Analyze Diet

Topic:Case Reports

Case reports in equine medicine provide detailed accounts of individual horses' clinical presentations, diagnostic processes, treatments, and outcomes. These reports are valuable for documenting rare conditions, novel treatment approaches, or unique clinical insights that may not be captured in larger studies. By focusing on individual cases, these reports contribute to the broader understanding of equine health and disease management. They often include comprehensive information on the horse's history, clinical findings, diagnostic tests, therapeutic interventions, and follow-up evaluations. This page assembles peer-reviewed case reports and scholarly articles that explore diverse aspects of equine health, offering insights into specific medical scenarios and their implications for veterinary practice.
Pharyngeal neuromuscular dysfunction associated with bilateral guttural pouch tympany in a foal.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    March 6, 2007   Volume 48, Issue 2 192-194 
Bell C.A 2-month-old warmblood filly was presented for a 1-week history of a large, nonpainful, fluctuant swelling of the parotid and laryngeal area. Bilateral guttural pouch tympany was diagnosed. Surgical correction resolved the guttural pouch tympany; however, postoperative pharyngeal neuromuscular dysfunction developed. Dysfonction pharyngée neuromusculaire associée à un tympanisme bilatéral des poches gutturales chez un poulain. Une pouliche de race Warmblood a été présentée pour examen d’une enflure marquée non-douloureuse et fluctuante, localisée dans la région laryngée et paroti...
Endoscopic resection of dorsal spinous processes and interspinous ligament in ten horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    March 6, 2007   Volume 36, Issue 2 149-155 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2007.00247.x
Desbrosse FG, Perrin R, Launois T, Vandeweerd JM, Clegg PD.To describe endoscopic surgical subtotal resection of the dorsal spinous processes (DSP) and interspinous ligament in horses. Methods: Descriptive clinical study. Methods: Adult horses (n=10) with back pain and impinging dorsal spinous processes Methods: Diseased portions of DSP and interspinous ligament were resected by endoscopic surgery, using Destandau Endospine to create a surgical space and provide triangulation for the endoscope, suction cannula, and surgical instruments. Medical records of 10 horses with pain attributable to DSP pathology treated by endoscopic resection of DSP were rev...
Management of airway difficulties during induction of general anesthesia in an American miniature horse with dwarfism.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    March 6, 2007   Volume 48, Issue 2 188-191 
Hatfield CL, Riley CB.This report describes previously unreported upper airway abnormalities encountered in a 5-month-old American miniature horse colt presented for elective surgery. Caution should be exercised when administering general anesthesia or heavy sedation to individuals of this breed that present with multiple congenital abnormalities. Conduite à tenir en présence de difficultés respiratoires pendant l’induction de l’anesthésie générale chez un cheval miniature américain atteint de nanisme. Ce rapport décrit des anomalies jamais rapportées des voies respiratoires supérieures d’un cheval ...
Clinical evaluation of a titanium, headless variable-pitched tapered cannulated compression screw for repair of frontal plane slab fractures of the third carpal bone in thoroughbred racehorses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    March 6, 2007   Volume 36, Issue 2 178-184 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2007.00251.x
Hirsch JE, Galuppo LD, Graham LE, Simpson EL, Ferraro GL.To report clinical evaluation of third carpal bone (C3) frontal plane slab fracture repair with the Acutrak screw system. Methods: Prospective case series. Methods: Racing Thoroughbreds (n=17) with frontal C3 slab fractures. Methods: C3 slab fractures in Thoroughbred racehorses (1999-2004) were repaired by use of the Acutrak screw system. Data collected were (1) preoperative variables--gender, age at injury, limb involved, injury occurrence, fracture thickness, complexity, and displacement, race starts and earnings and (2) postoperative variables were: surgical complications, days to first sta...
Questions conclusion in report on mycosis in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 28, 2007   Volume 230, Issue 3 339-340 
Hardy J.No abstract available
Hemangiosarcoma and squamous cell carcinoma in the third eyelid of a horse.
Veterinary ophthalmology    February 28, 2007   Volume 10, Issue 2 121-126 doi: 10.1111/j.1463-5224.2007.00510.x
Gearhart PM, Steficek BA, Peteresen-Jones SM.A 12-year-old Belgian draft horse presented for a right eye third eyelid mass and red-tinged ocular discharge of 3 months' duration. The third eyelid was excised and submitted for histopathology. On histopathologic examination, the mass was composed of both hemangiosarcoma and squamous cell carcinoma. The horse developed thickened eyelids and hemorrhagic ocular discharge from the right eye approximately 16 months following surgery, and was euthanized. Necropsy and histopathology confirmed local recurrence and regional metastasis of the hemangiosarcoma. This was an unusual case because there we...
Mycotic aneurysm in the aortic arch of a horse associated with invasive aspergillosis.
The Veterinary record    February 27, 2007   Volume 160, Issue 8 268-270 doi: 10.1136/vr.160.8.268
Okamoto M, Kamitani M, Tunoda N, Tagami M, Nagamine N, Kawata K, Itoh H, Kawasako K, Komine M, Akihara Y, Shimoyama Y, Miyasho T, Hirayama K....No abstract available
Three equine cases of mixed hepatoblastoma with teratoid features.
Veterinary pathology    February 24, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 2 211-214 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-2-211
Loynachan AT, Bolin DC, Hong CB, Poonacha KB.Hepatoblastoma was diagnosed in 3 Thoroughbreds at the University of Kentucky Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center (LDDC) since 1997. Case #1 involved a fetus with a well-demarcated, multilobulated, solitary mass that extended from the left liver lobe. Case #2 was observed in a neonate with a primary hepatic mass and multiple metastases in the skin, brain, meninges, and stylohyoid bone. Case #3 was a solitary hepatic mass incidentally discovered in a neonate at necropsy. Microscopically, the masses were similarly composed of sheets and cords of fetal and embryonal epithelial cells that frequent...
Equine osteosarcoma: a series of 8 cases.
Veterinary pathology    February 24, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 2 247-249 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-2-247
Bush JM, Fredrickson RL, Ehrhart EJ.In horses, osteosarcoma is a rare tumor, with the majority of reported cases occurring in the head, and, more specifically, in the mandible of young horses. The following report documents 8 cases of equine osteosarcoma, the majority occurring in male horses aged 7 years or older with a lack of metastasis identified in any horse. Six arose in the maxilla or mandible and one in the proximal tibia. The predominant subtype was fibroblastic osteosarcoma with fewer osteoblastic type tumors. All had osteoid and most had a chondromucinous matrix. Surgical excision was attempted in the majority of case...
Colonic ganglioneuromatosis in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    February 24, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 2 207-210 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-2-207
Porter BF, Storts RW, Payne HR, Edwards JF.Ganglioneuromas are complex tumors that arise in peripheral ganglia and are composed of well-differentiated neurons, nerve processes, Schwann cells, and enteric glial cells. The term ganglioneuromatosis (GN) denotes a regional or segmental proliferation of ganglioneuromatous tissue. This report describes an 8-year-old mixed breed horse with GN in a 25-cm segment of small colon. Grossly, the lesion consisted of numerous sessile to pedunculated nodules extending from the serosal surface. Histologic examination revealed the nodules to consist of fascicles of spindle-shaped cells consistent with S...
Sarcoids in captive zebras (Equus burchellii): association with bovine papillomavirus type 1 infection.
Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine : official publication of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians    February 24, 2007   Volume 36, Issue 1 74-81 doi: 10.1638/03-126
Löhr CV, Juan-Sallés C, Rosas-Rosas A, Parás García A, Garner MM, Teifke JP.Sarcoids were diagnosed in two captive zebras from different facilities. Zebra 1 (Equus burchellii boehmi) was a 4.5-yr-old, captive-born male that presented with a 9- by 7-cm inguinal mass. Seven months after surgical excision of the inguinal mass, the zebra presented with a similar lesion in the right upper eyelid that has relapsed repeatedly and has not responded to treatment including local cisplatin injections and cryosurgery. Zebra 2 (of undetermined taxon) was housed at a private wild animal farm. The zebra presented with a single, raised, 2.5- by 2.0- by 2.0-cm, ulcerated mass on the n...
A subcutaneous mass on the neck of a horse.
Veterinary clinical pathology    February 22, 2007   Volume 36, Issue 1 109-113 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-165x.2007.tb00193.x
Brown HM, Cuttino E, LeRoy BE.A 25-year-old Arabian gelding was presented for investigation of a subcutaneous neck mass. Fine-needle aspirates and impression smears revealed mast cells with widely varying degrees of cytoplasmic granulation and scattered eosinophils. Histopathology revealed a poorly circumscribed mass composed of sheets and bundles of mast cells with a large population of eosinophils. The mast cells were separated into numerous lobules by a heavy collagenous stroma, and multifocal collagen necrosis was present. Strong reactivity of the tumor cells for both Giemsa and toluidine blue stains confirmed the diag...
Use of successive dynamic videoendoscopic evaluations to identify progression of recurrent laryngeal neuropathy in three horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 17, 2007   Volume 230, Issue 4 555-558 doi: 10.2460/javma.230.4.555
Davidson EJ, Martin BB, Parente EJ.3 racehorses were evaluated because of poor performance or abnormal noise originating from the upper portion of the respiratory tract. Results: During maximal exercise, initial dynamic videoendoscopy of the upper respiratory tract revealed complete arytenoid cartilage abduction in 2 horses and incomplete but adequate abduction of the left arytenoid cartilage in 1 horse. Subsequent exercising endoscopic evaluation revealed severe dynamic collapse of the left arytenoid cartilage and vocal fold in all 3 horses. Results: 2 horses were treated with prosthetic left laryngoplasty and raced successful...
Disseminated cryptococcosis including osteomyelitis in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    February 16, 2007   Volume 85, Issue 1-2 51-85 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2006.00060.x
Lenard ZM, Lester NV, O'hara AJ, Hopper BJ, Lester GD.A 4-year-old Arab mare was diagnosed with disseminated cryptococcosis, including osteomyelitis of the proximal phalanx of the left hind limb, osteomyelitis with associated soft tissue granuloma of a rib and disseminated, large cryptococcal nodules in the lungs. The lesion in the dorsoproximal aspect of the proximal phalanx had a large area of cortical lysis with spiculated periosteal new bone and extensive soft tissue swelling. The affected rib had a pathological fracture. Cryptococcal osteomyelitis has not been previously reported in horses but should be considered as a differential diagnosis...
Evidence of the partial effects of inactivated Japanese encephalitis vaccination: analysis of previous outbreaks in Japan from 1953 to 1960.
Annals of epidemiology    February 14, 2007   Volume 17, Issue 4 271-277 doi: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2006.10.003
Satou K, Nishiura H.To evaluate the partial effects of vaccination against equine Japanese encephalitis (JE) and characterize other prognostic factors based on previous outbreak records in Japan from 1953 to 1960. Methods: Individual case records, which included demographic information, vaccination history, and clinical information (dates of onset, recovery and death, and symptoms), were investigated. The relations between two outcomes, JE death and symptomatic period, and other variables were examined. Results: Of a total reported 803 cases during the observation period, 453 (56.5%) were diagnosed with either se...
Cerebellar abscess due to Rhodococcus equi in an immunocompetent patient: case report and literature review.
Journal of neurosurgical sciences    February 8, 2007   Volume 50, Issue 4 127-129 
Ulivieri S, Oliveri G.Rhodococcus equi (R. equi) is a facultative, intracellular, nonmotile, non-spore-forming, gram-positive coccobacillus, primarily causes zoonotic infections that affect grazing animals, mainly horses and foals and is a rare opportunistic pathogen found in severely compromised patients, and most commonly in recent years, in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected persons. Early cases, most in patients receiving immunosuppressant therapy, were more likely to be successfully treated with antimicrobial agents than cases in AIDS patients, it is emerging as an important pathogen in patients with ...
Repair of a salivary duct fistula in a horse without using a stent.
The Veterinary record    February 6, 2007   Volume 160, Issue 5 157-158 doi: 10.1136/vr.160.5.157
Vos NJ, Vos A.A salivary duct fistula in a horse was repaired surgically without using a stent. Seventeen months after the operation the skin incision had healed without complications and the fistula had not recurred.
A case of blind vagina in a crossbred Lusitano mare.
Animal reproduction science    February 1, 2007   Volume 101, Issue 3-4 338-343 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2007.01.016
Payan-Carreira R, Quaresma M, Oliveira-Martins T, Silva JR.This report describes a case of blind vagina diagnosed during a pre-breeding evaluation of a 5-year-old crossbred Lusitano mare. This mare was mated twice during the previous breeding season but remained open. Clinical evaluation revealed the existence of follicles in the ovaries and an enlarged uterus. An ultrasound examination showed that a granular free-floating fluid distended the uterus. No connection was detected between the uterus and the vagina and a presumptive diagnosis of congenital vaginal obstruction was raised. On vaginal examination it was noticed that the vagina was short in de...
Atipamezole in the management of detomidine overdose in a pony.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    January 24, 2007   Volume 34, Issue 1 67-69 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2006.00296.x
Di Concetto S, Michael Archer R, Sigurdsson SF, Clarke K.A pony undergoing elective castration accidentally received an overdose of IV detomidine (200 microg kg(-1)) before anaesthesia was induced with ketamine and midazolam. A further 100 microg kg(-1) IV dose of detomidine was administered during anaesthesia. The mistake was recognized only when the animal failed to recover from anaesthesia in the expected time. The overdose (300 microg kg(-1) in total) was treated successfully with atipamezole, initially given IV and subsequently IM and titrated to effect to a total dose of 1100 microg kg(-1). The pony regained the standing position. A further in...
Equine perioperative fatalities associated with general anaesthesia at a private practice–a retrospective case series.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    January 24, 2007   Volume 34, Issue 1 23-30 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2005.00283.x
Bidwell LA, Bramlage LR, Rood WA.To determine the fatality rate of horses undergoing general anaesthesia at a private equine referral practice using a limited number of anaesthetic protocols. Methods: A retrospective analysis of records (n = 17 961) from all horses undergoing general anaesthesia for surgical procedures from 1997 to 2001 at Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital, Lexington, Kentucky, USA. Results were reported as percentage of the population, and as crude mortality rates for each procedure (deaths per 1000). Results: The prevalence of equine fatalities directly related to anaesthesia was 0.12% (n = 21) and this rose ...
Imaging diagnosis–equine mast cell tumor. Cole R, Chesen AB, Pool R, Watkins J.Equine mast cell tumors are typically benign solitary growths of the head, neck, trunk, or limbs. When involving the limbs, these masses tend to be adjacent to joints without involving them. In radiographs there is often a well-circumscribed soft tissue mass with granular mineralization. The Arabian breed appears to be over represented. Surgical removal is usually curative. In this report, we describe the diagnosis, clinical features, and management of mast cell tumors in the rear limb of a horse.
Endoscopic assessment and treatment of lesions of the deep digital flexor tendon in the navicular bursae of 20 lame horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 19, 2007   Volume 39, Issue 1 18-24 doi: 10.2746/042516407x151095
Smith MR, Wright IM, Smith RK.Clinical lesions of the deep digital flexor tendon and navicular bone are being reported with increasing frequency. However, the role of direct visualisation by navicular bursoscopy in the diagnosis and management of such injuries has not been explored. Objective: Navicular bursoscopy: 1) corroborates information obtained from other, noninvasive imaging modalities; 2) allows direct visualisation of lesions unidentified by other diagnostic modalities; 3) provides further information on morphology of lesions; and 4) permits minimally invasive surgical access to lesions. Methods: The case records...
Clinical and pathological findings in a HERDA-affected foal for 1.5 years of life.
Veterinary dermatology    January 16, 2007   Volume 18, Issue 1 36-40 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3164.2007.00562.x
White SD, Affolter VK, Schultheiss PC, Ball BA, Wessel MT, Kass P, Molinaro AM, Bannasch DL, Ihrke PJ.A Quarter horse filly bred from two horses affected with HERDA (hereditary equine regional dermal asthenia) was observed clinically and its skin histologically for the 1.5 years of its life. Severe signs of the disease did not manifest until 1.5 years of age, and were not temporally related to saddling. Histological comparison to an age-, breed- and sex-matched control did not show any consistent diagnostic features. Monitoring of the proband substantiated previous reports of (i) the autosomal recessive nature of the disease, (ii) mares affected with HERDA being able to foal without damage to ...
A case of equine motor neuron disease (EMND).
The Journal of veterinary medical science    January 11, 2007   Volume 68, Issue 12 1367-1369 doi: 10.1292/jvms.68.1367
Sasaki N, Yamada M, Morita Y, Furuoka H, Itoh M, Satoh M, Yamada H.We report a case of EMND in a heavy horse that was bred and trained in Hokkaido, Japan. Clinical symptoms included severe ataxia of all four limbs, tilted head, lethargy, and flaccid lips. Numerous axonal degenerations and swellings were observed in nuclei, mostly in the cerebellar dentate nucleus and the nucleus of the hypoglossal nerve, and in the ventral horn of the spinal cord. In the ventral horn of the spinal cord, neuronal degeneration, swelling, and/or necrosis were observed sporadically. The case was diagnosed as EMND from the clinical symptoms and pathological findings.
Combined keratectomy, strontium-90 irradiation and permanent bulbar conjunctival grafts for corneolimbal squamous cell carcinomas in horses (1990-2002): 38 horses.
Veterinary ophthalmology    January 6, 2007   Volume 10, Issue 1 37-42 doi: 10.1111/j.1463-5224.2007.00489.x
Plummer CE, Smith S, Andrew SE, Lassaline ME, Gelatt KN, Brooks DE, Kallberg ME, Ollivier FJ.The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of postoperative beta-irradiation with strontium-90 as an adjunctive treatment to superficial keratectomy and permanent bulbar conjunctival graft for removal of equine corneolimbal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), in decreasing recurrence rate. Methods: The retrospective case study included 38 horses diagnosed and treated for SCC of the eye that involved the limbus and/or cornea. The patients were treated between 1990 and 2002, with strontium-90 irradiation immediately after corneal and conjunctival graft surgery. Recurrence was defined...
Anesthesia case of the month. Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 4, 2007   Volume 230, Issue 1 33-36 doi: 10.2460/javma.230.1.33
Baetge CL.No abstract available
Molecular identification of Phialophora oxyspora as the cause of mycetoma in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 4, 2007   Volume 230, Issue 1 84-88 doi: 10.2460/javma.230.1.84
Lopez MJ, Robinson SO, Cooley AJ, Prichard MA, McGinnis MR.An 18-year-old mare was evaluated for an oral mass that developed after extraction of a broken incisor. Results: An ulcerated, firm, darkly pigmented, approximately 5-cm-diameter spherical mass involved the gingiva lateral and dorsal to the right first to third maxillary incisors. Osteolysis of the roots of the first and second right maxillary incisors and periosteal proliferation of the adjacent premaxilla margins were apparent on radiographs. Histologic examination of the mass revealed multiple coalescing and ramifying foci of abscess formation, each containing a well-defined, discrete, blac...
Verminous encephalitis in a horse produced by nematodes in the family protostrongylidae.
Veterinary pathology    January 2, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 1 119-122 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-1-119
Tanabe M, Kelly R, de Lahunta A, Duffy MS, Wade SE, Divers TJ.Parasitic granulomatous eosinophilic inflammation was observed in the central nervous system (CNS) of a 6-month-old Arabian colt from New York state. Inflammation was associated with eggs, larvae, and adult nematodes in the cerebellum. Nematodes had histological characteristics of the superfamily Metastrongyloidea. The presence of dorsal-spined larvae in the CNS was further indicative of infection with a nematode in the family Protostrongylidae. Infections were most compatible with Parelaphostrongylus tenuis but specific diagnosis was not possible. This is the first definitive report of a prot...
Mesenchymal hamartoma of the liver in a late-term equine fetus.
Veterinary pathology    January 2, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 1 100-102 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-1-100
Brown DL, Anderson M, Cullen JM.Mesenchymal hamartoma of the liver is a rare congenital disorder of biliary tract development. During the necropsy of a late-term equine fetus, a markedly enlarged liver of more than two times normal weight was found. Light microscopic review revealed that the normal hepatic parenchyma had been obliterated, replaced, and expanded by abnormal bile ducts surrounded by abundant, myxoid stroma. The lesion was diagnosed as a mesenchymal hamartoma. Small portions of the liver had bridging septa of fibrosis and proliferations of small-caliber abnormal bile ducts, resembling another congenital biliary...
Anesthesia case of the month.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 19, 2006   Volume 229, Issue 12 1893-1895 doi: 10.2460/javma.229.12.1893
Costa-Farré C, García-Martínez A, Segura D, Monreal L.No abstract available