Analyze Diet

Topic:Comparative Study

Comparative studies in equine research involve the systematic analysis of different horse breeds, management practices, or physiological responses to identify variations and similarities. These studies are instrumental in understanding how different factors influence health, performance, and behavior in horses. Common areas of comparison include genetic traits, nutritional requirements, disease resistance, and response to training. By evaluating these differences, researchers can develop targeted strategies for breeding, healthcare, and training. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that focus on the methodologies, findings, and implications of comparative studies in the context of equine science.
Molecular cloning of equine chromogranin A and its expression in endocrine and exocrine tissues.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 20, 2000   Volume 62, Issue 9 953-959 doi: 10.1292/jvms.62.953
Sato F, Hasegawa T, Katayama Y, Iwanaga T, Yanaihara N, Kanno T, Ishida N.Chromogranin A (CGA) is a member of a family of highly acidic proteins co-stored and co-released with catecholamines in the adrenal medullary cells as well as in other neurons and paraneurons. The nucleotide sequence encoding equine CGA was determined using RT-PCR and rapid amplification of complementary DNA (cDNA) ends (RACE) techniques. A total 1,828 bp of the nucleotide sequence reveals that equine CGA is a 448-residue protein preceded by an 18-residue signal peptide. Comparison of the amino acid sequence of equine CGA with those of human, porcine, bovine, mouse, rat and frog CGA showed hig...
Tracheobronchial mucus viscoelasticity during environmental challenge in horses with recurrent airway obstruction.
Equine veterinary journal    October 19, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 5 411-417 doi: 10.2746/042516400777591183
Gerber V, King M, Schneider DA, Robinson NE.The goal of this study was to compare the rheological properties of mucus from horses with recurrent airway obstruction (RAO) to that from healthy controls during environmental challenge by stabling in stalls with straw as bedding and hay as feed. We determined viscoelasticity (log G* dyn/cm2, at 10 radian/s) and calculated mucociliary clearability index (MCI) and cough clearability index (CCI), which are derivative parameters of G* and the ratio of viscosity and elasticity measured at 1 and 100 radian/s, respectively. We also investigated the solids content of mucus, and cytology of bronchoal...
Evidence supporting an increased presence of reactive oxygen species in the diseased equine joint.
Equine veterinary journal    October 19, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 5 439-443 doi: 10.2746/042516400777591129
Dimock AN, Siciliano PD, McIlwraith CW.Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are capable of degrading many components of the joint in the presence of insufficient antioxidant defences, and as a result have been implicated in the pathogenesis of joint disease in horses. However, to our knowledge, evidence of ROS occurring in diseased joints of horses has not been reported. The objective of this experiment was to compare differences in synovial fluid protein carbonyl content (as a marker of oxidative modification of synovial fluid proteins by ROS) and the antioxidant status of synovial fluid between clinically normal and diseased equine join...
Physical, hematological, and exercise response of collegiate female equestrian athletes.
The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness    October 18, 2000   Volume 40, Issue 2 131-138 
Meyers MC, Sterling JC.Physiological testing is extensively used to assess current physical status, target strength/deficiencies, and determine predisposition to injury in athletes. No studies exist regarding these issues on equestrian athletes. The purpose of this study was to quantify the physical, hematological, and exercise response of female equestrian athletes in order to provided greater insight into the health fitness of this unique competitor, and to compare results to other better studied sport athletes. Methods: Following written informed consent, physiological assessments were performed on 24 collegiate ...
TKY101: a highly polymorphic equine dinucleotide repeat locus.
Animal genetics    October 14, 2000   Volume 30, Issue 2 163 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.1999.00382-3.x
Mashima S, Kakoi H, Tozaki T.No abstract available
Differential outcome effect in the horse.
Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior    October 12, 2000   Volume 74, Issue 2 245-253 doi: 10.1901/jeab.2000.74-245
Miyashita Y, Nakajima S, Imada H.Three horses were trained with a discrimination task in which the color (blue or yellow) of a center panel signaled the correct (left or right) response (lever press). Reinforcing outcomes for the two correct color-position combinations (blue-left and yellow-right) were varied across phases. Discrimination performance was better when the combinations were differentially reinforced by two types of food (chopped carrot pieces and a solid food pellet) than when the combinations were randomly reinforced by these outcomes or when there was a common reinforcer for each of the correct combinations. H...
The exceptionally large genome of Hendra virus: support for creation of a new genus within the family Paramyxoviridae.
Journal of virology    October 12, 2000   Volume 74, Issue 21 9972-9979 doi: 10.1128/jvi.74.21.9972-9979.2000
Wang LF, Yu M, Hansson E, Pritchard LI, Shiell B, Michalski WP, Eaton BT.An outbreak of acute respiratory disease in Hendra, a suburb of Brisbane, Australia, in September 1994 resulted in the deaths of 14 racing horses and a horse trainer. The causative agent was a new member of the family Paramyxoviridae. The virus was originally called Equine morbillivirus but was renamed Hendra virus (HeV) when molecular characterization highlighted differences between it and members of the genus Morbillivirus. Less than 5 years later, the closely related Nipah virus (NiV) emerged in Malaysia, spread rapidly through the pig population, and caused the deaths of over 100 people. W...
Ontogenic and nutritionally induced changes in fetal metabolism in the horse.
The Journal of physiology    October 6, 2000   Volume 528 Pt 1, Issue Pt 1 209-219 doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.00209.x
Fowden AL, Taylor PM, White KL, Forhead AJ.1. Using the Fick principle and tracer methodology, the metabolic rates of chronically catheterized fetal foals (n = 24) were measured at different gestational ages during the second half of gestation and in response to maternal fasting for 36 h in late gestation (n = 4, term approximately 335 days). 2. Absolute rates of umbilical blood flow, fetal glucose utilization and umbilical uptake of oxygen (O2) and glucose increased from mid-gestation to 300 days and then plateauxed until term. The absolute rate of umbilical lactate uptake was significant after, but not before, 280 days of gestation. ...
Localization of the lectin reactive sites in adult and prepubertal horse testes.
Research in veterinary science    October 6, 2000   Volume 69, Issue 2 113-118 doi: 10.1053/rvsc.2000.0398
Verini-Supplizi A, Stradaioli G, Fagioli O, Parillo F.The testes of prepubertal and adult horses were investigated using 10 horseradish peroxidase conjugated lectins combined with sialidase digestion and potassium hydroxide treatment, to localise the oligosaccharide sequences of glycoconjugates during spermatid maturation. In adult animals, the lectins showed a variable affinity for spermatids and Sertoli cell apical extensions. Soybean agglutinin (SBA), peanut agglutinin (PNA), Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA-I) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound to the acrosomal structures of spermatids, whereas Griffonia simplicifolia agglutinin (GSA-II) l...
Measurement of plasma colloid osmotic pressure in normal thoroughbred neonatal foals.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    September 30, 2000   Volume 14, Issue 5 475-478 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2000)014<0475:mopcop>2.3.co;2
Runk DT, Madigan JE, Rahal CJ, Allison DN, Fredrickson K.A normal plasma colloid osmotic pressure (COP) interval was established for foals and compared to values for adult horses. Plasma samples were obtained from 38 Thoroughbred foals that had normal findings on postfoaling examination and 10 healthy Thoroughbred adult horses. Samples were analyzed using a commercially available colloid osmometer. Fifty samples were obtained from 38 foals. Twelve foals had 2 samples taken, 1 during the 1st 24 hours of life and the 2nd between 24 and 72 hours of life. For foals with 2 samples, only 1 randomly selected value was used in group analysis. Total plasma p...
Thiopurine methyltransferase in red blood cells of dogs, cats, and horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    September 30, 2000   Volume 14, Issue 5 499-502 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2000)014<0499:tmirbc>2.3.co;2
White SD, Rosychuk RA, Outerbridge CA, Fieseler KV, Spier S, Ihrke PJ, Chapman PL.Our objective was to determine if thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT), the enzyme important in the metabolism of azathioprine in human beings, is detectable in red blood cell lysates (RBCL) of healthy dogs, cats, and horses. Values for TPMT activity were determined from blood collected from 20 healthy dogs, cats, and horses. The TPMT activity in each animal's RBCL was determined using a radioenzymatic end point involving TPMT-facilitated metabolism of 6-mercaptopurine to 6-methylmercaptopurine (6-MMP). One unit of TPMT activity represents the formation of 1 nmol of 6-MMP per milliliter of pack...
Individual mares bias investment in sons and daughters in relation to their condition.
Animal behaviour    September 29, 2000   Volume 60, Issue 3 359-367 doi: 10.1006/anbe.2000.1480
Cameron EZ, Linklater WL.The Trivers-Willard hypothesis (TWH) predicts that a mother will treat a son or daughter differently depending on her ability to invest and the impact of her investment on offspring reproductive success. Although many studies have investigated the hypothesis, few have definitively supported or refuted it because of confounding factors or an inappropriate level of analysis. We studied maternal investment in sons and daughters in feral horses, Equus caballus, which meet the assumptions of the TWH with a minimum of confounding variables. Population level analyses revealed no differences in matern...
Stereological estimation of volume-weighted mean glomerular volume from arbitrary sections of the equine kidney.
Journal of anatomy    September 27, 2000   Volume 197 ( Pt 2), Issue Pt 2 307-311 doi: 10.1046/j.1469-7580.2000.19720307.x
Beech DJ, Roche ED, Sibbons PD, Rossdale PD, Ousey JC.Mean glomerular volume has previously been estimated, using stereological techniques, specifically the point-sampled intercept (PSI), either from isotropic or from vertical sections. As glomeruli are approximately spherical structures, the same stereological technique was carried out on vertical and arbitrary sections to determine whether section orientation had any effect on mean glomerular volume estimation. Equine kidneys from 10 individuals were analysed using the PSI method of estimating volume-weighted mean glomerular volume (MGV); for each kidney, arbitrary and vertical sections were an...
Effects of training on the concentration of Na+, K+-ATPase in foal muscle.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    September 22, 2000   Issue 31 101-105 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05321.x
Suwannachot P, Verkleij CB, Weijs WA, van Weeren PR, Everts ME.We investigated the effect of training on the Na+, K+-ATPase concentration in foal skeletal muscle by measurement of [3H]ouabain binding. From the 7th day after birth, 12 foals were divided in 3 groups: a) staying in a box stall (Box); b) staying in a box stall with a training regimen of an increasing number of sprints per day (Training); and c) staying on pasture (Pasture). Euthanasia was performed after 5 months. In semitendinosus muscle, the concentration of [3H]ouabain binding sites (pmol/g wet wt) was 181 +/- 6 in the Box, 220 +/- 15 in the Training, and 197 +/- 8 in the Pasture group (al...
Histological and morphometrical studies on the mucosa of the equine guttural pouch (auditory tube diverticulum).
Okajimas folia anatomica Japonica    September 22, 2000   Volume 77, Issue 2-3 69-76 doi: 10.2535/ofaj1936.77.2-3_69
Manglai D, Wada R, Kurohmaru M, Yoshihara T, Kuwano A, Oikawa M, Hayashi Y.The present study attempted to clarify the characteristics of the guttural pouch mucosa in equines and to evaluate its foreign substance clearance ability. The specimens were collected from nine regions (eight in the guttural pouch mucosa, and one in the nasopharynx mucosa). We first examined the pouch mucosa by light and electron microscopy. We then measured the frequency of goblet cells per 200 epithelial cells, the length of the cilia, the thickness of the epithelial cell layer and lamina propria and statistically analyzed the data. The guttural pouch mucosa consisted of stratified columnar...
The influence of different exercise regimens on the development of locomotion in the foal.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    September 22, 2000   Issue 31 106-111 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05322.x
Back W, Smit LD, Schamhardt HC, Barneveld A.To study the influence of different exercise regimens on the development of locomotion, 40 Warmblood foals aged 1 week were subdivided into 3 groups: box-rest, training and pasture exercise. The box-rest group remained for 24 h a day in a box stall while the training group was housed similarly, but additionally received a 30 min workout with gallop sprints 6 times a week. The pasture group served as a control group and was kept at pasture for 24 h a day. After 5 months, the locomotion pattern at the trot of every foal was recorded overground with a 2-D MacReflex gait analysis system. A randoml...
Influence of exercise on bone mineral density of immature cortical and trabecular bone of the equine metacarpus and proximal sesamoid bone.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    September 22, 2000   Issue 31 79-85 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05318.x
Cornelissen BP, van Weeren PR, Ederveen AG, Barneveld A.Bone mineral density (BMD) and cross-sectional area (CSA), measured using peripheral quantitative computed tomography, were determined in the left third metacarpal bone (MCIII) and left medial proximal sesamoid bone (psb) in 3 differently exercised groups of foals. Group(box) (n = 14) was confined to a box stall from birth to age 5 months, Group(training) (n = 14) was kept in similar box stalls but additionally given a daily exercise programme consisting of an increasing number of gallop sprints and Group(pasture) (n = 15) remained at pasture. At 5 months of age, 8 foals from each group were r...
Postnatal muscle fibre composition of the gluteus medius muscle of Dutch Warmblood foals; maturation and the influence of exercise.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    September 22, 2000   Issue 31 95-100 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05320.x
Dingboom EG, Dijkstra G, Enzerink E, van Oudheusden HC, Weijs WA.The fibre type composition of the deep gluteus muscle was studied in biopsies of Dutch Warmblood foals from birth until age 48 weeks. Half the foals were given box-rest, the other half received exercise consisting of an increasing number of gallop sprints. The muscle fibre types were determined using monoclonal antibodies discriminating against the following myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms: types I, IIa, IId, Cardiac-alpha and Developmental. During the first 48 weeks there was a consistent increase of fibres expressing types IIa MHC, replacing fibres expressing IId MHC. This change was refle...
Effect of a static magnetic field on blood flow to the metacarpus in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 21, 2000   Volume 217, Issue 6 874-877 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.217.874
Steyn PF, Ramey DW, Kirschvink J, Uhrig J.To determine the effect of a static magnetic field on relative blood flow to the metacarpus of horses. Methods: Randomized controlled clinical trial. Methods: 6 healthy adult horses. Methods: Red blood cells were radiolabeled in vivo by administration of technetium Tc 99m (pyro- and trimeta-) phosphates, and scintigraphic images were obtained 30 minutes later. A magnetic wrap that emitted a static magnetic field was applied to 1 metacarpus and a control wrap was applied to the contralateral metacarpus. Forty-eight hours later, the wraps were removed, and scintigraphy was repeated. Relative per...
Comparison of four drug combinations for total intravenous anesthesia of horses undergoing surgical removal of an abdominal testis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 21, 2000   Volume 217, Issue 6 869-873 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.217.869
Muir WW, Lerche P, Robertson JT, Hubbell JA, Beard W, Miller T, Badgley B, Bothwell V.To evaluate anesthetic effects of 4 drug combinations used for total intravenous anesthesia of horses undergoing surgical removal of an abdominal testis. Methods: Clinical trial. Methods: 32 healthy cryptorchid horses. Methods: Horses were sedated with xylazine and butorphanol and were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 groups: induction of anesthesia with ketamine and diazepam and maintenance with bolus administration of ketamine and xylazine (KD/KX); induction and maintenance of anesthesia with bolus administration of tiletamine-zolazepam, ketamine, and detomidine (TKD); induction and maintenance o...
Vitrification of immature and mature equine and bovine oocytes in an ethylene glycol, ficoll and sucrose solution using open-pulled straws.
Theriogenology    September 16, 2000   Volume 54, Issue 1 119-128 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(00)00330-7
Hurtt AE, Landim-Alvarenga F, Seidel GE, Squires EL.Studies were conducted to compare viability of immature and mature equine and bovine oocytes vitrified in ethylene glycol. Ficoll using open-pulled straws. Oocytes from slaughterhouse ovaries (N=50/group) with >2 layers of compact cumulus cells were vitrified immediately after collection (immature groups) or vitrified after 36 to 40 (equine) or 22 to 24 (bovine) h of maturation (mature groups). Immature oocytes were matured after thawing. Before vitrification, oocytes were exposed to TCM-199 + 10 FCS + 2.5 M ethylene glycol + 18% Ficoll + 0.5 M sucrose (EFS) for 30 sec and then to 5 M ethylene...
Animal models of asthma: potential usefulness for studying health effects of inhaled particles.
Inhalation toxicology    September 16, 2000   Volume 12, Issue 9 829-862 doi: 10.1080/08958370050123207
Bice DE, Seagrave J, Green FH.Asthma is now recognized to be a chronic inflammatory disease that affects the whole lung. Incidence appears to be increasing despite improved treatment regimens. There is substantial epidemiological evidence suggesting a relationship between the incidence and severity of asthma (e.g., hospitalizations) and exposure to increased levels of air pollution, especially fine and ultrafine particulate material, in susceptible individuals. There have been a few studies in animal models that support this concept, but additional animal studies to test this hypothesis are needed. However, such studies mu...
Amounts of selected coagulation factors in pre- and post-mortem follicular fluid are similar and do not correlate with molecular mass.
Animal reproduction science    September 16, 2000   Volume 63, Issue 3-4 177-185 doi: 10.1016/s0378-4320(00)00178-0
Semotok CA, Johnson WH, LaMarre J, Gentry PA.This study was designed to evaluate the amounts of coagulation factors and to determine whether the protein profile in pre-ovulatory ovarian follicular fluid aspirated from ovaries collected from mares at slaughter are representative of that in follicular fluid collected from live animals. The proteins evaluated included, (i) albumin, ceruloplasmin and fibronectin, (ii) the procoagulant plasma proteins, Factor V (FV), Factor VII (FVII), Factor X (FX) and prothrombin, and (iii) the anticoagulant plasma proteins, antithrombin and alpha2-macroglobulin. The amounts of the individual proteins were ...
Efficient homologous RNA recombination and requirement for an open reading frame during replication of equine arteritis virus defective interfering RNAs.
Journal of virology    September 12, 2000   Volume 74, Issue 19 9062-9070 doi: 10.1128/jvi.74.19.9062-9070.2000
Molenkamp R, Greve S, Spaan WJ, Snijder EJ.Equine arteritis virus (EAV), the prototype arterivirus, is an enveloped plus-strand RNA virus with a genome of approximately 13 kb. Based on similarities in genome organization and protein expression, the arteriviruses have recently been grouped together with the coronaviruses and toroviruses in the newly established order Nidovirales. Previously, we reported the construction of pEDI, a full-length cDNA copy of EAV DI-b, a natural defective interfering (DI) RNA of 5.6 kb (R. Molenkamp et al., J. Virol. 74:3156-3165, 2000). EDI RNA consists of three noncontiguous parts of the EAV genome fused ...
Concentrations of elastinolytic metalloproteinases in respiratory tract secretions of healthy horses and horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
American journal of veterinary research    September 8, 2000   Volume 61, Issue 9 1067-1073 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2000.61.1067
Raulo SM, Sorsa TA, Maisi PS.To determine whether samples of tracheal epithelial lining fluid (TELF) obtained from horses have elastinolytic activity characteristic of metalloproteinases, to compare elastinolytic activity in TELF obtained from healthy horses and horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and to determine whether chemically modified tetracycline-3 (CMT-3) inhibits elastinolytic activity in TELF ANIMALS: 10 horses with COPD and 10 healthy control horses. Methods: Zymography and fluorometry were used to measure elastinolytic activity, and EDTA was used to inhibit elastinolytic activity and ver...
Genotyping of Bacteroides fragilis isolates from stool specimens by arbitrarily-primed-PCR.
Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease    September 7, 2000   Volume 37, Issue 4 225-229 doi: 10.1016/s0732-8893(00)00150-4
Sarma PN, Tang YJ, Prindiville TP, Osborne PD, Jang S, Silva J, Cohen SH.In order to determine genetic relatedness of Bacteroides fragilis isolates from different clinical sources, arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (AP-PCR) was used to compare 17 strains isolated from patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and 20 strains isolated from foals with diarrhea. Three reference ATCC strains were also analyzed. Eighteen unique types were identified with a 22-mer arbitrary primer (ERIC-2) among the 20 patient isolates. Types 1 (enterotoxigenic) and 9 (nonenterotoxigenic), were each found in the stools of two patients. All other isolates showed a dis...
A horse whole-genome-radiation hybrid panel: chromosome 1 and 10 preliminary maps.
Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society    September 1, 2000   Volume 11, Issue 9 803-805 doi: 10.1007/s003350010146
Kiguwa SL, Hextall P, Smith AL, Critcher R, Swinburne J, Millon L, Binns MM, Goodfellow PN, McCarthy LC, Farr CJ, Oakenfull EA.No abstract available
Genomic variability of equine herpesvirus-5.
Archives of virology    August 30, 2000   Volume 145, Issue 7 1359-1371 doi: 10.1007/s007050070095
Dunowska M, Holloway SA, Wilks CR, Meers J.Seventeen New Zealand isolates of equine herpesvirus 5 (EHV-5) were compared to the Australian prototype strain. PCR primers were designed to amplify EHV-5 glycoprotein B (gB) gene, and Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) was used to detect differences between cloned PCR products. EHV-5 isolates from different horses showed a high degree of heterogeneity. However, EHV-5 isolates from individual horses remained homogeneous when examined over a period of time or isolated from different sites. A single EHV-5 gB RFLP profile was detected in isolates from each individual horse but one. ...
Secondary structure model for the ITS-2 precursor rRNA of strongyloid nematodes of equids: implications for phylogenetic inference.
International journal for parasitology    August 29, 2000   Volume 29, Issue 12 1949-1964 doi: 10.1016/s0020-7519(99)00155-1
Hung GC, Chilton NB, Beveridge I, Gasser RB.In order to maximise the positional homology in the primary sequence alignment of the second internal transcribed spacer for 30 species of equine strongyloid nematodes, the secondary structures of the precursor ribosomal RNA were predicted using an approach combining an energy minimisation method and comparative sequence analysis. The results indicated that a common secondary structure model of the second internal transcribed spacer of these nematodes was maintained despite significant interspecific differences (2-56%) in primary sequences. The secondary structure model was then used to refine...
Magnetic resonance imaging and cross sectional anatomy of the normal equine sinuses and nasal passages. Arencibia A, Vázquez JM, Jaber R, Gil F, Ramírez JA, Rivero M, González N, Wisner ER.The purpose of this investigation was to define the magnetic resonance imaging anatomy of the rostral part of the equine head. 10 mm-thick, T1-weighted images of two isolated equine cadaver heads were obtained using a 1.5 Tesla magnet and a body coil. MR images were compared to corresponding frozen cross-sections of the cadaver head. Relevant anatomic structures were identified and labeled at each level. The resulting images provided excellent anatomic detail of the oral and nasal cavities, paranasal sinuses and associated structures. Annotated MR images from this study are intended as a refer...