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Topic:Cardiovascular Health

Cardiovascular health in horses encompasses the study of the heart and blood vessels, focusing on their structure, function, and associated disorders. The equine cardiovascular system is responsible for the circulation of blood, delivering oxygen and nutrients to tissues, and removing waste products. Research in this area includes the examination of cardiac anatomy, the electrophysiology of the heart, and common cardiovascular conditions such as arrhythmias, valvular diseases, and heart murmurs. Diagnostic tools such as echocardiography, electrocardiography, and cardiac biomarkers are utilized to assess cardiovascular function and detect abnormalities. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the physiological mechanisms, diagnostic approaches, and therapeutic strategies related to cardiovascular health in horses.
Long term ECG recording with Holter monitoring in clinically healthy horses.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1992   Volume 33, Issue 1 71-75 doi: 10.1186/BF03546937
Raekallio M.The electrocardiogram of 9 horses was continuously recorded for 24 h with Holter monitoring to examine the variations in heart rate and rhythm during daily routine procedures and at night. Three horses had transient sinus bradycardia, and 3 had periods of sinus tachycardia. Heart blocks were detected in 3 horses, and all horses had periods of sinus arrhythmia. These changes in the heart rate and rhythm were apparently caused by variations in autonomic nervous system tone and they are probably "normal" findings in resting, undisturbed horses. Ventricular premature depolarisations were not obser...
Cardiovascular effects of low dose calcium chloride infusions during halothane anaesthesia in dorsally recumbent ventilated ponies.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    December 1, 1991   Volume 38, Issue 10 728-736 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1991.tb01072.x
Gasthuys F, De Moor A, Parmentier D.The effects of calcium chloride administered at low infusion rates on the cardiovascular depression and the blood calcium balance were studied during a constant halothane anaesthesia in dorsally recumbent ventilated ponies. A pronounced cardiopulmonary depression characterized by decreases of all cardiac parameters and lowering of the mean arterial blood pressure was observed after the initial anaesthetic stabilization period of 30 minutes in the ponies. A significant decrease in the total calcium plasma concentration together with a constant ionized and complexed calcium fraction was present ...
Measurement of cardiac dimensions with two-dimensional echocardiography in the living horse.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 6 461-465 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03762.x
Voros K, Holmes JR, Gibbs C.Two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) was performed on 22 unsedated Thoroughbred and part Thoroughbred horses weighing between 411 and 650 kg to establish normal reference values for 2DE measurements. Animals stood during examinations performed with a 3.5 MHz mechanical sector transducer using various transducer positions and tomographic planes. Right ventricular diameter (RVD), ventricular septal thickness (VSTh), aortic diameter (AoD), area of the chordal lumen of the left ventricle (CTA), left ventricular diameter (LVD) and left atrial diameter (LAD) were determined at ventricular end-dias...
Thermodilution estimation of cardiac output at high flows in anesthetized horses.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 11 1893-1897 
Dunlop CI, Hodgson DS, Chapman PL, Grandy JL, Waldron RD.The purpose of this study was to compare the thermodilution technique for estimation of cardiac output with the indocyanine green dye dilution technique at flows between 10 and 39 L/min in halothane-anesthetized horses. The estimation of area of dye dilution cardiac output curves was made by using the fore-'n-aft (FA) triangle method. This shorthand technique was compared with logarithmic exponential extrapolation and summation (extrapolated area), using 64 cardiac output curves. Then, 256 simultaneous thermodilution measurements were compared with dye dilution measurements calculated by use o...
The influence of detomidine and epinephrine on heart rate, arterial blood pressure, and cardiac arrhythmia in horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    November 1, 1991   Volume 20, Issue 6 468-473 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1991.tb00357.x
Raekallio M, Vainio O, Karjalainen J.Detomidine (10 micrograms/kg and 20 micrograms/kg) was administered to seven horses with and without epinephrine infusion (0.1 microgram/kg/min) from 5 minutes before to 5 minutes after detomidine injection. One or more single supraventricular premature heartbeats were observed in three horses after detomidine administration. Epinephrine infusion did not modify the incidence of cardiac arrhythmias in detomidine-treated horses at the doses tested. Relatively high momentary peak systolic pressures were registered in some horses after detomidine administration during epinephrine infusion. The hig...
Common horse sense.
Scientific American    October 1, 1991   Volume 265, Issue 4 12 
Heinrich B.This research article corrects a common misconception about the energy metabolism in horses during short sprinting and long-distance running events, emphasizing that short sprints are primarily powered by anaerobic activity, […]
Tetralogy of Fallot and segmental uterine aplasia in a three-year-old Morgan filly.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1991   Volume 81, Issue 4 411-418 
Cargile J, Lombard C, Wilson JH, Buergelt CD.A 3-year-old Morgan filly was presented to the University of Florida, Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, for heart murmur, poor growth, and progressive exercise intolerance. Thoracic radiographs, cardiac ultrasound, cardiac catheterization, and differential blood gases were utilized to tentatively diagnose tetralogy of Fallot. Postmortem examination confirmed tetralogy of Fallot and additionally revealed segmental uterine aplasia.
[Heart arrhythmias in horses caused by delays of conduction in the atrioventricular nodes and in the bundle of His].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 1, 1991   Volume 104, Issue 10 351-353 
Kroneman J.The clinical importance of the AV blocks in horses discussed. The second degree AV block is a symptom of the adaptation of the heart to increased workload and it is not an indication of a good performance.
Effects of a highly concentrated hypertonic saline-dextran volume expander on cardiopulmonary function in anesthetized normovolemic horses.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 10 1611-1618 
Moon PF, Snyder JR, Haskins SC, Perron PR, Kramer GC.Conventional fluid resuscitation is unsatisfactory in a small percentage of equine emergency surgical cases because the large volumes of fluids required cannot be given rapidly enough to adequately stabilize the horse. In anesthetized horses, the volume expansion and cardiopulmonary effects of a small volume of highly concentrated hypertonic saline-dextran solution were evaluated as an alternative initial fluid choice. Seven halothane-anesthetized, laterally recumbent, spontaneously ventilating, normovolemic horses were treated with a 25% NaCl-24% dextran 70 solution (HSD) at a dosage of 1.0 m...
Influence of digoxin followed by dopamine on the cardiovascular depression during a standard halothane anaesthesia in dorsally recumbent, ventilated ponies.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    October 1, 1991   Volume 38, Issue 8 585-593 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1991.tb01053.x
Gasthuys F, De Moor A, Parmentier D.The influence of digoxin (0.01 mg/kg) given as an intravenous bolus followed by dopamine at different infusion rates (1.25, 2.5 and 5.0 micrograms/kg/min) on the cardiovascular depression during a standard halothane anaesthesia was studied in dorsally recumbent ventilated ponies. Preanaesthetic digitalization induced no clear positive cardiovascular effects over 30 minutes, except for non-significant increases in mean pulmonary artery pressure and total pulmonary resistance. These changes were probably time-related. No specific side-effects related to the fast intravenous digitalization were n...
Participation of H1-receptors in histamine-induced contraction and relaxation of horse coronary artery in vitro.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 1, 1991   Volume 53, Issue 5 789-795 doi: 10.1292/jvms.53.789
Obi T, Miyamoto A, Matumoto M, Ishiguro S, Nishio A.The mechanisms of histamine-induced contraction and relaxation were investigated in rings isolated from a middle part of the left descending coronary arteries of horses. Intact and endothelium-denuded preparations were compared. Rings of horse coronary arteries contracted in response to histamine in a concentration dependent manner, but some of them relaxed with lower concentrations and contracted with higher concentrations. Removal of the endothelium abolished the relaxation and potentiated the contraction. The pD2 values were 4.70 +/- 0.08 in the rings with intact endothelium and 4.95 +/- 0....
Dynamic baroreflex sensitivity in anesthetized horses, maintained at 1.25 to 1.3 minimal alveolar concentration of halothane.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 10 1672-1675 
Hellyer PW, Dodam JR, Light GS.Dynamic baroreflex sensitivity for increasing arterial pressure (DBSI) was used to quantitatively assess the effects of anesthesia on the heart rate/arterial pressure relationship during rapid (less than or equal to 2 minutes) pressure changes in the horse. Anesthesia was induced with IV administration of xylazine and ketamine and maintained with halothane at a constant end-tidal concentration of 1.1 to 1.2% (1.25 to 1.3 minimal alveolar concentration). Systolic arterial pressure (SAP) was increased a minimum of 30 mm of Hg in response to an IV bolus injection of phenylephrine HCl. Linear regr...
Positive end-expiratory pressure during colic surgery in horses: 74 cases (1986-1988).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1991   Volume 199, Issue 7 917-921 
Wilson DV, McFeely AM.Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) was applied in 74 anesthetized, ventilated horses during colic surgery, to attempt to increase arterial oxygen tensions. In 28 horses with an initial PaO2 less than 70 mm of Hg, PEEP increased PaO2 values to a mean of 173 +/- 24 mm of Hg. Arterial oxygen content increased from 14.1 +/- 0.05 ml/dl to 17.2 +/- 0.05 ml/dl. In the remaining 46 horses, PEEP increased PaO2 from a mean value of 101 +/- 6 mm of Hg to 194 +/- 15 mm of Hg, and arterial oxygen content increased from 14.9 +/- 0.09 ml/dl to 16.9 +/- 0.07 ml/dl. Cardiovascular depression and decrease ...
[The effect of the sedative and analgesic detomidine for laryngoscopy of adult horses and foals].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 1, 1991   Volume 104, Issue 10 340-346 
Ohnesorge VB, Deegen E, Jöchle W.Detomidine was used in this field trial effectively as a sedative and analgesic for laryngoscopic examinations in a total of 193 foals and 806 mature horses (Hanoverians). Detomidine was given either i.v. in foals 3 to 11 months old (20 micrograms/kg) and in mature horses (15 micrograms/kg), or i.m. in foals below 6 months of age (35 micrograms/kg). After i.v. administration, laryngoscopy was tolerated in more than 90% of all animals without additional use of a twitch, while in foals treated i.m. more than 70% required a twitch in order to enable this procedure. The effectiveness of detomidine...
Effects of coronary occlusion duration on reactive hyperemia in conscious dogs and ponies.
The American journal of physiology    September 11, 1991   Volume 261, Issue 3 Pt 2 H768-H773 doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1991.261.3.H768
Sarazan RD, Krause GF, Franklin D, Garner HE, Griggs DM.Coronary reactive hyperemia duration (RHD) and coronary blood flow debt repayment (BFDR) were compared in conscious dogs and ponies instrumented with coronary artery Doppler flow probes and pneumatic occluders. Additional ponies were instrumented with pacing electrodes. With the use of a Latin square design, eight animals of each species were subjected to a randomized series of nine coronary occlusions ranging from 5 s to 2 min in duration. In both species, postocclusion blood flow velocity rose rapidly and plateaued at similar peak levels relative to control, but in ponies this plateau lasted...
Percutaneous transvenous removal of a broken jugular catheter from the right ventricle of a foal.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 5 392-393 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03745.x
Ames TR, Hunter DW, Caywood DD.No abstract available
Clenbuterol plasma concentrations after repeated oral administration and its effects on cardio-respiratory and blood lactate responses to exercise in healthy Standardbred horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    September 1, 1991   Volume 14, Issue 3 243-249 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1991.tb00833.x
Kallings P, Ingvast-Larsson C, Persson S, Appelgren LE, Förster HJ, Rominger KL.To evaluate the effects of clenbuterol on cardio-respiratory parameters and blood lactate relation to exercise tolerance, experimental horses performed standardized exercise tests on a high-speed treadmill before and after administration of the drug. Clenbuterol was administered in feed to six healthy Standardbreds at a dose rate of 0.8 micrograms/kg b.wt twice daily for 5.5 days. Each horse was tested twice, without and with a respiratory mask, during two consecutive days. One week elapsed between the baseline tests without drug and the tests with clenbuterol treatment (each horse served as i...
Renal tubular function in horses during submaximal exercise.
The American journal of physiology    September 1, 1991   Volume 261, Issue 3 Pt 2 R553-R560 doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.1991.261.3.R553
McKeever KH, Hinchcliff KW, Schmall LM, Muir WW.Exercise-induced changes in renal function were examined during steady-state submaximal treadmill exercise in six unfit mares. Horses were randomly assigned to either an exercise or parallel control (no exercise) trial on day 1 and the alternate trial 1 wk later. The mares ran on a treadmill, set at a 6 degrees incline, for 1 h at 55-60% of maximal heart rate. Exercise significantly (P less than 0.05) increased plasma osmolality, plasma [K+], urine flow (+ 45%), Na+ excretion (+ 371%), K+ excretion (+ 57%), osmotic clearance (+ 32%), Na+ clearance (+ 391%), K+ clearance (+ 33%), and fractional...
Diaphragmatic energetics during prolonged exhaustive exercise.
The American review of respiratory disease    August 1, 1991   Volume 144, Issue 2 415-418 doi: 10.1164/ajrccm/144.2.415
Manohar M, Hassan AS.The present study was carried out to examine diaphragmatic O2 extraction and lactate and ammonia production during prolonged exhaustive exercise. Experiments were performed on nine healthy exercise-conditioned ponies in which catheters had been implanted in the phrenic vein previously. Blood-gas variables and lactate and ammonia concentrations were determined on simultaneously obtained arterial and phrenic-venous blood samples at rest and during 30 min of exertion at 15 mph + 7% grade (heart rate, 200 beats/min; approximately 90% of maximum). Arterial O2 tension and saturation were maintained ...
Fine structure of atrial natriuretic peptide(ANP)-granules in the atrial cardiocytes in the pig, cattle and horse.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 1, 1991   Volume 53, Issue 4 561-568 doi: 10.1292/jvms.53.561
Mifune H, Suzuki S, Noda Y, Mohri S, Mochizuki K.In the pig, cattle and horse, the right and left atria and ventricles were examined by immunohistochemistry, and the right atrial and auricular cardiocytes were studied by transmission electron microscopy. Moreover, ANP-granules in the cardiocytes were analyzed by ultrastructural morphometry. Immunohistochemically, the most intensely ANP-reacted cardiocytes were localized in the right auricle, particularly more prominent in the pig and cattle than in the horse. Ultrastructurally, ANP-granules were located principally in the perinuclear region associated with the Golgi apparatus and throughout ...
Influence of dopamine and dobutamine on the cardiovascular depression during a standard halothane anaesthesia in dorsally recumbent, ventilated ponies.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    August 1, 1991   Volume 38, Issue 7 494-500 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1991.tb01040.x
Gasthuys F, de Moor A, Parmentier D.The influence of different rates of dopamine and dobutamine on the cardiovascular depression during a standard halothane anesthesia was studied in dorsally recumbent ventilated ponies. Haemodynamic and respiratory responses were investigated by means of cardiac output (CO) determination (thermodilution technique), mean systemic (MAP) and pulmonary artery pressure (MPAP) (direct intravascular method) and arterial blood analysis (blood gases and packed cell volume). An important cardiopulmonary depression characterized by decreases (55% of the standing values) in CO, cardiac index (CI), MAP, MPA...
Nonsurgical removal of a catheter embolus from the heart of a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1991   Volume 199, Issue 2 233-235 
Hoskinson JJ, Wooten P, Evans R.Nonsurgical, percutaneous, transvenous removal of a catheter fragment embolus was performed in a 14-day-old Thoroughbred foal. A basket retrieval catheter was introduced into the jugular vein and manipulated under fluoroscopic guidance to remove the fragment from the right side of the heart. Percutaneous retrieval should be considered as an alternative to thoracotomy for retrieval of intracardiac or intravascular foreign bodies.
Critical pulmonary stenosis in a newborn foal.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 4 318-320 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03727.x
Hinchcliff KW, Adams WM.No abstract available
Effects of xylazine butorphanol on cecal arterial blood flow, cecal mechanical activity, and systemic hemodynamics in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 7 1153-1158 
Rutkowski JA, Eades SC, Moore JN.A chronic model with an ultrasonic transit time blood flow probe and strain gauge force transducers implanted on the cecum was used to evaluate cecal mechanical activity and cecal arterial blood flow in 4 conscious adult horses. Intravenous administration of xylazine (1.1 mg/kg of body weight) significantly decreased heart rate and cardiac output, but significantly increased diastolic pulmonary arterial pressure, mean pulmonary arterial pressure, carotid arterial pressure, and central venous pressure. Lateral cecal arterial blood flow after xylazine administration was decreased substantially m...
Pharmacology of furosemide in the horse: a review.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    July 1, 1991   Volume 5, Issue 4 211-218 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1991.tb00951.x
Hinchcliff KW, Muir WW.Furosemide, a diuretic, is frequently administered to horses for the prophylaxis of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage and the treatment of a number of clinical conditions, including acute renal failure and congestive heart failure. Furosemide increases the rate of urinary sodium, chloride, and hydrogen ion excretion. Plasma potassium concentration decreases after furosemide administration but urinary potassium excretion in horses is minimally affected. Renal blood flow increases after furosemide administration. Systemically, furosemide increases venous compliance and decreases right atrial...
Ventilatory compensation for lactacidosis in ponies: role of carotid chemoreceptors and lung afferents.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    June 1, 1991   Volume 70, Issue 6 2619-2626 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1991.70.6.2619
Erickson BK, Forster HV, Pan LG, Lowry TF, Brown DR, Forster MA, Forster AL.We investigated changes in arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) and pulmonary ventilation (VE) in normal, carotid chemoreceptor-denervated, and hilar nerve-denervated ponies during intravenous lactic acid infusion at rest and treadmill exercise at 1.8 mph-5% grade (mild) and 1.8 mph-15% grade (moderate). Lactic acid, (0.5 M) infusion of 0.10, 0.13, and 0.20 ml.min-1.kg-1 at rest and mild and moderate exercise increased arterial [H+] linearly throughout the 10 min of acid infusion. At 10 min of infusion, arterial [H+] had increased approximately 20 nmol/l (0.2 pH units) for each condition and group. Under mos...
Two-dimensional echocardiographically guided pericardiocentesis in a horse with traumatic pericarditis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1991   Volume 198, Issue 11 1953-1956 
Vörös K, Felkai C, Szilágyi Z, Papp A.Two-dimensional echocardiographic (2DE) examination was performed on a horse with clinical signs of pericardial effusion. Thickening of the pericardium, excess amount of pericardial fluid, elevation of the cardiac apex, and right ventricular compression, characteristic of cardiac tamponade, could be seen on 2DE recordings. Fibrinous pericarditis was suspected by observation of fibrinous strands in the pericardial fluid and epicardial fibrin deposits. Echocardiographically guided pericardiocentesis was performed, and 4 L of fluid was removed from the pericardial sac. Streptococcus zooepidemicus...
Use of the cardiopulmonary flow index to evaluate cardiac function in thoroughbred horses.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    June 1, 1991   Volume 62, Issue 2 43-47 
Guthrie AJ, Killeen VM, Mülders MS, Grosskopf JF.The ratio of the cardiopulmonary blood volume to stroke volume is called the cardiopulmonary flow index (CPFI). The CPFI can be determined indirectly from the simultaneous recording of a radiocardiogram and an electrocardiogram. The CPFI and cardiac output were measured simultaneously in horses (n = 10) that were diagnosed as having cardiac disease. The diseased subjects were probably all exposed to feed contaminated with the ionophore, salinomycin, and all showed clinical signs indicative of chronic toxic myocarditis. The results obtained from these subjects were compared with those from cont...
ECG of the month.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1991   Volume 198, Issue 9 1533-1534 
Marr CM, Reef VB.No abstract available
Cardiovascular effects of xylazine and detomidine in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 5 651-657 
Wagner AE, Muir WW, Hinchcliff KW.The cardiovascular effects of xylazine and detomidine in horses were studied. Six horses were given each of the following 5 treatments, at 1-week intervals: xylazine, 1.1 mg/kg, IV; xylazine, 2.2 mg/kg, IM; detomidine, 0.01 mg/kg, IV; detomidine, 0.02 mg/kg, IV; and detomidine, 0.04 mg/kg, IM. All treatments resulted in significantly decreased heart rate, increased incidence of atrioventricular block, and decreased cardiac output and cardiac index; cardiac output and cardiac index were lowest following IV administration of 0.02 mg of detomidine/kg. Mean arterial pressure was significantly redu...
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