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Topic:Capillaries

Capillaries in horses are small blood vessels that form a network between arterioles and venules, facilitating the exchange of oxygen, nutrients, and waste products between blood and tissues. These microvessels are integral to the circulatory system, ensuring that tissues receive adequate blood supply and metabolic exchange. The structure and function of capillaries can vary depending on the specific tissue or organ they serve, influencing factors such as permeability and flow rate. Research in equine capillary function often focuses on topics such as blood flow regulation, the impact of exercise on capillary density and function, and the role of capillaries in various equine health conditions. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the anatomy, physiology, and clinical implications of capillary function in horses.
Evaluation of tachykinins and their receptors to determine sensory innervation in the dorsal hoof wall and insertion of the distal sesamoidean impar ligament and deep digital flexor tendon on the distal phalanx in healthy feet of horses.
American journal of veterinary research    February 15, 2002   Volume 63, Issue 2 222-228 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2002.63.222
Van Wulfen KK, Bowker RM.To localize substance P (SP) and neurokinin A (NKA) and their receptors in the insertion of the distal sesamoidean impar ligament (DSIL), deep digital flexor tendon (DDFT), and dorsal hoof wall of healthy feet of horses. Methods: 18 healthy feet from horses. Methods: Samples from the dorsal hoof wall and insertion of the DSIL and DDFT of 10 feet were processed for immunocytochemical analysis, using rabbit polyclonal antisera raised against SP and NKA. Tissue sections from 8 feet were incubated with 125-labeled SP to localize tachykinin receptors and their specificity and with control solutions...
NO inhalation reduces pulmonary arterial pressure but not hemorrhage in maximally exercising horses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    November 22, 2001   Volume 91, Issue 6 2674-2678 doi: 10.1152/jappl.2001.91.6.2674
Kindig CA, McDonough P, Finley MR, Behnke BJ, Richardson TE, Marlin DJ, Erickson HH, Poole DC.In horses, the exercise-induced elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa) is thought to play a deterministic role in exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH), and thus treatment designed to lower Ppa might reasonably be expected to reduce EIPH. Five Thoroughbred horses were run on a treadmill to volitional fatigue (incremental step test) under nitric oxide (NO; inhaled 80 ppm) and control (N(2), same flow rate as per NO run) conditions (2 wk between trials; order randomized) to test the hypothesis that NO inhalation would reduce maximal Ppa but that this reduction may not necessarily ...
Extravascular lung water in the exercising horse.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    November 22, 2001   Volume 91, Issue 6 2442-2450 doi: 10.1152/jappl.2001.91.6.2442
Wilkins PA, Gleed RD, Krivitski NM, Dobson A.Seven Standardbred horses were exercised on a treadmill at speeds (approximately 12 m/s) producing maximal heart rate, hypoxemia, and a mean pulmonary arterial pressure of approximately 75 mmHg. Extravascular lung water was measured by using transients in temperature and electrical impedance of the blood caused by a bolus injection of cold saline solution. Lung water was approximately 3 ml/kg body wt when standing but did not increase significantly with exertion. We conclude that any increase in fluid extravasation from the pulmonary hypertension accumulates in the lung at a level that is less...
In vivo imaging of physiological angiogenesis from immature to preovulatory ovarian follicles.
The American journal of pathology    November 7, 2001   Volume 159, Issue 5 1661-1670 doi: 10.1016/S0002-9440(10)63013-1
Vollmar B, Laschke MW, Rohan R, Koenig J, Menger MD.To develop a model for the study of physiological angiogenesis, we transplanted ovarian follicles onto striated muscle tissue and analyzed the process of microvascularization in vivo using repeated fluorescence microscopy. Follicles were mechanically isolated from unstimulated as well as pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG)- or PMSG/luteinizing hormone (LH)-stimulated Syrian golden hamster ovaries and were transplanted as free grafts into dorsal skinfold chambers of untreated or synchronized hamsters. Follicles lacking thecal cell layers did not vascularize regardless whether harvested fr...
Analyses of quaternary ammonium drugs in horse urine by capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry.
Electrophoresis    August 16, 2001   Volume 22, Issue 11 2201-2209 doi: 10.1002/1522-2683(20017)22:11<2201::AID-ELPS2201>3.0.CO;2-S
Tang FP, Leung GN, Wan TS.A capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (CE-MS) method for the analysis of quaternary ammonium drugs in equine urine was developed. Quaternary ammonium drugs were first extracted from equine urine by ion-pair extraction and then analysed by CE-MS in the positive electrospray ionization (ESI) mode. Within 12 min, eight quaternary ammonium drugs, each at 1 ng/mL in horse urine, could be detected. The confirmation of these drugs in urine samples was achieved by capillary electrophoresis tandem mass spectrometry (CE-MS/MS). A direct comparison of this method was made with existing liquid chr...
Endothelin-1 and control of blood flow distribution in the lung.
Equine veterinary journal    July 27, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 4 330-332 doi: 10.2746/042516401776249598
Wilkins PA, Gleed RD.No abstract available
Mucosal microvasculature of the gastric pars nonglandularis and margo plicatus in the horse: a scanning electron microscopic study on corrosion casts.
Annals of anatomy = Anatomischer Anzeiger : official organ of the Anatomische Gesellschaft    June 9, 2001   Volume 183, Issue 3 255-259 doi: 10.1016/S0940-9602(01)80228-4
Staszyk C, Jackowiak H, Godynicki S, Gasse H.The microvascularisation of the equine non-glandular gastric mucosa was investigated using corrosion casts for scanning electron microscopy. Specimens from 11 healthy horses were examined. Corresponding to the high incidence of gastric lesions in the margo plicatus, special attention was paid to the differentiation between the pars nonglandularis and the margo plicatus as a distinct area of the aglandular mucosa. In both areas, the blood vessels of the lamina propria mucosae were arranged in three vascular layers; i. e. I) a basal, II) an intermediate, and III) a subepithelial horizontal level...
Effect of prior high-intensity exercise on exercise-induced arterial hypoxemia in Thoroughbred horses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    May 18, 2001   Volume 90, Issue 6 2371-2377 doi: 10.1152/jappl.2001.90.6.2371
Manohar M, Goetz TE, Hassan AS.Strenuously exercising horses exhibit arterial hypoxemia and exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH), the latter resulting from stress failure of pulmonary capillaries. The present study was carried out to examine whether the structural changes in the blood-gas barrier caused by a prior bout of high-intensity short-term exercise capable of inducing EIPH would affect the arterial hypoxemia induced during a successive bout of exercise performed at the same workload. Two sets of experiments, double- and single-exercise-bout experiments, were carried out on seven healthy, sound Thoroughbred h...
Scanning electron microscopic study of the posterior ciliary veins in domestic ungulates.
Folia morphologica    March 10, 2001   Volume 60, Issue 1 21-26 
Simoens P, Van den Broeck W, Lauwers H.Vascular corrosion casts of 12 equine, 15 bovine and 50 porcine eyes were studied scanning electron microscopically for the presence of posterior ciliary veins. These veins drain a postequatorial segment of the choroid and emerge near the posterior bulbar pole. They complement the four vorticose veins that emerge near or at the equatorial zone of the eyeball and the slender choroidoretinal veins that drain the peridiscal area of the choroid. Posterior ciliary veins were observed in all equine and bovine eyes examined. In these species they presented a large variation in size, number and positi...
Effects of intraluminal distention and decompression on microvascular permeability and hemodynamics of the equine jejunum.
American journal of veterinary research    February 24, 2001   Volume 62, Issue 2 225-236 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2001.62.225
Dabareiner RM, White NA, Donaldson LL.To determine whether intraluminal distention and subsequent decompression of the equine jejunum affects intestinal blood flow, hemodynamics, and microvascular permeability. Methods: 5 healthy adu t horses. Methods: Horses were anesthestized and underwent exploratory laparotomy. Two jejunal segments were identified as sham-operated or instrumented segments. After baseline values were obtained, intraluminal distention was created in the experimental segment to induce an ntraluminal pressure of 18 cm H2O. After 120 minutes of distention, the intestine was decompressed for 120 minutes. Mesenteric ...
Effect of sodium bisulfate on skin and hooves of horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 7, 2000   Volume 61, Issue 11 1418-1421 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2000.61.1418
Sweeney CR, Habecker PL, Russell GE.To evaluate the safety of sodium bisulfate for use in horse barn environments by determining its irritant effect on skin and hooves. Methods: 6 female mixed-breed ponies. Methods: Sodium bisulfate was applied to clipped intact skin of 6 ponies to evaluate its irritant effect after single (48 hours) and repetitive (6 h/d for 10 days) applications; similar areas of skin were used as untreated control sites. In addition, sodium bisulfate was applied to the sole of both front hooves of each pony and covered with wet gauze, and the entire hoof was covered with adhesive tape for 48 hours. Results: C...
Intravenous pentoxifylline does not affect the exercise-induced pulmonary arterial, capillary or venous hypertension in Thoroughbred horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 7, 2000   Volume 23, Issue 5 317-322 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2885.2000.00262.x
Manohar M, Goetz TE, Rothenbaum P, Humphrey S.The present study was carried out to examine whether intravenously administered pentoxifylline-a phosphodiesterase inhibitor which increases red blood cell deformability and decreases blood viscosity-would attenuate the magnitude of exercise-induced pulmonary capillary hypertension in healthy, fit Thoroughbred horses and in turn, diminish the occurrence of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH). Experiments were carried out on six healthy, sound, exercise-trained Thoroughbred horses. Hemodynamic data were collected at rest, and during exercise performed at 8 and 14 m/sec on 3.5% uphill g...
Clenbuterol administration does not attenuate the exercise-induced pulmonary arterial, capillary or venous hypertension in strenuously exercising Thoroughbred horses.
Equine veterinary journal    November 28, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 6 546-550 doi: 10.2746/042516400777584604
Manohar M, Goetz TE, Rothenbaum P, Humphrey S.The present study was carried out to ascertain whether beta2-adrenergic receptor stimulation with clenbuterol would attenuate the pulmonary arterial, capillary and venous hypertension in horses performing high-intensity exercise and, in turn, modify the occurrence of exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH). Experiments were carried out on 6 healthy, sound, exercise-trained Thoroughbred horses. All horses were studied in the control (no medications) and the clenbuterol (0.8 pg/kg bwt, i.v.) treatments. The sequence of these treatments was randomised for every horse, and 7 days were allowe...
Relationship of pulmonary arterial pressure to pulmonary haemorrhage in exercising horses.
Equine veterinary journal    October 19, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 5 379-384 doi: 10.2746/042516400777591066
Langsetmo I, Meyer MR, Erickson HH.Exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) is characterised by blood in the airways after strenuous exercise and results from stress failure of the pulmonary capillaries. The purpose of this experiment was to establish a threshold value of transmural pulmonary arterial pressure at which haemorrhage occurs in the exercising horse. Five geldings, age 4-14 years, were run in random order once every 2 weeks at 1 of 4 speeds (9, 11, 13, 15 m/s); one day with no run was used as a control. Heart rate, pulmonary arterial pressure and oesophageal pressure were recorded for the duration of the run. T...
The case for measuring plasma colloid osmotic pressure.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    September 30, 2000   Volume 14, Issue 5 473-474 
Stewart RH.No abstract available
Laminar microvascular flow, measured by means of laser Doppler flowmetry, during the prodromal stages of black walnut-induced laminitis in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    August 22, 2000   Volume 61, Issue 8 862-868 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2000.61.862
Adair HS, Goble DO, Schmidhammer JL, Shires GM.To measure changes in laminar microvascular blood flow (LMBF) over time in healthy horses and horses in the prodromal stage of black walnut-induced laminitis and to determine the effects of glyceryl trinitrate application on LMBF in horses with acute laminitis. Methods: 10 healthy adult horses. Methods: Laser Doppler flowmetry was used to measure LMBF Baseline measurements were obtained, horses were given deionized water via a nasogastric tube, and measurements were obtained hourly for 12 hours. Twenty-four hours later, baseline measurements were again obtained, and horses were given black wal...
Myosin heavy chain profile of equine gluteus medius muscle following prolonged draught-exercise training and detraining.
Journal of muscle research and cell motility    August 22, 2000   Volume 21, Issue 3 235-245 doi: 10.1023/a:1005642632711
Serrano AL, Rivero JL.Fourteen 4-year old Andalusian mares were used to examine the plasticity of myosin heavy chain (MHC) composition in horse skeletal muscle with heavy draught-exercise training and detraining. Seven horses underwent a training programme based on carriage exercises for 8 months. Afterwards, they were kept in paddocks for 3 months. The remaining seven animals were used as control horses. Three gluteus medius muscle biopsies were removed at depths of 20, 40 and 60 mm from each horse before (month 0), during the training (months 3 and 8) and after detraining (month 11). Myosin heavy chain compositio...
Fine structure of the retinal pigment epithelium, Bruch’s membrane and choriocapillaris in the horse.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    August 5, 2000   Volume 29, Issue 3 135-139 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0264.2000.00241.x
Altunay H.The fine structure of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), Bruch's membrane and choriocapillaris was investigated by light and transmission electron microscopy in both the tapetal and non-tapetal fundus of the horse eye. In all locations, the RPE consisted of a single layer of low cuboidal cells. The epithelial cells were joined laterally by apically located tight junctions. These cells displayed numerous basal infoldings and abundant thin apical processes which enclosed the rod outer segments. The epithelial cell nuclei were large and located basally. Within the epithelial cells, smooth endo...
Pulmonary vascular resistance of horses decreases with moderate exercise and remains unchanged as workload is increased to maximal exercise.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 117-121 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05200.x
Manohar M, Goetz TE.This study was carried out to examine changes in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) induced by moderate and strenuous exercise; the objective being to understand why pulmonary artery blood pressure of exercising horses increases progressively as work intensity increases. Pulmonary arterial and wedge pressures (referenced at the point of the left shoulder) were determined simultaneously with cardiac output in 2 groups of healthy, sound, exercise-trained horses. Horses in Group 1 (n = 8) were studied at rest and during exercise performed at 8 and 13 m/s; the latter workload eliciting maximal he...
Effects of frusemide on pulmonary capillary pressure in horses exercising on a treadmill.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 102-106 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05198.x
Gleed FD, Ducharme NG, Hackett RP, Hakim TS, Erb HN, Mitchell LM, Soderholm LV.We hypothesised that frusemide would decrease pulmonary capillary pressure in horses during strenuous exercise. Seven horses were tested after receiving saline or frusemide (2 mg/kg bwt) in random order with an interval of at least one week. Measurements were made with the horses standing, exercising at 75, 90 and 100% HRmax (maximal heart rate), and then walking 2 min after cessation of 100% HRmax. The exercise tests lasted for approximately 3 min with an interval of walking between them. Pulmonary artery and oesophageal pressures were recorded continuously and subsequent analysis of the pulm...
Pulmonary capillary pressure in horses undergoing alteration of pleural pressure by imposition of various upper airway resistive loads.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 27-33 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05183.x
Ducharme NG, Hackett RP, Gleed RD, Ainsworth DM, Erb HN, Mitchell LM, Soderholm LV.We hypothesized that changes in pleural pressure induced by resistive breathing would affect transmural pulmonary artery, pulmonary capillary, and pulmonary wedge pressures. Seven horses were assigned to exercise with each of 4 upper respiratory resistive loads in random order at intervals of at least 2 days: 1) control--no added resistive loads; 2) inspiratory resistive load (Iobst)--left laryngeal hemiplegia; 3) expiratory resistive load (Eobst)--one-way valve in the right nostril; and 4) combined inspiratory and expiratory resistive loads (CIEobst)--left nostril occlusion. On each occasion,...
Pulmonary vascular pressures of strenuously exercising Thoroughbreds during intravenous infusion of nitroglycerin.
American journal of veterinary research    November 24, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 11 1436-1440 
Manohar M, Goetz TE.To determine whether intravenous infusion of nitroglycerin would modify pulmonary arterial, capillary, or venous hypertension in strenuously exercising Thoroughbreds. Methods: 5 healthy Thoroughbred horses. Methods: Right atrial, right ventricular, and pulmonary vascular pressures were measured. Each horse was used in a control treatment (not medicated) and a nitroglycerin infusion (20 microg/kg of body weight/min) at rest and during exercise on a treadmill. Sequence of treatments was randomized for each horse, and treatments were separated by a 7-day interval. Galloping at 14.2 m/s on a 5% up...
Effect of furosemide on pulmonary blood flow distribution in resting and exercising horses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    June 16, 1999   Volume 86, Issue 6 2034-2043 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1999.86.6.2034
Erickson HH, Bernard SL, Glenny RW, Fedde MR, Polissar NL, Basaraba RJ, Walther SM, Gaughan EM, McMurphy R, Hlastala MP.We determined the spatial distribution of pulmonary blood flow (PBF) with 15-micron fluorescent-labeled microspheres during rest and exercise in five Thoroughbred horses before and 4 h after furosemide administration (0.5 mg/kg iv). The primary finding of this study was that PBF redistribution occurred from rest to exercise, both with and without furosemide. However, there was less blood flow to the dorsal portion of the lung during exercise postfurosemide compared with prefurosemide. Furosemide did alter the resting perfusion distribution by increasing the flow to the ventral regions of the l...
Immunohistochemical demonstration of African horse sickness viral antigen in tissues of experimentally infected equines.
Archives of virology. Supplementum    October 24, 1998   Volume 14 57-65 doi: 10.1007/978-3-7091-6823-3_7
Wohlsein P, Pohlenz JF, Salt JS, Hamblin C.African horse sickness virus (AHSV) antigen was demonstrated immunohistochemically in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of tissues collected from three ponies suffering from the peracute form of the disease and from one pony affected by the fever form. The pattern of the antigen distribution indicated a particular organ tropism characterised by an accumulation of AHSV antigen in cardio-pulmonary tissues of the animals with the peracute disease and in the spleen of the pony with the fever form. AHSV antigen was identified in endothelial cells of small blood vessels, particularly capill...
Scanning electron microscopic study of the vascular supply of the equine hoof.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 26, 1998   Volume 60, Issue 7 855-858 doi: 10.1292/jvms.60.855
Nasu T, Yamanaka T, Nakai M, Ogawa H.The blood supply in the equine hoof was studied by a microvascular casting corrosion technique and scanning electron microscopy in combination with observations of sections of the decalcificated digit. The dermal lamella was observed at the hoof wall and the dermal papilla at the other parts of the hoof. The microvascular architecture of the dermal lamella differed from that of dermal papilla. The vascular cast in the dermal papillar regions indicated that each papilla contained two central vessels (artery and vein), which ran parallel to each other, and the capillary plexus surrounding these ...
Increase in blood viscosity in the sprinting horse: can it account for the high pulmonary arterial pressure?
Equine veterinary journal    August 15, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 4 329-334 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04106.x
Fedde MR, Erickson HH.Blood was taken from 49 Thoroughbred horses before and after racing at the track to determine if frusemide modified the apparent viscosity of the blood and to determine the effects of changes in shear rate and packed cell volume (PCV), associated with strenuous exercise, on apparent and relative viscosities. Small increases in apparent viscosity of the blood (at a specified PCV and shear rate) occurred in horses given frusemide compared to those receiving no frusemide; however, no differences were seen in relative viscosity. Although 2 groups of horses, those receiving frusemide before racing ...
The effect of social stress on adrenal axis activity in horses: the importance of monitoring corticosteroid-binding globulin capacity.
The Journal of endocrinology    August 6, 1998   Volume 157, Issue 3 425-432 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1570425
Alexander SL, Irvine CH.Plasma cortisol is largely bound to corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG), which regulates its bioavailability by restricting exit from capillaries. Levels of CBG may be altered by several factors including stress and this can influence the amount of cortisol reaching cells. This study investigated the effect of social instability on plasma concentrations of CBG, total and free (not protein bound) cortisol in horses. Horses new to our research herd ('newcomers') were confined in a small yard with four dominant resident horses for 3-4 h daily for 3-4 (n = 5) or 9-14 (n = 3) days. Jugular blood ...
Review of furosemide in horse racing: its effects and regulation.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    July 23, 1998   Volume 21, Issue 3 228-240 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2885.1998.00132.x
Soma LR, Uboh CE.Furosemide has been used empirically and has been legally approved for many years by the US racing industry for the control of exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) or bleeding. Its use in horses for this purpose is highly controversial and has been criticized by organizations outside and inside of the racing industry. This review concentrates on its renal and extra-renal actions and the possible relationship of these actions to the modification of EIPH and changes in performance of horses. The existing literature references suggest that furosemide has the potential of increasing perfo...
Occurrence and importance of glomus organs (Hoyer-Grosser’s organs) in the skin of the equine and bovine mammary gland.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    July 4, 1998   Volume 27, Issue 3 155-159 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1998.tb00173.x
Ludewig T.Glomus organs (Hoyer-Grosser's organs) were frequently found in the corium and the subcutis of the skin of the equine and bovine mammary gland. They were most frequently situated in the border zone between the stratum profundum and the stratum superficiale corii. These specialized vascular structures (arterio-venous anastomosis) were present in all investigated skin areas. Although the glomus organs varied in size and shape, they possessed common histologic structures: an arteriole entered the connective capsule of the glomus and divided into strongly convoluted arterio-venous channels; the ar...
Skeletal muscle adaptations to prolonged training, overtraining and detraining in horses.
Pflugers Archiv : European journal of physiology    June 30, 1998   Volume 436, Issue 3 391-397 doi: 10.1007/s004240050648
Tyler CM, Golland LC, Evans DL, Hodgson DR, Rose RJ.Thirteen standard-bred horses were trained intensively for 34 weeks and detrained for 6 weeks to study skeletal muscle adaptations to prolonged training, overtraining and detraining. Training included endurance (phase 1, 7 weeks), high-intensity (phase 2, 9 weeks) and overload training (OLT) (phase 3, 18 weeks). During phase 3, horses were divided into two groups, OLT and control (C), with OLT horses performing greater intensities and durations of exercise than C horses. Overtraining was evident in OLT horses after week 31 and was defined as a significant reduction in treadmill run time in res...