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.
Physiologic alterations in the horse produced by food and water deprivation during periods of high environmental temperatures.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 7 982-985 
Carlson GP, Rumbaugh GE, Harrold D.Eight normal horses were held without access to food or water for 72 hours during a period of high environmental temperatures. During this period, the horses had an average weight loss of 51.6 kg (10.7% of body weight). Highly significant (P less than 0.001) decreases in extracellular fluid volume (18.6 L) and plasma volume (5 L) were observed during this period as compared with base-line values. Plasma protein, sodium, chloride, and osmolality progressively increased in response to the dehydration, whereas packed cell volume, plasma potassium, calcium, magnesium, and phosphate were not signif...
Autologous, split skin transplantation on the lower limbs of horses.
The Veterinary record    June 30, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 26 590-595 doi: 10.1136/vr.104.26.590
Frankland AL.The skin grafting experiments were carried out on the cannon regions of horses to throw light on four matters relating to split skin transplantation. They were: The thickness of donor split skin that would provide good wound cover and still leave adequate tissue to permit uneventful healing at the donor site; whether split skin grafts were more readily accepted on fresh than on granulating wounds; the size of wounds that would benefit from grafting; and the maximum size of graft that would be readily accepted. The findings were: Split skin grafts 0.76 mm thickness gave the best results althoug...
Urination by racehorses at the sampling unit of the Barbados Turf Club.
The Veterinary record    June 23, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 25 580 doi: 10.1136/vr.104.25.580
Hutson LR.No abstract available
Linkage of loci controlling alloantigens on red blood cells and lymphocytes in the horse.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    June 22, 1979   Volume 204, Issue 4399 1317-1319 doi: 10.1126/science.451540
Bailey E, Stormont C, Suzuki Y, Trommershausen Smith A.A system of equine lymphocyte alloantigens designated ELA, is identified, and it is shown that the locus or loci controlling these markers must be closely linked to the locus controlling markers in the A system of horse blood groups. Among 29 offspring in two stallion families there was evidence for one recombinant. Lod scores for linkage between the A and ELA loci in the two families were 3.61 and 3.33, respectively, for theta equal to 0.
[Cutaneous leukemia in a horse (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    June 15, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 12 511-515 
Rutgers HC, Stibbe S, van den Ingh TS, Breukink HJ.The case of a 16-year-old mare with multiple dermal lymphosarcoma of the histiolymphocytic type is described. Leukaemic changes were not found to be present in the superficial and internal lymph nodes or in the visceral organs.
Thermal death times of the organism of contagious equine metritis 1977.
The Veterinary record    June 9, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 23 530 doi: 10.1136/vr.104.23.530
Timoney PJ, Ward J, McArdle JF, Harrington AM.No abstract available
Everybody’s horses.
The Veterinary record    June 2, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 22 491 doi: 10.1136/vr.104.22.491-a
No abstract available
Cryptococcal meningitis in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1979   Volume 174, Issue 11 1236-1238 
Barclay WP, deLahunta A.No abstract available
Plasma gonadotropin levels in intact and ovariectomized prepubertal ponies.
Biology of reproduction    June 1, 1979   Volume 20, Issue 5 1099-1104 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod20.5.1099
Wesson JA, Ginther OJ.No abstract available
Role of pregnant mare serum gonadotropin in luteal function of pregnant mares.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 6 889-891 
Squires EL, Stevens WB, Pickett BW, Nett TM.No abstract available
[Horse under modern conditions].
Veterinariia    June 1, 1979   Issue 6 61-63 
Bobylev IF.No abstract available
Dynamics of the healing of skin wounds in the horse as compared with the rat.
Experimental and molecular pathology    June 1, 1979   Volume 30, Issue 3 349-359 doi: 10.1016/0014-4800(79)90089-3
Chvapil M, Pfister T, Escalada S, Ludwig J, Peacock EE.No abstract available
Collagenase in equine cell culture preparation.
Journal of clinical microbiology    June 1, 1979   Volume 9, Issue 6 731-733 doi: 10.1128/jcm.9.6.731-733.1979
Lang G.Equine kidney cells disaggregated by treatment with 0.01% collagenase were used in the preparation of primary monolayer cell cultures. The primary cells could be stored for long periods in liquid nitrogen and subsequently subcultivated. These techniques provided a long-term supply of equine kidney cells, free of apparent contamination, from the kidneys of a single fetus.
Development of the equine venous sinuses of the dura mater.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    June 1, 1979   Volume 8, Issue 2 124-137 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1979.tb00685.x
Vitums A.No abstract available
Total fibre numbers in cross sections of the semitendinosus in athletic and non-athletic horses and dogs.
Journal of anatomy    June 1, 1979   Volume 128, Issue Pt 4 821-828 
Gunn HM.The numbers of fibres in the complete cross section of the semitendinosus were estimated in 58 equines and 59 canines of differing types. Animals selected for swiftness--thoroughbred horses and greyhounds--have a greater number of fibres in a cross section of their semitendinosus than other members of their species, whether as neonates or as adults. The numbers of fibres in the cross section increases during growth in both types of animal in each species.
Immunochemical studies on beta-lactoglobulins. precipitin reactions of sow’s and mare’s mammary secretions against anti – bovine beta – lactoglobulin antiserum.
Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale    May 15, 1979   Volume 55, Issue 9 815-821 
Liberatori J, Morisio Guidetti L, Conti A.By double diffusion in agarose gel, in well defined experimental conditions, cross reactions were observed between porcine beta-lactoglobulins and anti-bovine beta-lactoglobulin antisera. The immunological reactivity between these beta-lactoglobulins from a monogastric and the ruminant anti beta-lactoglobulin antiserum thus implies a certain degree of similarity between the monomeric beta-lactoglobulins examined and the dimeric of the ruminants. With the same antisera it also proved possible to demonstrate the presence of beta-lactoglobulins in the mammary secretions of another monogastric, na...
Equine hydatidosis.
The Veterinary record    May 5, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 18 417 doi: 10.1136/vr.104.18.417-a
Connor RJ, Hizzard P.No abstract available
[Mastocytoma in the horse].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    May 1, 1979   Volume 121, Issue 5 269-272 
Häni H, von Tscharner C.No abstract available
Postural reflexes in foals.
Modern veterinary practice    May 1, 1979   Volume 60, Issue 5 392-394 
Rooney JR.No abstract available
Preliminary investigation on the role of the ampulla of the vas deferens in glycerylphosphorylcholine production in the stallion. Kosiniak K.No abstract available
Seasonal relationship between pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) activity and reproductive status in the pony.
General and comparative endocrinology    May 1, 1979   Volume 38, Issue 1 46-52 doi: 10.1016/0016-6480(79)90087-x
Wesson JA, Orr EL, Quay WB, Ginther OJ.Pony pineal glands and female reproductive tracts were collected monthly for 1 year from a local slaughterhouse. Pineal gland weights did not change significantly throughout the year. Pineal gland tissue homogenates were assayed for hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) activity with N-acetylserotonin as the primary substrate. The greatest HIOMT activity was obtained with N-acetylserotonin as substrate. but three other related S-OH indole substrates (5-hydroxytryptophol, serotonin. and 5-hydroxy-2-methylindole) were also methylated. HIOMT activity with all substrates was highest duri...
Uterine luminal proteins in the cycling mare.
Biology of reproduction    May 1, 1979   Volume 20, Issue 4 689-698 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod20.4.689
Zavy MT, Bazer FW, Sharp DC, Wilcox CJ.No abstract available
[Intraosseous arteries of the ossa coxae in foals].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 1, 1979   Volume 92, Issue 9 178-180 
Pohlmeyer K, Butendieck E.No abstract available
Characterization of various horse thyroid forms of cyclic-nucleotide phosphodiesterase [proceedings].
Archives internationales de physiologie et de biochimie    May 1, 1979   Volume 87, Issue 2 408-410 
Erneux C, Couchie D.No abstract available
Adrenal gland function in the horse: effect of dexamethasone on hydrocortisone secretion and blood cellularity and plasma electrolyte concentrations.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 5 727-729 
Eiler H, Oliver J, Goble D.No abstract available
Effect of intrauterine saline infusion during the late luteal phase on the estrous cycle and luteal function of the mare.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 5 665-668 
Neely DP, Stabenfeldt GH, Kindahl H, Hughes JP, Kendrick JW.The intrauterine infusion of 500 ml of warm sterile saline solution into mares on days 12, 13, or 14 after ovulation failed to alter the ovulatory interval, although intervals were shorter for days 12 and 13 (20.6 days) when compared with those in control mares (21.6 days). The IU fusion shortened luteal-life-span on days 12 (12.0 vs 13.8 days) and 13 (13.0 vs 14.4 days) (P is less than 0.05), but not day 14 (14.0 vs 13.5 days), when comparing the effects of IU infusion with an average of before and after base-line data. There was no effect on the interval from corpus luteum regression to ovul...
Variability in erythrocyte deformability among various mammals.
The American journal of physiology    May 1, 1979   Volume 236, Issue 5 H725-H730 doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1979.236.5.H725
Smith JE, Mohandas N, Shohet SB.Deformability is an important aspect of erythrocyte physiology and has been extensively studied using human red cells. We have studied erythrocytes from 25 different animals using a viscometric technique. Erythrocyte diameters ranged from 3.3 microns in the goat to 11.4 microns for the elephant seal. Erythrocytes from most species deformed readily when a fluid shear stress was applied. A deformability index of the stressed cell defined as (length - width)/(length + width) correlated with cell size. The erythrocytes of four animals (pygmy goat, goat, Batanga horse, and miniature horse) deformed...
Molecular cytogenetics of the Equidae. I. Purification and cytological localization of a (G + C)-rich satellite DNA from Equus przewalskii.
Chromosoma    April 30, 1979   Volume 72, Issue 2 115-129 doi: 10.1007/BF00293229
Ryder OA, Hansen SK.A (G + C)-rich density satellite DNA (rho = 1.713 gm/cc) has been purified from splenic DNA of Przewalski's horse, Equus przewalskii, by successive equilibrium density gradient centrifugations. The purified satellite, which may comprise as much as 29% of the total DNA, renatures rapidly; however, analyses of native, single-stranded, and reassociated molecules by analytical ultracentrifugation and melting properties suggest that some sequence heterogeniety exists in the 1.713 gm/cc satellite. Complementary RNA (cRNA) transcribed from satellite DNA has been utilized for in situ hybridization stu...
[Results of hippotherapeutic measures – attempt at documentation of therapeutic successes (author’s transl)].
Das Offentliche Gesundheitswesen    April 1, 1979   Volume 41, Issue 4 201-205 
Tarnow A.No abstract available
Thoroughbred horses erythrocyte glycolytic capacity and glycolytic enzymes activities: comparisons with human red blood cells.
The Indian veterinary journal    April 1, 1979   Volume 56, Issue 4 273-278 
Medeiros LO, Nicolau J, Medeiros LF, Ferri S.No abstract available