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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.
Veins of the head and neck of the donkey (Equus asinus).
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    June 1, 1985   Volume 14, Issue 2 149-157 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1985.tb00273.x
Ahmed MA, Anis H, Moustafa MS.No abstract available
[Cardiovascular study of the horse: relation between vascular and tissue changes in the myocardium. 3].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    June 1, 1985   Volume 127, Issue 6 369-378 
Dudan F, Rossi GL, Luginbühl H.No abstract available
[Cardiovascular study of the horse: relation between the vascular and tissue changes in the myocardium. III. Results].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    May 1, 1985   Volume 127, Issue 5 319-338 
Dudan F, Rossi GL, Luginbühl H.No abstract available
Scanning electron microscopic studies on the microvascular system of the spleen in the rat, cat, dog, pig, horse and cow.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    April 1, 1985   Volume 47, Issue 2 237-249 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.47.237
Seki A, Abe M.No abstract available
Fascial compartments of the equine crus.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 3 692-696 
Updike SJ.The deep fascia of the equine crus was dissected grossly and separated into 2 layers, the superficial and deep laminae of the deep fascia. Attachments of these fascial laminae to the tibia and fibula formed 5 separate osteofascial compartments: cranial, lateral, caudal deep, caudal intermediate, and caudal superficial. Cranial tibial vessels and the deep peroneal nerve entered the cranial compartment through separate fascial hiatuses; this may predispose the equine crus to the occurrence of compartmental syndromes with clinically recognizable neural deficits.
Effect of protective padding on forelimb intracompartmental muscle pressures in anesthetized horses.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 3 688-691 
Lindsay WA, Pascoe PJ, McDonell WN, Burgess ML.Wick catheters were used to measure intracompartmental muscle pressures (ICMP) within the long heads of the triceps brachii and extensor carpi radialis muscles of 8 horses maintained under halothane anesthesia while their breathing was controlled by intermittent positive-pressure ventilation. Blood gas, cardiac output, and blood pressure determinations were monitored to maintain a stable plane of anesthesia. The horses were positioned in left lateral recumbency and were placed sequentially on each of 4 contact surfaces for 1 hour. The 4 surfaces used for each horse were concrete, foam rubber, ...
Flunixin meglumine attenuation of endotoxin-induced damage to the cardiopulmonary vascular endothelium of the pony.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 3 591-596 
Turek JJ, Templeton CB, Bottoms GD, Fessler JF.Endotoxic shock was induced in 5 ponies by intraperitoneal injections of 20, 40, 60, 80, and 80 micrograms of Escherichia coli endotoxin (LPS)/kg of body weight at 0, 6, 12, 18, and 24 hours, respectively. At 24 hours, the ponies also were given 20 micrograms of LPS/kg via catheter in the left ventricle of the heart. A 2nd group of 4 ponies was given 1.1 mg of flunixin meglumine (FM)/kg, IV, at 6, 12, 18, and 24 hours just before the corresponding LPS injection. Two hours after the 24-hour LPS injection, the ponies in both groups were anesthetized, the lungs were perfused with fixative, and po...
Evaluation of fluorescein dye as an indicator of small intestinal viability in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 3 257-261 
Sullins KE, Stashak TS, Mero KN.In 6 horses, 2 types of ischemic lesions were created in small intestinal segments by selective ligation of vessels and intestinal wall for 1, 2, or 3 hours. After confirming the ischemia by IV injection of sodium fluorescein, the ligatures were released. Five minutes later, the fluorescent patterns were documented photographically. Observed patterns ranged from normal (identical to that observed in unaffected bowel) to a patchy distribution of non-fluorescence (indicating incomplete perfusion). None of the experimental segments was normal when reevaluated 1 month later. The typical appearance...
Importance of uniform cuff application for equine blood pressure measurement.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 6 529-531 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb02009.x
Parry BW, Anderson GA.Seventeen horses were used to determine the variances associated with blood pressure cuff application (Sp2) and with other inherent errors (So2). Systolic pressure values had Sp2 = 3.9 mmHg and So2 = 5.6 mmHg, while diastolic pressure values had Sp2 = 1.1 mmHg and So2 = 4.4 mmHg. Thus, to be considered different, two blood pressure means (in mmHg), each derived from three readings, had to differ by at least 3.9 for systolic pressure and 3.4 for diastolic pressure when all readings were made without cuff displacement; 6.8 for systolic pressure and 4.6 for diastolic pressure when the cuff was re...
[Cardiovascular study of the horse: relation between vascular and tissue changes in the myocardium. 2].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    October 1, 1984   Volume 126, Issue 10 527-538 
Dudan F, Rossi GL, Luginbühl H.No abstract available
Equine plasma banking: collection by exsanguination.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1984   Volume 185, Issue 7 772-774 
Eicker SW, Ainsworth DM.A procedure was developed for the collection, preparation, storage, and administration of equine plasma. The technique involved exsanguination of anesthetized donor horses via carotid artery catheterization with a large-bore cannula. Blood was collected into plastic bags, allowed to settle by gravity, then transferred into storage bags and frozen. These were quickly thawed when needed.
Femoral fracture repair complicated by vascular injury in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1984   Volume 185, Issue 7 795-797 
Rose PL, Watkins JP, Auer JA.A comminuted, mid-diaphyseal femoral fracture was diagnosed radiographically in a 4-month-old Quarter Horse colt. Disruption of the distal blood supply was suspected, as evidenced by coolness and diminished pulses of the distal portion of the limb. The fracture was repaired by compression plating but the foal's condition continued to deteriorate. A femoral arteriogram of the affected limb was obtained. Positive contrast agent was visible only as far as the mid-shaft of the femur. The foal was euthanatized and the postmortem examination revealed a transected popliteal artery accounting for isch...
Persistent vaginal haemorrhage in five mares caused by varicose veins of the vaginal wall.
The Veterinary record    September 15, 1984   Volume 115, Issue 11 263-264 doi: 10.1136/vr.115.11.263
White RA, Gerring EL, Jackson PG, Noakes DE.Persistent bleeding from the vulva was the only presenting clinical sign in five non-pregnant pluriparous mares varying in age from eight to 20 years. These were two hunter types, one shire, one thoroughbred and one Arab pony. The haemorrhage originated from ulcerated varicose veins present on the dorsal wall of the vagina adjacent to the vestibulovaginal junction. All five mares were successfully treated, by submucosal resection (two), ligation of vessels (two) or diathermy (one). In four mares there was evidence of vulval incompetence caused by depression of the perineum. The importance of t...
Intravascular leukostasis in a horse with myelomonocytic leukemia.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1984   Volume 21, Issue 5 544-546 doi: 10.1177/030098588402100521
Boudreaux MK, Blue JT, Durham SK, Vivrette SL.No abstract available
A congenital vascular naevus in a foal.
Australian veterinary journal    September 1, 1984   Volume 61, Issue 9 286-288 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1984.tb06012.x
Jabara AG, Hazard GH, O'Shea JD.This paper describes a case of a congenital vascular malformation in the skin of a colt. The lesion arose at the coronary border of the right hind leg. The microscopic structure of a biopsy suggested that the lesion, consisting of multiple foci of closely-packed convoluted small vessels in the dermis, represented a marked exaggeration of glomi which normally occur in considerable numbers in this region of the skin. On the basis of the clinical, macroscopic and histological findings, this lesion was considered to be an hamartoma, rather than a true tumour, and was therefore termed a congenital ...
Clinicopathological studies on neurectomy in equids.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 5 442-446 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01972.x
Said AH, Khamis Y, Mahfouz MF, Hegazy A.Clinical and pathological changes following neurectomy were studied experimentally in 46 male and female equids. Sixty-three operations were performed using either the traditional or the Fackelman and Clodius methods of neurectomy. The effect of arteriovenous ligation was studied in 12 animals and 20 angiograms were performed post mortem to study the arterial pattern of the extremities of the operated limb. Neuroma formation (31 cases) and sloughing of the hoof (five cases) were the two main untoward sequelae. Neurectomy by the technique of Fackelman and Clodius proved superior to the traditio...
Vascular pathology in phenylbutazone intoxicated horses.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1984   Volume 74, Issue 3 282-297 
Meschter CL, Maylin GA, Krook L.Three mature Thoroughbred geldings were given 13.63 mg phenylbutazone/Kg bodyweight intravenously for 3 days and repeated in one horse 4 days later. After 4, 7 and 10 days (double treatment), degeneration of the wall of small veins occurred in all horses. The veins were dilated and/or showed hyalin degeneration. The phlebopathy was interpreted to be paramount in phenylbutazone intoxication. All other manifestations, including erythro- and leukodiapedesis, submucosal edema and ulceration of the gastrointestinal mucosa, phlebothrombosis and significant changes in the hemogram and serum chemistry...
The renin-angiotensin system in mother and foetus.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 4 253-255 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01921.x
Broughton Pipkin F.No abstract available
Angiography of the corpus cavernosum penis in the pony stallion during erection and quiescence.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 7 1464-1468 
Bartels JE, Beckett SD, Brown BG.Serial arteriography was used to determine the vascular pattern and blood flow in the penis of the pony stallion. Ponies were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium, and catheters were surgically introduced into the internal pudendal and obturator arteries. The vascular anatomy was visualized by angiography via image-intensified fluoroscopy and was recorded on 70-mm film at 3 frames/s or by direct radiography. Blood flow into the corpus cavernosum penis (CCP) was limited during quiescence because the blood was immediately shunted into the venous system. After vasodilation with mild stimulation...
[Cardiovascular study of the horse: correlations between vascular and myocardial tissue changes. 1].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    June 1, 1984   Volume 126, Issue 6 277-286 
Dudan F, Luginbühl H.No abstract available
Effects of tryptamine antagonists on the anaphylactic contractions of the bovine pulmonary smooth muscles.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1984   Volume 7, Issue 2 153-158 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1984.tb00892.x
Ogunbiyi PO, Eyre P.Calves were sensitized with horse plasma (H.P.), 0.2 ml/kg, i.v., and H.P. (0.2 ml/kg) in Freund's complete adjuvant, s.c. The latter injection was repeated 1 week later and the animals were killed 10 days after the second injection. Spirally cut strips of pulmonary artery and vein and the trachealis muscle from the sensitized calves contracted to 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and specific antigen (horse plasma). Antigen-induced contractions of the pulmonary smooth muscles were significantly blocked (P less than 0.05) by the 5-HT antagonists, methysergide and ketanserin. The trachea, however, app...
A “standard horse” for use in physiologically based mathematical modelling.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 3 189-191 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01900.x
Staddon GE, Weaver BM, Lunn CE.Standard data for the horse which can be used in physiologically based mathematical computer modelling are presented. The data includes figures for tissue mass, density and perfusion, obtained by measurement mainly from horses weighing 200 to 300 kg. Other related parameters such as mean transit times and tissue blood volume have been calculated and included in the actual values listed for a 250 kg horse.
Pulmonary arterial haemodynamics and blood gas values of Thoroughbred racehorses with a history of epistaxis during a race.
Veterinary research communications    February 1, 1984   Volume 8, Issue 1 41-45 doi: 10.1007/BF02214693
Littlejohn A, Howell W, Killeen V.In ten Thoroughbred racehorses which suffered epistaxis during a race, the mean pulmonary arterial diastolic pressure (PADP) was significantly higher, and the mean pulmonary arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) was significantly lower, than the corresponding mean values of a sample of fourteen clinically normal Thoroughbreds in training. The authors conclude that in horses with epistaxis during a race, pulmonary dysfunction may persist for up to two months after the episode, and that the results indicate a need for pulmonary function studies before and after racing, in order to resolve problems conc...
Platelet function, size and yield in whole blood and in platelet-rich plasma prepared using differing centrifugation force and time in domestic and food-producing animals.
Thrombosis and haemostasis    December 30, 1983   Volume 50, Issue 4 838-843 
Clemmons RM, Bliss EL, Dorsey-Lee MR, Seachord CL, Meyers KM.The effects of centrifugation force and time upon platelets function, mean platelet volume and platelet yield were compared with whole blood platelet counts and size in citrated blood samples from the bovine, canine, caprine, equine, feline, ovine and porcine species. The results were similar, for a given species, irregardless of sample volume. Bovine, caprine, feline and ovine platelet yields and mean platelet volumes were maximal when platelet-rich plasma was prepared using longer centrifugation times and lower gravitational forces. Canine, equine and porcine platelet yields and mean platele...
Cerebrovascular response to acute decreases in arterial PO2. Wagerle LC, Orr JA, Shirer HW, Kiorpes AL, Fraser DB, DeSoignie RC.The purpose of these studies was to examine the time course of the cerebrovascular response to acute hypoxia in unanesthetized ponies. An electromagnetic flow transducer chronically placed on the internal carotid artery of the pony allowed continuous recording of internal carotid artery blood flow (ICBF) which has been shown to be representative of cerebral blood flow (CBF). The ponies were subjected to three levels of acute isocapnic hypoxia (PaO2 = 62, 44, and 39 mm Hg for hypoxia level I, II, and III, respectively), and the temporal and steady-state cerebrovascular response was examined. IC...
Carotid and cerebral angiography in the horse.
The Veterinary record    November 19, 1983   Volume 113, Issue 21 483-489 doi: 10.1136/vr.113.21.483
Colles CM, Cook WR.Carotid and cerebral angiography has been found to be a relatively simple technique to carry out in the horse. At most it involves a cutdown approach to the carotid artery, followed by catheterisation of the artery and selective catheterisation, if necessary, of one of its three branches. The technique can be carried out with standard equipment normally available within equine hospital facilities. The authors have employed angiography as a routine aid to diagnosis over the past nine years, without encountering any serious complications or adverse reactions. Carotid angiography has been especia...
SEM study of Strongylus vulgaris larva-induced arteritis in the pony.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 4 349-353 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01822.x
White NA, Moore JN, Douglas M.This paper describes the histological and scanning electron microscopical examinations of the right colic artery of eight ponies. Lesions all had large thrombi surrounding a larva or larvae, with arterial wall thickening. Endothelial shape change, degeneration and loss were present. Fibrin-platelet red blood cell aggregates were present on endothelial surfaces as well as on the surface of thrombi. Damage to the intima appeared to produce the conditions for progressive thrombus formation.
Distribution of blood flow during moderate and strenuous exercise in ponies (Equus caballus).
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 10 1861-1866 
Parks CM, Manohar M.Blood flow to the brain, heart, kidneys, diaphragm, and skeletal muscles was studied at rest and during graded treadmill exercise, using radionuclide-labeled microspheres (15 microns diameter), in 11 healthy adult ponies. Hemodynamic changes brought about by exercise included marked increases in cardiac output, mean aortic pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, and right ventricular systolic and end-diastolic pressures. Blood flow to the brain stem and cerebral hemispheres was unchanged during both moderate exercise (heart rate = 154 +/- 3 beats/min) and severe exercise (heart rate...
Effect of cardiac arrhythmia on left ventricular and aortic blood pressure parameters in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1983   Volume 35, Issue 2 190-199 
Miller PJ, Holmes JR.Transaortic blood pressures were recorded in seven horses using catheter mounted transducers during various types of supraventricular arrhythmia. Changes in left ventricular (LV) and aortic (Ao) pulse contours were associated with variation in pulse interval (PI). When PI lengthened there was a rise in LV end diastolic pressure (LVEDP) associated with a prolonged filling time. In contrast, a long PI resulted in a reduced end diastolic Ao pressure (AoEDP) due to a prolonged arterial 'run off'. LVdP/dt max representing the peak rate of rise of pressure during the isovolumic contraction period wa...
Regional myocardial blood flow and coronary vascular reserve in unanesthetized ponies during pacing-induced ventricular tachycardia.
The Journal of surgical research    August 1, 1983   Volume 35, Issue 2 119-131 doi: 10.1016/0022-4804(83)90134-8
Parks C, Manohar M, Lundeen G.To examine the effects of tachycardia on coronary circulation, transmural distribution of myocardial blood flow (MBF, 15-micron diameter radionuclide-labeled microspheres) was studied in six healthy adult ponies at rest (heart rate = 60 +/- 7 beats . min-1), during ventricular pacing at 150 and 200 beats . min-1, as well as with ventricular pacing at 250 beats . min-1 before and during maximal coronary vasodilatation (iv adenosine infusion; 4 mumole . kg-1 . min-1). Mean aortic pressure and cardiac output were unchanged from control values with ventricular pacing. Whereas ventricular pacing at...
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