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Topic:Clinical Pathology

Clinical pathology in horses involves the study and analysis of biological samples to diagnose and monitor diseases and health conditions. This discipline encompasses various laboratory tests and procedures that assess the physiological and biochemical status of equines. Common analyses include hematology, biochemistry, urinalysis, and cytology, each providing insights into different aspects of equine health. Hematology evaluates blood components, such as red and white blood cells and platelets, to identify conditions like anemia or infection. Biochemistry tests measure enzymes, electrolytes, and metabolites to assess organ function and metabolic status. Urinalysis examines urine samples for indicators of renal function and systemic diseases. Cytology involves the microscopic examination of cells from tissues or fluids to detect abnormalities. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, applications, and diagnostic value of clinical pathology in equine medicine.
Equine shock: the need for prospective clinical studies.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 1 1-5 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02566.x
Muir WW.No abstract available
Ventilation imaging in the horse with 99mtechnetium-DTPA radioaerosol.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 1 19-24 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02570.x
O'Callaghan MW, Hornof WJ, Fisher PE, Rabbe OG.This study describes the development of a radioaerosol technique for horses using 99mtechnetium-DTPA (diethylenetriaminepentacetate). In 24 normal, adult horses, very satisfactory ventilation images were obtained with the technique. Four-minute administrations of the aerosol resulted in a mean uptake of radioactivity in the lung fields of 3.02 mCi, with mean maximum counts (+/- sd) of 159,800 +/- 75,000 per camera field. The mean clearance half-time for the 99mtechnetium-DTPA from the lung fields was 55.6 +/- 14.2 mins which is very similar to figures obtained for normal human and dog lungs. T...
[Proteases and protease inhibitors of possible clinical relevance in COPD of horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 4 399-407 
von Fellenberg R.The importance of proteases and protease inhibitors for the pathogenesis of pulmonary emphysema and chronic bronchitis of the horse is described. Endogenous elastases from neutrophil granulocytes and macrophages, which probably provoke emphysema in the human being, are not relevant in horse emphysema. Exogenous elastases from different species of streptomyces may be responsible for emphysema generation in this species. Part of the exogenous elastases are poorly or not inhibited at all by the equine blood protease inhibitors especially by alpha 1-protease inhibitors. A disorder similar to genet...
[Antithrombin III determination in horses. Reference values and acquired antithrombin III deficiency].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 1 47-55 
Gerhards H.Antithrombin III (AT III) determinations were done in healthy and sick horses using the chromogenic substrate Chromozym TH. Reference values for adult horses at 25 degrees C were 18-25 IU AT III per ml plasma and 84-118% AT III activity of normal horse plasma, respectively. Precision and accuracy were good (intra assay coefficient of variation less than 2%, accuracy 10%). Surgical operations on healthy horses led to a biphasic decrease in AT III activity touching the lower border of the reference values on the second postoperative day. Other reasons for acquired AT III deficiencies included di...
Clinical and endocrine aspects of early fetal death in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 35 497-498 
Darenius K, Kindahl H, Madej A.No abstract available
[Diagnosis of liver diseases in dogs, cats and horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 4 343-347 
Kraft W.Clinical symptoms of hepatopathies are not specific and must be verified by further investigation. Laboratory diagnosis is a very useful method to decide if liver disease is present or not. In individual cases laboratory methods can give hints as to the aetiology of the illness. If necessary, biopsy, angiography or/and cholecystography can be carried out for further clarification of the diagnosis.
Atrial fibrillation in the race horse.
Heart and vessels. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 2 2-6 
Amada A, Kiryu K.No abstract available
A review of antigenic variation by the equine infectious anemia virus.
Contributions to microbiology and immunology    January 1, 1987   Volume 8 77-89 
McGuire TC, O'Rourke K, Cheevers WP.No abstract available
Genetic diseases of connective tissues in animals.
Current problems in dermatology    January 1, 1987   Volume 17 199-215 doi: 10.1159/000413484
Minor RR, Wootton JA, Prockop DJ, Patterson DF.No abstract available
Characterization of equine plasma lipoproteins after separation by density gradient.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1987   Volume 87, Issue 3 501-506 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(87)90044-7
Le Goff D, Nouvelot A, Fresnel J, Silberzahn P.1. Plasma lipoproteins from six thoroughbred horses were separated by density gradient ultracentrifugation. For each sample, lipoprotein bands were visualized by means of a prestained plasma control and characterized by electrophoretic, chemical and morphological analysis. 2. Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) were isolated at d less than 1.018 g/ml. 3. Two clearly resolved bands were detected in the low density lipoprotein fraction (LDL). The density limits were evaluated as follows: LDL1(1.028 less than d less than 1.045 g/ml) and LDL2(1.045 less than d less than 1.070 g/ml). Marked differ...
Molluscum contagiosum in a horse with granulomatous enteritis.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 1, 1987   Volume 97, Issue 1 29-34 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(87)90124-1
Cooley AJ, Reinhard MK, Gross TL, Fadok VA, Levy M.Widespread cutaneous papules in a yearling Standardbred filly were attributed by light and electron microscopic examination to molluscum contagiosum. Concomitant granulomatous enteritis, suspected clinically due to protein-losing enteropathy, was verified histopathologically. An associated altered altered immune response is suggested as the reason for the widespread poxvirus infection.
Lipids in the laminated layer of liver, lung and daughter hydatid cysts of equine Echinococcus granulosus (Cestoda).
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1987   Volume 86, Issue 1 209-212 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(87)90199-4
Richards KS, Ilderton E, Yardley HJ.Lipids extracted from the laminated layers of horse liver and lung hydatids, including a daughter liver cyst, were analysed using TLC. No differences in lipid composition was detected in 11 liver cysts, whether from the same or different livers, and di- and triacylglycerols, cholesterol, wax and steryl esters, oleic acid, sphingomyelin, phosphatidyl choline, phosphatidyl inositol and ceramide hexosides were detected. The daughter cyst differed from its "parent" cyst in lacking diacylglycerols and wax and steryl esters. The lung cyst differed from the liver cysts in that cholesterol, wax and st...
[Hoof correction in foals].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 1 43-45 
Reinhard F.The conformation of a foal's limbs is of interest beginning in the first days of life. The hoof also must not be neglected. Management and hoof care necessary for normal hoof development are discussed. In addition, pathological hoof shapes and their appropriate treatments are outlined.
Acetabular osteochondrosis dissecans in a foal.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1987   Volume 77, Issue 1 75-83 
Miller CL, Todhunter R.Osteochondrosis affecting the acetabula in horses is rarely reported. Osteochondrosis dissecans in foals only a few weeks old is also an uncommon finding. Lesions compatible with osteochondrosis dissecans in the acetabulum were found to be the cause of a chronic coxofemoral lameness in a 3-week-old Arabian filly. The history, physical examination findings, joint fluid analysis, gross pathologic and histopathologic findings are described.
[Detection of dermatomycoses in horses with the dermatophyte test medium Fungassay].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 3 269-273 
Haack D.For the inoculation of the dermatophyte-test-medium Fungassay, 200 skin scrapings from horses, 13 from cattle and 13 from artificially infected guinea pigs were used. As control methods, the alkali method, the fluorescent microscope technique and the usual mycological culture were available. For the analysis of skin scrapings, the Fungassay culture mediums are clearly inferior to the usual mycological culture. Fewer dermatophytes were isolated and false positive as well as false negative results occurred. The cultivation of Trichophyton verrucosum failed on the dermatophyte-test-medium.
Meningocerebral hemangiomatosis resembling Sturge-Weber disease in a horse.
Acta neuropathologica    January 1, 1987   Volume 74, Issue 4 405-410 doi: 10.1007/BF00687221
McEntee M, Summers BA, de Lahunta A, Cummings J.A 3-year-old horse presented with intermittent generalized seizures of 2-month duration. During interictal periods, the horse appeared normal and a cause for the seizures could not be identified. Necropsy revealed opacity of the leptomeninges, covering most of one cerebral hemisphere along with thinning and collapse of the cortex in the ipsilateral pyriform lobe. Histopathology demonstrated leptomeningeal vascular proliferation and meningothelial hyperplasia. Prominent tortuous vessels of the gyri and sulci extended into some regions of the subjacent cortex, where there was neuronal loss, ecto...
Plasma endotoxin levels in horses subjected to carbohydrate induced laminitis.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 1 25-28 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02571.x
Sprouse RF, Garner HE, Green EM.Thirteen (65 per cent) of 20 horses subjected to carbohydrate overload developed Obel Grade 3 lameness within 56 h. Increases in plasma endotoxin from control levels of less than 0.1 ng/litre to values ranging from 2.4 to 81.53 ng/litre were measured in 11 (85 per cent) of 13 horses during the onset of Obel Grade 3 lameness. Obel Grade 3 lameness was associated with rises in plasma Gram-negative endotoxin levels in 11 (92 per cent) of 12 horses. Two peak increases separated by 16 h were verified in five (45 per cent) of 11 horses that exhibited both endotoxaemia and Obel Grade 3 lameness. The ...
The interaction of cadmium and selenium in horse kidney cortex in relation to histopathological changes.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1987   Volume 28, Issue 2 201-208 doi: 10.1186/BF03548243
Junnila M, Korkeala H, Rahko T, Salmi A.The kidney cortex of 32 Finnish horses was analysed chemically for cadmium (Cd) and selenium (Se) content and by light microscopy for histopathological changes of the tissues. Cd concentrations in kidney cortex ranged from 6.9 to 91.6 mg/kg wet weight with an average of 31.9 mg/kg. Se concentrations ranged from 0.5 to 1.5 mg/kg with an average of 1.0 mg/kg. The age of the horses varied from 1.5 to 32 years; mean age was 16 years. Cd levels in kidney cortex seemed to increase linearly up to an age of about 16 years. In old (over 16 years) horses no such correlation could be found. Se concentrat...
Histology of the normal and retained equine testis.
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1987   Volume 129, Issue 2 127-130 doi: 10.1159/000146387
Arighi M, Singh A, Bosu WT, Horney FD.Abdominal, inguinal and scrotal testes of horses were examined grossly and by light microscopy. An average of 1.5, 2.3 and 4.6 layers of spermatogenic cells, and mean seminiferous tubule diameters of approximately 66.2, 83.6 and 146.6 micron in the abdominal, inguinal and scrotal testes, respectively, were recorded. The interstitial spaces and the number of interstitial cells (of Leydig) seemed to be increased while spermatogenesis appeared to be arrested in the retained testes. Early spermatocytes were the most mature stages of the spermatogenic cells in the retained testes. An extensive vacu...
Detection of serum antibodies against Ehrlichia risticii in Potomac horse fever by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    January 1, 1987   Volume 14, Issue 1 85-92 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(87)90077-8
Dutta SK, Rice RM, Hughes TD, Savage PK, Myrup AC.An indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed which was specific and sensitive in detecting antibodies to Ehrlichia risticii in Potomac horse fever (PHF). The ELISA antibody titers were correlated with the indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) titers. E. risticii propagated in human histiocyte culture was purified on renografin gradient and the band of the organisms at a density of 1.182 g/ml was used as antigen. ELISA antibody titers were determined through computer assisted analysis, the observed antibody titers were derived by serial serum dilutions and using a resultant...
[Pathomorphology of chronic obstructive lung disease in the horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 2 52-56 
Geisel O, von Sandersleben J.The chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in horses is primarily based on a chronic bronchitis/bronchiolitis with constriction of the tubes in the lower respiratory tract. The outward appearance of the lung is characterized by a diffuse or marginal alveolar emphysema. The big bronchial tubes are usually not altered. Small bronchi and bronchioli can often be seen through the pulmonal pleura. On the sectional area they are visible as opaque grey-red nodules with a central lumen detectable under a magnifying glass. The histopathological picture of alterations in the bronchial tree can vary...
Dysplastic disease of the cerebellum of an adult horse.
Acta neuropathologica    January 1, 1987   Volume 75, Issue 2 209-211 doi: 10.1007/BF00687083
Poss M, Young S.A 4-year-old horse was evaluated at the Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital for rapidly progressing cerebellar disease. Euthanasia was elected and at postmortem examination a proliferative mass encompassing the right side of the cerebellum was discovered. The lesion was characterized by large, convoluted, vascular folia and absence of the core of central white matter. Histologically, there was a diminution or loss of the internal granule cell layer, cavitation of the central white matter, and absence of Purkinje cells. The molecular layer was thickened with myelinated axons ...
[Endometrial cysts in the mare. 2. Clinical studies: occurrence and significance].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 3 281-289 
Leidl W, Kaspar B, Kähn W.Endometrial cysts were found in 11 (13.4%) of 82 mares of various breeds by clinical examinations. Endometrial cysts were diagnosed by hysteroscopy and ultrasonic echography. Typical images are described. The importance of endometrial cysts is discussed with regard to differential diagnosis of early pregnancy and uterine pathology. There was no evidence of cysts in mares under 10 years of age. Mares with endometrial cysts had a 10% higher history of disturbed fertility than mares without endometrial cysts. Seven of nine mares with cystic structures in the uterus became pregnant. Endometrial cy...
Influence of chlorhexidine on seminal patterns in stallions.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 35 109-112 
Rath D, Leiding C, Klug E, Krebs HC.Ejaculates were collected at 3-day intervals before, during and after a washing procedure with chlorhexidine (2%). Semen motility and pathology were determined before and after deep-freezing. Blood samples were taken before and within 1 h after washing procedures and then extracted in ether. This was followed by HPL chromatography. Chlorhexidine concentrations in blood and seminal plasma were distinctly higher in the treated stallions than in control groups. Concentrations in the control groups were below the detection limit of the column. Significant correlations between decreasing semen qual...
Cartilage thickness measurement in foals.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1987   Volume 42, Issue 1 35-46 
Firth EC, Greydanus Y.The talus and proximal and distal epiphysis of the humerus, radius, femur, tibia and distal metacarpus of 20 foals aged 0 to 150 days were obtained at necropsy and sawn sagittally into slabs 4 to 8 mm thick. The thickness of the cartilage (articular cartilage and unossified epiphyseal cartilage) was measured in three to five places in each slab, using a sliding calliper. In most epiphyses, the site, or sites, of thickest cartilage was constant in all foals examined. The difference between thickest and thinnest cartilage within one epiphysis was greatest in distal femora and least in distal met...
[Histogenesis of granulation tissue in wound healing by second intention in horses and cattle].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1987   Volume 24, Issue 1 72-79 
Dinev D, Dzhurov A.An experiment in comparative developmental aspect was carried out with 5 horses and 5 cattle having a total of 60 skin and muscular wounds. Light microscopic studies on hematoxylin-eosin stained preparations revealed that the dystrophic changes in the underlying tissues were more strongly manifested in horses. This had to be taken into consideration in the surgical treatment of wounds with this animal species. The basic differences comprised the better manifested leukocytic reaction in horses and the more strongly expressed processes of growth and differentiation on the part of the connective ...
Clinical and hematologic variables in ponies with experimentally induced equine ehrlichial colitis (Potomac horse fever).
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 1 63-67 
Ziemer EL, Whitlock RH, Palmer JE, Spencer PA.The clinical and hematologic variables of 10 ponies with experimentally induced equine ehrlichial colitis (EEC; syn: Potomac horse fever) were studied for a 30-day period (6 ponies) or until death (4 ponies). The earliest clinical sign indicative of EEC was fever (rectal temperature exceeding 39 C). All ponies became depressed (CNS) at various times during the disease, and 90% of the ponies developed diarrhea between 9 and 15 days after infection was induced. The most significant hematologic change was an increase in plasma protein concentration after the onset of fever (P less than 0.05). The...
Heparin-induced agglutination of erythrocytes in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 1 68-71 
Moore JN, Mahaffey EA, Zboran M.Heparin was administered subcutaneously 2 times a day for 4 days to 5 horses. An additional group of 5 horses was used as time-matched controls. Significant decreases in PCV, erythrocyte count, and hemoglobin concentration were observed during heparin therapy. The mean corpuscular volume (MCV) of the heparin-treated horses increased to a peak value of 66.1 fl on the last day of treatment. Erythrocyte creatine concentration and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity increased moderately during the treatment. These data indicated that the rapid, profound increase in MCV during heparin therap...
Subclinical entrapment neuropathy of the equine suprascapular nerve.
Acta neuropathologica    January 1, 1987   Volume 74, Issue 1 53-61 doi: 10.1007/BF00688338
Duncan ID, Schneider RK, Hammang JP.The suprascapular nerve from 14 horses, which had no clinical evidence of spinatus muscle atrophy, were obtained to determine whether the nerve was sub-clinically compressed at the scapular edge. The nerves were divided into three portions, proximal and distal to the scapular edge and as it reflected around it. In nine horses there was evidence of a chronic neuropathy which varied in severity and which was most severe at the site of reflection, where the nerve appeared constricted by a tendinous band. At this site the predominant change was that of chronic demyelination and remyelination, with...
Alimentary lymphomas in the horse.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 1, 1987   Volume 97, Issue 1 1-10 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(87)90121-6
Platt H.A series of 9 cases of primary diffuse alimentary lymphoma of the equine small intestine is described. Clinically, the principal effects were attributable to malabsorption and disordered alimentary function and several cases had severe anaemia; in four this was of the haemolytic type. Hypoalbuminaemia and elevated gamma globulin levels were often present. The neoplasms were confined mainly to the small intestine and mesenteric lymph nodes, sometimes with some involvement of other lymph nodes as well. The large bowel was affected in one horse, but none of the cases showed detectable invasion of...