Analyze Diet

Topic:Animal Health

Animal Health encompasses a broad range of topics focused on maintaining and improving the well-being of equine species. This field addresses various aspects of horse care, including disease prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and management of health conditions. Key areas of interest include equine nutrition, vaccination protocols, parasite control, dental care, and the management of chronic conditions such as laminitis and colic. Additionally, animal health research in horses investigates the impact of exercise and training on physical health, the role of genetics in disease susceptibility, and the development of new therapeutic approaches. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the latest advancements, challenges, and best practices in preserving and enhancing the health of horses.
Ectoparasites: recent advances in control.
Trends in parasitology    February 8, 2002   Volume 18, Issue 2 55-56 doi: 10.1016/s1471-4922(01)02201-2
Coop RL, Taylor MA, Jacobs DE, Jackson F.No abstract available
Effect of pyruvate on the function of stallion spermatozoa stored for up to 48 hours.
Journal of animal science    February 8, 2002   Volume 80, Issue 1 12-18 doi: 10.2527/2002.80112x
Bruemmert JE, Coy RC, Squires EL, Graham JK.Stallion spermatozoa maintain high fertilizing capacity if cooled to 5 degrees C and inseminated within 24 h. However, if spermatozoa are stored for 48 h, fertilizing capacity declines. Therefore, multiple shipments of semen are often required to inseminate mares that remain in estrus for days. Therefore, experiments were designed to determine if adding antioxidants to stallion spermatozoa stored at 5 degrees C for 48 h could maintain motility and fertilizing ability. In the first experiment stallion spermatozoa were incubated in a skim milk (SM) or a skim milk-egg yolk medium in combination w...
Conditioning taste aversions to locoweed (Oxytropis sericea) in horses.
Journal of animal science    February 8, 2002   Volume 80, Issue 1 79-83 doi: 10.2527/2002.80179x
Pfister JA, Stegelmeier BL, Cheney CD, Ralphs MH, Gardner DR.Locoweed (Oxytropis sericea) is a serious poisoning problem for horses grazing on infested rangelands in the western United States. Our objectives were to determine 1) whether lithium chloride or apomorphine would condition aversions to palatable foods, and at what doses, and 2) whether horses could be averted to fresh locoweed in a pen and grazing situation. Apomorphine was not an acceptable aversive agent because at the dose required to condition an aversion (> or = 0.17 mg/kg BW), apomorphine induced unacceptable behavioral effects. Lithium chloride given via stomach tube at 190 mg/kg BW...
Identification of virulence attributes of gastrointestinal Escherichia coli isolates of veterinary significance.
Animal health research reviews    February 8, 2002   Volume 2, Issue 2 129-140 
DebRoy C, Maddox CW.The pathogenic strains of Escherichia coli recovered from the intestinal tract of animals fall into categories called enterotoxigenic, enteropathogenic, enterohemorrhagic and necrotoxigenic. The other two categories, enteroinvasive and enteroaggregative, have not been reported in animals. The pathogenicity of these strains is determined by the presence of certain genes that encode adhesins and toxins, are generally organized in large blocks in chromosomes, large plasmids or phages, and are often transmitted horizontally between strains. In this review, we summarize current knowledge of the vir...
Newer programs prove popular at AAEP convention. American Association of Equine Practitioners.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 7, 2002   Volume 220, Issue 3 280-284 
McLaughlin BG, DiVita LJ.No abstract available
Human nutritional supplements in the horse: comparative effects of 19-norandrostenedione and 19-norandrostenediol on the 19-norsteroid profile and consequences for doping control.
Journal of chromatography. B, Analytical technologies in the biomedical and life sciences    February 5, 2002   Volume 766, Issue 2 257-263 doi: 10.1016/s0378-4347(01)00506-0
Dehennin L, Bonnaire Y, Plou P.The dietary supplements 19-norandrostenedione and 19-norandrostenediol are potential metabolic precursors of nandrolone. They are considered by law in the United States as prohormones without proven therapeutic, curative or diagnostic properties, and therefore available as over-the-counter drugs. Oral dosages of 0.1-1 mg/kg body weight were readily absorbed in the equine intestinal tract and thereby led to urinary excretion of drastically increased 5alpha-estrane-3beta,17alpha-diol conjugates, which are known to be final metabolites of nandrolone. The actual rules for detection of illicit nand...
Urea as a measure of dilution of equine synovial fluid.
Equine veterinary journal    January 31, 2002   Volume 34, Issue 1 76-79 doi: 10.2746/042516402776181213
Gough MR, Munroe GA, Mayhew G.This paper tests the hypothesis that serum and synovial urea concentrations are similar and that urea concentration can be used as an accurate marker for synovial fluid dilution in normal equine joints. Serum and synovial fluid urea concentrations were compared in 42 horses and were equivalent for individual horses (P<0.0001). Mean +/- s.e. serum concentration was 6.1+/-0.552 mmol/l and synovial concentration 6.0+/-0.459 mmol/l. The normal range for synovial urea concentration was determined as 2.5-7.7 mmol/l. The synovial urea concentration from different synovial structures in individual hor...
Horse resistance to natural infestations of Anocentor nitens and Amblyomma cajennense (Acari: Ixodidae).
Veterinary parasitology    January 29, 2002   Volume 104, Issue 3 265-273 doi: 10.1016/s0304-4017(01)00625-2
Borges LM, Oliveira PR, Lisboa CL, Ribeiro MF.The objective of this study was to investigate some aspects of horse resistance to natural infestations of Anocentor nitens and Amblyomma cajennense over a 2-year period. Free-living stages of A. nitens were used to evaluate the influence of season of the year on horse resistance. Every 2 weeks, 10 selected engorged females, weighing 150-329 mg, were removed from naturally infested horses and were individually placed into glass tubes closed with a cotton stopper, and maintained in an incubator. The biological parameters evaluated varied according to the season of the year, i.e., reproductive e...
Suspected adverse reactions to veterinary drugs reported in South Africa (January 1998 – February 2001).
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    January 29, 2002   Volume 72, Issue 3 120-126 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v72i3.634
Gehring R.The Veterinary Pharmacovigilance Centre received 59 reports of suspected adverse drug reactions during the period January 1998 - February 2001. The number of reports received increased after the establishment of a formal procedure for recording and responding to reports. The number of reports received per species was: dogs 19, cats 15, cattle 7, sheep/ goats 6, chickens 4, pigs 3, horses 2 and giraffe 1. Many different types of adverse reactions were reported, including lack of efficacy, hypersensitivity, inappropriate use of products by non-veterinarians, known adverse effects and adverse eff...
Comparison of pregnancy outcome in mares among methods used to evaluate and select spermatozoa for insemination.
Animal reproduction science    January 29, 2002   Volume 69, Issue 3-4 211-222 doi: 10.1016/s0378-4320(01)00180-4
Nie GJ, Wenzel JG, Johnson KE.An artificial insemination dose for mares consisting of 500 million progressively motile spermatozoa is considered "standard" by most clinicians. However, little information is available directly comparing pregnancy outcome among methods of evaluating and selecting spermatozoa for insemination. The objective of this study was to determine if the method of spermatozoal evaluation and selection influences fertility as measured by pregnancy outcome. Mares were inseminated with 100 or 500 million spermatozoa that were selected for progressive motility, normal morphology, hypoosmotic swelling or ab...
Use of sterile maggots to treat panniculitis in an aged donkey.
The Veterinary record    January 26, 2002   Volume 149, Issue 25 768-770 
Bell NJ, Thomas S.An aged female donkey developed a severe, localised, suppurative panniculitis secondary to a skin wound. Bacterial culture of swabs taken from the wound gave a profuse growth of multi-drug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a profuse growth of Escherichia coli and a moderate growth of beta-haemolytic Streptococcus species. The lesion did not respond to conventional medical and surgical treatment and continued to progress. Six applications of sterile larvae (maggots) of the common greenbottle, Lucilia sericata, were used to debride the wound successfully.
[Smallpox and smallpox virus–200 years since the first vaccination in Norway].
Tidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke    January 26, 2002   Volume 121, Issue 30 3546-3550 
Tryland M.In December 1801, the first vaccination against smallpox in Norway took place. Vaccine material came from Denmark, England, Ireland, and other countries; it was also obtained from a few local cowpox cases. What mattered was the effect, not the origin. Several reports indicate that variola virus itself, the cause of smallpox, was also used for human vaccination after passages through cows and horses. A vaccine institute for production of vaccine in calves was established in Kristiania in 1891. Cowpox was once a rare disease in cattle, but a total of 70,985 bovine cases were reported between 188...
Mammalian lipocalin-type prostaglandin D2 synthase in the fluids of the male genital tract: putative biochemical and physiological functions.
Biology of reproduction    January 24, 2002   Volume 66, Issue 2 458-467 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod66.2.458
Fouchécourt S, Charpigny G, Reinaud P, Dumont P, Dacheux JL.Prostaglandin D2 synthase (PGDS) is a major epididymal secretory protein in several species. We quantified PGDS in ram and bull semen using a specific antiserum. Strong variations in PGDS concentration existed between animals. In the bull, the highest concentrations were found preferentially in animals with normal or high fertility, as was previously suggested. However, low concentrations were found in males with all ranges of fertility, suggesting that the function of PGDS either is not necessary for male fertility or can be assumed by other proteins when its concentration is low. In the ram ...
Isolation of influenza A virus from a 7-day-old foal with bronchointerstitial pneumonia.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 23, 2002   Volume 43, Issue 1 55-56 
Britton AP, Robinson JH.No abstract available
Rapid intrachain binding of histidine-26 and histidine-33 to heme in unfolded ferrocytochrome C.
Biochemistry    January 23, 2002   Volume 41, Issue 4 1372-1380 doi: 10.1021/bi011371a
Hagen SJ, Latypov RF, Dolgikh DA, Roder H.Time-resolved spectroscopic studies of unfolded horse iron(II) cytochrome c have suggested that the imidazole side chains of His26 and His33 bind transiently to the heme iron on microsecond time scales, after photodissociation of a carbon monoxide ligand from the heme. Our studies of four variants of cytochrome c (horse wild type, horse H33N, horse H33N/H26Q, and tuna wild type), unfolded in guanidine hydrochloride at pH 6.5, demonstrate that these side chains are responsible for the observed microsecond spectral changes. As His33 and then His26 are eliminated from the horse wild-type sequence...
Loading the problem loader: the effects of target training and shaping on trailer-loading behavior of horses.
Journal of applied behavior analysis    January 22, 2002   Volume 34, Issue 4 409-423 doi: 10.1901/jaba.2001.34-409
Ferguson DL, Rosales-Ruiz J.The purpose of this study was to develop an effective method for trailer loading horses based on principles of positive reinforcement. Target training and shaping were used to teach trailer-loading behavior to 5 quarter horse mares in a natural setting. All 5 had been trailer loaded before through the use of aversive stimulation. Successive approximations to loading and inappropriate behaviors were the dependent variables. After training a horse to approach a target, the target was moved to various locations inside the trailer. Horses started training on the left side of a two-horse trailer. A...
Experimental infection of horses with West Nile virus and their potential to infect mosquitoes and serve as amplifying hosts.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    January 19, 2002   Volume 951 338-339 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2001.tb02712.x
Bunning ML, Bowen RA, Cropp B, Sullivan K, Davis B, Komar N, Godsey M, Baker D, Hettler D, Holmes D, Mitchell CJ.No abstract available
Effects of repeated atropine injection on heart rate variability in Thoroughbred horses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    January 16, 2002   Volume 63, Issue 12 1359-1360 doi: 10.1292/jvms.63.1359
Ohmura H, Hiraga A, Aida H, Kuwahara M, Tsubone H.To investigate the effects of repeated atropine injection on heart rate (HR) variability in resting Thoroughbred horses, two microg/ kg of atropine as parasympathetic nervous blockade was injected intravenously every 6 min to a total of 8 microg/kg after intravenous administration of 0.2 mg/kg of propranolol as sympathetic nervous blockade. We recorded electrocardiograms and obtained the HR, then evaluated variation in HR from the power spectrum in terms of low frequency (LF, 0.01-0.07 Hz) power and high frequency (HF, 0.07-0.6 Hz) power. Administration of atropine decreased parasympathetic ne...
Diagnosis of Mycobacterium bovis infection in a mare.
The Veterinary record    January 15, 2002   Volume 149, Issue 23 712-714 
Monreal L, Segura D, Segalés J, Garrido JM, Prades M.No abstract available
In vitro microelectrode study of the electrical properties of smooth muscle in equine ileum.
The Veterinary record    January 15, 2002   Volume 149, Issue 23 707-711 
Hudson NP, Mayhew IG, Pearson GT.Intracellular microelectrode recordings were made from smooth muscle cells in cross-sectional preparations of equine ileum, superfused in vitro. Membrane potential oscillations and spike potentials were recorded in all preparations, but recordings were made more readily from cells in the longitudinal muscle layer than from cells in the circular layer. The mean (se) resting membrane potential (RMP) of smooth muscle cells in the longitudinal muscle layer was -51.9 (1.2) mV, and the membrane potential oscillations in this layer had a mean amplitude of 4.8 (0.4) mV, a frequency of 9.0 (0.1) cycles...
[Eight polymorphic blood protein systems in Arab horses from Turkey].
Genetika    January 12, 2002   Volume 37, Issue 12 1667-1672 
Uzun M, Karkhan A, Kopar A.Analysis of the blood protein system was used to study the genetic composition of Arabian horses. Biochemical markers of eight polymorphic loci (Tf, Al, Es, AlB, Gc, Hb, PGD, and PGM) were electrophoretically identified in blood samples. A total of 43 phenotypes were identified for these polymorphic systems. The Tf, Hb, and Es loci appeared to be more polymorphic than the other loci studied. Statistically significant differences between the observed and expected genotypic frequencies were found for the PGD and PGM loci (P < 0.05 and P < 0.01, respectively). Individual allele frequencies,...
Damper for bad vibrations.
Nature    January 10, 2002   Volume 414, Issue 6866 855-857 doi: 10.1038/414855a
Alexander RM.This research presents the hypothesis and findings that short muscle fibers in horses and other large mammals may protect bones and tendons from damaging vibrations during running, negating the previous […]
Fescue toxicosis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 567-577 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30052-4
Blodgett DJ.Most of the tall fescue pastures in the United States are infected by an endophyte, N. coenophialum. The fungus derives nutrients from the plant while supplying the plant with toxins for defense. The most detrimental toxins for animals in tall fescue are ergopeptine alkaloids, especially ergovaline. Ergovaline functions as a dopamine D2 agonist and alters prolactin and several other hormones in the body. Pregnant mares are most susceptible during their last month of gestation. Clinical signs include prolonged gestation, dystocia, retained placentas, agalactia, and dysmature foals that are eith...
Mycotoxins.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 547-viii doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30051-2
Osweiler GD.Horses consume feed grains and forages that can produce a range of mycotoxins resulting from mold invasion. Toxicosis of horses often occurs from fumonisins or aflatoxin in grains, from the tremorgenic mycotoxins in dallis grass, or from slaframine in red clover. Fumonisin toxicosis often is severe and fatal, and aflatoxin can be acute or chronic and debilitating. Other mycotoxins reported in horses may cause moderate to mild signs that regress when the contaminated feedstuff is removed. Overall, horses appear to have a relatively low prevalence of reported mycotoxicoses among domestic animals...
Toxic plants. What the horse practitioner needs to know.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 529-546 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30050-0
Barr AC, Reagor JC.Horses poisoned by a plant may show a myriad of clinical signs. Awareness of the poisonous plants growing in a given area and those that are likely to appear in hay and their associated clinical signs can be instrumental in making diagnoses. More importantly, the information can be shared with clients to help prevent plant poisonings in horses.
Risks associated with the use of herbs and other dietary supplements.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 455-vii doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30045-7
Poppenga RH.The use of dietary supplements (herbs, vitamins, minerals, amino acids, enzymes, and other compounds) is common in horses. They are heavily marketed in retail stores, magazines, and on the Internet. There is the perception that since these compounds are "natural" they are devoid of toxicity, and, therefore, they are safe to use. Some of the active compounds in supplements, however, have inherent toxicity, and using them may cause adverse effects. Even relatively non-toxic ingredients may be toxic if used over-zealously or for a long period of time. By and large, these compounds have not been t...
Subchondral bone thickness, hardness and remodelling are influenced by short-term exercise in a site-specific manner.
Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society    January 10, 2002   Volume 19, Issue 6 1035-1042 doi: 10.1016/S0736-0266(01)00027-4
Murray RC, Vedi S, Birch HL, Lakhani KH, Goodship AE.It was hypothesised that subchondral bone thickness, hardness and remodelling are influenced by exercise intensity, and by location within a joint. Dorsal carpal osteochondral injury is a major cause of lameness in horses undergoing high intensity training. This project aimed to determine the subchondral bone thickness, formation, resorption and hardness at sites with high and low incidence of pathology in 2 year-old horses undergoing 19 weeks high intensity treadmill training or low intensity exercise, and to compare these factors between exercise groups. Dorsal and palmar test sites were ide...
Horses damp the spring in their step.
Nature    January 10, 2002   Volume 414, Issue 6866 895-899 doi: 10.1038/414895a
Wilson AM, McGuigan MP, Su A, van Den Bogert AJ.The muscular work of galloping in horses is halved by storing and returning elastic strain energy in spring-like muscle-tendon units.These make the legs act like a child's pogo stick that is tuned to stretch and recoil at 2.5 strides per second. This mechanism is optimized by unique musculoskeletal adaptations: the digital flexor muscles have extremely short fibres and significant passive properties, whereas the tendons are very long and span several joints. Length change occurs by a stretching of the spring-like digital flexor tendons rather than through energetically expensive length changes...
Botulism in the horse.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 579-588 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30053-6
Galey FD.Botulism should be considered in cases where weakness, paralysis, or intolerance to exercise might be seen in the horse. Dysphagia may also be present, although it is not a consistent finding. Potential sources include carrion in hay, moldy or otherwise rotted vegetation or forage, birds carrying material from animal burial or other similar sites, and contaminated carcasses on-site. Horses, especially foals, may also suffer from toxicoinfectious botulism, a condition where the C. botulinum might colonize and produce toxin within the gastrointestinal tract. Wounds also may harbor the organism a...
Adequacy of a concentrated equine serum product in preventing failure of immune passive transfer in neonatal foals: preliminary study.
Equine veterinary journal    January 5, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 7 734-736 doi: 10.2746/042516401776249345
Hammer CJ, Booth JA, Etzel L, Tyler HD.No abstract available