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Topic:Clinical Findings

Clinical findings in horses encompass a range of observable signs and symptoms identified during veterinary examinations that contribute to diagnosing and managing equine health conditions. These findings can include physical observations, such as changes in behavior, posture, or gait, as well as physiological measurements like heart rate, respiratory rate, and temperature. Diagnostics may also involve laboratory tests, imaging, and other diagnostic procedures to assess organ function and detect abnormalities. Recognizing and interpreting clinical findings are essential components of veterinary practice, aiding in the identification of diseases, monitoring treatment progress, and guiding therapeutic interventions. This page brings together peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, interpretations, and implications of clinical findings in the context of equine health care.
Nonsurgical management of type II fractures of the distal phalanx in 48 standardbred horses.
Australian veterinary journal    September 24, 1999   Volume 77, Issue 8 501-503 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1999.tb12118.x
O'Sullivan CB, Dart AJ, Malikides N, Rawlinson RJ, Hutchins DR, Hodgson DR.To evaluate nonsurgical management of type II fractures of the distal phalanx in Standardbred horses. Methods: Retrospective study of 48 affected horses. Results: Most fractures occurred on the lateral palmar process of the left forelimb or the medial palmar process of the right forelimb; 81% of horses were considered sound enough to return to training and 63% raced. Of those returning to racing, 41% competed in > 10 races, 37% in 2 to 10 races and 22% in only 1 race. There was no difference in performance before and after fracture. Twenty-four of 25 horses had a bar shoe fitted for > 50...
Intramuscular desmoid tumor (musculoaponeurotic fibromatosis) in two horses.
Veterinary pathology    September 18, 1999   Volume 36, Issue 5 468-470 doi: 10.1354/vp.36-5-468
Valentine BA, Del Piero F, Edwards RB.Intramuscular desmoid tumors (musculoaponeurotic fibromatosis) were discovered in two young adult horses. The tumor in one horse was in the lateral cervical musculature, and that in the second horse occurred in the pectoral musculature. Histopathologic features were similar in both horses and included proliferation of fibroblasts and cells expressing muscle actin (myofibroblasts), with extensive dissecting fibrosis within muscle. These features are similar to those of desmoid tumors in humans, particularly those also known as musculoaponeurotic fibromatosis. Dissection of these lesions reveale...
Subconjunctivally implanted micro-osmotic pumps for continuous ocular treatment in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    September 18, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 9 1102-1105 
Blair MJ, Gionfriddo JR, Polazzi LM, Sojka JE, Pfaff AM, Bingaman DP.To evaluate the feasibility of using a subconjunctivally implanted micro-osmotic pump for continuous delivery of medication to the eyes of horses- during a 7-day period. Methods: 4 healthy adult horses. Methods: With horses restrained in a standing position, micro-osmotic pumps were implanted subconjunctivally in each eye for 7 days. The treatment eye received an atropine-loaded micro-osmotic pump (100 microl of 1.5% atropine), and the contralateral eye received a sterile saline-loaded pump (100 microl of 0.9% NaCl) as a control treatment. Pupil size was measured at 12-hour intervals until val...
Pathologic and electrocardiographic findings in sudden cardiac death in racehorses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    September 16, 1999   Volume 61, Issue 8 921-928 doi: 10.1292/jvms.61.921
Kiryu K, Machida N, Kashida Y, Yoshihara T, Amada A, Yamamoto T.Five racehorses in apparently normal condition succumbed to sudden cardiac death (SCD) during or shortly after intensive training exercise. Cardiopathologic examination was performed. In 1 of the 5 horses, the use of an electrocardiogram (ECG) recording taken continuously for 440 sec enabled us to analyze some of the arrhythmias in the terminal event of SCD. The ECG tracing exhibited the R-on-T phenomenon following a pair of ventricular premature contractions (VPCs). The phenomenon rapidly degenerated into ventricular fibrillation, which led to cardiac arrest. In all 5 horses cardiopathologic ...
Equine clinical behaviour.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    September 15, 1999   Issue 27 3 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05134.x
Bracher V, Stohler T.No abstract available
What is your diagnosis? Extensive alveolar pattern in the caudodorsal and caudoventral aspects of the right and left lungs.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 7, 1999   Volume 215, Issue 5 623-624 
Costa LR, Mirza MH, Williams J, Evans DE, McClure JJ.No abstract available
Results of physical inspection before races and race-related characteristics and their association with musculoskeletal injuries in Thoroughbreds during races.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 7, 1999   Volume 215, Issue 5 654-661 
Cohen ND, Mundy GD, Peloso JG, Carey VJ, Amend NK.To estimate the relative risk of injury among horses deemed to be at increased risk of injury on the basis of prerace physical inspection findings and to examine the association of injury during races with race-related characteristics. Methods: Cohort study. Methods: 2,187 Thoroughbred horses that started 3,227 races in Kentucky. Methods: All race starts for which a horse was deemed to be at increased risk of injury on the basis of prerace physical inspection findings and a random sample of race starts for which horses were not deemed at increased risk of injury were included in the study. Fin...
Clinical presentation, diagnosis, and prognosis of acute laminitis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    September 3, 1999   Volume 15, Issue 2 311-vi doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30147-5
Swanson TD.The purpose of this article is to describe the clinical features present in the patient affected with acute laminitis. The variations in the stance and characteristic lameness of the acute disease are described in relation to the disease severity and limb involvement. The elements of establishing a diagnosis including clinical history, physical and radiologic evaluation, and differential diagnosis are discussed. Difficulties and criteria used in establishing a prognosis of the acute phase patient are defined.
In vivo pathogenicity and resistance to phagocytosis of Streptococcus equi strains with different levels of capsule expression.
Veterinary microbiology    August 31, 1999   Volume 67, Issue 4 277-286 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(99)00051-6
Anzai T, Timoney JF, Kuwamoto Y, Fujita Y, Wada R, Inoue T.The glossy non-encapsulated strain of Steptococcus equi, NCTC 9682, was compared with the matt strain Hidaka/95/2 which expresses a medium sized capsule and with the mucoid CF32 which expresses a large sized capsule in phagocytosis assays and for virulence in inoculated horses. The three strains, NCTC 9682, Hidaka /95/2 and CF32 produced 2.0, 3.1, and 5.3 mg/g wet cells respectively after 3 h incubation, but similar amounts of M-like proteins, cytotoxin and mitogen. NCTC 9682 showed no resistance to phagocytosis by equine neutrophils regardless of the presence of opsonin while strains Hidaka /...
Clinicopathological features of equine primary hepatic disease: a review of 50 cases.
The Veterinary record    August 31, 1999   Volume 145, Issue 5 134-139 doi: 10.1136/vr.145.5.134
McGorum BC, Murphy D, Love S, Milne EM.The clinicopathological features of 50 cases of equine hepatic disease were reviewed. There was a wide range of clinical signs and at least 50 per cent of the animals exhibited either dull demeanour, anorexia, abdominal pain, cerebral dysfunction and/or weight loss. Life-threatening complications of hepatic failure recorded were: gastric impaction in 10 cases, bilateral laryngeal paralysis in seven cases and coagulopathy in five cases. All the cases had high activities of gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) and most had high activities of glutamate dehydrogenase (GLDH) and high concentrations of ...
Identification of an ossicle associated with the palmar aspect of the carpus in the horse. Martens P.An ossicle associated with the palmar aspect of the carpus is described in five horses. The size of the ossicle varied from 3 x 4 mm to approximately 12 x 10 mm. The ossicles were located at the junction of the proximal and distal rows of carpal bones, between the palmaromedial aspect of the fourth carpal bone and the ulnar carpal bone. In 3 horses they were bilateral, in one horse unilateral, and only one limb was examined in the remaining horse. In all horses it was an incidental finding and not regarded to be a pathologic entity.
Detection of a radiographically occult fracture of the lateral palmar process of the distal phalanx in a horse using computed tomography. Martens P, Ihler CF, Rennesund J.A horse with a suspected injury of the distal phalanx was examined using radiography at day two and 19 after the onset of the lameness, with no definite diagnosis. Using computed tomography an incomplete fracture of the lateral wing of the distal phalanx was diagnosed at day 25. Based on computed tomography it was determined that the fracture probably did not enter the joint or involve the palmar cortex throughout its length which were of prognostic importance. The day following the CT examination a new oblique radiographic projection was made. In this radiography which was based on, and never...
Persistent vitelline vein in a foal.
The Veterinary record    August 25, 1999   Volume 145, Issue 3 75-77 doi: 10.1136/vr.145.3.75
De Bosschere H, Simoens P, Ducatelle R.A three-day-old foal died from intestinal strangulation due to a remnant of vitelline vein which extended between the umbilicus and the portal vein. The strangulating vein was identified on the basis of its morphological and histological structure. This finding, which is the first reported case of a persistent vitelline vein in a horse, is discussed in relation to the normal development and involution of the vitelline circulation.
Anomalous aortic origin of the left coronary artery in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    August 24, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 4 350-352 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03830.x
Karlstam E, Ho SY, Shokrai A, Agren E, Michaëlsson M.No abstract available
Histopathological findings in equine sinonasal disorders.
Equine veterinary journal    August 24, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 4 296-303 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03820.x
Tremaine WH, Clarke CJ, Dixon PM.Biopsies collected from 79 referred cases of equine sinonasal disease, including 27 horses with primary sinusitis, 10 with secondary dental sinusitis, 19 with sinus cysts, 11 with progressive ethmoid haematomata (PEH), 4 with false nostril epidermal inclusion cysts, 4 with sinonasal polyps, 3 with sinonasal mycosis and from 2 control animals were examined histologically. Observations were made on epithelial type and integrity, cellular inflammatory response, fibroplasia and presence of potential pathogens. Chronic inflammatory changes including mucosal thickening, ulceration and significant fi...
Testicular neoplasia of horses: an underreported condition.
Equine veterinary journal    August 24, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 4 270-272 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03815.x
Schumacher J.No abstract available
The characteristics of intestinal injury peripheral to strangulating obstruction lesions in the equine small intestine.
Equine veterinary journal    August 24, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 4 331-335 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03826.x
Gerard MP, Blikslager AT, Roberts MC, Tate LP, Argenzio RA.Recent studies suggest that horses requiring surgical correction of strangulating intestinal obstruction may develop post operative complications as a result of ischaemia/reperfusion injury. Therefore, the mucosal and serosal margins of resected small intestine from 9 horses with small intestinal strangulating lesions were examined for evidence of ischaemia/reperfusion injury. Severe mucosal injury and marked elevations in myeloperoxidase activity were detected at ileal resection margins (n = 4), whereas the mucosa from proximal jejunal (n = 9) and distal jejunal (n = 5) resection margins was ...
Characterisation of the type and location of fractures of the third metacarpal/metatarsal condyles in 135 horses in central Kentucky (1986-1994).
Equine veterinary journal    August 24, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 4 304-308 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03821.x
Zekas LJ, Bramlage LR, Embertson RM, Hance SR.The objective of this retrospective study was to provide a detailed description of the characteristics of condylar fractures represented in a population of 135 horses who sustained 145 fractures. Records and radiographic studies were examined. Fifty-nine percent of the horses were male and the majority Thoroughbreds. The distribution of fractures was 37% incomplete-nondisplaced, 30% complete-nondisplaced and 32% complete-displaced. The right front was more likely to sustain a complete-displaced fracture, whereas the left front was more likely to sustain an incomplete-nondisplaced fracture. For...
Effects of orally administered enteric-coated omeprazole on gastric acid secretion in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    August 18, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 8 929-931 
Andrews FM, Doherty TJ, Blackford JT, Nadeau JA, Saxton AM.To determine the effects of orally administered omeprazole, as enteric-coated capsules, on baseline and stimulated gastric acid secretion in horses. Methods: 5 healthy 8-year-old mixed-breed horses fitted with gastric cannulas. Methods: Enteric-coated granules of omeprazole were mixed with corn syrup and administered orally once daily for 5 consecutive days. On days 1 and 5 beginning 5 hours after omeprazole administration, 4 gastric fluid samples were collected, each for 15 minutes, via the gastric cannula (baseline samples). Pentagastrin was administered IV as a constant infusion for the sub...
Digital arterial thrombosis in a septicemic foal.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    August 17, 1999   Volume 13, Issue 4 382-385 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(1999)0132.3.co;2
Forrest LJ, Cooley AJ, Darien BJ.No abstract available
Pathological alterations caused by Anoplocephala perfoliata infection in the ileocaecal junction of equids.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    August 13, 1999   Volume 46, Issue 5 261-269 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0442.1999.00203.x
Rodríguez-Bertos A, Corchero J, Castaño M, Peña L, Luzón M, Gómez-Bautista M, Meana A.The pathological alterations caused by Anoplocephala perfoliata in the ileocaecal junction of 28 equids slaughtered in an abattoir in Madrid (Central Spain) are described. The lesions were scored in grades based on the intensity of the damage and were related to the tapeworm number observed. The first grade (grade I) of alterations consisted of a slight enteritis associated with focal erosions observed in 43% of parasitized animals with low parasitic burden (1-26 tapeworms). The second grade (grade II) was a focal pseudomembranous enteritis, present in the ileocaecal junctions of 36% infected ...
A non-competitive chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay for the equine acute phase protein serum amyloid A (SAA) — a clinically useful inflammatory marker in the horse.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    August 7, 1999   Volume 68, Issue 2-4 267-281 doi: 10.1016/s0165-2427(99)00027-6
Hultén C, Tulamo RM, Suominen MM, Burvall K, Marhaug G, Forsberg M.A non-competitive chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay for measuring serum amyloid A (SAA) in equine serum was developed. A polyclonal anti-equine-amyloid A antiserum specific for equine SAA was utilized, and the assay was standardized using highly purified equine SAA. An acute phase horse serum was calibrated against the purified SAA and was used as standard when running the assay. Serum SAA concentrations in the range of 3-1210 mg/l could be measured. The reference range of SAA in clinically healthy adult horses was <7 mg/l. The clinical validation of the assay comprised the SAA responses...
Radiation exposure to personnel during examination of limbs of horses with a portable hand-held fluoroscopic unit.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 6, 1999   Volume 215, Issue 3 372-379 
Thomas HL, Trout DR, Dobson H, McFadden RC.To determine radiation exposure to personnel during fluoroscopic imaging of limbs of horses with a portable unit and to determine distance from the c-arm at which radioprotective clothing is not required. Methods: Repeated-measures cohort study. Methods: Part 1, 1 forelimb and 1 hind limb from each of 5 equine cadavers; parts 2 and 3, personnel involved during imaging of limbs of 5 and 9 horses, respectively. Methods: Radiation exposure rates were mapped around the suspended c-arm of a portable fluoroscopy unit during imaging of various joints of equine cadaver limbs. During similar examinatio...
Mammary carcinoma in three mares.
The Veterinary record    July 29, 1999   Volume 144, Issue 26 731-732 doi: 10.1136/vr.144.26.731
Prendergast M, Bassett H, Larkin HA.No abstract available
Necrotizing mycotic vasculitis with cerebral infarction caused by Aspergillus niger in a horse with acute typholocolitis.
Veterinary pathology    July 27, 1999   Volume 36, Issue 4 347-351 doi: 10.1354/vp.36-4-347
Tunev SS, Ehrhart EJ, Jensen HE, Foreman JH, Richter RA, Messick JB.An 18-year-old Morgan mare was presented to the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, University of Illinois, with a 10-day history of watery diarrhea, depression, and dysphagia. On admission, the animal was severely dehydrated, depressed, and unable to swallow and had no clinical signs of diarrhea. The respiratory and heart rate and body temperature were within normal limits. Following fluid therapy, the mare developed severe watery diarrhea and continued to be depressed, incoordinated, and dysphagic. The animal died on the fourth day after admission and was sent to the Laboratories of Veteri...
Diagnosis of larval cyathostominosis in horses in Belgium.
The Veterinary record    July 15, 1999   Volume 144, Issue 24 665-668 doi: 10.1136/vr.144.24.665
Smets K, Shaw DJ, Deprez P, Vercruysse J.Between October 1996 and May 1997, 94 horses which were suspected of being infected with strongyles were examined clinically, and samples of faeces were examined for strongyle eggs and cyathostome larvae (L4) and adults. Blood samples were monitored for total protein, albumin and beta-globulins. In 28 of the horses (30 per cent) cyathostome L4 and adults were detected in the faeces, and were significantly associated with the horses' condition, the occurrence of diarrhoea, with lower concentrations of total protein and albumin, and with higher percentages of beta-globulin. Thirty-four of the ho...
Assessment of bilateral infra-orbital nerve blockade and bilateral infra-orbital neurectomy in the investigation and treatment of idiopathic headshaking.
Equine veterinary journal    July 13, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 3 262-264 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03184.x
Mair TS.No abstract available
Dystocia and caesarean sections: the importance of duration and good judgement.
Equine veterinary journal    July 13, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 3 179-180 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03167.x
Embertson RM.No abstract available
The science and art of angular limb deformity correction.
Equine veterinary journal    July 13, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 3 182-183 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03168.x
Bramlage LR.No abstract available
New treatment technologies demand rigorous evaluation.
Equine veterinary journal    July 13, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 3 184 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03169.x
Kaneps AJ.No abstract available