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.
High-performance liquid chromatography determination of erythrocyte membrane phospholipid composition in several animal species.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 4 577-580 
Engen RL, Clark CL.High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) was used to determine the phospholipid (PL) composition of ovine, equine, bovine, porcine, and canine RBC membranes. Procedural modifications of established techniques provided for separation of 7 PL within a 15- to 20-minute sample run. Significant (P less than 0.05) differences were detected in RBC membrane PL composition among the various species. The concern for physiologic properties associated with hemolysis and/or sedimentation rate must include evaluation of differences in the PL bilayer structure.
[Endodontics in horses. An experimental study].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    April 1, 1990   Volume 37, Issue 3 205-214 
Garcia F, Sanromán F, Llorens MP.A total of 44 experimental endodontic treatments were performed in incisors of eight horses of different ages. Four different endodontic pastes were used: Cloropercha, AH26 De Trey, Eugenol-Endometasone, and Universal N2. Gutta-percha points were also included in the last two treatments. Access to the pulp cavity of incisors was gained through their vestibular and occlusal faces. Holes drilled in vestibular faces were sealed with composite and those drilled in occlusal faces were sealed with Amalgama. Animals were observed during eighteen months at least after endodontics. Radiographic control...
Changes in accessory sex glands of stallions after sexual preparation and ejaculation.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1990   Volume 196, Issue 7 1084-1089 
Weber JA, Geary RT, Woods GL.Ultrasonographic images of the accessory sex glands of 8 stallions were recorded immediately prior to sexual preparation, immediately after sexual preparation, and immediately after ejaculation. Relative size changes, determined by measurements of ultrasonograms of accessory sex gland, were contrasted. Length and width of the bulbourethral glands increased significantly (P less than 0.05) after sexual preparation and decreased significantly (P less than 0.05) after ejaculation. The increase in bulbourethral gland volume following sexual preparation was correlated significantly (P less than 0.0...
Effect of meal feeding on plasma volume and urinary electrolyte clearance in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 4 571-576 
Clarke LL, Argenzio RA, Roberts MC.The effect of meal size and frequency on plasma volume, plasma aldosterone concentration and urinary Na and K clearances was determined in ponies. A daily maintenance ration of hay-grain pellets was provided either as a multiple feeding regimen, ie, 12 equal portions fed at 2-hour intervals, or as single large feedings, ie, half the ration fed every 12 hours at 0800 and 2000 hours. Only the effect of the single morning feeding was studied, using the latter regimen. Serial measurements of plasma volume were made by use of an indicator-dilution technique and indocyanine green (0.15 mg/kg of body...
Further observations on Strongyloides westeri dermatitis: recovery of larvae from soil and bedding, and survival in treated sites.
New Zealand veterinary journal    April 1, 1990   Volume 38, Issue 1 34-37 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1990.35612
Dewes HF, Townsend KG.Two horses repeatedly underwent episodes of frenzy characterised by extreme discomfort and hyperactivity. Within 2 days of an attack the lower extremities of both hind legs of one subject were uniformly swollen, while on the second subject skin lesions erupted 3-4 days after an attack and swelling persisted for 2-3 weeks. Filariform larvae of Strongyloides westeri were cultured from soil and sawdust where the subjects were kept. Larvae were cultured from soil of low pH (4.5-5.8) but were absent from neutral or alkaline soils. Larvae were found in sawdust with a wide pH range. It is thought tha...
Sequential mesenteric arteriography in pony foals during repeated inoculations of Strongylus vulgaris and treatments with ivermectin.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 4 661-665 
Holmes RA, Klei TR, McClure JR, Turk MA, Watters JW, Chapman MR.Semiselective mesenteric arteriography was performed at regular intervals (inoculation weeks [IW] 0, 11, 18, and 24) in 9 of 10 pony foals raised to be free of parasites. Fifty infective larvae (L3) of Strongylus vulgaris were administered weekly for 4 weeks, then every 2 weeks through the 20th week. Three ponies were given ivermectin (oral paste, 0.2 mg/kg of body weight) treatment at IW 8, 16 and 24. Four ponies were inoculated, but did not receive ivermectin, and a third group of 2 ponies acted as uninoculated controls. Control ponies did not have gross or arteriographic lesions, whereas th...
[Influenza or equine herpes virus (EHV)?].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    March 15, 1990   Volume 115, Issue 6 272 
van Maanen C, Binkhorst GJ.No abstract available
Differences between horse and human haemoglobins in effects of organic and inorganic anions on oxygen binding.
The Biochemical journal    March 15, 1990   Volume 266, Issue 3 897-900 
Giardina B, Brix O, Clementi ME, Scatena R, Nicoletti B, Cicchetti R, Argentin G, Condo SG.Despite the fact that the horse is one of the more common domesticated animals, there are few reports dealing with the properties of its blood, and no comprehensive study has been performed on the reactivity of horse haemoglobin towards organic and inorganic ions. Here we report data on the effects of the organic phosphates D-glycerate-2,3-bisphosphate (2,3-DPG) and InsP6, and of chloride on the properties of horse haemoglobin. Thus the effect of saturating concentrations of 2,3-DPG on the oxygen affinity of horse haemoglobin is about 60% lower than with human adult haemoglobin under the same ...
[Analysis of reproductive parameters in mare herds of the chief and state stud farms at Marbach and Schwaiganger].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 1, 1990   Volume 97, Issue 3 107-114 
Oster M, Paufler S.The paper analyses different parameters of fertility in mares of different breeds. Totally 2794 cycles of the years 1973 to 1985 have been investigated.
Infertility of autoimmune origin in a stallion.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 145-146 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04230.x
Papa FO, Alvarenga MA, Lopes MD, Campos Filho EP.THE immunogenicity of mammalian sperm has been recognised since the beginning of this century. In 1909, Adler induced autoantibodies in the serum of guinea pigs by injecting them with their own spermatozoa. Nowadays, the concept of immunologically privileged sites is well understood and any disruption which allows antigenic contact with the immune system may give rise to an immune response. For example, failure of the blood/testes barrier following infection, trauma or surgery can lead to the production of antisperm antibodies as a result of spermatozoa coming in contact with the immune syst...
Antisperm antibodies in the semen of a stallion following testicular trauma.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 138-141 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04228.x
Zhang J, Ricketts SW, Tanner SJ.No abstract available
Distribution of neutralizing antibodies to California and Bunyamwera serogroup viruses in horses and rodents in California.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 1, 1990   Volume 42, Issue 3 282-290 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1990.42.282
Campbell GL, Reeves WC, Hardy JL, Eldridge BF.Neutralization tests were done on sera from 141 horses from high elevation regions of California. Antibody prevalences to Jamestown Canyon, snowshoe hare, and California encephalitis viruses in the California serogroup and Northway virus in the Bunyamwera serogroup were 55%, 43%, 18%, and 46%, respectively. In 51 horses from rural low elevation regions, seroprevalences were 31%, 35%, 35%, and 37%, respectively. Twenty-four horses from a suburban lowland area were seronegative, except for a single horse with a low titer to snowshoe hare virus. Seroprevalence to Jamestown Canyon and snowshoe har...
[The aberrant parasitism of horse botflies (Diptera: Gasterophilidae)].
Parazitologiia    March 1, 1990   Volume 24, Issue 2 154-156 
Rastegaev IuM.Alongside with a high intensity of infection of horses with botfly larvae there was observed mass aberrant parasitism of horse botflies in farms of Astrakhan, Guryev and Uralsk Provinces, and in the Kalmyk ASSR in 1980-1981 and 1987. As a result of extremely high aggregation of horse botfly larvae in their usual localization places, Gasterophilus pecorum larvae remained, due to interspecific competition, in nonspecific places (oral cavity, pharynx), adapted to new habitats and normally developed. Their number varied from 260 to 750 specimens. Localization of G. pecorum larvae in the mentioned ...
Contrast radiography of the equine oesophagus: effect of spasmolytic agents and passage of a nasogastric tube.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 133-135 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04225.x
King JN, Davies JV, Gerring EL.No abstract available
Bilateral granulomatous guttural pouch infection due to Mycobacterium avium complex in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1990   Volume 27, Issue 2 133-135 doi: 10.1177/030098589002700213
Sills RC, Mullaney TP, Stickle RL, Darien BJ, Brown CM.No abstract available
The effect of artificial occlusion of the Ramus navicularis and its branching arteries on the navicular bone in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 135-146 
Wright IM.No abstract available
Immune related infertility in stallions?
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 67-69 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04212.x
Boyle M.No abstract available
Quantitative and qualitative morphology of equine peripheral nerve: teased fibre studies.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1990   Volume 48, Issue 2 145-151 
Wheeler SJ.Single teased fibre studies were made on samples of the lateral palmar nerve from 16 horses of mixed age and size which had no evidence of neuromuscular disease. Significant proportions of abnormal fibres indicative of axonal degeneration/regeneration and demyelination/remyelination were identified. Measurements of internodal length and fibre diameter were made. Internodal length was shown to be related to fibre diameter, changes in this relationship being mainly influenced by the incidence of abnormal fibres rather than by the age of the horse. Information about the incidence of abnormal fibr...
Changes in plasma progesterone concentrations from days 17 to 42 of gestation in mares maintaining or losing pregnancy.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 104-106 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04219.x
Irvine CH, Sutton P, Turner JE, Mennick PE.Plasma progesterone concentrations were measured in 179 mares bled on alternate days commencing with a positive pregnancy diagnosis on Days 17 to 18 after ovulation and concluding on Days 42 to 45. During this period 17 mares (10 per cent) lost their pregnancies, 11 before Day 25. In 15 mares the timing of the pregnancy loss could be determined with adequate accuracy; in only one did a decline in progesterone precede the loss. Thus pregnancy loss between Days 17 and 42 was rarely caused by a fall in plasma progesterone.
Pars plicata in equine recurrent uveitis.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1990   Volume 27, Issue 2 138-140 doi: 10.1177/030098589002700215
Cooley PL, Wyman M, Kindig O.No abstract available
Management of intracortical fractures of the palmaroproximal third metacarpal bone in a horse by surgical forage.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 142-144 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04229.x
Wright IM, Platt D, Houlton JE, Webbon PM.No abstract available
Sulfonamides and blood dyscrasias.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 1, 1990   Volume 196, Issue 5 681-682 
Dodds WJ.No abstract available
An immunohistochemical study of various peptide-containing endocrine cells and neurones at the equine ileocaecal junction.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1990   Volume 57, Issue 1 13-17 
Kotze SH, Van Aswegen G.The ileocaecal junctions of 5 horses and 2 donkeys were examined by using antisera to the following peptides: somatostatin, glucagon, gastrin, neurotensin, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), peptide histidine isoleucine (PHI), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), substance P (SP) and neuropeptide Y (NPY). Antisera to somatostatin, neurotensin and NPY demonstrated endocrine cells in the ileal- and caecal parts of the ileocaecal junction, while immunoreactivity for glucagon was demonstrated in endocrine cells of the ileal part only. Nerve cell bodies showing immunoreactivity to SP, VIP, CGR...
Liquid flow and capacity of the caecum and colon of the horse.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1990   Volume 48, Issue 2 265-266 
Simmons HA, Ford EJ.The rate of flow of fluid from the caecum and from the large colon was measured in four Shetland-type ponies fed a hay diet. In two ponies with cannulas in the caecum and at the origin of the right ventral colon, a continuous intracaecal infusion of a solution of chromium EDTA was used and samples were obtained from the cannula at the origin of the right ventral colon. Based on four determinations, the liquid flow from the caecum was 54.2 +/- 1.89 litres d-1. In the other two ponies with cannulas in the origin of the right ventral colon and near the end of the right dorsal colon, a continuous ...
A comparison between chromium-mordanted hay and acid-insoluble ash to determine apparent digestibility of a chaffed, molassed hay/straw mixture.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 122-125 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04223.x
Cí·¯ord D, Hughes D.The apparent digestibility of a molassed, chaffed grass hay/straw mixture was determined using four mature horses (mean weight 606 kg). Animals were stalled individually and kept on rubber mats. A preliminary feeding period of 18 days was followed by a 10 day collection period. Chromium-mordanted hay was given before the first feed at 08.00 h and subsequent meals were at 12.00, 16.00 and 20.00 h. On Days 3 and 10 of the collection, all faeces were sampled over a 24 h period. In addition, throughout the 10 day collection, faecal material was sampled at 10.00 and 16.00 h. The mean (+/- se) chrom...
Scanning electron and light microscopy of the mucosa of the equine ileocaecal junction.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1990   Volume 57, Issue 1 19-23 
Kotzé SH, Soley JT.The ileocaecal junction mucosal surface morphology of 5 horses and 1 donkey was examined using scanning electron microscopy and light microscopy. Based on differences in surface morphology, the junction could be divided into 4 distinct regions. The distal extremity of the ileum was characterized by the presence of typical finger-like villi followed by a narrow zone displaying short, stubby villi which gradually merged into a 3rd region representing the true transitional zone between the small and large intestine. In this region the villi fused, forming low ridges arranged in circular, semi-cir...
Effect of age on sensory nerve conduction velocity in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1990   Volume 48, Issue 2 141-144 
Wheeler SJ.This study aimed to establish a clinically reproducible method of evaluation of sensory nerve conduction in the horse and to provide reference values in a group of normal horses. Age-related changes in the sensory nerve conduction velocity were of particular interest. Sensory nerve conduction was performed in the lateral palmar nerve. The results revealed an increase in velocity over the first year of life and a subsequent decrease in velocity in older horses. The effect of age must be considered if results from horses in which peripheral nerve disease is suspected are to be interpreted correc...
The transovarial transmission of Babesia caballi by Hyalomma truncatum.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1990   Volume 57, Issue 1 99-100 
De Waal DT.Babesia caballi, isolated from a horse that originated from South West Africa/Namibia, was transmitted transovarially by adult Hyalomma truncatum. B. caballi proved to be highly infective for adult H. truncatum. Forty-five per cent of ticks feeding on a reacting animal with an extremely low parasitaemia became infected. In spite of a low parasitaemia, the ticks were severely affected by the parasite. Seventy per cent of the infected ticks either died during oviposition or after laying only a few eggs. The features of the infection in horses were: a prepatent period of 10 days, very low parasit...
Equine urine pH: normal population distributions and methods of acidification.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 118-121 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04222.x
Wood T, Weckman TJ, Henry PA, Chang SL, Blake JW, Tobin T.Our investigation of the urine of grazing horses at the University of Kentucky shows that the mean pH level is about 7.9, and if their diet is supplemented with grain, it is about 7.4. There appears to be no significant effect of time of day or year on urine pH levels in horses. However, horses taken from pasture and supplemented with grain in a stalled environment show a slight decrease in urine pH. Additionally, we investigated the effects of storage on pH levels. Equine urine samples appear to be quite stable with regard to pH for 48h, but then show a marked increase. Urine pH can have a gr...
Effect of administration of prostaglandin F2 alpha on embryo recovery from the uterus on day 5 after ovulation in mares.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 3 451-453 
Hinrichs K, Riera FL.Ten mares were used to investigate the effect of administration of prostaglandin F2 alpha on uterine tubal motility, as reflected by embryo recovery from the uterus 5 days after ovulation (day 0). Mares were assigned to 3 groups: group A, uterine flush for embryo recovery on day 7; group B, uterine flush for embryo recovery on day 5; and group C, uterine flush for embryo recovery on day 5, after treatment with prostaglandin F2 alpha (10 mg, IM) on day 3. Each mare was assigned to each group once. Embryo recovery rates for the 3 groups were: A, 6 of 10; B, 2 of 8; and C, 0 of 10. The embryo rec...