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.
Use of clomiphene citrate to induce estrus in anestrous mares.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    April 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 4 605-607 
Robinson JR.No abstract available
The laboratory diagnosis of cutaneous and subcutaneous mycoses in animals.
Folia veterinaria Latina    April 1, 1977   Volume 7, Issue 2 111-129 
Euzeby J.No abstract available
Conception in a mare with an active corpus luteum.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1977   Volume 170, Issue 7 733-734 
Hughes JP, Stabenfeldt GH.No abstract available
Clinical use of glucocorticoids in large animals.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    April 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 4 611-614 
Kunesh JP.No abstract available
Digestible energy requirements of working and non-working ponies.
Journal of animal science    April 1, 1977   Volume 44, Issue 4 585-589 doi: 10.2527/jas1977.444585x
Barth KM, Williams JW, Brown DG.No abstract available
The development of complement-fixing antibody in horses after infection with Mycoplasma equirhinis.
Journal of comparative pathology    April 1, 1977   Volume 87, Issue 2 281-286 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(77)90015-9
Hooker JM, Butler M.No abstract available
Isolation and properties of prophospholipase A2 and phospholipase A2 from horse pancreas and horse pancreatic juice.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    March 28, 1977   Volume 491, Issue 1 265-274 doi: 10.1016/0005-2795(77)90062-9
Evenberg A, Meyer H, Verheij HM, de Haas GH.Two phospholipases A2 (EC 3.1.1.4) with different isoelectric points have been isolated from horse pancreas in high yield (880 mg/kg tissue). From pancreatic juice the more acidic species was isolated as the sole phospholipase A2. Upon tryptic activation the zymogens release a hepta- and pentapeptide, respectively from the N-terminal part of the protein giving rise to the formation of one single enzyme with a specific activity higher than that of pancreatic phospholipases A2 from other mammalian species. Horse phospholipase A2 differs from the porcine and bovine enzymes with respect to amino a...
Laminitis in the horse.
The Veterinary record    March 26, 1977   Volume 100, Issue 13 262-264 doi: 10.1136/vr.100.13.262
Colles CM, Jeffcott LB.Much has been written on laminitis and its treatment over the past 200 years. This article makes a brief review of the practical essentials of the disease and considers some of the recent trends in therapy. Knowledge of the pathogenesis and aetiology of equine laminitis is still very incomplete but recent work in the United States by Coffman and his colleagues has been particularly productive.
Chromatographic determination of some corticosteroids, with special reference to horse doping.
Zeitschrift fur Rechtsmedizin. Journal of legal medicine    March 23, 1977   Volume 79, Issue 2 97-102 doi: 10.1007/BF00200236
Schubert B.Some chromatographic procedures, which can be used to detect and determine certain corticosteroids in samples from race horses, are described. These procedures include thin-layer, gas and high pressure liquid chromatography.
Recent developments in air transportation of farm animals and horses.
The Veterinary record    March 12, 1977   Volume 100, Issue 11 211-216 doi: 10.1136/vr.100.11.211
Allsup TN.This paper deals with some recent developments in the air transportation of cattle, sheep, pigs and horses and comments on the factors involved which influence the results.
Discussion: “Horseback riding as a psychotherapeutic tool”.
Communicating nursing research    March 1, 1977   Volume 8 213-215 
Muhlenkamp AF.No abstract available
Probing DNA quaternary ordering with circular dichroism spectroscopy: studies of equine sperm chromosomal fibers.
Biopolymers    March 1, 1977   Volume 16, Issue 3 573-582 doi: 10.1002/bip.1977.360160308
Sipski ML, Wagner TE.No abstract available
Herpes virus infections of animals–a brief review.
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy    March 1, 1977   Volume 3 Suppl A 9-14 doi: 10.1093/jac/3.suppl_a.9
Burrows R.No abstract available
Horseback riding as a psychotherapeutic tool.
Communicating nursing research    March 1, 1977   Volume 8 206-212 
Hunn SE.No abstract available
[Gastric juice – an effective therapeutic agent].
Veterinariia    March 1, 1977   Issue 3 82-84 
Chuklov NF, Morozov AP.No abstract available
Marginal pulmonary atelectasis a symptom of viral infection in horses and bovines.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    March 1, 1977   Volume 24, Issue 3 241-249 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1977.tb00994.x
Steck W.No abstract available
Hepatic midzonal necrosis in a pig fed aflatoxin and a horse fed moldy hay.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1977   Volume 14, Issue 2 182-187 doi: 10.1177/030098587701400210
McGavin MD, Knake R.A 35-kg Duroc pig died 3 days after eating a ration containing aflatoxin B1, B2, G1, and G2. It had hemorrhagic enteritis and extensive midzonal necrosis in the liver. A 13-year-old Quarterhorse that died 2 days after eating moldy hay had hemorrhagic enteritis, fatty degeneration of the myocardium and renal tubules, and extensive total midzonal necrosis of the liver.
Klossiella equi Baumann, 1946 (Sporozoa: Eucoccidiorida) from an Illinois horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    March 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 3 443-448 
Todd KS, Gosser HS, Hamilton DP.No abstract available
Prostaglandin F2alpha specific binding in equine corpora lutea.
Prostaglandins    March 1, 1977   Volume 13, Issue 3 553-564 doi: 10.1016/0090-6980(77)90032-6
Kimball FA, Wyngarden LJ.Preliminary studies indicate the presence of PGF2alpha specific binding sites in membrane fractions prepared from equine corpora lutea. The equilibrium binding data indicate an apparent dissociation constant of 3.2 X 10(-9)M and the concentration of binding sites of -0.1 pmoles/mg membrane protein. Competition of several natural prostaglandins for equine luteal PGF2alpha specific binding sites indicates specificity for the 9alpha-hydroxyl moiety and the 5,6-cis doublebond. Significant increases in relative binding affinities were demonstrated for PGF2alpha analogs with a phenyl ring introduced...
Surgical repair of cleft soft palate in the horse.
The Veterinary record    February 12, 1977   Volume 100, Issue 7 145 doi: 10.1136/vr.100.7.145-a
De Geus JJ, Jones RS, Lovius BB, Maisels DO.No abstract available
Transmission of the cytochrome c structural gene in horse-donkey crosses.
The Journal of biological chemistry    February 10, 1977   Volume 252, Issue 3 830-834 
Walasek OF, Margoliash E.Donkey cytochrome c was shown to differ from horse cytochrome c by having a serine in position 47 rather than a threonine. The rest of the amino acid sequences are identical. Mules and hinnies, both males and females, carry equal amounts of horse and donkey cytochromes c. The same ratio is found in hinnies in preparations from heart tissue and from skeletal muscle. These results demonstrate that cytochrome c is transmitted in horse-donkey crosses as a simple Mendelian character which is neither sex-linked nor shows dominance. The cytochrome c gene is therefore located in the nuclear genome, as...
[“Rehabilitation through horseback riding–horseback-riding therapy” 2. International Congress, Basel 11-13 November 1976].
Die Rehabilitation    February 1, 1977   Volume 16, Issue 1 38-45 
Riesser H.No abstract available
Effect of level of feed intake and gelatin supplementation on growth and quality of hoofs of ponies.
Journal of animal science    February 1, 1977   Volume 44, Issue 2 257-261 doi: 10.2527/jas1977.442257x
Butler KD, Hintz HF.A pelleted ration was fed limited or ad libitum to two groups of seven Shetland 8-month-old ponies for 117 days. During the last 56 days, gelatin was added to the diets of four animals in each of the two intake groups. Gelatin was added at levels of 30 and 90 g per 100 kg body weight for the first and second 28-day periods, respectively. Ponies fed the diet ad libitum consumed 180% more feed, had 50% greater rate of hoof growth (.384 ± .009 vs .254 ± .008 mm/d), 200% greater increase in height at the withers and 425% greater increase in body weight than ponies fed the limited level. The h...
[Electrophoregram of blood serum of normal pure-bred Mangalarga horses 1 to 2 years of age].
Revista brasileira de biologia    February 1, 1977   Volume 37, Issue 1 175-178 
Medeiros LF, Stipp AC, Jaria LJ, Medeiros LO.No abstract available
[Magnesium metabolism in the horse].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    February 1, 1977   Volume 24, Issue 2 128-139 
Meyer H, Ahlswede L.No abstract available
[Serologic studies of O antigens from E coli strains isolated from horses during hygienic supervision of breeding].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    February 1, 1977   Volume 90, Issue 3 52-55 
Weber A, Bertelsmann U.No abstract available
Bovine papilloma virus: presence of virus-specific DNA sequences in naturally occurring equine tumors.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    February 1, 1977   Volume 74, Issue 2 524-528 doi: 10.1073/pnas.74.2.524
Lancaster WD, Olson C, Meinke W.Four of five spontaneous benign equine connective tissue tumors of unknown etiology and a bovine papilloma virus (BPV)-induced equine tumor contained BPV-specific DNA sequences as determined by DNA-DNA hybridization of DNA from tumors with BPV DNA labeled in vitro. Analysis of the kinetics of reassociation indicated that 20-75% of the BPV genome was present in the various tumors. The number of partial BPV genome equivalents ranged from 60 to 500 copies per diploid quantity of cellular DNA. Thermal denaturation profiles of duplexes formed between labeled BPV DNA and DNA from tumor cells indicat...
Estrus, ovulation, and serum progesterone, estradiol, and LH concentrations in mares after an increased photoperiod during winter.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 2 203-207 
Oxender WD, Noden PA, Hafs HD.On December 11, 1974, 15 seasonally anestrous mares were assigned at random to 1 of 3 experimental groups: outdoor-control, indoor-control, or indoor light-treated (a 16-hour photo-period). This experiment was terminated on April 21, 1975. The five mares in the indoor light-treated group ovulated 59.0+/-6.9 days later, which was 74 days earlier (P less than 0.01) than 2 of the 5 outdoor-controls (the other 3 ovulated after April 21 during a subsequent experiment) and 50 days earlier (P less than 0.05) than the indoor-controls. Durations of the 1st estrus for the 3 groups of mares were 13.3+/-3...
Serum enzyme and protein concentrations in English shire horses.
The Veterinary record    January 29, 1977   Volume 100, Issue 5 91-92 doi: 10.1136/vr.100.5.91
Blackmore DJ, Kent JE.No abstract available
Artificial control of the mare’s oestrous cycle.
The Veterinary record    January 22, 1977   Volume 100, Issue 4 68-71 doi: 10.1136/vr.100.4.68
Allen WR.No abstract available