Analyze Diet

Topic:Animal Science

Animal Science and horses encompass the study of equine biology, physiology, and management practices aimed at understanding and improving horse health, welfare, and performance. This field integrates various scientific disciplines, including genetics, nutrition, reproduction, and behavior, to address the needs of horses in diverse contexts such as sports, work, and companionship. Research in this area often focuses on optimizing feeding strategies, enhancing breeding programs, and developing effective health management protocols. Additionally, studies explore the genetic factors influencing traits such as athleticism and disease resistance, as well as the impact of environmental and management conditions on horse behavior and welfare. This page gathers peer-reviewed research and scholarly articles that investigate the scientific principles underpinning equine science and their practical applications in horse care and management.
A comparison of two computer-automated semen analysis instruments for the evaluation of sperm motion characteristics in the stallion.
Journal of andrology    September 1, 1990   Volume 11, Issue 5 453-459 
Jasko DJ, Lein DH, Foote RH.Two commercially available computer-automate semen analysis instruments (CellSoft Automated Semen Analyzer and HTM-2000 Motion Analyzer) were compared for their ability to report similar results based on the analysis of pre-recorded video tapes of extended, motile stallion semen. The determinations of the percentage of motile cells by these instruments were more similar than the comparisons between subjective estimates and either instrument. However, mean values obtained from the same sample may still differ by as much as 30 percentage units between instruments. Instruments varied with regard ...
Attempted transmission of Ehrlichia risticii (Rickettsiaceae) with Stomoxys calcitrans (Diptera: Muscidae).
Journal of medical entomology    September 1, 1990   Volume 27, Issue 5 874-877 doi: 10.1093/jmedent/27.5.874
Burg JG, Roberts AW, Williams NM, Powell DG, Knapp FW.Experimental transmission of Ehrlichia risticii, the causal agent of Potomac horse fever, was attempted with adult stable flies, Stomoxys calcitrans, (L.) using two feeding schedules. In schedule A, a set of 140 flies was allowed to feed once on an experimentally infected donor pony and once 24 h later on a recipient pony. A different set of flies was used each day for a 12-d period. In schedule B, 240 flies were allowed to feed once daily for 12 consecutive d on the donor pony followed by five consecutive daily feedings on the recipient pony. E. risticii was isolated from the blood of the exp...
Alteration of intestinal enzyme activities associated with extensive large-colon resection in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 9 1329-1334 
Bertone AL, Toofanian F, Stashak TS.Lactase, maltase, sucrase, and alkaline phosphatase activities were determined in the intestinal mucosa from 3 locations in the small intestine and 4 locations in the large intestine 1 year after extensive large-colon resection (group 1; n = 5) and 1 year after sham operation (group 2; n = 3) in horses. Lactase, maltase, and sucrase activities were similar (P greater than 0.05) between group-1 and group-2 horses in all locations measured in the intestinal tract. Alkaline phosphatase activity in the remaining large colon of group-1 horses was significantly (P less than 0.05) greater than the ac...
Applications of skin grafting in large animals.
Problems in veterinary medicine    September 1, 1990   Volume 2, Issue 3 442-462 
Wilson DG.Injuries involving full-thickness skin wounds are common in large animals. Skin grafting can shorten the healing time and improve the cosmetic result. Techniques that have been used successfully in the management of full-thickness skin wounds include full-thickness skin grafts, split-thickness skin grafts, tunnel grafts, pinch/punch grafts, and immediate split-thickness skin grafts. The technical aspects of each of these procedures are detailed and representative cases are presented.
[The cardiotropic, hypometabolic and hypothermic activity of peptide fractions from the tissues of hibernating cold-adapted animals].
Zhurnal evoliutsionnoi biokhimii i fiziologii    September 1, 1990   Volume 26, Issue 5 623-629 
Sukhova GS, Ignat'ev DA, Akhremenko AK, Levashova VG, Mikhaleva II, Sviriaev VI, Anufriev AI, Ziganshin RKh, Kramarova LI, Gnutov DIu.From tissues of hibernating and active long-tailed ground squirrels and from the brain of cold-adapted Yakut horses, low molecular peptide fractions were obtained which, after injection to albino mice, decreased oxygen consumption and rectal temperature in them. The same fractions exhibited negative chrono- and inotropic effects on isolated hearts of ectothermic and endothermic animals. Fractions from the brain of ground squirrels and the brain of horse exhibited similar pattern of the activity. The activity of fractions was subjected to seasonal changes and depended on the degree of their pur...
An outbreak of botulism type B in horses.
The Veterinary record    August 25, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 8 206 
Haagsma J, Haesebrouck F, Devriese L, Bertels G.No abstract available
Villous hypoplasia of small intestine in neonatal foals.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    August 1, 1990   Volume 52, Issue 4 855-858 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.52.855
Oikawa M, Yoshihara T, Kaneko M, Yoshikawa T.No abstract available
Feed additives and contaminants as a cause of equine disease.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1990   Volume 6, Issue 2 467-478 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30552-7
Whitlock RH.The equine practitioner often encounters serious diagnostic and therapeutic challenges regarding the specific origin of a disease. Such challenges may occur when horses become unaccountably ill after consuming what was thought to be acceptable feed but which in fact was contaminated or contained additives intended for other species. Examples of such additives and contaminants are monensin, lasalocid, salinomycin, blister beetles, and such antimicrobics as lincomycin and clindamycin.
A conceptual approach to optimal nutrition of brood mares.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1990   Volume 6, Issue 2 373-391 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30547-3
Donoghue S, Meacham TN, Kronfeld DS.Cumulative nutritional demands on good brood mares are unrivalled among domestic livestock, but little attention has been given to the influence of nutrition on their reproductive performance and efficiency. We suggest that part of the decline in racing performance of progeny of mares over 10 years of age may be caused by suboptimal nutrition. This article contrasts the concepts of minimal and optimal nutrient requirements, revives Hammond's concept of nutrient partitioning to the conceptus and mammary gland, and discusses energy and nutrient requirements during gestation and lactation. Furthe...
Clinical nutrition.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1990   Volume 6, Issue 2 281-478 
No abstract available
Histochemical profile of articularis humeri muscle in the horse.
Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale    August 1, 1990   Volume 66, Issue 8 767-769 
Lalatta Costerbosa G, Barazzoni AM, Clavenzani P, Callegari E.In this study the histochemical fiber type analysis of the articularis humeri muscle of the horse was performed. This muscle is composed of type I and type IIA fibers. A large number of spindles has been observed and the presence of these receptors could help to understand the role played by this muscle.
Taste aversion learning in horses.
Journal of animal science    August 1, 1990   Volume 68, Issue 8 2340-2344 doi: 10.2527/1990.6882340x
Houpt KA, Zahorik DM, Swartzman-Andert JA.The ability of ponies to learn to avoid a relatively novel food associated with illness was tested in three situations: when illness occurred immediately after consuming a feed; when illness occurred 30 min after consuming a feed; and when illness was contingent upon eating one of three feeds offered simultaneously. Apomorphine was used to produce illness. The feeds associated with illness were corn, alfalfa pellets, sweet feed and a complete pelleted feed. The ponies learned to avoid all the fees except the complete feed when apomorphine injection immediately followed consumption of the feed....
Ultrastructural morphology of hypomelanosis in equine cutaneous papilloma.
Journal of comparative pathology    August 1, 1990   Volume 103, Issue 2 199-213 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(08)80176-4
Hamada M, Itakura C.The morphology of hypomelanosis occurring in experimentally induced equine papillomas was investigated. Histologically, dopa-positive functioning melanocytes were decreased in number from the basal layer in the epidermis. Electron-microscopically, melanogenic organelles in the melanocytes were degenerate and melanosomes were decreased in number and size. In addition, the melanocytes had some abnormal melanosomes including melanosome complexes and giant melanosomes. Some abnormal melanosomes were also present in the keratinocytes. The hypomelanosis seemed to be related to a disturbance in melan...
Determination of the relationship between sperm morphologic classifications and fertility in stallions: 66 cases (1987-1988).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 3 389-394 
Jasko DJ, Lein DH, Foote RH.The analysis of breeding records and sperm morphologic classifications from ejaculated semen during 99 stallion seasons, over a 2-year period, revealed a significant correlation (r = 0.34, P less than 0.01) between the percentage of morphologically normal sperm in ejaculates and the per cycle fertility estimate of the stallions studied. In addition, the percentage of sperm classified as having major defects (abnormal heads, proximal droplets, and abnormal midpieces) was significantly inversely correlated (r = -0.36, P less than 0.01) with the same fertility estimates. Multiple variable regress...
Ingestive behavior.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1990   Volume 6, Issue 2 319-337 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30544-8
Houpt KA.In summary, horses spend 60% or more of their time eating when grazing or when feed is available free choice. Grasses are their preferred food, but they supplement the grass with herbs and woody plants. Sweetened mixtures of oats and corn are the most preferred concentrate. Horses can increase or decrease the time spent eating and amount eaten to maintain caloric intake. Their intake is stimulated by drugs such as diazepam and by the presence of other horses. Horses stop eating when gastric osmolality increases; increases in plasma osmolality, protein, and glucose accompany digestion. Foals ea...
Absence of cadmium in the blood of horses fed oats grown on municipal sludge-amended soil.
The Science of the total environment    August 1, 1990   Volume 96, Issue 3 313-316 doi: 10.1016/0048-9697(90)90081-5
Maylin GA, Bache CA, Lisk DJ.Effluents from a number of industries which are typically treated in municipal sewage plants result in cadmium-containing sludge. Disposal of such sewage sludge by application to agricultural land can result in uptake of cadmium by crops. In this study, oats were grown on soils which had been amended with sewage sludge from Syracuse, New York. The cadmium concentration in the sludge-grown oats was 1.79 ppm dry weight. Horses were fed the sludge-grown oats for 6 weeks during which time blood samples were taken for the determination of cadmium. No significant differences (p greater than 0.05) we...
Evidence of Toxoplasma gondii in an equine placenta.
The Veterinary record    July 28, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 4 96 
Turner CB, Savva D.No abstract available
Efficacy of ivermectin oral liquid for horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    July 1, 1990   Volume 31, Issue 7 519-521 
Bell RJ, Holste JE.No abstract available
The median cleft of the lower lip and mandible and its surgical correction in a donkey.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 4 298-301 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04274.x
Farmand M, Stohler T.No abstract available
Fibre size and composition in the middle gluteal muscle of the Andalusian horse.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 4 286-287 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04269.x
López-Rivero JL, Agüera E, Monterde JG, Diz A, Vivo J.No abstract available
The inheritance of the leopard complex of spotting patterns in horses.
The Journal of heredity    July 1, 1990   Volume 81, Issue 4 323-331 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a110997
Sponenberg DP, Carr G, Simak E, Schwink K.The leopard complex of white spotting patterns in horses consists of the leopard, few-spot leopard, blanket, blanket with spots, varnish roan (or marble), snowflake, frosted, speckled, and mottled patterns. Horses with any of these patterns can produce the other patterns when mated to nonpatterned horses. Twenty-two horses of the Welsh Pony, Noriker, Appaloosa, and Pony of the Americas breeds produced 270 foals in a distribution consistent with a single dominant allele being responsible for the patterns. The symbol for this dominant allele, Lp, is retained from previous work on the leopard pat...
Equine synovial tendon sheaths and bursae: an histological and scanning electron microscopical study.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 4 264-272 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04265.x
Hago BE, Plummer JM, Vaughan LC.The structure of equine synovial tendon sheaths and bursae has been examined by light and scanning electron microscopy. Tissue samples were obtained from horses of various types and ages with no clinical evidence of sheath or bursal disorders. The interior of both structures was lined by a cellular layer superimposed on a vascular zone supported by a fibrous layer. The pattern of cell distribution of the lining varied from site to site within the same structure depending on the nature of the underlying tissue and on the amount of movement to which the structure was subjected. The cellular laye...
Isolation and staging of horse seminiferous tubules by transillumination.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    July 1, 1990   Volume 89, Issue 2 689-696 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0890689
Johnson L, Kattan-Said AF, Hardy VB, Scrutchfield WL.Stages of the spermatogenic cycle in the horse were determined by trans-illumination of enzymically isolated, seminiferous tubules and were verified by whole-mounted tubules observed by Nomarski optics and by conventional histology. Isolated tubules were obtained from young (less than 2 years) and adult (4-10 years) horses by enzymic digestion. Dispersed tubules were separated into three different groups based on the presence, size, and intensity of a dark region in the centre of the tubules: (1) pale--homogeneously light, (2) spotty--light on the periphery with a wide spotty region in the cen...
Suspected salmonellosis in seven broodmares after transportation.
Australian veterinary journal    July 1, 1990   Volume 67, Issue 7 265-267 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1990.tb07785.x
McClintock SA, Begg AP.No abstract available
Effects of exercise and adrenaline on equine erythrocyte ATP content.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1990   Volume 49, Issue 1 77-81 
Snow DH, Martin V.To investigate the claim that equine erythrocytes released from the spleen are older cells than those found at rest in the circulation, the 2,3, diphosphoglycerate (2,3 DPG), adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and creatine concentration of erythrocytes before and following splenic emptying were examined. Normal values for thoroughbreds (43) and ponies (10) at rest were established. Following either exercise or intravenous injection of adrenaline in six thoroughbreds, there was an increase in erythrocyte creatine content and a decrease in ATP concentration. Exercise produced a slight increase in 2,3 ...
Carbonic anhydrase III in equine tissues and sera determined by a highly sensitive enzyme-immunoassay.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 4 247-250 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04262.x
Nishita T, Matsushita H.A sensitive sandwich enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for measuring equine carbonic anhydrase III (CA-III) was established using a microplate as a solid-phase and peroxidase as a labelling enzyme. The assay can detect concentrations as low as 5 ng/ml using 20 microliters of sample sera. Within-run coefficients of variation obtained using standard equine CA-III were less than 5 per cent. CA-III levels in equine serum ranged from 5 to 50 ng/ml (n = 370), and apparently abnormal levels of CA-III from 100 to 1900 ng/ml (n = 27) were observed. The concentrations of immunoreactive CA-III in the extracts of ...
Uterine contractile activity in mares during the estrous cycle and early pregnancy.
Theriogenology    July 1, 1990   Volume 34, Issue 1 47-56 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(90)90576-f
Griffin PG, Ginther OJ.Transrectal ultrasonography was used to quantitate uterine contractile activity during the estrous cycle and early pregnancy in pony mares (nonbred, n = 9; pregnant, n = 16). Continuous 1-min scans of longitudinal sections of the uterine body were videotaped, and uterine activity scores (1=minimal activity, 5=maximal activity) were assigned to each tape segment. There was a tendency (P<0.06) for a main effect of reproductive status (nonbred versus pregnant), a main effect of day (P<0.0001), and a reproductive status by day interaction (P<0.006). Uterine activity scores were higher (P&...
Multifactorial inheritance of common white markings in the Arabian horse.
The Journal of heredity    July 1, 1990   Volume 81, Issue 4 250-256 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a110987
Woolf CM.The results of a previous study were compatible with the hypothesis that common white facial markings in the Arabian horse have a multifactorial mode of inheritance. I expanded that study to (1) include the legs and therefore obtain insight into the heritability of common white markings in all peripheral regions (face and legs) of the Arabian horse and (2) investigate the influence of sex and the genotypes that produce the bay and chestnut phenotypes on the variation in common white markings. Both studies were based on computerized data obtained from the Arabian Horse Registry of America, Inc....
A survey of whole blood selenium concentrations of horses in Maryland.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1990   Volume 80, Issue 3 251-258 
Carmel DK, Crisman MV, Ley WB, Irby MH, Edwards GH.We surveyed the whole blood selenium status of a randomly sampled population of horses from 4 contiguous counties in northern Maryland. Two hundred and two horses from 74 farms were sampled. Whole blood selenium levels greater than or equal to 0.100 parts per million (ppm) were considered adequate; blood levels less than 0.100 ppm were considered marginal or deficient. The average blood selenium concentration of the horses sampled was 0.137 ppm, with a standard deviation of 0.041 ppm. Blood selenium concentrations ranged from 0.050-0.266 ppm. Thirty-eight of 202 horses (18.8%) had a selenium l...
High-resolution study of the three-dimensional structure of horse heart metmyoglobin.
Journal of molecular biology    June 20, 1990   Volume 213, Issue 4 885-897 doi: 10.1016/S0022-2836(05)80270-0
Evans SV, Brayer GD.The three-dimensional structure of horse heart metmyoglobin has been refined to a final R-factor of 15.5% for all observed data in the 6.0 to 1.9 A resolution range. The final model consists of 1242 non-hydrogen protein atoms, 154 water molecules and one sulfate ion. This structure has nearly ideal bonding and bond angle geometry. A Luzzati plot of the variation in R-factor with resolution yields an estimated mean co-ordinate error of 0.18 A. An extensive analysis of the pattern of hydrogen bonds formed in horse heart metmyoglobin has been completed. Over 80% of the polypeptide chain is involv...