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.
Copper status and skeletal development in horses: still a long way to go.
Equine veterinary journal    June 11, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 3 183-185 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04485.x
Jeffcott LB, Davies ME.No abstract available
L-NAME does not affect exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension in thoroughbred horses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    June 11, 1998   Volume 84, Issue 6 1902-1908 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1998.84.6.1902
Manohar M, Goetz TE.The present study was carried out to examine the effects of nitric oxide synthase inhibition with Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) on the right atrial as well as on the pulmonary arterial, capillary, and venous blood pressures of horses during rest and exercise performed at maximal heart rate (HRmax). Experiments were carried out on seven healthy, sound, exercise-trained Thoroughbred horses. Using catheter-tip manometers, with signals referenced at the point of the shoulder, we determined phasic and mean right atrial and pulmonary vascular pressures in two sets of experiments [con...
Quantitative assessment of motor neuron loss in equine motor neuron disease (EMND).
Equine veterinary journal    June 11, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 3 256-259 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04497.x
Weber Polack E, King JM, Cummings JF, de Lahunta A, Divers TJ, Mohammed HO.The mean number of motor neurons was assessed in the C7 spinal cord segment of 5 EMND and 5 control horses. Mean number per section in EMND horses was reduced significantly (P<0.001). The mean neuronal loss was estimated at 31%. Each of the 5 affected horses had a mean neuronal count below the 95% confidence interval for control horses. The statistically significant difference between the 2 groups was consistent in the cranial, middle and caudal thirds of the C7 segment (P<0.001). The results of regression analysis indicated an association between neuronal reduction in EMND horses and th...
Effect of copper supplementation on the copper status of pasture-fed young Thoroughbreds.
Equine veterinary journal    June 11, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 3 204-210 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04489.x
Pearce SG, Grace ND, Firth EC, Wichtel JJ, Holle SA, Fennessy PF.The effect of copper supplementation of pasture fed mares and foals on the copper status of the foals, in terms of plasma, soft tissue and bone copper concentrations and caeruloplasmin activity, was investigated. Twenty-one Thoroughbred foals from either control mares (n = 9), or copper-supplemented mares (n = 12) were divided randomly into control (pasture only, n = 10) or supplemented (pasture and oral copper sulphate, n = 11) groups. The pasture diet was grazed by all animals, and contained 4.4-8.6 mg Cu/kg dry matter (DM). The copper supplement for the mares contained copper sulphate equiv...
Production and characterization of Ehrlichia risticii, the agent of Potomac horse fever, from snails (Pleuroceridae: Juga spp.) in aquarium culture and genetic comparison to equine strains.
Journal of clinical microbiology    June 10, 1998   Volume 36, Issue 6 1501-1511 doi: 10.1128/JCM.36.6.1501-1511.1998
Reubel GH, Barlough JE, Madigan JE.We report on the production and characterization of Ehrlichia risticii, the agent of Potomac horse fever (PHF), from snails (Pleuroceridae: Juga spp.) maintained in aquarium culture and compare it genetically to equine strains. Snails were collected from stream waters on a pasture in Siskiyou County, Calif., where PHF is enzootic and were maintained for several weeks in freshwater aquaria in the laboratory. Upon exposure to temperatures above 22 degrees C the snails released trematode cercariae tentatively identified as virgulate cercariae. Fragments of three different genes (genes for 16S rRN...
Equine Embryo Transfer IV. Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Equine Embryo Transfer. Reims, France, 16-18 January 1997.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    June 6, 1998   Issue 25 6-112 
No abstract available
A conserved structural element in horse and mouse IGF2 genes binds a methylation sensitive factor.
Nucleic acids research    May 30, 1998   Volume 26, Issue 7 1605-1612 doi: 10.1093/nar/26.7.1605
Otte K, Choudhury D, Charalambous M, Engström W, Rozell B.The equine IGF2 gene has been cloned and characterised. It spans a 9 kb region, which is substantially less than the corresponding human gene. Three coding exons and three untranslated leader exons, all highly homologous to those in other species, were identified. Downstream of the polyadenylation site in exon 6, a dinucleotide repeat sequence was identified. Three putative promoters (P1-P3) were localised in the 5' region of the gene. RNase protection analysis revealed two active promoters in fetal tissues, P2 and P3, whereas P3 was the only promoter active in adult tissues. This represents a...
Contribution of K+ channels and ouabain-sensitive mechanisms to the endothelium-dependent relaxations of horse penile small arteries.
British journal of pharmacology    May 30, 1998   Volume 123, Issue 8 1609-1620 doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701780
Prieto D, Simonsen U, Hernández M, García-Sacristán A.1. Penile small arteries (effective internal lumen diameter of 300 600 microm) were isolated from the horse corpus cavernosum and mounted in microvascular myographs in order to investigate the mechanisms underlying the endothelium-dependent relaxations to acetylcholine (ACh) and bradykinin (BK). 2. In arteries preconstricted with the thromboxane analogue U46619 (3-30 nM), ACh and BK elicited concentration-dependent relaxations, pD2 and maximal responses being 7.71+/-0.09 and 91+/-1 % (n=23), and 8.80+/-0.07 and 89+/-2% (n=24) for ACh and BK, respectively. These relaxations were abolished by me...
Aorto-iliac thrombosis in a foal.
The Veterinary record    May 29, 1998   Volume 142, Issue 17 459-462 doi: 10.1136/vr.142.17.459
Moore LA, Johnson PJ, Bailey KL.A six-day-old Missouri foxtrotter colt was examined because it had had diarrhoea since it was 24 hours old. A diagnosis of colitis, septicaemia, and disruption of the arterial blood flow to the pelvic limbs was made on the basis of clinical and laboratory findings. Despite intensive medical therapy, the foal died 13 hours after being examined. Postmortem examination revealed diffuse fibrinous enteritis with lymphoid necrosis, multifocal fibrinonecrotic typhlocolitis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and a large occluding thrombus at the aortic termination. The results of bacteriological...
[Reproduction in horses: contagious equine endometritis (CEM)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    May 23, 1998   Volume 123, Issue 2 51 
Hesselink JW.No abstract available
The regulation of drugs and medicines in horse racing in the United States. The Association of Racing Commissioners International Uniform Classification of Foreign Substances Guidelines.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    May 23, 1998   Volume 21, Issue 2 145-153 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2885.1998.00115.x
Short CR, Sams RA, Soma LR, Tobin T.The primary reason for developing the ARCI Uniform Classification of Foreign Substances was to give stewards and other racing regulators guidelines to assist them in understanding the relative performance effects and general offensiveness to the Rules of Racing of various drugs and medications. As such, these guidelines have been very useful in the world of racing regulation--officially or unofficially--because this classification system, for the first time, places a relative number on the inappropriateness of any one of more than 750 agents appearing in forensic samples taken from racing hors...
Cumulus expansion, chromatin configuration and meiotic competence in horse oocytes: a new hypothesis.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 21, 1998   Issue 25 43-46 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb05098.x
Hinrichs K.When recovered from the follicle, horse oocytes may be categorised as having either a compact or an expanded cumulus. Cumulus expansion is strongly associated with follicle atresia. Oocytes with expanded and compact cumuli have similar proportions in the germinal vesicle stage when recovered from the follicle. However, during in vitro culture, a higher proportion of oocytes with expanded cumuli mature, and they do so more quickly, than do oocytes with compact cumuli. Using Hoechst 33258 to label chromatin, in the germinal-vesicle stage horse oocytes can be divided into those in which the nucle...
Treatment of equine oocytes with A23187 after intracytoplasmic sperm injection.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 21, 1998   Issue 25 51-53 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb05100.x
Kato H, Seidel GE, Squires EL, Wilson JM.In vitro matured horse oocytes with a first polar body (n = 68) were each injected with a single spermatozoon and divided into 2 groups: Group 1 oocytes were treated with 10 microM calcium ionophore A23187 for 5 min while Group 2 oocytes received no activation treatment. After culture in vitro for 2 days, significantly more oocytes treated with A23187 (5/24, 21%) cleaved than oocytes without activation treatment (2/44, 5%, P<0.05). All 7 cleaved zygotes from both treatment groups were transferred to recipient mares but no pregnancies resulted.
Timing of in vivo maturation of equine preovulatory oocytes and competence for in vitro maturation of immature oocytes collected simultaneously.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 21, 1998   Issue 25 33-37 
Bézard J, Mekarska A, Goudet G, Duchamp G, Palmer E.The objects of this study were to monitor the development of the cumulus complex and nuclear maturation in oocytes recovered from preovulatory follicles following treatment to induce ovulation and to investigate the in vitro maturation competence of oocytes recovered from smaller nonpreovulatory follicles of varying size. All follicles > or =5 mm in pony mares were individually punctured at 0, 6, 12, 24 and 35 h after an injection of LH to induce ovulation. The recovery rates of oocytes were 64% from 55 preovulatory follicles, 22% from 32 subordinate follicles and 52% from 227 small follicl...
Living fibroblast cells in the oviductal masses of mares.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 21, 1998   Issue 25 103-108 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb05112.x
Aguilar JJ, Woods GL, Miragaya MH, Olsen LM.The object of this experiment was to estimate the number and type of living cells in oviductal masses of mares. Oviducts of abattoir mares were dissected, divided into 3 sections, and flushed individually. Oviductal masses were recovered from 220 of 250 mares and from 389 of 500 oviducts. A greater number of masses was recovered from the left than the right oviducts. A higher percentage of masses was recovered from the ampullary-isthmic junction than from the ampulla or isthmus. The number of masses increased slightly with increasing mare age and was weakly correlated with the number of unfert...
Equine oocyte-cumulus morphology as affected by follicular size.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 21, 1998   Issue 25 38-42 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb05097.x
Mlodawska W, Okólski A.From the ovaries of 256 slaughtered mares a total of 1713 follicles were isolated from which 1641 (95.8%) oocytes were recovered (6.4/mare). A total of 564 follicles and oocytes were evaluated for the degree of vascularisation of the follicle wall, the appearance of the follicular fluid and the location and morphology of the cumulus-oocyte-complex. Follicles with a diameter of >10 mm displayed more numerous, well branched and more pronounced blood vessels than the smaller ones (4-10 mm diameter) and most of them contained clear, yellowish fluid with few granulosa cells. The percentage of oo...
Management and the hour of parturition in mares.
The Veterinary record    May 20, 1998   Volume 142, Issue 15 408 
Jöchle W.No abstract available
Surgical repair of bilateral comminuted articular ulnar fractures in a seven-month-old horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 20, 1998   Volume 212, Issue 9 1380-1383 
Scott EA, Mattoon JS, Adams JG, Riebold TW, Teshera J.No abstract available
Activation of extracellular matrix metalloproteinases in equine laminitis.
The Veterinary record    May 20, 1998   Volume 142, Issue 15 392-396 doi: 10.1136/vr.142.15.392
Johnson PJ, Tyagi SC, Katwa LC, Ganjam VK, Moore LA, Kreeger JM, Messer NT.Samples of connective tissue obtained from the hoof of six laminitic and eight non-laminitic adult horses were analysed zymographically to investigate whether connective tissue matrix metalloproteinases are activated or induced during laminitis. The activity or matrix metalloproteinases was substantially greater in the tissues from the laminitic horses than in the tissues from the non-laminitic horses. A comparison of the collagenolytic activity in the laminitic and control tissues showed that collagenolytic activities corresponding to the 92 kDa (P < 0.001), 72 kDa (P < 0.01) and 66 kDa (P < ...
[Contribution to the treatment of displacement of the ascendant colon in the spleen-kidney area].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    May 20, 1998   Volume 26, Issue 2 85-93 
Hofmeister S, Becker M, Böckenhoff G.Objective to this field study was to find an alternative to rolling a colic patient with left dorsal displacement under general anesthesia. For that purpose a total of 49 horses with a complete nephrosplenic entrapment out of 542 colic patients presented at the Tierklinik Kerken in 1996 were retrospectively evaluated. Having performed a preliminary colic examination and initial treatment if needed, horses which did not undergo surgery immediately where left loose in a small sized arena to move and roll themselves under observation. According to the results of further exams, horses were left in...
Fine structural and histochemical study of equine Paneth cells.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    May 20, 1998   Volume 27, Issue 2 125-129 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1998.tb00167.x
Takehana K, Masty J, Yamaguchi M, Kobayashi A, Yamada O, Kuroda M, Park YS, Iwasa K, Abe M.Ultrastructure, lysozyme and glycoconjugate activity in duodenal Paneth cells were observed concurrently in the horse. Paneth cells were seen to uniformly line the base of the equine intestinal glands. The round secretory granules have centrally located electron densities with peripherally located electron lucent halos. Histochemically, the peripheral halo layer was positively stained for carbohydrates by the periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide-silver protein-physical development (PA-TCH-SP-PD) method and the entire granules reacted positively to the WGA. The central core area reacted with anti-l...
[Marking of horses].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 15, 1998   Volume 105, Issue 3 112-113 
Voigt G.The author informs on up to date identification methods of horses. The implantation of passive transponders is a practicable method for marking of horses. Because it gives less pain to horses, this method is to prefer. Stress inflicted on horse is minimal, it compares to a intramuscular injection. The reliability of the system in use has so far been very high. Members of ISO have voted overwhelmingly in favor of a standard for electronic identification of animals. From now on, countries and user organizations can make use of this technique to identify animals and if used can rely on the fact t...
[Critical review of “Recommendations for Horse Maintenance”].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 15, 1998   Volume 105, Issue 3 109-111 
Neufang R.Comments are given on the present recommendations for the keeping of horses in stables. Proposals for an animal friendly accommodation are made including practical considerations.
[Review of nutritional conditions of horses and cattle as a tool in veterinary services animal welfare procedures].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 15, 1998   Volume 105, Issue 3 124-127 
Coenen M.The control of husbandry by veterinarians with the prospect of animal welfare demands a valuation of the nutritional status of farm animals. The situation of main importance is a suspected undernutrition. A prolonged failure in nutrient and energy supply results in mobilisation of body fat as well as body protein. Especially the protein depletion includes a loss of capacity of several essential functions, e.g. of the immune system or the respiratory tract. Undernutrition is often classified as stress, but the typical parameters for stress related reactions offer no sufficient information to ev...
Aging horses by examining the teeth–a centuries-old inexact science. Special report.
Journal of veterinary dentistry    May 8, 1998   Volume 14, Issue 3 97-98 
No abstract available
Elimination of mucosal cyathostome larvae by five daily treatments with fenbendazole.
The Veterinary record    May 7, 1998   Volume 142, Issue 11 268-271 doi: 10.1136/vr.142.11.268
Duncan JL, Bairden K, Abbott EM.The efficacy of five daily treatments with 7.5 mg fenbendazole/kg bodyweight against mucosal cyathostome larvae was evaluated in 20 12- and 24-month-old ponies with naturally acquired cyathostome infections. After three weeks communal grazing on infected pasture and six weeks indoors, one group of 10 ponies were treated. Six weeks later, both groups of ponies were humanely destroyed and their burdens of large intestinal cyathostome worms, including luminal parasites and mucosal larvae, were assessed. In the control animals approximately 7 per cent of the total worm burden was present in the gu...
What is the function of the guttural pouches: selective brain cooling? Augmentation of swallowing? Still to be defined?
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 2, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 2 115-117 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80002-6
Hodgson DR.No abstract available
Induced diarrhoea in horses. Part 2: Response to administration of an oral rehydration solution.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 2, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 2 161-170 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80012-9
Ecke P, Hodgson DR, Rose RJ.Hydration status, electrolyte balance and acid-base balance were studied in four adult standardbred geldings with castor oil-induced diarrhoea. The horses received an oral rehydration solution (ORS) at a point when signs consistent with mild decreases in effective circulating fluid volume were first detected. Within 1.5 h of ORS administration, all horses exhibited a significant metabolic acidosis. At this time, mean values for venous blood pH, [HCO3], and standard base excess were 7.264 +/- 0.011, 17.7 +/- 0.3 mmol L-1, and -8.2 +/- 0.4 mmol L-1, respectively. Throughout the duration of the s...
Effect of a set stabled environmental control on pulmonary function and airway reactivity of COPD affected horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 2, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 2 189-195 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80018-x
Vandenput S, Votion D, Duvivier DH, Van Erck E, Anciaux N, Art T, Lekeux P.The aim of this study was to evaluate the respiratory function of horses affected with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) when maintained in a barn on wood shavings and fed grass silage for a period of 6 weeks. The mechanics of breathing, blood gas analysis and bronchial reactivity were examined on five horses with COPD at the end of the environment-controlled period (Period B) and the results compared with values obtained after 2 months at pasture (Period A) and after the onset of clinical signs of acute crisis (Period C). The results showed that clinical and functional parameters w...
Changes in plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentration in exercising horses in relation to hydration status and exercise intensity.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1998   Volume 59, Issue 4 489-494 
Nyman S, Kokkonen UM, Dahlborn K.To investigate effects of hydration status and exercise intensity on plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) concentration in exercising horses. Methods: 4 trained Standardbreds. Methods: Horses performed a 40-minute exercise test at 65 to 70% maximal heart rate (HRmax; no incline) and a 12-minute test at approximately 90% HRmax (3.5 degrees incline). The 40-minute test was performed with ad libitum access to drinking water (normohydration), after water had been withheld for 24 hours (dehydration), and 30 minutes after 12 L of water at body temperature had been given via nasogastric tube (hype...