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.
Dietary value of cubes in equine nutrition.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    March 1, 1975   Volume 46, Issue 1 29-37 
Van der Merwe JA.The revised NRC's Nutrient Requirements of Horses is changing the outlook on equine nutrition, dominated for so long by the traditional belief in oats. This has lead to the need for properly balanced diets, in the compounding of which dietary cubes offer the distinct advantage of providing a standardized diet of constant quality in keeping with modern knowledge. Additional factors are: longer storage, freedom from dust, palatability, refractoriness to mould infection, and facilitation of routine feeding. Cube size and hardness are important considerations for the manufacturer. Horses appear to...
[Studies on the duration of feeding, masticatory frequency and mincing of feed in horses].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    February 5, 1975   Volume 82, Issue 2 54-58 
Meyer H, Ahiswedeu L, Reinhardt HJ.No abstract available
[Routine determination of free hydroxyproline in horse serum. Methods and normal values].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    February 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 2 89-101 
Jaeschke G.No abstract available
[Relationship between the health of horses and feeding rations consisting of pelleted concentrates alone. I. Zootechnical aspects (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    February 1, 1975   Volume 100, Issue 3 129-137 
Bouwman H.No abstract available
Use of the hoof tester in diagnosing lameness in horses.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    February 1, 1975   Volume 70, Issue 2 205-212 
Szabuniewicz M, Szabuniewicz JM.No abstract available
Cryosurgery for removal of equine sarcoids.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    February 1, 1975   Volume 70, Issue 2 200-203 
Joyce JR.No abstract available
[Studies on the blood copper level in horses. I. Year-round changes in the copper level and in some other blood parameters in mares].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    February 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 2 142-148 
Ghergariu S, Angi E.No abstract available
Five equine practitioners discuss today’s economy.
Modern veterinary practice    February 1, 1975   Volume 56, Issue 2 96-100 
No abstract available
[Effect of an absorbable synthetic suture material (Dexon) in horses and dogs].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    February 1, 1975   Volume 88, Issue 3 44-49 
Urdahl K.No abstract available
[Relationship between the health of horses and feeding rations consisting of pelleted concentratons alone. II. Clinicochemical examination of the blood(author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    February 1, 1975   Volume 100, Issue 3 138-145 
Bouwman H, Schotman AJ.No abstract available
Experimental infection of the horse with Fasciola hepatica.
Experimental parasitology    February 1, 1975   Volume 37, Issue 1 15-19 doi: 10.1016/0014-4894(75)90049-1
Nansen P, Andersen S, Hesselholt M.No abstract available
Collection technique and progesterone concentration of ovarian and uterine venous blood in mares.
Journal of animal science    February 1, 1975   Volume 40, Issue 2 275-281 doi: 10.2527/jas1975.402275x
Squires EL, Ginther OJ.No abstract available
[The cologne riding course for the blind. Original information on a didactic-methodical approach (author’s transl)].
Die Rehabilitation    February 1, 1975   Volume 14, Issue 1 29-34 
Dordel HJ.Since November 1973 a riding course has been carried out with six blind adults. Due to the instructional methods the participants were able to ride independently, without an attendant, after only 30 hours. The effects of riding on the blind encompass coordination training and development of muscle strength. Furthermore, riding has a pronounced influence on the circulatory system. This attractive reaction activity provides the person who, as a result of his specific handicapping condition is limited in both the spatial and social fields, with an expansion of his living space and sphere of exper...
Experimental acute Babesia caballi infections. I. Red blood cell dynamics.
Experimental parasitology    February 1, 1975   Volume 37, Issue 1 67-77 doi: 10.1016/0014-4894(75)90053-3
Allen PC, Frerichs WM, Holbrook AA.No abstract available
Efficacy of a prostaglandin analogue in reproduction in the anestrous mare.
Theriogenology    February 1, 1975   Volume 3, Issue 2 77-85 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(75)90017-5
Lamond DR, Buell JR, Stevenson WS.No abstract available
Ventilatory alterations in normal horses in response to changes in inspired oxygen and carbon dioxide.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 2 155-159 
Muir WW, Moore CA, Hamlin RL.The influence of various concentrations of CO2 and O2 in the inspired gases on minute volume (V), tidal volume (VT), and respiratory rate (breaths per min; BPM) was examined in nonanesthetized, nonsedated normal horses. The VT and BPM increased linearly in response to increases in inspired CO2 concentration and curvilinearly in response to decreases in inspired Os concentration. The V increased curvilinearly in response to both increases in inspired CO2 concentration and decreases in inspired O2 concentration.
Identification of the lysine residue modified during the activation of acetimidylation of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase.
Biochemistry    January 28, 1975   Volume 14, Issue 2 200-203 doi: 10.1021/bi00673a002
Dworschack R, Tarr G, Plapp BV.A single amino group in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase was modified with methyl(14C)acetimidate by a differential labeling procedure. Lysine residues outside the active site were modified with ethyl acetimidate while a lysine residue in the active site was protected by the formation of an enzyme-NAD+-pyrazole complex. After the protecting reagents were removed, the enzyme was treated with methyl(14C)acetimidate. Enzyme activity was enhanced 13-fold as 1.1 (14C)acetimidyl group was incorporated per active site. A labeled peptide was isolated from a tryptic-chymotryptic digest of the modified...
Letter: Complete uterine prolapse in a mare.
The Veterinary record    January 25, 1975   Volume 96, Issue 4 98 doi: 10.1136/vr.96.4.98
Gray JD.No abstract available
Occurrence of nervous-tissue tumors in cattle, horses, cats and dogs.
International journal of cancer    January 15, 1975   Volume 15, Issue 1 39-47 doi: 10.1002/ijc.2910150106
Hayes HM, Priester WA, Pendergrass TW.From 11 North American veterinary university hospitals and clinics, 248 animals were a confirmed diagnosis of nervous-tissue tumor were identified; 7 tumors were found in cattle, 28 in horses, 14 in cats, 199 in dogs, and none in other species. Tumors were divided for analysis into three categories-glial, meningeal, and peripheral nerve. In cattle and horses, all tumors involved peripheral nerves, the risk of which, in horses, reached a plateau at 4-6 years of age and remained constant thereafter. In cats, the tumors were equally distributed among the three tumor categories whereas, in dogs, t...
Giant cell tumor of soft parts. A report of an equine and a feline case.
Veterinary pathology    January 11, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 5-6 428-433 doi: 10.1177/0300985875012005-00609
Ford GH, Empson RN, Plopper CG, Brown PH.Masses removed from the superficial fascia of the jugular groove of a 12-year-old Arabian mare and from the femoral canal of a 7 1/2-year-old female cat appeared to be counterparts of the human malignant giant cell tumor of soft parts, even recapitulating the clinical behavior of the respective subgroups. Histologically, both neoplasms contained the characteristic features of the malignant giant cell tumor of soft parts: large multinucleate giant cells, pleomorphic mononuclear giant cells, histiocytes, fibroblasts and fibrocytes that were sometimes sarcomatous, and foci of hemorrhage and necro...
Experimentally induced infection of dogs, cats, and nonhuman primates with Ehrlichia equi, etiologic agent of equine ehrlichiosis.
American journal of veterinary research    January 11, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 1 85-88 
Lewis GE, Huxsoll DL, Ristic M, Johnson AJ.Dogs (German Shepherd Dogs and Beagles), cates, rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta), and baboons (Papio anubis) were inoculated with Whrlichia equi, the etiologic agent of equine ehrlichiosis. Within 3 to 7 days after inoculation, morulae were observed in the eosinophils of cats, neurtrophils of macaques and baboons, and in both neutrophils and eosinophils of dogs. The severe disease produced in horses by this agent was not a feature of E equi infection in dogs, cats, macaques, and baboons. However, a susceptible horse, inoculated with the pooled blood of 2 infected macaques, developed severe cli...
Hyperlipoproteinaemia in ponies: mechanisms and response to therapy.
Clinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry    January 6, 1975   Volume 58, Issue 1 1-15 doi: 10.1016/0009-8981(75)90479-9
Wensing T, van Gent DM, Schotman AJ, Kroneman J.(I) The lipid and lipoprotein concentrations in sera of 4 healthy and 9 hyperlipaemic patients were determined. From the results of the analyses, it is suggested that three types of hyperlipoproteinaemia can be distinguished in ponies: (a) Type 1, characterised by a very pronounced increase in only the very low density lipoproteins (VLDL); (b) Type 2, in which there is a pronounced increase in the chylomicrons (Chylo) and the very low density lipoproteins (VLDL); (c) Type 3, which can be the result of fasting and is characterised by a moderate increase in the concentration of chylomicrons and ...
[Morphology and the morphological diagnosis of equine infectious anemia].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 3 140-142 
Jélev Vl, Entchev St.No abstract available
[Comparative study of the optimum pH value of serum alkaline phosphatase in various species of farm animals].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 6 89-93 
Goranov Kh, Ivanov V.Investigations were carried out on the alkaline phosphatase in the sera of cattle, horses, pigs, sheep, goats, and chickens, the pH value of the buffer used being 9.0-9.8-10.0-10.2-10.6 and 11.0, and the method applied--that of Richterich. The pH value at which the serum alkaline phosphatase in the various farm animals and birds was most active was found to vary to a large extent. Optimal values for the enzyme's activity usually range as follows: cattle, 10.2; pigs and goats, 10.0; sheep,--10.2; horses,--9.8; chickens,--10.6.
[An immunologic study of hyaluronidase of different animal origin].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 2 31-38 
Kozhukharova L.Studied was the antigenic relatedness of hyaluronidase contained in the semen of breeder animals of homologic and heterologic species. The experiments were carried out by means of the immunodiffusion and the immunoelectrophoretic methods. The results obtained showed that the seminal hyaluronidase of bulls, rams and bucks is antigenically related, and that of stallions, boars and rabbits does not exhibit antigenic relatedness. Stallion semen is closely related antigenically with the above-mentioned three animal species' semen as manifested by two precipitation bands, but these are not identical...
Survey findings of equine infectious anemia positive horses in New York State. Nusbaum SR.No abstract available
[Contribution to the antigenic study of influenza viruses in animals. I.–Neuraminidase of the equine influenza viruses (author’s transl)].
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1975   Volume 6, Issue 4 397-410 
Fontaine M, Aymard-Henry M.From the Revised Nomenclature of WHO, the fowl influenza virus A/Duck/Ukraine/63 (Hav7 Neq2) has the same neuraminidase as the equine virus A/equi 2/Miami/63 (Heq2 Neq2); the A/Chicken Germany "N"/49 virus has the same neuraminidase as the equine virus A/equi 1/Prague/56. A comparative study of the antigenic specificities confirms that the Neq2 neuraminidases are closely connected, whatever their animal origin, and that the fowl strain Hav7 Neq2 can be used for the titration of anti Neq2 antibodies in the serums of animals immunized with the equine virus Heq2 Neq2. The Neqi neuraminidases of v...
The multiple forms of acid phosphatase from horse leucocytes.
Bulletin de l'Academie polonaise des sciences. Serie des sciences biologiques    January 1, 1975   Volume 23, Issue 3 153-159 
Wasyl Z.No abstract available
[Effect of tranquilizer doping on the muscular activity of the sport horse. II. — Diazepam (author’s transl)].
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1975   Volume 6, Issue 2 117-129 
Courtot D, Mouthon G, Roux L, Jeanin E.The practise of repeated doping of the sport horse led us to examine its effects on the health of the animal, and particularly on muscular activity. The main doping agent used at present (acepromazine) has already been studied (COURTOT et al., 1974). In this paper, we study the secondary effects of diazepam, a derivative of the benzodiazepine series, which is being used more and more frequently on horses. In treated animals as compared to controls, we observe: -- a slight respiratory depression related solely to effort, -- an increase in seric creatine phosphokinase rate with no apparent relat...
Succinylcholine for restraint of horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1975   Volume 166, Issue 1 10-14 
Lindley WH.No abstract available