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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.
A comparison of the reduction in immunoglobulin (IgG) concentration of frozen equine plasma treated by three thawing techniques.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1993   Volume 70, Issue 12 442-444 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1993.tb00845.x
O'Rielly JL.The IgG concentration of plasma from 13 mares was measured by radial immunodiffusion when fresh and after storage at -4 degrees C and thawing by 3 methods. There was no significant (P > 0.05) reduction in the IgG concentration when plasma was thawed over 6 hours at 22 degrees C (1352.9 +/- 101.6 mg/dL) (mean +/- SEM) compared with the fresh sample (1369.5 +/- 88.1 mg/dL). In contrast, there was a significant (P < 0.05) reduction in the IgG concentration of plasma that was rapidly thawed at 57 degrees C over 50 minutes (1142.9 +/- 66.2 mg/dL), or placed in a microwave oven for 20 to 25 minutes ...
Narcotics and local anesthetics.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 3 605-620 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30388-7
Kamerling SG.The recognition and alleviation of animal pain is a growing veterinary and public concern. Pain can be of an acute or chronic nature with different behavioral manifestations. Physiologically, pain is a dynamic and complex phenomenon that produces changes in the central and autonomic nervous systems as well as in the endocrine system. Horses and other animals appear to possess an endogenous pain-suppressing system involving the brainstem and spinal cord. This system can modulate pain perception and the responses to it. The recently discovered endogenous opioid peptides (endorphins and enkephali...
The Horserace Betting Levy Board’s code of practice for equine viral arteritis for the 1994 breeding season.
The Veterinary record    November 20, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 21 512-514 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.21.512
The Horserace Betting Levy Board formulates codes of practice for the control of contagious equine metritis and other equine bacterial venereal diseases, and equine viral arteritis and equid herpesvirus 1. This year's codes have just been published and the code of practice for EVA, reproduced below, has been substantially amended following the recent outbreak in the UK. The code is intended for use by veterinary surgeons and breeders of thoroughbred and non-thoroughbred horses. The HBLB states that its recommendations represent the minimum measures necessary to monitor for the presence of equi...
What is your diagnosis? Penetrating foreign body in a horse causing delayed wound healing and a chronic draining tract.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1993   Volume 203, Issue 10 1401-1402 
Mueller PO, Watson E, Allen D.No abstract available
Equine pharmaceutical products.
The Veterinary record    November 13, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 20 508 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.20.508-b
Renton CP.No abstract available
Narcolepsy in animals and man.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 476-477 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02996.x
Mignot EJ, Dement WC.No abstract available
Different resistance of mammalian red blood cells to hemolysis by bile salts.
Lipids    November 1, 1993   Volume 28, Issue 11 999-1003 doi: 10.1007/BF02537121
Salvioli G, Gaetti E, Panini R, Lugli R, Pradelli JM.To evaluate why hemolysis of red blood cells (RBC) by bile acids varies in different mammalian species, we determined the mean corpuscular volume (MCV), lipid content and the concentrations of the conjugates of deoxycholate and of NaCl inducing 50% hemolysis of RBC from healthy humans, pigs, horses, cows, sheep and jaundiced humans. A volume of 0.05 mL of washed RBC at 1% hematocrit, which has the same lipid content but different phospholipid composition and number of erythrocytes (owing to the variable MCV), was incubated in taurodeoxycholate (TDC) solution (0-5 mM) to determine the TDC conce...
Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma: an unusual cause of lameness in a pony.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 547-549 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03012.x
Clegg PD, Coumbe A.No abstract available
More on self-mutilative behavior in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1993   Volume 203, Issue 9 1252-1253 
Luescher UA.No abstract available
[Parasitological fecal studies of equids, dogs, cats and hedgehogs during the years 1984-1991].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 1, 1993   Volume 100, Issue 11 426-428 
Epe C, Ising-Volmer S, Stoye M.The results of the coproscopical examinations in horses, dogs, cats and hedgehogs between 1984 and 1991 are presented. In 9192 samples from horses 55.5% stages of strongylids, 4.0% of Parascaris equorum, 2.2% of anoplocephalids, 1.6% Strongyloides westeri, 0.7% of Oxyuris equi, 0.6% of Eimeria leuckarti, 0.2% of Fasciola hepatica and 0.04% of Dictyocaulus arnfieldi were found. In 48.0% of the 46 samples from donkeys eggs from strongylids were detected, in 17.4% larvae from Dictyocaulus arnfieldi, in 2.2% eggs from Strongyloides westeri, Parascaris equorum and oocysts from Eimeria leuckarti, re...
A new technique for accessing the cerebral ventricles of the horse.
Research in veterinary science    November 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 3 389-391 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(93)90115-v
Regodon S, Franco A, Lignereux Y, Redondo E.A technique is described for catheterisation of the ventricular recess within the olfactory bulb of the horse. Twelve adult horses were used. The olfactory recess is in the frontal region, 42 +/- 3 mm below the skin, on the line joining the supraorbital foramina, and approximately 18 +/- 2 mm from the midline. The approach is relatively easy under normal experimental conditions.
Automated morphometric analysis of stallion spermatozoa.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 11 1808-1811 
Davis RO, Gravance CG, Casey PJ.Tissue variation in microscope slides made for spermatozoon analysis and variation introduced by the subjective techniques used to analyze these slides reduce the statistical power of studies that seek to use spermatozoon morphology to predict fertility. A simple specimen preparation method was developed to standardize stallion spermatozoon morphologic smears, and a new, automated spermatozoa morphometry instrument was used to objectively analyze the efficacy of the specimen preparation technique. The method achieved a standard spermatozoon concentration and reduced field-to-field variation in...
Massive iron overload and liver fibrosis resembling haemochromatosis in a racing pony.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 552-554 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03014.x
Lavoie JP, Teuscher E.No abstract available
Registration of myometrial activity using multiple site electromyography in cyclic mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1993   Volume 99, Issue 2 299-306 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0990299
Troedsson MH, Wiström AO, Liu IK, Ing M, Pascoe J, Thurmond M.A method for interpreting and analysing electromyographic (EMG) data of myometrial electrical activity was established. This method was used to study EMG activity in the uterus during the various stages of the oestrus cycle in mares. Recordings were analysed from four pairs of electrodes that were surgically implanted in the myometrium of four reproductively sound mares. The electrodes were placed at the tip, middle and base of the left horn and in the uterine body. Electrical activity was monitored by a polygraph. Data were transformed to a digitized form and statistically analysed. Myometria...
Effects of exercise and polysulfated glycosaminoglycan on repair of articular cartilage defects in the equine carpus.
Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society    November 1, 1993   Volume 11, Issue 6 782-795 doi: 10.1002/jor.1100110603
Todhunter RJ, Minor RR, Wootton JA, Krook L, Burton-Wurster N, Lust G.Our aim was to determine if mild to moderate postoperative exercise and intra-articular polysulfated glycosaminoglycan result in improved repair of large, experimentally induced osteochondral defects in a weight-bearing surface of equine joints. Arthroscopic debridement was used to produce full-thickness defects in a weight-bearing area of the radial carpal bones in 18 ponies. The ponies were randomly assigned to two groups balanced for age: nine animals in the exercise and nine in the no exercise group. Six ponies in each group were medicated weekly for 5 weeks with an intra-articular injecti...
[Prevalence of fascioliasis in humans, horses, pigs, and wild rabbits in 3 Chilean provinces].
Boletin de la Oficina Sanitaria Panamericana. Pan American Sanitary Bureau    November 1, 1993   Volume 115, Issue 5 405-414 
Apt W, Aguilera X, Vega F, Alcaíno H, Zulantay I, Apt P, González V, Retamal C, Rodríguez J, Sandoval J.This study sought to estimate for the first time the prevalence of fascioliasis among the rural population in the Chilean provinces of Curico, Talca, and Linares, while also determining the disease's prevalence among horses and wild rabbits in Curico and Talca and among pigs in Talca. From January 1986 to December 1990 a randomly selected sample of 5,861 persons in the three provinces was given intradermal, complement-fixation, double-diffusion, and immunoelectrophoresis tests to detect antibody to Fasciola hepatica. In addition, the ELISA test was used in Talca and Linares. Fecal specimens fr...
An unusual familial neurological syndrome in newborn thoroughbred foals.
The Veterinary record    October 30, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 18 447-448 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.18.447
Mayhew IG, Schneiders DH.No abstract available
Use of a stapling device to aid in the ovariectomy of nine mares with a granulosa thecal cell tumour.
The Veterinary record    October 30, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 18 442-445 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.18.442
Greet TR, Bathe AP.This paper describes the use of a linear stapling device as an aid to unilateral ovariectomy in nine mares with granulosa thecal cell tumours. The intraoperative and postoperative complications are described and follow up details on each case are presented.
Autochthonous echinococcosis in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1993   Volume 203, Issue 8 1117 
Miller S, Hoberg EP, Brown MA.No abstract available
Should Mexico hold its horses?
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1993   Volume 203, Issue 8 1095-1097 
Kahler S.No abstract available
Anthelmintic dosing intervals for horses: comparison of three chemical groups.
The Veterinary record    October 2, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 14 346-347 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.14.346
Parry JM, Fisher MA, Grimshaw WT, Jacobs DE.No abstract available
A serological survey of dogs, cats and horses in south-eastern Australia for leptospiral antibodies.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1993   Volume 70, Issue 10 389-390 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1993.tb00823.x
Dickeson D, Love DN.No abstract available
Hepatoblastoma in an equine fetus. Neu SM.No abstract available
Expression of an evolutionarily conserved function associated molecule on sheep, horse and cattle natural killer cells.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    October 1, 1993   Volume 38, Issue 3-4 273-282 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(93)90087-k
Harris DT, Camenisch TD, Jaso-Friedmann L, Evans DL.Natural killer (NK) cells are large granular lymphocytes that lyse a wide variety of transformed and virally-infected target cells without prior exposure to antigen, and without restriction by major histocompatibility complex antigens. Although NK cells have been identified in a variety of mammalian species, how NK cells recognize antigen and trigger lysis is unknown. Recently, monoclonal antibodies made against NK-like cells from teleost fish were shown to react with NK cells from humans and rats, and to inhibit their cytolytic activity. The role of this apparently evolutionarily conserved fu...
Measurement of pulmonary diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide and functional residual capacity during rebreathing in conscious thoroughbreds.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 10 1752-1757 
Aguilera-Tejéro E, Pascoe JR, Amis TC, Kurpershoek CJ, Woliner MJ.A rebreathing method for measurement of pulmonary diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) and functional residual capacity (FRC) was evaluated in conscious horses. Horses were manually ventilated through an endotracheal tube, using a custom-made syringe filled with a gas mixture containing 18-carbon monoxide (18CO) and helium (He). The 18CO and He concentrations were continuously monitored by use of a mass spectrometer connected to the rebreathing circuit. Values for DLCO and FRC were calculated from changes in the concentration of these 2 gases. In 11 Thoroughbreds, mean (+/- SD) DLCO w...
Oviductal and uterine influence on the development of Day-2 equine embryos in vivo and in vitro.
Theriogenology    October 1, 1993   Volume 40, Issue 4 689-698 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(93)90205-j
Weber JA, Woods GL, Freeman DA, Vanderwall DK.The objective of this experiment was to contrast the influence of the oviductal and uterine environments on development of Day-2 embryos. Embryos were transferred to oviducts or uteri of synchronous recipient mares, or were incubated in oviductal co-culture, in uterine co-culture or in defined culture medium. Significantly more (P < 0.02) embryos transferred to the oviduct versus the uterus survived until Day 11 after ovulation (5 7 vs 0 7 , respectively). Significantly more (P 0.1) in oviductal co-culture versus uterine co-culture (3 7 vs 6 7 , respectively), or in oviductal co-culture ve...
Equine cricoid cartilage densitometry.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    October 1, 1993   Volume 57, Issue 4 307-308 
Behrens E, Poteet B, Cohen N.The density of the cricoid cartilage from 29 equine larynges collected from an abattoir was determined by dual photon absorptiometry (DPA). Densities of the right and left cricoid cartilages were highly correlated. No correlation was found between age of the horse and the density of the cricoid cartilage.
Natural infections of Strongyloides westeri: prevalence in horse foals on several farms in central Kentucky in 1992.
Veterinary parasitology    October 1, 1993   Volume 50, Issue 1-2 101-107 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(93)90010-k
Lyons ET, Tolliver SC, Drudge JH, Granstrom DE, Collins SS.During the period 28 February-1 July 1992, fecal samples were collected and examined for eggs of Strongyloides westeri once from each of 382 horse foals (364 Thoroughbreds, 16 Standardbreds, one Lippizaner, and one draft-type horse) in central Kentucky. Ages of the foals at the time of sampling ranged from 7 to 63 days (mean 22 days). The nine farms in the study were considered to have overall excellent deworming programs. None of the foals had been treated with an antiparasitic compound before the study. Eggs of S. westeri were found in 6% (22 of 382) of the foals on 78% (7 of 9) of the farms...
Recovery of horses from inhalation anesthesia.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 10 1693-1702 
Whitehair KJ, Steffey EP, Willits NH, Woliner MJ.To study behavioral and cardiopulmonary characteristics of horses recovering from inhalation anesthesia, 6 nonmedicated horses were anesthetized under laboratory conditions on 3 different days, with either halothane or isoflurane in O2. Anesthesia was maintained at constant dose (1.5 times the minimum alveolar concentration [MAC]) of halothane in O2 for 1 hour (H1), halothane in O2 for 3 hours (H3), or isoflurane in O2 for 3 hours (I3). The order of exposure was set up as a pair of Latin squares to account for horse and trial effects. Circulatory (arterial blood pressure and heart rate) and re...
Weather factors in the prediction of western equine encephalitis epidemics in Manitoba.
Epidemiology and infection    October 1, 1993   Volume 111, Issue 2 373-390 doi: 10.1017/s0950268800057071
Sellers RF, Maarouf AR.Cases of western equine encephalitis in horses in 1987 in western USA and Manitoba, Canada were examined by backward trajectory analysis of winds. Culex tarsalis mosquitoes infected with western equine encephalitis virus could have been carried on southerly winds from Texas and Oklahoma to northern USA and from there to Manitoba. The presence of the Polar front over North Dakota and Minnesota at the end of July would have led to the landing of Cx. tarsalis in Montana and Wisconsin and prevented further carriage into Manitoba. Temperatures in southern Texas during the winter months (average dai...