Analyze Diet

Topic:Animal Models

Animal models in equine research refer to the use of horses or other species to study biological and disease processes relevant to equine health. These models facilitate the investigation of various physiological and pathological conditions, allowing researchers to explore disease mechanisms, test therapeutic interventions, and understand genetic influences on health outcomes. Horses themselves are often studied as models for human diseases due to certain physiological similarities. Additionally, other species may be used to model equine-specific conditions when direct study in horses is impractical. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the application, development, and findings of animal models in equine research.
[Can the study of the ocular lesions of Onchocerca cervicalis infection in the horse provide interesting data on the pathogenesis of human ocular onchocerciasis?].
Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique et de ses filiales    May 1, 1962   Volume 55 417-422 
LAGRAULET J.No abstract available
[Experience in a study of the typological features of the nervous system of horses in conditions of unrestrained motor activity].
Zhurnal vysshei nervnoi deiatelnosti imeni I P Pavlova    May 1, 1961   Volume 11 504-511 
MONAENKOV AM.No abstract available
Experimental studies on equine infectious anemia (EIA). IV. Alteration of blood in mouse inoculated with the mouse-fixed equine infectious anemia virus and re-transmission test of the virus to a pony.
Japanese journal of microbiology    April 1, 1960   Volume 4 97-103 doi: 10.1111/j.1348-0421.1960.tb00157.x
ARAKAWA S, MUTO S, MURAOKA T, TSURUMI N, KANEKO T, SEKI T.No abstract available
Operant responding in a horse under several schedules of reinforcement.
Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior    April 1, 1960   Volume 3, Issue 2 161-164 doi: 10.1901/jeab.1960.3-161
MYERS RD, MESKER DC.No abstract available
Serological survey in animals for type A influenza in relation to the 1957 pandemic.
Bulletin of the World Health Organization    January 1, 1959   Volume 20, Issue 2-3 465-488 
KAPLAN MM, PAYNE AM.In 1957 the World Health Organization arranged a survey of horse and swine sera in a number of countries in order to gain information on the role and importance of animals in the epidemiology of influenza. The veterinary services of the countries concerned were requested to obtain blood specimens from these animals, if possible both before and after the human pandemic of Asian influenza. This paper reports on the results of haemagglutination-inhibition and complement-fixation tests performed on these sera in WHO Influenza Centres and other collaborating laboratories.It is apparent from these r...
[Properties & mode of action of a biological antithyroid agent; serum from thyroidectomized horses].
La Revue du praticien    January 11, 1958   Volume 8, Issue 2 193 
BERTRAND I, GAYET-HALLION T.No abstract available
The cytopathogenesis of vesicular stomatitis virus infection in cattle.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1958   Volume 19, Issue 70 66-73 
RIBELIN WE.No abstract available
The influence of reciprocal immunity on eastern and western equine encephalomyelitis infection in horses and English sparrows.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    October 1, 1957   Volume 79, Issue 4 342-347 
STAMM DD, KISSLING RE.No abstract available
[The paradoxical intention, in horses].
Zeitschrift fur Psychotherapie und medizinische Psychologie    July 1, 1957   Volume 7, Issue 4 176-177 
BRUEL O.No abstract available
Studies on hepatitis in hamsters infected with equine abortion virus. I. Sequential development of inclusions and the growth cycle.
The American journal of pathology    July 1, 1957   Volume 33, Issue 4 709-727 
RANDALL CC, BRACKEN EC.No abstract available
Intrathecal inoculation of mouse sarcoma 180 in the horse; production of heterologous tumor antibodies.
American journal of surgery    October 1, 1956   Volume 92, Issue 4 514-531 doi: 10.1016/s0002-9610(56)80082-2
STERN EL.No abstract available
[Peculiarities of the higher nervous function in horses].
Zhurnal vysshei nervnoi deiatelnosti imeni I P Pavlova    September 1, 1956   Volume 6, Issue 5 718-725 
POPOV NF.No abstract available
Studies on the North American arthropod-borne encephalitides. II. Eastern equine encephalitis in horses.
American journal of hygiene    November 1, 1954   Volume 60, Issue 3 237-250 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a119717
KISSLING RE, CHAMBERLAIN RW, EIDSON ME, SIKES RK, BUCCA MA.No abstract available
[Attempted transmission to monkey of the virus of infectious anemia of horses (Vallée and Carré disease)].
Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l'Academie des sciences    October 28, 1953   Volume 237, Issue 17 1041-1043 
PLACIDI L, VERGE J.No abstract available
Adaptation of the equine abortion virus to suckling Syrian hamsters.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1953   Volume 43, Issue 4 551-558 
DOLL ER, RICHARDS MG, WALLACE ME.No abstract available
SUSCEPTIBILITY of animals to louse infection.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1953   Volume 122, Issue 914 377 
No abstract available
[Technic of loading mules on trucks].
Revue veterinaire militaire    January 1, 1953   Volume 8, Issue 2 91-92 
CRUMIERE A.No abstract available
Crystalline forms of myoglobin from horse heart.
Nature    May 19, 1951   Volume 167, Issue 4255 802-804 doi: 10.1038/167802a0
LAWRIE RA.No abstract available
Cecostomy in the horse; a practical experimental procedure.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1950   Volume 117, Issue 885 456-458 
JASPER DE, CUPPS PT.No abstract available
Experimental Mixed Infection of Mice with Lansing Poliomyelitis Virus and Western Equine Encephalomyelitis Virus.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    September 23, 1949   Volume 110, Issue 2856 301-302 doi: 10.1126/science.110.2856.301
Gallagher FW.No abstract available
[Pathological lesions of equine encephalomyelitis].
Revista medica dominicana    July 1, 1949   Volume 4, Issue 3 175-177 
LITHGOW EW.No abstract available
[Employment of equine plasma as a substitute for human plasma].
Revista paulista de medicina    September 1, 1948   Volume 33, Issue 3 151 
MELLONE O, MONTENEGRO EB.No abstract available
Horses and the world of medicine.
Bulletin of the National Society for Medical Research    March 1, 1948   Volume 2, Issue 4 6-8 
EICHHORN A.No abstract available
Effect of equine gonadotrophin on prepuberal male mice.
Experimental medicine and surgery    February 1, 1948   Volume 6, Issue 1 28-30 
BISHOP DH, LEATHEM JH.No abstract available
[The German half-blood and the hot iron marks of German horses].
Revue veterinaire militaire    January 1, 1948   Volume 3, Issue 3 251-267 
VALLET L.No abstract available
The Transmission of Periodic Ophthalmia of Horses by Means of a Filterable Agent.
The Journal of experimental medicine    September 30, 1930   Volume 52, Issue 4 637-648 doi: 10.1084/jem.52.4.637
Woods AC, Chesney AM.A filterable agent has been obtained from the humors and tissues of the eyes of horses suffering from active periodic ophthalmia. The intra-vitreous injection of this filtrate produced in normal horses the same clinical and pathological picture observed in the natural disease. This filtrate injected into rabbits produced a different clinical picture, but the essential pathological lesions closely resembled those found in horses. After passage of the filterable agent through six generations of rabbits, it again produced the clinical and pathological picture of the natural disease when injected ...
PARAMENINGOCOCCUS AND ITS ANTISERUM.
The Journal of experimental medicine    September 1, 1914   Volume 20, Issue 3 201-217 doi: 10.1084/jem.20.3.201
Wollstein M.The parameningococci of Dopter are culturally indistinguishable from true or normal meningococci, but serologically they exhibit differences as regards agglutination, opsonization, and complement deviation. Because of the variations and irregularities of serum reactions existing among otherwise normal strains of meningococci it does not seem either possible or desirable to separate the parameningococci into a strictly definite class. It appears desirable to consider them as constituting a special strain among meningococci not, however, wholly consistent in itself. The distinctions in serum rea...
Active Immunity Produced by So-Called Balanced or Neutral Mixtures of Diphtheria Toxin and Antitoxin.
The Journal of experimental medicine    March 1, 1909   Volume 11, Issue 2 241-256 doi: 10.1084/jem.11.2.241
Smith T.The foregoing and earlier data taken together demonstrate that an active immunity lasting several years can be produced in guinea-pigs, by the injection of toxin-antitoxin mixtures which have no recognizable harmful effect either immediate or remote. They also show, what might have been anticipated, that under the same conditions mixtures which produce local lesions and which, therefore, contain an excess of toxin produce a much higher degree of immunity than the neutral mixtures, and that an excess of antitoxin reduces the possibility of producing an active immunity, and may extinguish it alt...
The Callosities Upon Horses’ Legs.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    July 20, 1900   Volume 12, Issue 290 113-114 doi: 10.1126/science.12.290.113-b
Irwell L.No abstract available
Insanity in Horses.
Hall's journal of health    July 1, 1875   Volume 22, Issue 7 221 
No abstract available