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Topic:Anatomy

Anatomy in horses encompasses the study of the structural organization of the equine body, including the bones, muscles, organs, and systems that function together to sustain life and enable movement. Understanding equine anatomy is important for veterinarians, equine scientists, and horse owners, as it provides insights into how horses move, how they respond to external stimuli, and how various conditions can affect their health and performance. Key anatomical features in horses include the musculoskeletal system, which provides support and locomotion; the cardiovascular system, which circulates blood and nutrients; and the respiratory system, which facilitates gas exchange. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the detailed anatomy of horses, focusing on the structure and function of different body systems, their interrelationships, and their relevance to equine health, performance, and veterinary care.
Effect of intestinal distention on local blood flow.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 2 307 
Freeman DE.No abstract available
Preparation and characterization of monoclonal antibodies against equine chondrocytes, osteoblasts and osteocytes.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    February 1, 1994   Volume 41, Issue 1 31-36 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1994.tb00062.x
Katayama Y, Oikawa M, Kaneko M, Yoshihara T, Yoshikawa H, Yoshikawa T.Three monoclonal antibodies capable of individually recognizing chondrocytes, osteoblasts and osteocytes were prepared. EB-1 reacted with a 55-kDa antigen on the chondrocyte membrane, EB-2 with a 110-kDa antigen on the membrane of osteoblasts and/or partial osteocytes, and EB-3 with a 130-kDa antigen on the membrane of osteocytes. These monoclonal antibodies may be useful probes for studying the differentiation and maturation of osteogenic cells.
Enterolithiasis in two zebras.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 3 430-432 
McD○ LA, Dart AJ, Schiffman P, Parrot JJ.Enterolithiasis, as a cause of colic, was diagnosed and treated during surgical intervention in 2 Grant's zebras (Equus burchelli bohmi). The zebras were part of a wild herd in a zoo in the western United States. The clinical signs of enterolithiasis in both zebras were similar to those reported for horses. Analysis of the enterolith from 1 zebra revealed a composition identical to enteroliths that have been analyzed from horses. Three other zebras from this herd had enteroliths at necropsy. Enterolithiasis should be considered as a differential diagnosis for zebras with low-grade obstructive ...
Effect of oxytetracycline on metacarpophalangeal and distal interphalangeal joint angles in newborn foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 15, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 2 246-249 
Madison JB, Garber JL, Rice B, Stumf AJ, Zimmer AE, Ott EA.Thirty-five newborn foals were assigned to 1 of 3 groups and treated with 0.9% NaCl solution (saline; group 1; n = 12), oxytetracycline (44 mg/kg of body weight; group 2; n = 12), or 2-pyrrolidone (oxytetracycline vehicle; group 3; n = 11) in saline solution during the first 36 hours after birth. Serum biochemical analyses were performed on samples obtained from group-1 and group-2 foals before treatment and 24 and 96 hours after treatment. Lateral to medial radiographic views of the forelimbs were obtained before treatment and 24 and 96 hours after treatment in all foals. Metacarpophalangeal ...
Frequency and morpho-structural organization of the thyroid gland isthmus in horses, donkeys and small ruminants.
Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale    January 1, 1994   Volume 70, Issue 1-2 1-4 
Zedda M, Acone F, Bo Minelli L, Sanna L.No abstract available
Natural outcome and ultrasonic identification of equine fetal twins.
Theriogenology    January 1, 1994   Volume 41, Issue 5 1193-1199 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(05)80041-x
Ginther OJ, Griffin PG.The natural outcome of bilateral twins (one in each uterine horn) that were viable on Day 40 was studied in 15 pony mares. Fetuses were monitored by transrectal ultrasonography until the outcome was determinable. One fetus (2 mares) or both fetuses (8 mares) died (cessation of heartbeats) during Months 2 and 3. Loss of fetuses was externally observed in 4 additional mares during the late fetal stage (Months 8 to 11); 2 mares lost 1 fetus and 2 lost both fetuses. Birth of 2 live foals occurred in only 1 of 15 mares (7%) First day of detected apposition between portions of the 2 allantochorions ...
Ameloblastomas in the horse: a critical review and report of an additional example. Gardner DG.Previously published cases of ameloblastoma in the horse are reviewed in detail for their acceptability as examples of that tumor; an additional one is described. So far, this rare equine lesion has been shown to have two histologic patterns. The first consists of islands and sheets of epithelium that exhibit the basal cell characteristics of ameloblastoma; the central cells comprise stellate reticulum. The second exhibits these basal cell features less markedly and the central cells are spindle-shaped and closely packed. The biologic behavior of the equine ameloblastoma is thought to be the s...
[Pathology of cardiac ventricular aneurysms in the horse].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1994   Volume 136, Issue 2 76-80 
Guarda F, Rattazzi C.The authors describe pathologic and histopathologic findings of three cardiac aneurysms in horses, two of which in the left ventricle and one in the right ventricle. The aneurysms were always associated with multiple foci of myocardiac fibrosis. A hypothesis concerning histogenesis of the lesion is formulated.
Measurements of urethral pressure profiles in the male horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 1 55-58 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1994.tb04332.x
Ronen N.Urinary tract pressure profiles were evaluated in 6 clinically normal geldings over 3 consecutive days. This was performed by introducing a 1.3 m-long cuffed catheter into the urinary tract, under xylazine sedation (0.8 mg/kg, iv). The method was reproducible. The mean (+/- sd) intra-vesicular pressure (IVP) and maximal urethral closure pressures (MUCP) were 10.3 (+/- 1.7) and 129.8 (+/- 19.6) cmH2O, respectively, and the ratio between MUCP and IVP was 13.2 (+/- 2.5). A gelding with urinary incontinence showed a significantly lower MUCP (73.4 cmH2O), and an MUCP to IVP ratio of 8.0. It was con...
Cystic adenomatous hyperplasia of the equine allantois: a report of eight cases. Shivaprasad HL, Sundberg JP, McEntee K, Gordon L, Johnstone AC, Lombardo de Barros CS, Hoffman RL.No abstract available
What is your diagnosis? Radiographic diagnosis–dorsal subluxation of cervical vertebrae 2 and 3.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 1 47-48 
Nelson KM, Scarratt WK, Moon ML, Robertson JL.No abstract available
[The discovery of a horse skeleton from the 17th century in Kiesen in Bern canton].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1994   Volume 136, Issue 1 4-8 
Imhof U.In 1968 a skeleton of a horse was found in Kiesen (Switzerland). This discovery could be dated by radiocarbon method: According to that this 13 years old gelding with a withers-height of 135 to 140 cm must have lived during the first third of the 17th century. Apparently it died by an accident. The bones are fully documented with pictures and scales and the findings described and discussed in detail.
Solitary osteochondroma of the nasal bone in a horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1994   Volume 84, Issue 1 25-31 
Adair HS, Duncan RB, Toal RL.A 3-year-old Appaloosa stallion with a 4 cm x 4 cm x 2.5 cm mass protruding from his nasal bone was evaluated. Radiographs revealed an osseous mass, with a radiopaque outer margin and several radiolucent areas within the body of the mass. The mass was surgically removed and evaluated histopathologically. The histopathological diagnosis was osteochondroma. This case represent the first reported occurrence of an osteochondroma arising from intramembraneous bone in the horse.
[Ultrasonography of ovarian pathology in the mare: a review for the practitioner].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1994   Volume 136, Issue 9 285-291 
Montavon S.The aim of this review is to give the practitioner the ability to be familiar with the echographic exam of ovarian abnormalities. He should be able to recognize different stages of the development of these important structures and to estimate the effect that they can have on the normal cycle of the mare. Various specific criteria and details regarding the equine echography of ovarian abnormalities are reported and illustrated, using the last scientific data published on that particular topic.
[Ultrasonography of the formation and development of the corpus luteum in the mare: review for the practitioner].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1994   Volume 136, Issue 3 91-94 
Montavon S.Because of the anatomical position of the Corpus luteum within the ovary, rectal palpation is of little value for identification and evaluation. The aim of this review is to familiarize the practitioner with the echographic examination of the Cl. He should be able to recognize different stages of this important structure and to correlate ovulation and the existence of the Cl. Various specific criteria and details regarding equine echography are reported and illustrated, using the the most recently published scientific data.
Equine fetal kinetics: entry and retention of fetal hind limbs in a uterine horn.
Theriogenology    January 1, 1994   Volume 41, Issue 4 795-807 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(94)90496-6
Ginther OJ, Williams D, Curran S.Transrectal ultrasonic examinations were made in 31 pregnant pony mares once a week during Months 6 to 11. Each uterine horn was divided into 3 approximately equal segments (caudal, middle, cranial). The percentage of examinations with cranial fetal presentation increased (P<0.05) progressively from 58% at Month 6 to 99% at Month 9 and was followed in all mares by entry of the fetal hind limbs into one uterine horn. The mean number of uterinehorn segments with limb parts increased (P<0.05) between each set of consecutive months from Month 6 to Month 10. Initially (Months 7 and 8), retrac...
Respiratory mechanics of the horse during the first year of life.
Respiration physiology    January 1, 1994   Volume 95, Issue 1 21-41 doi: 10.1016/0034-5687(94)90045-0
Koterba AM, Wozniak JA, Kosch PC.This study investigated the developmental changes in the mechanical properties of the respiratory system in growing horses. Pulmonary mechanics and lung volumes were serially measured in anesthetized foals during the first year of life. Quasi-static pressure-volume curves were generated, and functional residual capacity (FRC) was measured using a closed nitrogen equilibration technique. At birth, chest wall compliance normalized to body weight was substantially less than that reported in other less precocious newborn species, while lung compliance normalized to body weight was similar to value...
Idiopathic peripheral neuropathy in a horse with knuckling.
Acta neuropathologica    January 1, 1994   Volume 88, Issue 4 389-393 doi: 10.1007/BF00310385
Furuoka H, Mizushima M, Miyazawa K, Matsui T.We report the pathological findings of the skeletal muscle and peripheral nerves from a male 14-months-old thoroughbred horse showing idiopathic knuckling. The affected animal, when in staining position, presented knuckling at the fetlock joint of both forelegs, and dragged both fore- and hindlegs when attempting forward movement. The skeletal muscles demonstrated neurogenic atrophy characterized by the scattering of single angular fibers, groups consisting of five to ten angular fibers, and multiple fascicles of atrophic and hypertrophic fibers. The severity of changes tended to be a distal g...
Ultrasonographic assessment of the proximal digital annular ligament in the equine forelimb.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 1 59-64 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1994.tb04333.x
Dik KJ, Boroffka S, Stolk P.Ultrasonography was used with 6 normal cadaver forelimbs of Dutch Warmblood horses to delineate the ultrasonographic anatomy of the palmar pastern region, with emphasis on the proximal digital annular ligament. Using a 5.5 MHz sector scanner, the thin proximal digital annular ligament was not visible on offset sonograms. Only if the digital sheath in the normal limb was distended was the distal border of this ligament outlined. In all normal limbs the palmarodistal thickness of the combined skin-proximal digital annular ligament layer in the mid-pastern region was 2 mm. The flexor tendons and ...
Inhibitory nerve distribution and mediation of NANC relaxation by nitric oxide in horse airways.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    January 1, 1994   Volume 76, Issue 1 339-344 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1994.76.1.339
Yu M, Wang Z, Robinson NE, Leblanc PH.The distribution of inhibitory nerves and the mediator of the inhibitory nonadrenergic noncholinergic (iN-ANC) nervous system were investigated in smooth muscle preparations from seven regions of equine airways. In tissues incubated with atropine and precontracted with histamine, electrical field stimulation produced frequency-dependent relaxation, and the magnitude of the relaxation decreased from trachea to central bronchi and was absent in peripheral airways. The degree of relaxation in bronchi was not simply a function of bronchial size or generation. Propranolol inhibited part of the rela...
Assessment of vertebral canal diameter and bony malformations of the cervical part of the spine in horses with cervical stenotic myelopathy.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 1 5-13 
Moore BR, Reed SM, Biller DS, Kohn CW, Weisbrode SE.Magnification of cervical radiographs prevents accurate interpretation of vertebral canal absolute minimum sagittal diameter (MSD) values and application of the established MSD values for diagnosis of cervical stenotic myelopathy (CSM). Variability in MSD determination in human beings, owing to radiographic magnification, is minimized by assessing a ratio of the vertebral canal diameter to the sagittal width of the vertebral body. This relative measurement technique improves the accuracy of diagnosis of cervical spinal stenosis in human beings. The MSD of the vertebral canal was determined in ...
The relationship of daily sperm production with number of Sertoli cells and testicular size in adult horses: role of primitive spermatogonia.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    January 1, 1994   Volume 100, Issue 1 315-321 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1000315
Johnson L, Carter GK, Varner DD, Taylor TS, Blanchard TL, Rembert MS.The number of Sertoli cells is important in spermatogenesis as noted by significant correlations between the number of Sertoli cells and the number of germ cells observed as early as type B2 spermatogonia in the horse. However, the stage within spermatocytogenesis at which these relationships first occur is unclear. The relationships between the number of Sertoli cells and parenchymal weight and the number of germ cells during the mitosis of spermatogenesis were determined in 184 adult horses to identify the developmental stage (that is, the earliest germ cell) at which significant relationshi...
Ultrastructure of the epithelium that lines the ductuli efferentes in domestic equidae, with particular reference to spermatophagy.
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1994   Volume 149, Issue 3 174-184 doi: 10.1159/000147574
Arrighi S, Romanello MG, Domeneghini C.The epithelium that lines the ductuli efferentes in the horse, donkey and mule has been examined by electron microscopy. The epithelium consists of columnar ciliated and non-ciliated cells. Lymphocytes and macrophages are also present, together with cells that are rich in lipofuscin. These 'lipofuscin-rich' cells are a peculiar feature of the excurrent ducts of Equidae and are characterized by a large number of highly heterogeneous residual bodies. The general morphology of the epithelium and, in particular, of the non-ciliated cells implies that the epithelium is involved in the absorption an...
Histochemical and morphometric study of the cricoarytenoideus lateralis muscle in the horse.
Histology and histopathology    January 1, 1994   Volume 9, Issue 1 141-148 
López-Plana C, Sautet JY, Ruberte J, Sabaté D.Histochemical and morphometric parameters of the cricoarytenoideus lateralis muscle of the horse are presented. Using myosin ATPase staining after acid preincubation, 3 fibre types (I, IIA and IIC) were identified. Using NADH-TR staining, type I fibres showed high oxidative capacity, whereas type II fibres had high or low oxidative capacity. The type I to type II ratio was of 35:65. This ratio remained constant in the age range examined. Statistically significant (p < 0.01) differences were found in values for fibre size between groups of horses weighing more than 500 kg and less than 400 k...
Substance P immunohistochemical study of the sensory innervation of normal subchondral bone in the equine metacarpophalangeal joint.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 1 28-33 
Nixon AJ, Cummings JF.Serial sections of bone and soft tissue from the metacarpophalangeal joints of 2 mature and 2 immature horses were evaluated for substance P immunoreactive sensory nerve fibers. Formalin-fixed specimens were sectioned, either nondemineralized or demineralized with formic acid or EDTA. Rabbit antiserum to substance P (SP) was used in the streptavidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method for immunolocalization of SP antigen, and staining with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine was used for permanent identification of SP fibers. Abundant sensory nerve fibers were identified in the joint capsule, synovial membrane...
[The former place of execution of the Lucerne herd in Emmen (1562-1798)(1562-1798) and slaughter yard belonging to it (1562-1866): pathologico-anatomic findings in excavated animal bones].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1994   Volume 136, Issue 1 24-37 
Häni H, Lang J, Ueltschi G.During archaeological excavations of the former knackers yard in Emmen (Canton Lucerne) skeletons and individual bones of more than 700 animals were recovered. 110 bone samples had lesions and were examined macroscopically and radiologically, 100 were from horses, 9 from dogs and only one from cattle. According to morphological and etiopathogenetical criteria, lesions are presented in the following groups: tooth irregularities (10), degenerative changes in bones and joints due to overload and aging (80), trauma and infection (10), other lesions (10). Over 80% of pathological bone samples prese...
Substance P innervation of equine synovial membranes: joint differences and neural and nonneural receptor localizations.
Neuroscience letters    December 24, 1993   Volume 164, Issue 1-2 76-80 doi: 10.1016/0304-3940(93)90861-e
Bowker RM, Sonea IM, Vex KB, Caron JP.Substance P (SP) immunocytochemistry and receptor autoradiography were used to define the innervation of the equine synovial membrane of joints equivalent to the wrist and knuckle of man. SP-immunoreactive fibers were mainly concentrated around blood vessels in the subsynovial layer, although not exclusively, while in the more distal joint, SP fibers were more frequently seen in the synovial surface layer. Iodinated SP receptor autoradiography studies revealed silver grain concentrations in the advential layer of blood vessels associated with the vasa vasorum, on the vascular endothelium and i...
Immunocytochemical and dye distribution studies of nerves potentially desensitized by injections into the distal interphalangeal joint or the navicular bursa of horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1993   Volume 203, Issue 12 1708-1714 
Bowker RM, Rockershouser SJ, Vex KB, Sonea IM, Caron JP, Kotyk R.To determine whether the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joint directly or indirectly communicates with the navicular bursa (bursa podotrochlearis) and to identify sensory nerves in these synovial structures that might be desensitized by intra-articular injections of anesthetics, Evans blue dye in physiologic saline solution, Luxol fast blue dye with mepivicaine, or commercial latex was injected into the DIP joint (5 ml) or the navicular bursa (3 ml) of 152 digits obtained from horses or ponies at necropsy. The digits were frozen, cut with a band saw, and examined for distribution of dye or latex...
Ischemia/reperfusion injury of the ascending colon in ponies: a correlative study utilizing microvascular histopathology and corrosion casting.
Scanning microscopy    December 1, 1993   Volume 7, Issue 4 1311-1320 
Darien BJ, Sims PA, Stone WC, Schilly DR, Dubielzig RR, Albrecht RM.Volvulus of the ascending colon (ACV) in the horse results in microvascular injury and necrosis of the intestinal mucosa. This study investigated the site and type of microvascular injury which occurs within the mucosa and submucosa following ACV. Histopathology of volvulus treated ponies demonstrated mucosal necrosis with microvascular hemorrhage and thrombosis. Thrombi occurred within the subepithelial capillaries and edema and hemorrhage developed throughout the mucosa and submucosa. Vascular casts allowed 3-D viewing of samples obtained from the entire pelvic flexure and demonstrated two d...
Sonographic brightness of the flexor tendons and ligaments in the metacarpal region of horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 12 1969-1974 
Wood AK, Sehgal CM, Polansky M.Sonographic observations were made of the image mean gray scale (MGS) of the flexor tendons and ligaments in the left and right metacarpal regions of each of 10 clinically normal horses. In images made in the dorsal and sagittal planes, the MGS was measured at multiple sites in the superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT), deep digital flexor tendon (DDFT), accessory ligament (AL), and suspensory ligament (SL), and at single sites in the medial and lateral limbs of the SL, and the palmar ligament. Relative sonographic brightness of each tendon and ligament was calculated by dividing the value ...