengths of ileum and large colon of 201 horses from two different regions of Norway (Ostlandet and Trøndelag) were examined for the presence of Anoplocephala perfoliata. In all, 20% of the horses were infested with the cestode (27% in Ostlandet and 7% in Trøndelag). The mean number of worms in infected horses from the two regions was 18 and 6, respectively. Information was obtained on the age, sex, breed, type of pasture and anthelmintic treatment after the grazing season for 183 of the 20 horses. The degree of infestation with A. perfoliata was not influenc...
Age-related storage of iron in the liver of horses.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 4 261-268 doi: 10.1007/BF01839192
Ramsay WN.The non-haem iron concentration was estimated in post-mortem liver samples from 51 horses (age range 1-25 years). Two were normal and 49 had been suffering from conditions that were not expected to have had long-term effects on iron metabolism. Muscle samples (splenius and biceps femoris) from 23 of these horses were also analysed. There was a highly significant age-related increase in the non-haem iron concentration in the liver (r = 0.635, p < 0.001), but not in the muscles, in which the iron concentration was much lower than in the liver.
The effects of furosemide and pentoxifylline on the flow properties of equine erythrocytes: in vitro studies.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 5 373-381 doi: 10.1007/BF01839288
Weiss DJ, Evanson OA, Geor RJ.The effects of various concentrations of furosemide and pentoxifylline on equine RBC in vitro were evaluated to facilitate better understanding of the potential effects of these drugs on blood flow properties. Furosemide induced increased mean cell volume (MCV), increased RBC potassium concentration, increased whole blood viscosity, and decreased the RBC filtrability. These data indicate that furosemide may block the RBC membrane transport pathways resulting in potassium and water retention. The increase in size and the resultant decrease in the surface-area-to-volume ratio may have caused the...
Estimation of the size of the genome of Taylorella equigenitalis by crossed-field gel electrophoresis.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 2 99-102 doi: 10.1007/BF01839226
Matsuda M, Asami Y, Miyazawa T, Sugawara T, Kumano M, Isayama Y, Honda M.No abstract available
Caffeine clearance in the horse.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 5 367-372 doi: 10.1007/BF01839287
Schumacher J, Spano JS, Wilson RC, DeGraves FJ, Duran SH, Ruffin DC.The pharmacokinetic properties of intravenously administered caffeine were studied in 10 horses using a commercially available automated enzyme immunoassay. The harmonic mean for the distribution half-life was 5.2 min (range 1.4-18.7). The harmonic mean for the elimination half-life was 10.18 h (range 6.82-20.92). The harmonic mean of the volume of distribution was 0.32 L/kg (range 0.22-0.53). There was no correlation between the dose of caffeine/kg body weight and the elimination half-life (Spearman's coefficient of rank correlation = 0.19).
Glucose transport and glycolytic enzyme activities in erythrocytes of two-year-old thoroughbreds undergoing training exercise.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 6 417-422 doi: 10.1007/BF01839417
Arai T, Washizu T, Hamada S, Sako T, Takagi S, Yashiki K, Motoyoshi S.D-Glucose transport and cytosolic enzyme activities were measured in erythrocytes from 2-year-old thoroughbreds under continuous training exercise (race horses) and compared with those from untrained horses of various ages (sires, mares and untrained 2-year-old thoroughbreds). The activities of the glucose transport and glycolytic enzymes, hexokinase and pyruvate kinase, in the race horses' erythrocytes were elevated to 2-3.5 times above those of untrained horses. There were no significant differences in plasma glucose, triglyceride or IRI concentrations between the horses in training and untr...
Vasomotor effects of histamine on bovine and equine basilar arteries in vitro.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 6 447-456 doi: 10.1007/BF01839422
Miyamoto A, Nishio A.The vasomotor effects of histamine on isolated bovine and equine basilar arteries were examined. Histamine induced contractions in both these preparations. The maximal response to and pEC50 value for histamine of the equine artery were larger than those of bovine tissue. Similar results were obtained with endothelium-denuded basilar arteries. Diphenhydramine (H1-receptor antagonist) inhibited histamine-induced contractions of the basilar arteries from both species in a concentration-dependent manner and its pA2 values (with 95% confidence limits) were 7.61 (7.39-7.83) and 8.15 (8.01-8.29) for ...
Cholinergic activity of intestinal muscle in vitro taken from horses with and without equine grass sickness.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 3 199-207 doi: 10.1007/BF01839269
Murray A, Cottrell DF, Woodman MP.Equine grass sickness (EGS) is a pan-dysautonomia of horses that involves central and peripheral neuronal degeneration and ultimately depletion. This is the first reported functional study on the motility of equine intestine taken immediately post mortem from horses with EGS. Strips of smooth muscle from the small intestine of healthy and EGS-affected horses were suspended in an organ bath and their motility was measured isometrically. The activity of the cholinergic system was studied. Physostigmine enhanced the motility of all muscle strips. Tissues taken from horses suffering from acute gra...
Prevalence and risk factors in serous arthritis in the carpal joint of Norwegian coldblooded trotters.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1994   Volume 18, Issue 4 281-288 doi: 10.1007/BF01839194
Dolvik NI.Of 508 four-year-old coldblooded trotters examined for carpitis, 135 (27%) had the condition. Thirty horses had unilateral carpitis on the left frontlimb, 52 on the right frontlimb and 53 had bilateral carpitis. Of these horses, 105 were stallions, 135 were geldings and 269 were mares. The prevalence of carpitis in these three groups was 25%, 25% and 28%, respectively. Information was obtained on the training regimes in four periods of the life of 378 horses. The odds ratios for the training variables were of the same order in all four periods. In logistic regression analyses on the training v...
Coronary arterial anatomy of the one-humped camel (Camelus dromedarius).
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1993   Volume 17, Issue 3 163-170 doi: 10.1007/BF01839161
Ghazi SR, Tadjalli M.The detailed coronary arterial anatomy of seven camels was studied and compared with that of horses and cattle. In camels, there is a bilateral coronary supply, the right coronary artery being the larger. The left coronary artery follows the same pattern as that in horses. The ramus collateralis proximalis in camels separates off some distance away from the origin of the ramus interventricularis paraconalis, as in horses, whereas it separates of very quickly in cattle. The ramus collateralis distalis has two branches in camels, whereas the left distal ventriculi ramus does not branch. The ramu...
Mal seco, a grass sickness-like syndrome of horses in Argentina.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1993   Volume 17, Issue 6 449-457 doi: 10.1007/BF01839212
Uzal FA, Robles CA.Mal seco is a grass sickness-like syndrome of horses which has mainly been observed in Patagonia, Argentina, although some reports indicate that the disease may exist in other Argentinian provinces and in the south of Chile. The aetiology of mal seco remains unknown but the disease seems to be restricted to animals grazing on natural pastures and not receiving supplementary feeding. Mal seco is clinically characterized by total or partial bowel stasis and the main findings at post-mortem examination are almost exclusively restricted to the bowel. The most striking histopathological changes fou...
Bile acid fractionations by high-performance liquid chromatography in equine liver disease.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1992   Volume 16, Issue 3 161-172 doi: 10.1007/BF01839151
Kaneko JJ, Rudolph WG, Wilson DW, Carlson GP.Serum bile acids were fractionated by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in 13 control and 8 cases of liver disease in horses. The severity and type of liver injury was determined by histopathological examination of biopsy and/or necropsy specimens. The total serum bile acids (tSBA) were determined in these horses by an enzymatic method (SBA-EA) and by summation of the bile acids (SBA-LC) as fractionated by the HPLC. The SBA-LC were generally higher than the SBA-EA in both the controls and liver disease and they did not parallel each other. The primary bile acids, total cholates and...
The pharmacokinetics of a slow-release theophylline preparation in horses after intravenous and oral administration.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1992   Volume 16, Issue 2 131-138 doi: 10.1007/BF01839010
Errecalde JO, Landoni MF.The pharmacokinetics of a slow-release theophylline formulation was investigated following intravenous and oral administration at 10 mg/kg in horses. A tricompartmental model was selected to describe the intravenous plasma profile. The elimination half-life (t1/2 beta) was 16.91 +/- 0.93 h, the apparent volume of distribution (Vd) was 1.35 +/- 0.18 L/kg and the body clearance (ClB) was 0.061 +/- 0.009 L kg-1 h. After oral administration the half-life of absorption was 1.24 +/- 0.30 h, and the calculated bioavailability was above 100%. The t1/2 beta after oral administration was 18.51 +/- 1.75 ...