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Topic:Blood Vessels

Blood vessels in horses are integral components of the circulatory system, responsible for the transportation of blood throughout the body. They consist of arteries, veins, and capillaries, each serving distinct functions in maintaining circulatory efficiency. Arteries carry oxygen-rich blood away from the heart to various tissues, while veins return deoxygenated blood back to the heart. Capillaries facilitate the exchange of nutrients, gases, and waste products between blood and tissues. The structure and function of equine blood vessels are subjects of study due to their role in health and disease, including conditions such as laminitis and equine metabolic syndrome. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the anatomy, physiology, and pathophysiology of blood vessels in horses.
Alpha-adrenoceptors in equine digital veins: evidence for the presence of both alpha1 and alpha2-receptors mediating vasoconstriction.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    August 1, 1997   Volume 20, Issue 4 308-317 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2885.1997.00078.x
Elliott J.Rings of equine digital vein examined under conditions of isometric tension recording constricted to alpha-adrenoceptor agonists with an order of potency of 5-bromo-6-[2-imidazolin-2-yl-amino]-quinoxaline bitartrate (UK 14304) = noradrenaline > 6-Allyl-2-amino-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-4H-thiazolo-(4,5-d) azepine (BHT-920) > phenylephrine > dopamine > methoxamine. The maximum force generated was greatest for the non-selective agonist noradrenaline and lowest for the alpha2-selective agonist BHT-920 with the other agonists between these two extremes. Selective inactivation of alpha1-adreno...
Lesions of experimental equine morbillivirus pneumonia in horses.
Veterinary pathology    July 1, 1997   Volume 34, Issue 4 312-322 doi: 10.1177/030098589703400407
Hooper PT, Ketterer PJ, Hyatt AD, Russell GM.Laboratory examinations of equine morbillivirus included experimental reproductions of the disease caused by the virus by transmission of mixed lung and spleen taken from two field equine cases into two horses and by inoculating tissue culture virus into a further two horses. The most distinctive gross lesions of the diseases that developed in three of the horses was that of pulmonary edema characterized by gelatinous distension of subpleural lymphatics. Histologically, the lesions in the lungs were those of serofibrinous alveolar edema, alveolar macrophages, hemorrhage, thrombosis of capillar...
Regional differentiation of the blood-epididymis barrier in stallion (Equus caballus).
Journal of submicroscopic cytology and pathology    July 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 3 353-363 
López ML, Fuentes P, Retamal C, De Souza W.The occurrence, localization and ultrastructural characteristics of a blood-tissue barrier throughout the stallion proximal seminal excurrent duct system were studied by the exclusion of electron-dense tracers and freeze-fracture techniques. Striking differences were observed in the distribution of lanthanum tracer and in the geometrical organization of the zonulae occludentes along the ductus efferentes, epididymides and vas deferens. The zonulae occludentes domain, the principal structural component of the blood-epididymis barrier, differed in permeability, width and strand numbers along the...
Tachykinin receptors in the equine pelvic flexure.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 4 306-312 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb03128.x
Sonea IM, Wilson DV, Bowker RM, Robinson NE.Tachykinins, of which substance P (SP) is the prototype, are neuropeptides which are widely distributed in the nervous systems. In the equine gut, SP is present in enteric nerves and is a powerful constrictor of enteric muscle; in other species, SP is also known to have potent vasodilatory and pro-inflammatory effects. The specific effects of SP are determined by the subtype of receptor present in the target tissue. There are 3 known subtypes of tachykinin receptors, distinguished by their relative affinities for SP and other tachykinins. The distribution of SP binding sites in the equine pelv...
Use of Doppler ultrasonography to evaluate renal arterial blood flow in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 7 697-701 
Hoffmann KL, Wood AK, Kirby AC.To obtain Doppler ultrasonographic images of renal arteries in horses and to establish reference range values for systolic and diastolic renal arterial blood flow and resistive indices. Also to determine whether Doppler ultrasonography could be used in horses to detect changes in renal blood flow after IV administration of furosemide. Methods: 11 clinically normal adult horses. Methods: Pulsed-wave Doppler examinations were performed on arcuate arteries of 5 sedated horses. Continuous-wave Doppler examinations were performed on pyelorenal arteries in 7 nonsedated horses and were repeated in 6 ...
Comparative studies on mammalian Müller (retinal glial) cells.
Journal of neurocytology    July 1, 1997   Volume 26, Issue 7 439-454 doi: 10.1023/a:1018525222826
Chao TI, Grosche J, Friedrich KJ, Biedermann B, Francke M, Pannicke T, Reichelt W, Wulst M, Mühle C, Pritz-Hohmeier S, Kuhrt H, Faude F, Drommer W....Müller cells from 22 mammalian species were subjected to morphological and electrophysiological studies. In the 'midperiphery' of retinae immunocytochemically labeled for vimentin, estimates of Müller cell densities per unit retinal surface area, and of neuron-to-(Müller) glia indices were performed. Müller cell densities were strikingly similar among the species studied (around 8000-11,000 mm-2) with the extremes of the horse ( or = 20,000 mm-2). By contrast, the number of neurons per Müller cell varied widely, being clustered at 6-8 (in retinae with many cones), at about 16, and at up t...
Perinatal carbohydrate metabolism and the blood flow of the fetal liver.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    June 1, 1997   Issue 24 26-31 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb05075.x
Barnes RJ.No abstract available
Varices with thrombosis in the cervix and uterus of a mare.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 1, 1997   Volume 38, Issue 6 375-376 
Foster RA, Gartley CJ, Newman S.Cervical and uterine varices with thrombosis were observed at the necropsy of a virgin 16-year-old Peruvian Paso that had previous episodes of hemorrhage from the uterus. Practitioners and pathologists should be alert to the possibility of ruptured varices in mares with hemorrhage into the uterus or from the vulva.
Very high pressures are required to cause stress failure of pulmonary capillaries in thoroughbred racehorses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    May 1, 1997   Volume 82, Issue 5 1584-1592 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1997.82.5.1584
Birks EK, Mathieu-Costello O, Fu Z, Tyler WS, West JB.Thoroughbred horses develop extremely high pulmonary vascular pressures during galloping, all horses in training develop exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage, and we have shown that this is caused by stress failure of pulmonary capillaries. It is known that the capillary transmural pressure (Ptm) necessary for stress failure is higher in dogs than in rabbits. The present study was designed to determine this value in horses. The lungs from 15 Thoroughbred horses were perfused with autologous blood at Ptm values (midlung) of 25, 50, 75, 100 and 150 mmHg, and then perfusion fixed, and samples (d...
Role of endothelium and nitric oxide in the response of equine colonic arterial rings to vasoconstrictor agents.
Veterinary surgery : VS    May 1, 1997   Volume 26, Issue 3 182-188 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1997.tb01482.x
Venugopalan CS, Moore RM, Holmes EP, Sedrish SA.To determine the in vitro contractile responses of equine colonic arteries to angiotensin II, histamine, serotonin, norepinephrine, prostaglandin F2 alpha, vasopressin, and a thromboxane-B2-analogue. Methods: The tension generated in colonic arterial rings placed in organ baths with oxygenated Tyrode's solution at 37 degrees C after exposure to the previously mentioned chemical agents was measured using force-transducers interfaced with a polygraph. Methods: Large colon arterial rings collected from eight horses. Methods: The rings were allowed to equilibrate for 45 minutes after applying 2 g ...
Pulsed wave-Doppler ultrasonographic evaluation of the common carotid artery in the resting horse: physiologic data. Cipone M, Pietra M, Gandini G, Boari A, Guglielmini C, Venturoli M.A pulsed wave-Doppler ultrasonographic evaluation of common carotid arterial blood flow was carried out on 63 healthy Italian Saddlebred horses. Vessel diameter and tracing morphology were evaluated and blood flow parameters (systolic, diastolic and mean velocity, acceleration and deceleration of the systolic wave, carotid pulse volume) were calculated and correlated with class variables (sex, age and body weight). On the basis of the presence of an incisure in the ascending branch of the systolic curve, subjects were divided in two groups: one with a bifid systolic curve and the other with a ...
Acute arsenic toxicosis in five horses.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1997   Volume 34, Issue 2 160-164 doi: 10.1177/030098589703400211
Pace LW, Turnquist SE, Casteel SW, Johnson PJ, Frankeny RL.Five adult horses presented with acute clinical signs of watery diarrhea, excessive salivation, muscle tremors, ataxia, and depression. Four died within 24 hours and the fifth was euthanatized approximately 48 hours after onset of clinical signs. Necropsy finds in two of the horses included hyperemia of gastric mucosa, intestines filled with green to black watery fluid, and multifocal to coalescing, hemorrhagic 1.0-2.0-cm-diameter ulcers of the mucosa of the cecum and large colon. Histopathologic changes in the cecum and large colon consisted of mucosal necrosis and ulceration, vascular thromb...
Effects of racing and gender on viscoelastic properties of horse blood.
Respiration physiology    February 1, 1997   Volume 107, Issue 2 165-172 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5687(96)02518-2
Wood SC, Fedde MR.Splenic contraction in racing horses increases the hematocrit (hct), thereby increasing blood viscosity. We tested as to whether racing also affects the elastic properties of blood. Mares and geldings were studied for thus purpose. After racing, there was: (i) an increased erythrocyte count independent of gender and race distance (0.32 to 1.7 km): (ii) an increased mean erythrocyte volume in both sexes; (iii) an increased heterogeneity of RBC size in both sexes; (iv) an increased plasma fibrinogen concentration and erythrocyte sedimentation rate in both sexes; and (v) an increased elastic yiel...
Equine synovial villi: distinctive structural organization of vasculature and novel nerve endings.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    December 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 12 1193-1204 doi: 10.1292/jvms.58.12_1193
Izumisawa Y, Yamaguchi M, Bertone AL, Tangkawattana P, Masty J, Yamashita K, Kotani T.The structural arrangement and cellular distribution of endothelial and lining cells of the synovial villi were studied in the equine palmar/plantar recess of the metacarpo- and metatarsophalangeal joints by light microscopy and electron microscopy. The extent and distribution of blood vessels varied with villous shape and length. The majority of vessels formed concentric circles in cross and longitudinal sections and probably are arranged in a convoluted, spiral or helical pattern. The villi do not contain smooth muscle cells or typical capillaries as observed in other organs. Under the elect...
Glyceryl trinitrate enhances nitric oxide mediated perfusion within the equine hoof.
The Journal of endocrinology    November 1, 1996   Volume 151, Issue 2 R1-R8 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.151r001
Hinckley KA, Fearn S, Howard BR, Henderson IW.Laminitis, a microvascular disease of the equine hoof leads to severe lameness. Exogenous iv 1-arginine and transdermal nitric oxide donors, such as GTN, applied to the pasterns improve lameness during acute laminitis. Near Infrared spectroscopy in an earlier study showed haemostasis and ischaemia in the hoof during acute laminitis, both were alleviated by 1-arginine. Quantitative NIRS in the present study shows that transdermal GTN increases blood flow in the equine hoof. It is concluded that glyceryl trinitrate enhances nitric oxide mediated perfusion within the equine hoof in normal and chr...
Pulmonary vascular pressures of exercising thoroughbred horses with and without endoscopic evidence of EIPH.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    October 1, 1996   Volume 81, Issue 4 1589-1593 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1996.81.4.1589
Manohar M, Goetz TE.Exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH) is a common occurrence in racehorses. The objective of this study was to compare pulmonary vascular pressures of healthy Thoroughbred horses with and without postexertion endoscopically detectable fresh blood in the trachea. The nasopharynx, larynx, and trachea (down to the carina) of horses were examined weekly with an endoscope 55-60 min postexertion, and the diagnosis of EIPH was confirmed by the presence of fresh blood in the trachea. Measurements of heart rate and right atrial, pulmonary arterial, and pulmonary arterial wedge pressures were mad...
Thrombosis of the brachial artery in a foal.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    September 1, 1996   Volume 10, Issue 5 330-332 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1996.tb02072.x
Triplett EA, O'Brien RT, Wilson DG, Steinberg H, Darien BJ.No abstract available
Alterations in colonic arterial and venous plasma neuropeptide concentrations in horses during low-flow ischemia and reperfusion of the large colon.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 8 1200-1205 
Moore RM, Charalambous AC, Masty J.To measure colonic arterial (CA) and colonic venous (CV) plasma neuropeptide concentrations during low-flow ischemia and reperfusion of the large colon in horses. Methods: 10 adult horses. Methods: CA and CV plasma samples collected from anesthetized horses during experimentally induced low-flow colonic ischemia and reperfusion were assayed for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), and substance P (SP), using radioimmunoassays. In 6 anesthetized horses, colonic ischemia (20% of baseline (BL]) was maintained for 3 hours, then blood flow was restored an...
Equine coronary hemodynamics during brief coronary occlusions at three levels of collateral function.
The American journal of physiology    June 11, 1996   Volume 270, Issue 6 Pt 2 H1893-H1904 doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1996.270.6.H1893
Williams DO, Boatwright RB, Rugh KS, Ross CR, Sarazan RD, Garner HE, Griggs DM.Adult-grade ponies were surgically instrumented with a Doppler flow probe and pneumatic cuff occluder on the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), sonomicrometry crystals and intraventricular micromanometer in the left ventricle, and catheters in the left atrium, anterior interventricular vein, and, in some animals, the LAD. Conscious-animal studies were begun 2 wk after surgery. Measured variables included regional left ventricular systolic function, end-diastolic wall thickness, oxygen extraction, lactate extraction, and hydrogen ion release. Changes in collateral perfusion were de...
Pulmonary capillary pressure during exercise in horses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    May 1, 1996   Volume 80, Issue 5 1792-1798 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1996.80.5.1792
Sinha AK, Gleed RD, Hakim TS, Dobson A, Shannon KJ.The object of this study was to relate pulmonary capillary pressure to arterial and wedge pressures during exercise. Pulmonary vascular pressures were measured in six standardbred horses exercising at speeds equivalent to 75, 90, and 100% of maximal heart rate. Vascular pressures were measured with transducer-tip catheters and expressed relative to esophageal pressure. Pulmonary capillary pressure was estimated by the arterial-occlusion technique modified for exercise. Mean pulmonary arterial, capillary and wedge pressures increased from 30.5 +/- 6.3, 17.8 +/- 4.3, and 13.4 +/- 1.6 mmHg, respe...
A comparison of equid herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) vascular lesions in the early versus late pregnant equine uterus.
Journal of comparative pathology    April 1, 1996   Volume 114, Issue 3 231-247 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(96)80045-4
Smith KC, Mumford JA, Lakhani K.Four Welsh Mountain pony mares at 3 months of gestation and one mare at 5 months were inoculated intranasally with equid herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1: Ab4 isolate) at doses of 10(5) to 10(6.6) TCID50. All five mares became infected, but no cases of paresis or abortion occurred. On days 8, 9, 11, 12 (3-month-pregnant mares) and 13 (5-month-pregnant mare) after infection, a detailed examination of the pregnant uterus was made. Small numbers of vascular lesions with EHV-1 antigen expression in endothelial cells were present in the uteri of the early gestational mares; thrombi were rare and foci of thromb...
Joint pressure influences synovial tissue blood flow as determined by colored microspheres.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    April 1, 1996   Volume 80, Issue 4 1225-1232 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1996.80.4.1225
Hardy J, Bertone AL, Muir WW.We measured regional blood flow in synovial tissue of the antebrachiocarpal, midcarpal, and metacarpophalangeal joints of six normal adult anesthetized horses by using 15-microns-diameter polystyrene colored microspheres. The midcarpal fibrous capsule and synovial membrane blood flows (SMBF) were compared, and the effect of increased intra-articular pressure (30 and 60 mmHg) on midcarpal SMBF was investigated. Dorsal, medial palmar, and lateral palmar midcarpal SMBF measured 108 +/- 36, 61 +/- 12, and 50 +/- 11 microliters.min-1.g-1, respectively. Antebrachiocarpal, dorsal, and palmar metacarp...
Effects of hematocrit and erythrocyte deformability on pulmonary vascular pressures in perfused pony lungs.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 3 346-350 
Weiss DJ, Richwagen K, Evanson OA.To evaluate the contribution of hematocrit and RBC deformability to pulmonary vascular pressures of racehorses. Methods: Pony lungs were isolated and right and left lungs were perfused separately with blood. The effects of changing hematocrit and of pentoxifylline treatment were evaluated. Methods: 11 healthy mixed-breed ponies. Methods: Ponies were anesthesized, blood was collected, and lungs were removed and perfused with blood at constant flow rate. Results: Increasing the hematocrit from 35% to 65% resulted in increases in pulmonary arterial pressure (53%, 45%), capillary shear stress (45%...
Histologic and immunohistochemical characterization of hemangiomas in the skin of seven young horses.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 2 142-149 doi: 10.1177/030098589603300203
Johnson GC, Miller MA, Floss JL, Turk JR.The histologic and immunochemical characteristics of benign vascular tumors excised from the skin of seven young horses were evaluated. The patients were male horses of various breeds and were 16 months of age or younger at the time of presentation. Six tumors occurred on the extremities, and one was removed from the lip. Histologically, most tumors consisted of cellular nodules of varying compactness with few to many blood-filled lumina. Nodular growth separated preexisting adnexa and subcutaneous collagen. Some tumors contained or consisted predominantly of loosely packed arrays of ramifying...
Spontaneous vascular mineralization in the brain of horses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    January 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 1 35-40 doi: 10.1292/jvms.58.35
Yanai T, Masegi T, Ishikawa K, Sakai H, Iwasaki T, Moritomo Y, Goto N.Cerebral vascular mineralization was found in 12 (60%) of 20 3- to 10-year-old healthy horses collected at an abattoir. It was variable in degree and occurred mostly in the pallidal arteries showing two types of lesions; small globoid bodies along capillaries, and amorphous deposits in the wall of arterioles, small- or medium-sized arteries and veins. Both types were strongly positive for periodic acid-Schiff reaction, and weakly positive for von Kossa's and Berlin blue stains. Elemental analysis of the deposit revealed the presence of large amounts of aluminum, moderate amounts of phosphorus,...
Thrombosis of the aorta and the caudal arteries in the horse; additional diagnostics and a new surgical treatment.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1996   Volume 18 Suppl 2 S85-S89 
Brama PA, Rijkenhuizen AB, van Swieten HA, Warmerdam EP.The prognosis of aortic-iliac thrombosis (TAI) is usually considered to be poor, although affected horses are reported to have recovered following treatment with sodium gluconate. This paper presents some diagnostic techniques to monitor the development of hypoxemia in the diseased limb and to visualise the extension of the thrombosis into the femoral artery. Also, a surgical technique using a Fogarty thrombectomy catheter for partial or total removal of thrombi to restore blood flow, is described. One horse recovered completely, allowing it to resume its former career, the other horse improve...
The vasomotor effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine on equine basilar arteries in vitro.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 1 61-70 doi: 10.1007/BF00346578
Miyamoto A, Obi T, Nishio A.The vasomotor effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) on isolated equine basilar arteries were studied. 5-HT induced contractions of equine basilar arteries in a concentration-dependent manner, with a pEC50 value (with 95% confidence limits) of 7.35 (7.08-7.62). Similar results were obtained with endothelium-denuded basilar arteries. Contractions were not competitively inhibited by the 5-HT2 receptor antagonist ketanserin at low concentrations of 5-HT. Conversely, at high concentrations of 5-HT, contractions were inhibited by ketanserin in a concentration-dependent manner, with a pA2 value of 8....
Transphyseal vessel involvement in repair of metaphyseal retained cartilage.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1995   Volume 72, Issue 12 452-455 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1995.tb03487.x
Firth EC, Klarenbeek A.A foal with retained cartilage in the distal metaphysis of the right and left radii and third metacarpal bones had abnormal physeal vasculature. In areas where cartilage was retained, vessels crossed the physis, and branched at the physeal-metaphyseal junction or at the site of retained cartilage. Vessels appeared to be involved in re-initiation of endochondral ossification and in the repair reponse to the presence of retained cartilage. In areas where the physis was radiographically and histologically normal, no vessels crossed the physis. A function of transphyseal vessels may be as a reserv...
Evidence for endothelium-derived relaxing factor/nitric oxide in equine digital arteries.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1995   Volume 56, Issue 12 1637-1641 
Cogswell AM, Johnson PJ, Adams HR.To test the hypothesis that endothelium-derived nitric oxide modulates vasomotor reactivity in equine digital arteries. Methods: Digital arteries were isolated from adult horses, and their vasodilator properties were examined in an in vitro controlled environment. Methods: Five adult horses (1 gelding, 4 mares) without evidence of hoof or vascular disease were studied. Methods: Arterial rings with or without endothelium were exposed to endothelium-dependent vasodilator drugs in the presence or absence of a pharmacologic inhibitor of the enzyme nitric oxide synthase. Results: Vasodilator effect...
Near infrared spectroscopy of pedal haemodynamics and oxygenation in normal and laminitic horses.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 6 465-470 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb04428.x
Hinckley KA, Fearn S, Howard BR, Henderson IW.The present study applies near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to the haemodynamics of the pedal circulation in normal and laminitic horses. NIRS is a noninvasive technique which uses changes in light absorption at 4 wavelengths to provide information on the changes in cytochrome aa3 (cyt aa3) reduction-oxidation (redox) status, and changes in the tissue concentration of oxyhaemoglobin (O2Hb), deoxyhaemoglobin (HHb) and therefore total haemoglobin (tHb). Other studies have shown NIRS to be sensitive to changes in tissue oxygenation and perfusion in human cerebral and limb circulation. In this stu...
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