Analyze Diet

Topic:Animal Studies

Animal studies involving horses encompass a range of research focused on understanding equine biology, behavior, and health. These studies often investigate various aspects of horse physiology, genetics, nutrition, and disease pathology. Researchers utilize animal studies to explore the effects of different treatments, management practices, and environmental factors on horse welfare and performance. The findings from such studies contribute to the development of improved care strategies and health interventions. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, findings, and implications of animal studies conducted on horses, providing insights into their application in advancing equine science.
Hemodynamics and myocardial function during acute hypoxia in the pony.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 3 365-371 
Buss DD, Bisgard GE.Hemodynamics and myocardial contractility were evaluated in 6 unanesthetized ponies during hypocapnic and isocapnic hypoxia and during hypocapnic hypoxia after beta adrenergic blockade with propranolol. Hypocapnic hypoxia, with a mean arterial oxygen pressure (PaO2) of 41.9 mm of Hg, produced a decrease in stroke index and an increase in heart rate, with no change of cardiac index. A moderate increase in left ventricular contractility occurred during hypocapnic hypoxia. Beta adrenergic blockade abolished changes in nearly all indices of left ventricular contractility during hypocapnic hypoxia,...
Amino acid sequence of phospholipase A2 from horse pancreas.
The Journal of biological chemistry    February 25, 1977   Volume 252, Issue 4 1189-1196 
Evenberg A, Meyer H, Gaastra W, Verheij HM, De Haas GH.The complete amino acid sequence of phosphlipase A2 (EC 3.1.1.4) from horse pancreas was determined. The protein controls of a single polypeptide chain of 125 amino acids and has a molecular weight of 13,927. The chain is crosslinked by seven disulfide bridges. The sequence was determined by automated Edman degradation of the intact protein and several of the large peptide fragments. Smaller peptides were analyzed by manual Edman degradation. Fragmentation of the peptide chain was accomplished by enzymatic digestion with trypsin, chymotrypsin, and thermolysin. The final overlap was found by di...
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...
Seasonal variation in plasma androgens and testosterone in the North American wild horse.
The Journal of endocrinology    February 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 2 237-238 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0720237
Kirkpatrick JF, Wiesner L, Kenney RM, Ganjam VK, Turner JW.No abstract available
Neoplasms of Equidae.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 15, 1977   Volume 170, Issue 2 150-152 
Sundberg JP, Burnstein T, Page EH, Kirkham WW, Robinson FR.In a retrospective study of neoplasms in Equidae pre;ented to the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory, Purdue University, from Jan 1, 1970, to Dec 31, 1974, data were compiled on numbers and anatomic sites of neoplasms as well as on age, sex, and breed of subjects from which the neoplasms were taken. During this 5-year period, 21 neoplasms were diagnosed from 687 equine necropsies (3.1%) and 215 from 635 biopsies (33.9%), totaling 236 neoplasms from 1,322 cases (17.9%). The most common neoplasms were sarcoids (43.6%) and squamous cell carcinomas (24.6%). Papillomas (5.5%), nerve sheath tumors...
[Mechanisms for the expression of parental alleles of the Gpd locus in mule erythrocytes].
Genetika    January 1, 1977   Volume 13, Issue 10 1761-1766 
Serov OL, Zakiian SM, Kulichkov VA.No abstract available
Prevalence and pathogenicity of Anoplocephala perfoliata in a horse population in South Auckland.
New Zealand veterinary journal    January 1, 1977   Volume 25, Issue 1-2 27-28 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1977.34343
Bain SA, Kelly JD.No abstract available
[Can portable Röntgen apparatus produce useful radiograms of large animals].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1977   Volume 119, Issue 1 31-39 
Ueltschi G.No abstract available
Studies on cytochrome c. XIV. Synthesis of the protected heptadecapeptide (sequence 88-104) of horse heart cytochrome c.
International journal of peptide and protein research    January 1, 1977   Volume 10, Issue 2 95-101 
Borin G, Filippi B, Cavaggion F, Marchiori F.A solution synthesis is described of the partially protected N alpha-benzyloxycarbonylheptadecapeptide Z-Lys (Tfa)-Thr-Glu-Arg-Glu-Asp-Leu-Ile-Ala-Tyr-Leu-Lys (Tfa)-Lys (Tfa)-Ala-Thr-Asn-Glu (OBu t)-OBu t corresponding to sequence 88-104 of horse heart cytochrome c. The synthesis is achieved through the preparation of two subunits H1 (sequence 88-96) and H2 (sequence 97-104) and their linkage by an azide coupling step.
In vivo and analytical studies of forces and moments in equine long bones.
Journal of biomechanics    January 1, 1977   Volume 10, Issue 11/12 701-705 doi: 10.1016/0021-9290(77)90085-9
Rybicki EF, Mills EJ.No abstract available
Cross-reactivity in the radioimmunoassay of ferritin with cells from high- and low-responder mice.
Biochemical Society transactions    January 1, 1977   Volume 5, Issue 1 256-258 doi: 10.1042/bst0050256
Deacon NJ, Ebringer A.No abstract available
Indirect measurement of blood pressure in animals.
Advances in veterinary science and comparative medicine    January 1, 1977   Volume 21 1-18 
Hahn AW, Garner HE.No abstract available
[The fluorescence angiogram of the normal ocular fundus in the dog and horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1977   Volume 5, Issue 3 343-347 
Walde I.No abstract available
[Cochliatoxum periachtum Gassovsky, 1919, entodinimorphic Ciliate of the horse digestive tract].
La Cellule    January 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 1-2 5-25 
Meuleman A, Latteur B.The topography of Cochliatoxum periachtum is studied. The cuticle is very thick. The digestive, nuclear and excretory systems are located in the ectoplasm, they are not surrounded by the mesoplasm. The endoplasm is very large, it contains vegetable inclusions. By the features of its topography, this species is similar to some species belonging to the Family Ophryoscolescidae and, especially, to Eudiplodinium giganteum.
[Studies on the effects of intravenous administration of glucose, fructose, invertose and sorbitol on various blood constituents of blood plasma (monosaccharides, insulin, lactate, pyruvate and free fatty acids as well as glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase) in the horse].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    January 1, 1977   Volume 31, Issue 5 701-718 
Kouider S, Kolb FE, Müller I, Pfüller C, Schneider J.Horses were examined for the behaviour of various blood constituents prior to and following infusions of solutions of glucose, fructose, invertose, and sorbitol. Infusion of 0.5 g/kg live weight glucose to six horses was followed by half-life variation between eleven and 23 minutes. Subsequent infusion of invertose to the same animals usually caused prolongation of glucose half-life. Half-life values were between 17 and 33 minutes for fructose and between 21 and 80 minutes for glucose. Infusion of 0.5 g/kg live weight fructose to two horses was followed by half-life values between 17 and 18 mi...
Effects of fluoride on livestock. Sutie JW.Animals normally ingest small amounts of fluorides in their diet with no adverse effect. An increased ingestion of fluoride can be harmful to animals, and grazing animals can be damaged by the consumption of high-fluoride vegetation. Cattle have been the species most commonly affected, and the symptoms of excessive fluoride ingestion in that species include; lesions in the developing dentition, skeletal lesions, lameness, chemical evidence of tissue fluoride ingestion in that species include: lesions in the developing take and decrease in production. The level of fluoride which can be tolerate...
[Comparative electrophoretic study of the molecular forms of alkaline phosphatase in the leukocytes of agricultural animals].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1977   Volume 14, Issue 3 100-104 
Goranov Kh.The alkaline phosphatase enzyme, isolated by Morton's method from leukocytes of sheep, goats, and pigs gave after agarose elctrophoresis two isoenzyme fractions moving to the positive pole at the sites of the alpha 1- and alpha 2-globulins of the blood serum. In bovine leukocytes, besides these two fractions there was a third one that moved more slowly in the zone of the beta-globulins. In horses the alkaline phosphatase of leukocytes produced a wide band within the zones of the beta-globulins and the albumins. It was established that the proportion between the individual isoenzyme fractions o...
Drug interactions in the horse: effects of chloramphenicol, quinidine, and oxyphenbutazone on phenylbutazone metabolism.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 1 123-127 
Tobin T, Blake JW, Valentine R.The plasma half-life of phenylbutazone in horses was not increased after pretreatment with chloramphenicol or quinidine, but was increased after oxyphenbutazone. This increased plasma half-life after oxyphenbutazone is consistent with observations in other species and suggests that oxyphenbutazone inhibits the metabolism of phenylbutazone in horses. Lack of inhibition of phenylbutazone metabolism in the horse by chloramphenicol and quinidine is inconsistent with results obtained in other species.
Comparative study of the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 1 37-49 
Kitchell RL, Stromberg MW, Davis LH.Quantitative studies were made of cells in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve in the horse, dog, cat, pig, sheep, goat, and calf. This nucleus was larger in ruminants than in nonruminants. Some cells in all parts of the nucleus supplied visceral structures in the head, cervical, thoracic, and abdominal regions; however, a definite topographic localization did exist within the nucleus. Eighty percent of the cells which supplied the abdominal viscera were in the rostral and rostral-middle regions. The cells which supplied the thoracic viscera were distributed almost equally within the r...
The activity of some nucleolytic enzymes in semen and in the secretion of the male reproductive tract.
Andrologia    January 1, 1977   Volume 9, Issue 1 15-22 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0272.1977.tb01252.x
Mennella MR, Jones MR.The activity of 5'-nucleotidase (EC 1.3.5), cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 2.1.4.17), non-specific phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.1) and ribonuclease (EC 1.7.7.16)has been investigated in the seminal plasma of whole semen and in the secretions of the seminal vesicle, prostate and epididymis of the bull, boar, ram, stallion, jackass, rabbit and man. Bull seminal plasma showed the highest activity for 5'-nucleotidase, cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and ribonuclease; in contrast, stallion and jackass semen were very poor in these enzymes. Ram, rabbit and boar seminal plasma showed inte...
A comparative study of experimental and spontaneous emphysema.
Journal of toxicology and environmental health    January 1, 1977   Volume 2, Issue 3 589-604 doi: 10.1080/15287397709529460
Port CD, Ketels KV, Coffin DL, Kane P.Normal lung architecture of the rat, mouse, hamster, horse, and human was compared to that of emphysematous lungs from the same species by utilizing a light microscope and a scanning electron microscope (SEM). The results obtained by SEM examination of normal and emphysematous lungs corresponded to those obtained with the light microscope. However, the SEM provided a view of alveoli and airway morphology not obtainable with the light microscope. Because of the variability in pore size and number of pores per alveolus, a pore-to-alveolus ratio was determined with the SEM on the normal lungs of ...
Comparative studies on the gastric glycopeptide in eleven animal species.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1977   Volume 58, Issue 2 163-165 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(77)90103-1
Masuda H, Shichijo S, Takeuchi M.1. Glycopeptides in the stomachs of eleven mammalian species, including human, rabbit, horse, cow, pig, goat, sheep, dog, cat, guinea pig and rat were assayed by determining the carbohydrate content of materials which remained after proteolysis. 2. The glycopeptide content was higher in the mucosa than in the muscular layer including serosa, especially in the porcine stomach and the fourth stomachs of the ruminants than in the stomachs of any other animals. 3. The glycopeptide, which was stained with both alcian blue and PAS, was absent or sparingly present in the mucosae of the human, rabbit,...
Proton-dependent dissociation equilibrium of hemoglobin. 1. A 700-nanometer light-scattering study on horse methemoglobin in the pH range 4.8 to 7.2.
Biochemistry    December 28, 1976   Volume 15, Issue 26 5693-5697 doi: 10.1021/bi00671a002
Schroeder E, Wollmer A, Kubicki J, Ohlenbusch HD.The effect of proton concentration upon the subunit dissociation of horse methemoglobin has been investigated at two ionic strengths by light scattering photometry at 700 nm. Differential refractometry revealed a slight but systematic decrease of the specific refractive index increment with decreasing protein concentration for solutions in dialytic equilibrium with the solvent. In the pH range 4.8-7.2 the dissociation can be described by a simple equilibrium between tetramers and dimers. The dissociation constant Kd of the met derivative is found to be very similar to those of the O2- and CO-l...
Experimental intraspinal trypanosoma equiperdum infection in a horse.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1976   Volume 43, Issue 4 201-202 
Barrowman PR.To establish the ability of Trypanosoma equiperdum to cross the blood-brain-barrier in the horse, a susceptible stallion was infected via the cerebrospinal fluid of the subarachnoid space by lumbosacral puncture. Cerebrospinal fluid with low detectable levels of trypanosomes removed from a dourine-infected mare by lumbosacral puncture was used for infecting the animal. The parasite was detected in blood smears of the recipient 13 days after infection and the subsequent parasitaemia and clinical course of the disease followed that of naturally infected horses.
Epidemiologic analysis of oral and pharyngeal cancer in dogs, cats, horses, and cattle.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1976   Volume 169, Issue 11 1202-1206 
Dorn CR, Priester WA.Four hundred sixty-nine oral-pharyngeal malignancies diagnosed in dogs, cats, horses, and cattle and submitted to the Viterinary Medical Data Program between March 1, 1964, and Dec 31, 1974, were analyzed. Of these cases, 84% were in dogs. The most frequent oral-pharyngeal cancer in dogs was melanoma; in cats and horses, it was squamous cell carcinoma. In dogs, the risk of developing melanoma increased more with age than did the risk of developing squamous cell carcinoma and fibrosarcoma. Male dogs had significantly greater risk of developing fibrosarcomas and melanomas than did female dogs. T...
Effects of training on resting and postexercise ECG in standardbred horses, using a standardized exercise test.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1976   Volume 37, Issue 12 1485-1488 
Skarda RT, Muir WW, Milne DW, Gabel AA.Five healthy, mature, previously trained Standardbred horses were given no exercise (left in a stall) for 4 months, then jogged (slow exercise) for 3 weeks, and placed in a 6-week training period. Cardiac variables were measured at the beginning of training and after 14, 20, 35, and 42 days of training before and at 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30 minutes after a 1.8-km (in 3:12 +/- 2 seconds) standard, submaximal exercise test on a deep 0.53-km track. There was no significant change during the 6-week conditioning period in the following variables at rest or at any of the times observed during recovery...
[Poisoning with meta (metaldehyde) in a horse].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    December 1, 1976   Volume 118, Issue 12 557-558 
Grandchamp G.No abstract available
Ventilatory control in peripheral chemoreceptor-denervated ponies during chronic hypoxemia.
Journal of applied physiology    December 1, 1976   Volume 41, Issue 6 878-885 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1976.41.6.878
Forster HV, Bisgard GE, Rasmussen B, Orr JA, Buss DD, Manohar M.The present study was designed to provide further insight into the role of the carotid and aortic chemoreceptors in ventilatory (VE) acclimatization during sojourn at altitude. Measurements were made: 1) on 10 ponies near sea level (SL, 740 Torr) under normal conditions, 2) on 6 of these at SL following chemoreceptor denervation (CD), and 3) subsequently on all 10 during 4 days of hypobaric hypoxia (PaO2 = 40-47 Torr). CD resulteo in hypoventilation at SL (deltaPaCO2 = d8 Torr, P less than 0.05), and it prevented hyperventilation normally observed with injection of NaCN and acute exposure to h...
A radioimmunoassay for equilin in equine pregnancy plasma.
FEBS letters    November 15, 1976   Volume 72, Issue 1 18-20 doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(76)80888-5
Park BK, Rance TA, Dean PD.No abstract available
Comparison of serum DNA, native DNA-binding and deoxyribonuclease levels in ten animal species and man.
Life sciences    November 15, 1976   Volume 19, Issue 10 1609-1614 doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(76)90108-9
Cox RA, Gokcen M.No abstract available