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Topic:Brain

The equine brain is a complex organ responsible for processing sensory information, regulating behavior, and controlling motor functions in horses. It plays a part in cognitive processes such as learning, memory, and decision-making. The equine brain is divided into several regions, each with distinct functions, including the cerebrum, cerebellum, and brainstem. Research in this area often focuses on understanding the neurological pathways and mechanisms that underlie equine behavior and performance. This topic encompasses studies that explore brain anatomy, neurophysiology, and the effects of various factors such as stress, training, and disease on brain function in horses. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the structure, function, and health of the equine brain.
West Nile virus isolation from equines in Argentina, 2006.
Emerging infectious diseases    December 21, 2006   Volume 12, Issue 10 1559-1561 doi: 10.3201/eid1210.060852
Morales MA, Barrandeguy M, Fabbri C, Garcia JB, Vissani A, Trono K, Gutierrez G, Pigretti S, Menchaca H, Garrido N, Taylor N, Fernandez F, Levis S....West Nile virus (WNV) was isolated from the brains of 3 horses that died from encephalitis in February 2006. The horses were from different farms in central Argentina and had not traveled outside the country. This is the first isolation of WNV in South America.
Guttural pouches, brain temperature and exercise in horses.
Biology letters    December 7, 2006   Volume 2, Issue 3 475-477 doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2006.0469
Mitchell G, Fuller A, Maloney SK, Rump N, Mitchell D.Selective brain cooling (SBC) is defined as the lowering of brain temperature below arterial blood temperature. Artiodactyls employ a carotid rete, an anatomical heat exchanger, to cool arterial blood shortly before it enters the brain. The survival advantage of this anatomy traditionally is believed to be a protection of brain tissue from heat injury, especially during exercise. Perissodactyls such as horses do not possess a carotid rete, and it has been proposed that their guttural pouches serve the heat-exchange function of the carotid rete by cooling the blood that traverses them, thus pro...
Alobar holoprosencephaly, mobile proboscis and trisomy 13 in a fetus with maternal gestational diabetes mellitus: a 2D ultrasound diagnosis and review of the literature.
Archives of gynecology and obstetrics    October 18, 2006   Volume 275, Issue 5 385-387 doi: 10.1007/s00404-006-0264-6
Capobianco G, Cherchi PL, Ambrosini G, Cosmi E, Andrisani A, Dessole S.Alobar holoprosencephaly is a rare and severe brain malformation due to early arrest in brain cleavage and rotation. Methods: We report a congenital anomalous fetus with alobar holoprosencephaly, prenatally diagnosed by two-dimensional (2D) sonography at the 40 weeks of gestation. The mother was affected by gestational diabetes mellitus and was obese (BMI > 30 kg/m(2)). 2D Ultrasound depicted the cerebral malformation, cyclopy, proboscis, cardiac defects (atrial septal defect, hypoplastic left heart, anomalous communication between right ventricle and aorta) and extremities defects. The new...
Age-related and non-age-related changes in 100 surveyed horse brains.
Veterinary pathology    September 13, 2006   Volume 43, Issue 5 740-750 doi: 10.1354/vp.43-5-740
Jahns H, Callanan JJ, McElroy MC, Sammin DJ, Bassett HF.Brains from 100 horses, aged 2-25 years, were systematically examined by histopathology at 46 different neuroanatomical sites. The horses were sourced from a slaughterhouse (group A, n = 57), from a kennel that collected dead animals, and from 2 diagnostic laboratories (group B, n = 43). All horses from group A and 26 horses from group B were examined by a veterinarian in the period before death. None of the horses were known to exhibit clinical signs suggestive of neurologic disease. Among the main changes identified were vacuolation in the neuropil (n = 73), neurons (n = 32), white matter (n...
Cytokine gene signatures in neural tissue of horses with equine protozoal myeloencephalitis or equine herpes type 1 myeloencephalopathy.
The Veterinary record    September 12, 2006   Volume 159, Issue 11 341-346 doi: 10.1136/vr.159.11.341
Pusterla N, Wilson WD, Conrad PA, Barr BC, Ferraro GL, Daft BM, Leutenegger CM.This study was designed to determine the relative levels of gene transcription of selected pathogens and cytokines in the brain and spinal cord of 12 horses with equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM), 11 with equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) myeloencephalopathy, and 12 healthy control horses by applying a real time pcr to the formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues. Total rna was extracted from each tissue, transcribed to complementary dna (cDNA) and assayed for Sarcocystis neurona, Neospora hughesi, EHV-1, equine GAPDH (housekeeping gene), tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interfer...
Reverse transcription real-time PCR assays for detection and quantification of Borna disease virus in diseased hosts.
Molecular and cellular probes    August 30, 2006   Volume 21, Issue 1 47-55 doi: 10.1016/j.mcp.2006.08.001
Schindler AR, Vögtlin A, Hilbe M, Puorger M, Zlinszky K, Ackermann M, Ehrensperger F.Borna disease is a severe, immunopathological disorder of the central nervous system caused by the infection with the Borna disease virus (BDV). The detection of BDV in diseased animals, mainly sheep and horses, is achieved by histological, immunohistochemical and serological approaches and/or PCR-based technologies. In the present study, reverse transcription, real-time PCR assays were established for the detection of BDV in the brain tissue from sheep and horses, using loci for the p40 (nucleoprotein) and the p24 (phosphoprotein) genes. The PCRs were equally specific and sensitive, detecting...
Electroencephalographic and electromyographic changes during the use of detomidine and detomidine-butorphanol combination in standing horses.
Acta veterinaria Hungarica    April 15, 2006   Volume 54, Issue 1 35-42 doi: 10.1556/AVet.54.2006.1.4
Kruluc P, Nemec A.Clinically, the use of detomidine and butorphanol is suitable for sedation and deepening of analgosedation. The aim of our study was to establish the influence of detomidine used alone and a butorphanol-detomidine combination on brain activity and to evaluate and compare brain responses (using electroencephalography, EEG) by recording SEF90 (spectral edge frequency 90%), individual brain wave fractions (beta, alpha, theta and delta) and electromyographic (EMG) changes in the left temporal muscle in standing horses. Ten clinically healthy cold-blooded horses were divided into two groups of five...
Diagnosis of deafness in a horse by brainstem auditory evoked potential.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    April 4, 2006   Volume 47, Issue 2 151-154 
Harland MM, Stewart AJ, Marshall AE, Belknap EB.Deafness was confirmed in a blue-eyed, 3-year-old, overo paint horse by brainstem auditory evoked potential. Congenital inherited deafness associated with lack of facial pigmentation was suspected. Assessment of hearing should be considered, especially in paint horses, at the time of pre-purchase examination. Brainstem auditory evoked potential assessment is well tolerated and accurate. Un diagnostic de surdité a été confirmé par potentiel auditif évoqué au niveau du tronc cérébral chez un cheval Paint Horse overo aux yeux bleus âgé de 3 ans. Une surdité congénitale héréditaire ...
Penetration of equine leukocytes by merozoites of Sarcocystis neurona.
Veterinary parasitology    March 6, 2006   Volume 138, Issue 3-4 371-376 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2006.01.057
Lindsay DS, Mitchell SM, Yang J, Dubey JP, Gogal RM, Witonsky SG.Horses are considered accidental hosts for Sarcocystis neurona and they often develop severe neurological disease when infected with this parasite. Schizont stages develop in the central nervous system (CNS) and cause the neurological lesions associated with equine protozoal myeloencephalitis. The present study was done to examine the ability of S. neurona merozoites to penetrate and develop in equine peripheral blood leukocytes. These infected host cells might serve as a possible transport mechanism into the CNS. S. neurona merozoites penetrated equine leukocytes within 5 min of co-culture. I...
Intracranial abscess caused by Rhodococcus equi infection in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 24, 2006   Volume 228, Issue 2 251-253 doi: 10.2460/javma.228.2.251
Janicek JC, Kramer J, Coates JR, Lattimer JC, Lacarrubba AM, Messer NT.A 4-month-old Missouri Fox Trotter colt was examined for a 5-week history of head tilt after treatment for suspected pulmonary Rhodococcus equi infection. Results: Computed tomography revealed osteolysis of the occipital, temporal, and caudal portion of the parietal bones of the left side of the cranium. A soft tissue mass compressing the occipital region of the cerebral cortex and cerebellum was associated with the osteolytic bone. Results: A rostrotentorial-suboccipital craniectomy approach was performed to remove fragmented occipital bone, debulk the intracranial mass, and obtain tissue sam...
Central nervous system hemangiosarcoma in a horse.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    December 17, 2005   Volume 19, Issue 6 914-916 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2005)19[914:cnshia]2.0.co;2
Ladd SM, Crisman MV, Duncan R, Rossmeisl J, Almy FS.No abstract available
Traumatic cerebral partial lobotomy in a Thoroughbred stallion.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 11 674-677 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb13045.x
Rayner SG.No abstract available
Scanning electron microscopy of the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle of the horse.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    November 18, 2005   Volume 34, Issue 6 379-382 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.2005.00628.x
Adami M, Faria MM, Almeida AE, Pinto MG, Prada IL.The present study examined the ultrastructure of the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle of the horse. The material was fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 m sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.3, processed and analysed by scanning electron microscopy. The choroid plexus was characterized by regions with a predominance of villi, which resembled finger-like projections or bunches of grapes, and others where straight and uniform folds predominated. Epithelial cells projected into the ventricle and large amounts of cilia and microvilli were observed on their surface. The choroid glomus corresponded...
Differential susceptibility of equine and mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells to equine herpesvirus 1 infection.
Archives of virology    November 17, 2005   Volume 151, Issue 4 775-786 doi: 10.1007/s00705-005-0653-3
Hasebe R, Kimura T, Nakamura K, Ochiai K, Okazaki K, Wada R, Umemura T.Equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) shows endotheliotropism in the central nervous system (CNS) of infected horses. However, infection of endothelial cells has not been observed in the CNS of infected mice. To explore the basis for this difference in endotheliotropism, we compared the susceptibility of equine brain microvascular endothelial cells (EBMECs) and mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells (MBMECs) to EHV-1 infection. The kinetics of viral growth in EBMECs was typical of a fully productive infection whereas viral infection in MBMECs seemed to be nonproductive. Immunofluorescence microsco...
The influence of 1-10 kD fraction from brains of the hibernating ground squirrel and the Yakut horse on proliferation and protein synthesizing system of Ehrlich ascitic carcinoma cells.
Cryo letters    September 1, 2005   Volume 26, Issue 5 279-288 
Gulevsky AK, Grischenko VI, Tereschenko OS, Shchenyavcky IJ.The experimental data presented in the work testify to the cytostatic activity of 1-10 kD polypeptide fractions from brains of the hibernating ground squirrel and the Yakut horse towards Ehrlich ascitic carcinoma (EAC) cells. The experiments on the investigation of the inhibiting influence of 1-10 kD fractions from tissues of the hibernating and cold-adapted animals on protein-synthesizing system of EAC cells allow us to conclude that the cytostatic effect of the fractions is effected at the genetic level in the tumor cells.
Importation of canid rabies in a horse relocated from Zimbabwe to South Africa.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    July 5, 2005   Volume 72, Issue 1 95-100 doi: 10.4102/ojvr.v72i1.226
Sabeta CT, Randles JL.In July 2003 a 2-year-old Thoroughbred colt was imported from Harare, Zimbabwe to the Ashburton Training Centre, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. Five months after importation, the colt presented with clinical signs suggestive of rabies: it was uncoordinated, showed muscle tremors and was biting at itself. Brain tissue was submitted for analysis and the clinical diagnosis was confirmed by the fluorescent antibody test and reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Phylogenetic analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the cytoplasmic domain of the glycoprotein and the G-L intergenic...
Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease in a horse.
Acta neuropathologica    June 22, 2005   Volume 110, Issue 2 191-195 doi: 10.1007/s00401-005-1033-5
Pumarola M, Vidal E, Trens JM, Serafín A, Marquez M, Ferrer I.Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID) is reported in a 16-year-old Pure Spanish breed female horse suffering from progressive ataxia and motor deficiencies. The neuropathological study revealed NIIs throughout the central nervous system, although mainly in the brain stem and spinal cord. This distribution did not correlate with neuron loss, which was marked in the hippocampus and moderate in the neocortex, particularly in the occipital cortex. As in humans, NIIs in the horse were hyaline autofluorescent inclusions composed of non-membrane-bound aggregates of filaments and fine granule...
Semilobar holoprosencephaly in a Morgan horse.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    June 16, 2005   Volume 19, Issue 3 367-372 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2005)19[367:shiamh]2.0.co;2
Koch TG, Loretti AP, de Lahunta A, Kendall A, Russell D, Bienzle D.No abstract available
A novel, progressive, sclerosing panencephalitis in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    May 17, 2005   Volume 37, Issue 3 276-280 doi: 10.2746/0425164054530623
Swain JM, Hudson NP, Rhind SM, Baird PM, Mayhew IG.No abstract available
Species-specific ultrastructure of neuronal lipofuscin in hippocampus and neocortex of subhuman mammals and humans.
Ultrastructural pathology    March 15, 2005   Volume 28, Issue 5-6 341-351 doi: 10.1080/019131290882330
Boellaard JW, Schlote W, Hofer W.Lipofuscin represents an integral part of neurons and glial cells in mammals and in submammalian species. It is a special lysosomal organelle, takes part of cellular metabolism, and is a structural expression of catabolic pathways. Species-specific differences of lipofuscin indicate metabolic differences of the relevant neurons. The authors have studied the ultrastructure of neuronal lipofuscin in the hippocampus and cerebral neocortex of dogs, horses, cows, elephants, rats, mice, apes, and humans to answer the question of species-specific differences of this organelle. Paraffin sections of fo...
Immunoglobulin M-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay testing of cerebrospinal fluid and serum from horses exposed to west nile virus by vaccination or natural infection.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    January 11, 2005   Volume 18, Issue 6 866-870 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2004)18<866:imeiat>2.0.co;2
Porter MB, Long M, Gosche DG, Schott HM, Hines MT, Rossano M, Sellon DC.The West Nile (WN) virus, present in the United States since 1999, is a cause of encephalomyelitis in birds, alligators, humans, and horses. No data exist regarding detection of anti-WN virus immunoglobins in equine cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The aims of this study were to evaluate the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in WN virus-infected (WNE) horses, to compare diagnostic testing in serum and CSF, and to describe the immunoglobulin M (IgM) response in serum and CSF of vaccinated horses. CSF was collected from the lumbosacral (LS) space (n = 13) or the allanto-occipital (AO) space (n = 14) of WNE ho...
Altered mesoaccumbens and nigro-striatal dopamine physiology is associated with stereotypy development in a non-rodent species.
Behavioural brain research    December 8, 2004   Volume 159, Issue 1 113-118 doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2004.10.014
McBride SD, Hemmings A.Stress-induced changes in mesoaccumbens dopamine neurophysiology have been associated with the development of stereotypic behaviour in in-bred strains of laboratory rodents. This experiment evaluated whether similar changes are associated with environmentally-induced stereotypic behaviour in a higher-vertebrate species, the horse. D1- and D2-like dopamine receptor densities (B(max)) and dissociation constants (K(d)) were measured in control (n=9) and stereotypy (n=9) horses in the nucleus accumbens, caudate nucleus, putamen, substantia nigra and ventral tegmentum brain regions. Results reveale...
Different chemokine expression in lethal and non-lethal murine West Nile virus infection.
Journal of medical virology    September 16, 2004   Volume 74, Issue 3 507-513 doi: 10.1002/jmv.20205
Shirato K, Kimura T, Mizutani T, Kariwa H, Takashima I.West Nile (WN) virus is a mosquito-borne flavivirus that can cause lethal encephalitis in humans and horses. The WN virus endemic in New York City (NY) in 1999 caused large-scale mortality of wild birds that was not evident in endemic areas in other parts of the world, and the pathogenesis of the WN virus strain isolated in NY (NY strain) appears to differ from that of previously isolated strains. However, the pathogenesis of NY strain infection remains unclear. This study examined CC (RANTES/CCL5, MIP-1 alpha/CCL3, MIP-1 beta/CCL4) and CXC (IP-10/CXCL10, B lymphocyte chemoattractant (BLC/CXCL...
Leukoencephalitis associated with selective viral replication in the brain of a pony with experimental chronic equine infectious anemia virus infection.
Veterinary pathology    September 7, 2004   Volume 41, Issue 5 527-532 doi: 10.1354/vp.41-5-527
Oaks JL, Long MT, Baszler TV.Neurologic disease occurs sporadically in horses infected with the equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV). This report describes a case of clinically severe neurologic disease in a pony experimentally infected with EIAV. This pony did not have fever or anemia, which are the characteristic clinical signs of disease. The histopathologic changes were characterized as lymphohistiocytic periventricular leukoencephalitis. Polymerase chain reaction and in situ hybridization data showed that the brain lesions were directly associated with viral replication and that high-level viral replication occurred...
Intracranial elastance in isoflurane-anesthetized horses.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 2004   Volume 65, Issue 8 1042-1046 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2004.65.1042
Brosnan RJ, LeCouteur RA, Steffey EP, Imai A, Farver TB.To determine whether high intracranial pressure (ICP) during spontaneous ventilation (SV) in anesthetized horses coincides with an increase in intracranial elastance (ie, change in ICP per unit change of intracranial volume). Methods: 6 adult horses. Methods: Anesthesia was induced and maintained in each horse for 5 hours with isoflurane at a constant dose equal to 1.2 times the minimum alveolar concentration. Direct ICP measurements were obtained by use of a strain gauge transducer inserted in the subarachnoid space, and arterial blood pressure was measured from a carotid artery. Physiologic ...
Phylogenetic analysis of West Nile virus, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico.
Emerging infectious diseases    August 25, 2004   Volume 10, Issue 7 1314-1317 doi: 10.3201/eid1007.030959
Blitvich BJ, Fernández-Salas I, Contreras-Cordero JF, Loroño-Pino MA, Marlenee NL, Díaz FJ, González-Rojas JI, Obregón-Martínez N....West Nile virus RNA was detected in brain tissue from a horse that died in June 2003 in Nuevo Leon State, Mexico. Nucleotide sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of the premembrane and envelope genes showed that the virus was most closely related to West Nile virus isolates collected in Texas in 2002.
Cytology of the normal and abnormal choroid plexi in selected domestic mammals, wildlife species, and man. Garma-Aviña A.A cytologic study of the choroid plexi of animals and humans was carried out using impression smears (imprints, imp) to understand better the cellular changes that occur in the cerebrospinal fluid in the case of disease. The samples, totaling 756 imp were from 11 dogs (239 imp), 10 horses (219 imp), 1 mule (23 imp), 3 cattle (69 imp), 1 sheep (19 imp), 2 pigs (39 imp), 1 deer (20 imp), 4 monkeys (22 imp), and 7 humans (106 imp). The samples came from individuals clinically free of neurologic disease, as well as from a few abnormal cases. Six of the 7 humans had no history of neurologic disease...
Magnetic resonance imaging of a brain abscess in a 10-month-old filly. Audigié F, Tapprest J, George C, Didierlaurent D, Foucher N, Faurie F, Houssin M, Denoix JM.The purpose of this paper was to correlate the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) characteristics of a mature brain abscess in a horse with histopathologic alterations of brain tissue. Eight months after the onset of clinical signs, MRI of the brain of a 10-month-old filly was performed. A large space-occupying lesion in the right cerebral hemisphere was identified. This space-occupying lesion was delineated by a thick and well-defined capsule that was isointense to brain parenchyma on the T1-weighted images and with a markedly hypointense on the T2-weighted images. The identification of such a ...
The mystery of fungal infection in the guttural pouches.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 26, 2004   Volume 168, Issue 1 60-64 doi: 10.1016/S1090-0233(03)00108-4
Lepage OM, Perron MF, Cadoré JL.Advances in the understanding of guttural pouch physiology and novel therapeutic approaches to mycotic infections in the horse are reviewed. It is suggested that the guttural pouches may contribute to the regulation of arterial blood temperature, cooling the circulation to the brain to below body temperature. Aspergillus spp. is the major organism found in a guttural pouch affected with mycosis but it is unclear why this agent becomes aggressive. Conventional therapy aims to prevent fatal haemorrhage and to treat any neurological lesions but it is desirable to try to prevent the disease. A tec...
A punch drunk jockey?
British journal of sports medicine    May 25, 2004   Volume 38, Issue 3 e3 doi: 10.1136/bjsm.2003.006338
McCrory P, Turner M, Murray J.The case is reported of a retired professional jockey with progressive memory loss. The concern is that he may be suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy or the "punch drunk syndrome".
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