Analyze Diet

Topic:Aging

The aging process in horses involves a series of physiological and metabolic changes that occur over time. These changes can affect various systems, including the musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and endocrine systems. As horses age, they may experience alterations in body condition, joint function, and metabolic efficiency. Understanding the aging process is important for managing the health and welfare of senior horses. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the biological mechanisms of aging in horses, the impact on different bodily systems, and strategies for managing age-related conditions in equine populations.
Morphogenesis of compound melanosomes in melanoma cells of a gray horse.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 4 677-680 doi: 10.1292/jvms.55.677
Ohmuro K, Okada K, Satoh A, Murakami K, Satake S, Asahina M, Numakunai S, Ohshima K.A thoroughbred horse, gelding, gray color, aged 19 years old had cutaneous melanomas from the root to the middle of the tail, and throughout the connective tissues of the whole body. Histologically, the tumors were diagnosed as mature melanotic melanomas characteristically deposited with abundant melanin pigment. Examined with an electron microscope, melanosomes were electron opaque without internal structure (stage IV), or as mature granular and lamellar types. Most of them were fused with each other, and formed compound melanosomes, which was similar to internal melanin aggregates in shape. ...
Microscopical characteristics of uterine wall arteries in barren aged mares.
Journal of comparative pathology    May 1, 1993   Volume 108, Issue 4 411-415 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(08)80214-9
Oikawa M, Katayama Y, Yoshihara T, Kaneko M, Yoshikawa T.The morphology of the arteries in the uterine wall was studied in three multiparous aged mares that had suffered repeated pregnancy failure. The uterine wall arteries exhibited elastosis of the intima or adventitia, or both, resembling "physiological pregnancy sclerosis". In areas affected by elastosis, degeneration of the pre-existing elastic fibres and increased glycosaminoglycans were frequently observed. Newly formed elastic fibres were not evident. Delayed resorption due to disordered metabolic turnover of the elastin was thought to be an important factor in the pathogenesis of the arteri...
Focal gingival hyperplasia in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1993   Volume 202, Issue 8 1287-1288 
Handy LH, Peyton LC, Calderwood-Mays MB, Ackerman N.A diagnosis of gingival hyperplasia in a 22-year-old Quarter Horse gelding was confirmed by histologic examination. Clinical signs included difficulty eating hay, and a large, intraoral soft tissue mass measuring 13 x 8 x 4.5 cm. The mass was located in the mucosa on the lingual aspect of the caudal left portion of the mandible, ventral to the base of the tongue, and covered the second and third lower molars, extending rostrally along the buccal mucosa to the premolars. The left maxillary second and third molars were overgrown with sharp edges. Lateral radiography of the mandible revealed abse...
Functional significance of the morphology and micromechanics of collagen fibres in relation to partial rupture of the superficial digital flexor tendon in racehorses.
Research in veterinary science    November 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 3 354-359 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(92)90139-s
Wilmink J, Wilson AM, Goodship AE.The high incidence of partial rupture of the superficial digital flexor tendor in the equine athlete represents a major cause for concern in the racing industry. Frequently, the lesion is localised to the central core of the tendon. This study tested the hypothesis that the site specific structural failure results from differences in the collagen fibre morphology and associated micromechanics between central and peripheral regions of the tendon. Bundles of collagen fibres were dissected from central and peripheral sites in the mid-metacarpal region of the tendon. Crimp morphology was quantifie...
Use of manual stimulation for collection of semen from an atactic stallion unable to mount.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1991   Volume 199, Issue 6 753-754 
McDonnell SM, Pozor MA, Beech J, Sweeney RW.A 9-year-old atactic breeding stallion was trained to ejaculate, with only manual stimulation, while standing on the ground. Ejaculates obtained yielded fertile semen with morphologic and motility characteristics within the range for normal stallions. This method extended the breeding life of a stallion unable to mount a live or dummy mare or to ejaculate into an artificial vagina while standing on the ground.
Ferritin: the role of aluminum in ferritin function.
Neurobiology of aging    September 1, 1991   Volume 12, Issue 5 413-418 doi: 10.1016/0197-4580(91)90066-s
Fleming JT, Joshi JG.We previously showed that human brain ferritin (HBF) binds aluminum (Al) in vivo and in vitro and HBF isolated from Alzheimer's brain had more Al bound compared to aged matched controls (7). To further understand the role ferritin may play in Al neurotoxicity, we have studied in vitro the effect of Al on the function of human ferritin isolated from Alzheimer's (AD) and normal brain tissue, and compared the results with other mammalian ferritins. Al causes a concentration-dependent decrease in the initial rate of iron loading into apo-horse spleen and human brain ferritin and the rates were sim...
A conceptual approach to optimal nutrition of brood mares.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1990   Volume 6, Issue 2 373-391 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30547-3
Donoghue S, Meacham TN, Kronfeld DS.Cumulative nutritional demands on good brood mares are unrivalled among domestic livestock, but little attention has been given to the influence of nutrition on their reproductive performance and efficiency. We suggest that part of the decline in racing performance of progeny of mares over 10 years of age may be caused by suboptimal nutrition. This article contrasts the concepts of minimal and optimal nutrient requirements, revives Hammond's concept of nutrient partitioning to the conceptus and mammary gland, and discusses energy and nutrient requirements during gestation and lactation. Furthe...
Hypertrophic osteopathy in a pony with a pituitary adenoma.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 1, 1989   Volume 195, Issue 1 103-105 
Sweeney CR, Stebbins KE, Schelling CG, Beech J, Schilling DA.Hypertrophic osteopathy was diagnosed in a pony that had no antemortem or postmortem evidence of an intrathoracic lesion. With a history of hirsutism in an aged pony, a pituitary adenoma was suspected, and evaluation of plasma cortisol and insulin values and their response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone supported the diagnosis.
Histogenesis of neoformation in the endocrine pancreas of aging horses.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1989   Volume 26, Issue 1 40-46 doi: 10.1177/030098588902600107
Furuoka H, Shirakawa T, Taniyama H, Ohishi H, Satoh H, Itakura C.Pancreatic tissue from 20 horses was examined using immunocytochemical techniques. In aged horses, neogenesis of endocrine cells, neoformation, and hyperplasia of islets occurred closely associated with the pancreatic duct; these changes were regarded as nesidioblastosis. In addition, pancreatic fibrosis accompanied by ductal proliferation and endocrine neogenesis was considered a regenerative change. Thus, the origin of neoformation in the endocrine pancreas was in the ductal system, and it is suggested that the pancreatic endocrine cells were of endodermal origin.
Spinal hyperostosis in comparative pathology. A useful approach to the concept.
Skeletal radiology    January 1, 1989   Volume 18, Issue 2 99-107 doi: 10.1007/BF00350656
Lagier R.Spinal hyperostosis, an anatomical and radiological concept primarily described in man, is characterized by enthesopathic bony overgrowth on vertebral bodies in the form of spurs or intervertebral bridges. It can also be part of a more diffuse enthesopathic condition, including the appendicular skeleton. These changes are distinct from those of osteoarthrosis. Similar changes can be observed in all kinds of mammals, independent of their type of locomotion (bipodic, quadrumanous, quadrupedic, or aquatic). An anatomical and radiological study is presented of six cases (with histological examinat...
Vascular malformations and angiomatous lesions in horses: a review of 10 cases.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 6 500-504 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02658.x
Platt H.Vascular malformations and angiomas are rather uncommon in horses and the literature concerning these lesions is reviewed. The pathology is described in 10 additional cases. These lesions were classified as arteriovenous malformation (one case), haemangiomas (six cases), 'proliferative angiomas' (two cases) and lymphangioma (one case). The haemangiomas and lymphangioma were probably hamartomatous in origin. Both cases of 'proliferative angioma' developed in aged animals and their pathogenesis was uncertain. More information is needed on the natural history and behaviour of lesions of this type...
A quantitative study of Sertoli cell and germ cell populations as related to sexual development and aging in the stallion.
Biology of reproduction    August 1, 1986   Volume 35, Issue 1 138-148 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod35.1.138
Jones LS, Berndtson WE.Testes from 47 stallions, 1-20 yr of age, were used to examine the influence of age on Sertoli and germ cell populations as well as on functional activity of Sertoli cells. For these stallions, the number of Sertoli cells per paired testes declined linearly with age, and was only 41.7% as great at age 20 as at age 2. However, development of reproductive organs proceeded until age 12-13, as evident from increases in paired testes weight and quantitative rates of spermatozoal production. Although the absolute number of Sertoli cells declined during this period of development, individual Sertoli ...
Ocular angiosarcoma in the horse: morphological and immunohistochemical studies.
Veterinary pathology    May 1, 1986   Volume 23, Issue 3 240-244 doi: 10.1177/030098588602300303
Moore PF, Hacker DV, Buyukmihci NC.Angiosarcomas arising in ocular tissues of four aging horses are described. Tumors were locally invasive and eventually metastasized via the mandibular and cervical lymph nodes. Pathologically, the tumors contained well-differentiated regions, in which vascular channels were lined by pleomorphic endothelial cells, as well as poorly-differentiated regions, in which vascular channels were either rudimentary or absent. Red blood cells were scare in vascular structures formed by the tumors. Factor VIII related antigen (VIII:RAg), a blood vascular endothelial marker, was demonstrated by immunohisto...
Progressive polycystic renal disease in an aged horse.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1986   Volume 63, Issue 3 92-XV doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1986.tb02942.x
Scott PC, Vasey J.No abstract available
Induction of oestrus and ovulation by means of prostaglandin and gonadoliberin (GnRH) treatment in an old mare barren for two breeding seasons.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    March 1, 1985   Volume 56, Issue 1 53-54 
Penzhorn BL, Gilbert RO.A 17-year-old Nooitgedacht mare was presented in mid-summer after failing to conceive during the previous 2 breeding seasons. The mare conceived to service during a PG-induced oestrus when synthetic GnRH was used to induce ovulation.
[Enterohepatic cycle of bile acids and erythrocyte survival].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1985   Volume 22, Issue 6 27-33 
Tsolov V, Tsolov A, Tsankov R.A comparative analysis is made of the correlation between the life of erythrocytes in various species of animals and some parameters of the gallbladder and its secretion. Due attention is paid to the presence of the bladder, its size, and the concentration and intensity of secretion as well as to the effect of the various bile components on the surface tension of water, the water solution of salts, and the erythrocyte membrane. It is believed that both the composition of bile and the structure of erythrocyte membrane are homeostatically determined. It has been found that the mechanism of aging...
Primary renal cell carcinoma in a horse.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    March 1, 1984   Volume 55, Issue 1 35-38 
Van Amstel SR, Huchzermeyer D, Reyers F.A case of primary renal cell carcinoma in a 16-year-old mare is reported. The main presenting signs of chronic weight loss and diarrhoea as well as the initial laboratory examination did not directly indicate renal involvement. Follow-up investigations were strongly suggestive of avain tuberculosis. Further laboratory investigation revealed neoplasia, which was confirmed at autopsy.
Spermidine cytotoxicity in vitro: effect of serum and oxygen tension.
In vitro    March 1, 1984   Volume 20, Issue 3 Pt 1 198-204 doi: 10.1007/BF02618188
Hegre OD, Marshall S, Hickey GE.Plasma amine oxidase activities (benzylamine oxidase and spermine oxidase) were determined in the sera of a number of species of various ages. Benzylamine oxidase (BZO) activity, measured spectrophotometrically, was present in bovine, equine, and ovine species examined. Generally its activity in serum increased with the age of the animal. Spermine oxidase activity (SPO) was estimated by a bioassay of in vitro toxicity and did not necessarily correlate with BZO. Cytotoxicity in the presence of spermidine was found only in the sera of the ruminant species examined. Serum activity tended to rise ...
The pineal gland of the horse. Morphological and histochemical results. (With notes on the donkey and mule pineal).
Basic and applied histochemistry    January 1, 1984   Volume 28, Issue 1 81-90 
Cozzi B, Ferrandi B.The horse pineal gland has been investigated by morphological and histochemical methods. Particular care has been given to the cellular types, to the eventual presence of neurosecretory activity and to the nature of the pigments. Even in the horse pineal, it is possible to distinguish two populations of pinealocytes, morphologically but not histochemically distinct. A great number of pinealocytes are positive for the Masson- Hamperl reaction, and for Gomori- Bargmann 's chromic haematoxylin-phloxine and Gomori's paraldehyde-fuchsin. Along the connective septa, many brown- blackish pigmented ce...
[Structure and vascularization of the dental pulp in horse incisors].
Bulletin de l'Association des anatomistes    December 1, 1981   Volume 65, Issue 191 367-381 
Barasa A, Dazia S, Canavese B, Modica R.The dental pulp of 34 horses aged between 4 months and 20 years has been studied on India ink injected and on paraffin embedded specimens. The pulp dimensions of the first and especially of the second dentition decrease with age. This reduction is accompanied by pronounced changes of structure; the mucous connective tissue becomes a dense, irregular connective tissue. The vessels are numerous and make a network particularly rich at the margins of the pulp; they diminish with advancing age. The reduction of the pulp volume and the regression of its vascular network are particularly pronounced a...
Myxoma of the equine respiratory tract.
Modern veterinary practice    July 1, 1978   Volume 59, Issue 7 529-532 
Murphy JR, Breeze RG, McPherson EA.Bronchial myxoma occurred in an aged Arab mare with longstanding respiratory disease wrongly attributed to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Blood gas and maximum intrathoracic pressure change measurements were not consistent with this latter diagnosis, and this was supported by aerosol antigen provocation tests. Radiography demonstrated a hilar mass in the thorax, and this proved to be a myxoma at necropsy.
Epidural melanoma causing posterior paresis in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1977   Volume 170, Issue 12 1400-1403 
Traver DS, Moore JN, Thornburg LP, Johnson JH, Coffman JR.An aged gray stallion was examined because of fullminating posterior paresis, bladder paralysis, and perineal anesthesia. Lower motor neuron dysfunction was detected at the lumbosacral level of the spinal cord, and cerebrospinal fluid was yellow. After brief supportive treatment, the horse died. Necropsy revealed a single epidural melanoma at L5-6. The absence of cutaneous melanotic growth, absence of organ involvement, and extensive vertebral remodeling indicated the neoplasm to have been primary and to have been present for an extended period. Neurologic dysfunction was acute and progressive...
A comparative study of the mechanical properties in aging alveolar wall.
The American review of respiratory disease    June 1, 1977   Volume 115, Issue 6 981-988 doi: 10.1164/arrd.1977.115.6.981
Martin CJ, Chihara S, Chang DB.Alveolar wall from the lung of aging humans shows a progressive decrease in maximal extensibility, which should follow an increase in resting tissue length rather than a reduction in maximal length. An increase in resting tissue length is compatible with the change in lung volumes and reduction in elastic recoil that occurs with time. A model of the lung was used to compare the effects of a change in resting tissue length in diminishing elastic recoil with that of a reduction in the volume density of the elastic elements (emphysema). Such differentiation is important in selecting an animal tha...
Epidermoid cyst of the brain in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1976   Volume 8, Issue 3 110-112 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1976.tb03309.x
Kelly DF, Watson WJ.An aged Connemara mare had a neurological illness lasting 3 weeks and characterised by episodes of dullness, head-pressing, staggering gait and hyperexcitability. The signs recurred at intervals of 3 to 4 days, with intervening periods of apparent normality. Post-mortem examination revealed an epidermoid cyst on the dorsal surface of the occipital lobe of the left cerebral hemisphere. The cyst was lined by stratified squamous epithelium and contained desquamated keratinised material and blood. The lesion is considered to be a congenital malformation which enlarges and produces space-occupying ...
[Sexual function and aging in domestic animals – the horse and cattle].
Horumon to rinsho. Clinical endocrinology    May 1, 1975   Volume 23, Issue 5 419-423 
Yamauchi S.No abstract available
[Unilateral equine gait. Manifestation of senile alcoholic polyneuritis]. Graux P, Milbled G, Chevat H, Copin JM, Demonchaux J.No abstract available
Enzyme changes in ageing mammals.
Gerontologia    January 1, 1973   Volume 19, Issue 2 79-125 doi: 10.1159/000211964
Wilson PD.No abstract available
Proliferative Optic Neuropathy in Horses.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1972   Volume 9, Issue 5 368-378 doi: 10.1177/030098587200900507
Saunders LZ, Bistner SI, Rubin LF.An asymptomatic, ophthalmoscopically visible proliferation affected the optic disc and nerve of two aged horses. The lesion consisted of an accumulation of foamy cells, histologically akin to fat cells, which contained an unidentified lipid-like material. The affected area and its environs were permeated by tortuous, thickened blood vessels with heavy deposits of collagen in their walls. The neuropathy is considered to be a storage disease, and although the product stored is unidentified, the lesion is similar to that of human xanthelasma. The neuropathy seems distinct from the exudative optic...
Cesarean Section in an Aged Mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1963   Volume 143 591-592 
GRAFF AD.No abstract available
The longevity and mortality of thoroughbred mares.
Journal of gerontology    October 1, 1958   Volume 13, Issue 4 342-350 doi: 10.1093/geronj/13.4.342
COMFORT A.No abstract available