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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.
Equine rhinovirus serotypes 1 and 2: relationship to each other and to aphthoviruses and cardioviruses.
The Journal of general virology    August 1, 1996   Volume 77 ( Pt 8) 1719-1730 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-77-8-1719
Wutz G, Auer H, Nowotny N, Grosse B, Skern T, Kuechler E.Equine rhinoviruses (ERVs) are picornaviruses which cause a mild respiratory infection in horses. The illness resembles the common cold brought about by rhinoviruses in humans; however, the presence of a viraemia during ERV-1 infection, the occurrence of persistent infections and the physical properties are all more reminiscent of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV). cDNA cloning and sequencing of the genomes of ERV-1 and ERV-2 between the poly(C) and poly(A) tracts showed that the serotypes are heterogeneous. Nevertheless, the genomic architecture of both serotypes is most similar to that of ...
Biochemical and antigenic relationships between porcine and equine isolates of Actinobacillus suis.
Veterinary microbiology    August 1, 1996   Volume 51, Issue 3-4 393-396 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(96)00040-5
Bada R, Mittal KR, Higgins R.A total of 50 Actinobacillus suis isolates were studied for their biochemical and antigenic characteristics. Of them, 40 isolates originated from different tissues of diseased pigs, and the other ten isolates were from horses with respiratory problems. There was no major biochemical difference among equine and porcine A. suis isolates. Results of tube agglutination tests showed that porcines isolates were antigenically homogeneous while equine isolates were heterogeneous.
Structure of equine infectious anemia virus proteinase complexed with an inhibitor.
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society    August 1, 1996   Volume 5, Issue 8 1453-1465 doi: 10.1002/pro.5560050802
Gustchina A, Kervinen J, Powell DJ, Zdanov A, Kay J, Wlodawer A.Equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV), the causative agent of infectious anemia in horses, is a member of the lentiviral family. The virus-encoded proteinase (PR) processes viral polyproteins into functional molecules during replication and it also cleaves viral nucleocapsid protein during infection. The X-ray structure of a complex of the 154G mutant of EIAV PR with the inhibitor HBY-793 was solved at 1.8 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 0.136. The molecule is a dimer in which the monomers are related by a crystallographic twofold axis. Although both the enzyme and t...
Effects of transporting horses facing either forwards or backwards on their behaviour and heart rate.
The Veterinary record    July 6, 1996   Volume 139, Issue 1 7-11 doi: 10.1136/vr.139.1.7
Waran NK, Robertson V, Cí·¯ord D, Kokoszko A, Marlin DJ.The effects of transporting horses facing either forwards or backwards were compared by transporting six thoroughbred horses in pairs in a lorry on one journey facing in the direction of travel, and on another journey facing away from the direction of travel, over a standard one-hour route. Heart rate monitors were used to record their heart rate before, during and after the journey and the horses' behaviour was recorded by scan sampling each horse every other minute. The average heart rate was significantly lower (P < 0.05) when the horses were transported facing backwards, and they also t...
Third International Workshop on Animal Locomotion: components of applied science.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 4 253 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03086.x
Deuel NR.No abstract available
Oral bioavailability and in vitro stability of pivampicillin, bacampicillin, talampicillin, and ampicillin in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 7 1021-1024 
Ensink JM, Vulto AG, van Miert AS, Tukker JJ, Winkel MB, Fluitman MA.To determine the oral bioavailabilities of 3 ampicillin esters (pivampicillin, bacampicillin, and talampicillin) and ampicillin sodium, and to determine in vitro stability of the ampicillin esters in ileal contents (pH 8.3 to 8.5). Methods: A crossover design to administer the 4 drugs orally, and ampicillin i.v. to all horses in the study. Methods: 4 healthy adult horses. Methods: The drugs were administered intragastrically to the horses at a dosage equimolar to 15 mg of ampicillin/kg of body weight. Also, ampicillin sodium was administered i.v. at the same dosage. Blood samples were taken up...
Characterisation of proteins in the seminal plasma of stallions, geldings and supplemented with testosterone.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1996   Volume 61, Issue 1 33-37 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(96)90107-1
McDowell KJ, Little TV, Timoney PJ, Adams MH.The major proteins in stallion seminal plasma were characterised by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and compared with the patterns of proteins in normal geldings (castrated males) and geldings supplemented with testosterone. The major proteins or groups of proteins identified according to their approximate relative molecular weight in kilodaltons (kDa) and apparent isoelectric point (pl) were: 1) 60 kDa. pl 7; 2) 23 kDa, pl 4-5; 3) 25-30 kDa, pl 5.5-6; 4) 23 kDa, pl 7-8; and 5) 15-20 kDa, pl 6-7.5. Protein groups 1 and 2 were more prominent in the seminal plasma from the st...
Reproducibility of the blood lactate-running speed curve in horses under field conditions.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 7 1059-1062 
Guhl A, Lindner A, von Wittke P.To examine the reproducibility of blood lactate-running speed curve parameters derived by a curve-fit equation and by linear interpolation from the results of 4-speed tests of sport horses under field conditions. Methods: Thoroughbreds completed 10 test pairs with 3 to 11 days between tests and retest. Methods: 7 Thoroughbreds. Methods: The 4-speed test consisted of 4 runs over a distance of 2,110 m. Exercise intensity was increased by 1 m/s for each run. Blood lactate concentration measured after each run was plotted against running speed to determine the blood lactate-running speed relation....
Comparison and simulation of different levels of erythrocyte aggregation with pig, horse, sheep, calf, and normal human blood.
Biorheology    July 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 4-5 365-377 doi: 10.1016/0006-355x(96)00028-5
Weng X, Cloutier G, Pibarot P, Durand LG.Erythrocyte aggregation levels in pig, horse, sheep, and calf blood samples were investigated and compared to that of normal human blood. The aggregation kinetics and adhesive forces between red cells, and an index of structure of the aggregates were determined with an erythroaggregameter (Regulest, France) at constant hematocrit (0.40 l/l) and temperature (37 degrees C). The adhesive forces and the index of structure in pig blood were close to those of normal human blood. The results for horse blood showed a very high level of aggregation kinetics and adhesive forces between red cells. For sh...
Serologic responses to Rhodococcus equi in individuals with and without human immunodeficiency virus infection. Vullo V, Mastroianni CM, Lichtner M, Mengoni F, Chiappini E, D'Agostino C, Delia S.Thirty healthy blood donors, 15 workers from horse-breeding farms, 69 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative persons at risk for HIV infection, 125 HIV-infected subjects without Rhodococcus equi infection, and nine HIV-infected patients with Rhodococcus equi pneumonia were evaluated in order to detect serum antibodies to Rhodococcus equi precipitate-soluble antigen by an enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Whereas EIA values for healthy donors, horse farm workers, individuals at risk for HIV infection, and HIV-positive subjects without Rhodococcus equi infection were comparable, HIV-infected patien...
Analysis of MHC class I expression in equine trophoblast cells using in situ hybridization.
Placenta    July 1, 1996   Volume 17, Issue 5-6 351-359 doi: 10.1016/s0143-4004(96)90060-0
Maher JK, Tresnan DB, Deacon S, Hannah L, Antczak DF.Down-regulation of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes by trophoblast cells is considered to be a primary mechanism preventing maternal immune rejection of the fetal-placental unit in mammalian pregnancy by rendering these cells, which form the primary barrier between mother and fetus, relatively non-antigenic. In situ hybridization with probes encoding human and horse MHC class I genes was used to characterize the pattern of MHC class I mRNA expression in the various forms of horse trophoblast. Strong hybridization signals were observed in the invasive trophoblast cells of chorionic ...
Sequence analysis and polymerase chain reaction amplification of small subunit ribosomal DNA from Sarcocystis neurona.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 7 975-981 
Marsh AE, Barr BC, Madigan J, Lakritz J, Conrad PA.To identify Sarcocystis neurona-specific DNA sequences in the nuclear small subunit ribosomal RNA (nss-rRNA) gene that could be used to distinguish S neurona from other closely related protozoal parasites, and to evaluate a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test, using broad based primers and a unique species-specific probe on CSF for detection of S neurona in equids. Methods: Sequencing of the nuclear small subunit ribosomal RNA gene from a new S neurona isolate (UCD 1) was performed. The sequence was compared with that of other closely related Sarcocystidae parasites. From this sequence, conse...
Comparison of the deduced matrix and fusion protein sequences of equine morbillivirus with cognate genes of the Paramyxoviridae.
Virus research    July 1, 1996   Volume 43, Issue 1 17-31 doi: 10.1016/0168-1702(96)01308-1
Gould AR.The nucleotide sequence of the matrix protein of equine morbillivirus (EMV) was determined to be 1062 nucleotides and coded for a deduced protein of M(r) 40148 having a net charge of + 19 at neutral pH. The matrix protein gene was separated from the P and F genes by intercistronic regions of 546 and 469 nucleotides, respectively. The nucleotide sequence which coded for the F protein was 1641 nucleotides and coded for a deduced protein of 546 amino acids having an M(r) of 60,447 and a charge + 4 at neutral pH. Partial sequence information was also determined for the P/V proteins. M, P and F pro...
Allergens of horse dander: comparison among breeds and individual animals by immunoblotting.
The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology    July 1, 1996   Volume 98, Issue 1 169-171 doi: 10.1016/s0091-6749(96)70239-7
Felix K, Ferrándiz R, Einarsson R, Dreborg S.Some patients who are allergic to horses have reported that they can tolerate certain breeds, and the presence of breed-specific allergens has been suggested. Breeders and patients with asthma have claimed that Bashkir horses are nonallergenic. We used sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting to determine IgE-binding profiles of extracts of dander obtained from horses of several breeds. We found considerable inter-breed and within-breed variation but no breed-specific allergens. Danders from all breeds investigated contained the most important allergens, and ...
Protein binding and in vitro serum thromboxane B2 inhibition by flunixin meglumine and meclofenamic acid in dog, goat and horse blood.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1996   Volume 61, Issue 1 78-81 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(96)90115-0
Galbraith EA, McKellar QA.Flunixin was highly protein bound in the serum of dogs (92.2 per cent), goats (84.8 per cent) and horses (86.9 per cent). Meclofenamic acid was also highly protein bound, although there were larger differences between the extent of the binding in dogs (90.3 per cent), goats (84.7 per cent) and horses (99.8 per cent). Both flunixin and meclofenamic acid were potent inhibitors of the in vitro generation of thromboxane (Tx) B2 in blood. Flunixin inhibited the generation of TxB2 by 50 per cent of the maximum response (IC50) in dog, goat and horse blood at concentrations of 0.10, 0.02 and 0.04 micr...
Ultrasonography of the equine triceps muscle before and after general anaesthesia and in post anaesthetic myopathy.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 4 311-319 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03095.x
Smith RK, Dyson SJ, Head MJ, Butson RJ.The ultrasonographic appearance of the equine triceps muscle of clinically normal horses, before and after general anaesthesia, was investigated and compared with 5 cases of post anaesthetic myopathy. The triceps muscle areas were examined bilaterally using a 7.5 MHz linear array probe in 2 different planes, with each limb both weightbearing and nonweightbearing. The triceps muscles of 4 unanaesthetised horses were scanned twice, 24 h apart. Six horses underwent general anaesthesia and were scanned pre-anaesthesia and at 1 and 24 h intervals after recovery. Blood samples were obtained in the u...
Cross-antigenicity of horse serum albumin with dog and cat albumins: study of three short peptides with significant inhibitory activity towards specific human IgE and IgG antibodies.
Immunology    July 1, 1996   Volume 88, Issue 3 340-347 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2567.1996.d01-669.x
Goubran Botros H, Gregoire C, Rabillon J, David B, Dandeu JP.Horse serum albumin is present in the near vicinity of the animal, while dog and cat serum albumins are very common allergens present in house dust. Human patients clinically defined as allergic to horse could react with horse serum albumin by means of IgE or IgG antibodies. Studies regarding the specificities of these antibodies by inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and depletion experiments have demonstrated that they are directed against dog serum albumin and cross-react not only with horse serum albumin but with other serum albumins from different origins. To investigate ...
Looking for residues involved in the muscle acylphosphatase catalytic mechanism and structural stabilization: role of Asn41, Thr42, and Thr46.
Biochemistry    June 4, 1996   Volume 35, Issue 22 7077-7083 doi: 10.1021/bi952900b
Taddei N, Stefani M, Magherini F, Chiti F, Modesti A, Raugei G, Ramponi G.Asn41, Thr42, and Thr46 are invariant residues in both muscle and erythrocyte acylphosphatases isolated so far. Horse muscle acylphosphatase solution structure suggests their close spatial relationship to Arg23, the main substrate binding site. The catalytic and structural role of such residues, as well as their influence on muscle acylphosphatase stability, was investigated by preparing several gene mutants (Thr42Ala, Thr46Ala, Asn41Ala, Asn41Ser, and Asn41Gln) by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. The mutated genes were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, and the mutant enzymes were...
Equine dinucleotide repeat loci LEX015-LEX024.
Animal genetics    June 1, 1996   Volume 27, Issue 3 217-218 
Coogle L, Reid R, Bailey E.No abstract available
Apparent viscosity of the synovial fluid from mid-carpal, tibiotarsal, and distal interphalangeal joints of horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 6 879-883 
Lumsden JM, Caron JP, Steffe JF, Briggs JL, Arnoczky SP.To compare the apparent viscosity of normal synovial fluid of the mid-carpal, tibiotarsal, and interphalangeal joints of horses. Methods: Viscosity evaluation over a range of shear rates was used to characterize the apparent viscosity of synovial fluids from the 3 joints. Methods: 60 clinically normal adult horses. Methods: Viscosity data for synovial fluid samples were obtained over a shear rate range of 10 to 250/s and apparent viscosity was calculated at 50, 100, 150, 200, and 250/s. Effect of shear rate on apparent viscosity was determined, using a two-way ANOVA, with significant differenc...
Three new polymorphic equine microsatellites: HLM2, HLM3, HLM5.
Animal genetics    June 1, 1996   Volume 27, Issue 3 215 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1996.tb00961.x
Vega-Pla JL, Garrido JJ, Dorado G, de Andrés-Cara DF.No abstract available
Genomic quasispecies associated with the initiation of infection and disease in ponies experimentally infected with equine infectious anemia virus.
Journal of virology    June 1, 1996   Volume 70, Issue 6 3346-3354 doi: 10.1128/JVI.70.6.3346-3354.1996
Lichtenstein DL, Issel CJ, Montelaro RC.Equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) provides a uniquely dynamic system in which to study the mechanism and role of genomic variation in lentiviral persistence and pathogenesis. We have used a Shetland pony model of infection to investigate the association of specific long terminal repeat (LTR) and env gene genomic sequences with the initiation of infection and the onset of disease. We analyzed viral RNA isolated from a pathogenic stock of virus (EIAV PV) and from plasma taken during the first disease episode from two ponies infected with EIAV PV. Overall sequence variation within gp90 was lo...
Comparison of polymerase chain reaction and microbiological culture for detection of salmonellae in equine feces and environmental samples.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 6 780-786 
Cohen ND, Martin LJ, Simpson RB, Wallis DE, Neibergs HL.To compare the sensitivity of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with microbiological culture for detecting salmonellae in equine fecal samples and equine environmental swab specimens. Methods: Samples and specimens were tested by PCR and microbiological culture. Methods: A fecal sample from each of 152 horses admitted consecutively to the clinic for evaluation by the outpatient service, 282 fecal samples from 110 hospitalized horses that had been submitted to the clinical microbiology laboratory, and 313 environmental swab specimens were examined. Methods: Each sample and specimen in the study w...
Laparoscopic anatomy of the abdomen in dorsally recumbent horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 6 923-931 
Galuppo LD, Snyder JR, Pascoe JR, Stover SM, Morgan R.To provide an accurate and detailed description of the laparoscopic anatomy of the abdomen of horses positioned in dorsal recumbency and to compare those observations with laparoscopic anatomy of standing horses. The effects of laparoscopy and positional changes on arterial blood pressure and blood gas values also were investigated. Methods: Descriptive anatomic study. Methods: Laparoscopy was performed on 6 horses (2 mares, 2 geldings, and 2 stallions) to record the normal laparoscopic anatomy of the abdomen in dorsal recumbency. Methods: Feed was withheld from all horses for 36 hours. Horses...
Rapid analysis of four bilirubins in domestic animal sera using high-performance liquid chromatography.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    June 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 6 495-499 doi: 10.1292/jvms.58.495
Mizobe M, Kondo F, Toyoshima C, Kumamoto K, Terada T, Nasu H.A rapid method was developed to analyze delta-bilirubin (B delta), diconjugated bilirubin (DCB), monoconjugated bilirubin (MCB), and unconjugated bilirubin (Bu) by direct injection of sera using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with an internal-surface reversed-phase silica support (ISRP) column. Sharp bilirubin peaks were obtained using a simple mobile phase of acetonitrile: 0.5 M Tris-HCl buffer (20:80, v/v, pH 7.2). A variable-wavelength detector set at 450 nm, 0.01 absorbance unit full scale (AUFS), and a recorder set at 4 mm/min were used for detection. Peaks for B delta, DCB...
Failure of endometrial cup development in the donkey-in-horse model of equine abortion.
Journal of anatomy    June 1, 1996   Volume 188 ( Pt 3), Issue Pt 3 575-589 
Enders AC, Meadows S, Stewart F, Allen WR.The mature preinvasive chorionic girdles of horse, mule, donkey and extraspecies donkey-in-horse conceptuses, and the very young endometrial cups on d 37 of gestation in mares carrying horse, mule and transferred donkey-in-horse conceptuses, were compared histologically and ultrastructurally to determine possible mechanisms underlying failure of endometrial cup development in the donkey-in-horse model of equine abortion. The progenitor chorionic girdle from the failing donkey-in-house pregnancy was similar in size to the normal donkey chorionic girdle but the trophoblast cells within the forme...
[The oldest German textbook on internal medicine of horses, edited at the Kayserlich-Köngliche Pferd-Cur und Operations Schul in Vienna in 1770].
Tierarztliche Praxis    June 1, 1996   Volume 24, Issue 3 219-222 
Greiner S.The manuscript has the title: "Erkandtnus deren innerlichen Krankheiten des Pferds überhaupt". Through two take downs of the lectures of Ludwig Scotti, the founder of the first school for veterinarians in the German speaking part of Europe and its first teacher, the manuscript is identified as another take down. The first part of the manuscript, which is about internal medicine, in large passages is a literally translation of Lafosse's "Guide de Maréchal". In most passages the second part, which is about pharmacology, is a copy of the German translation of Claude Bourgelat's "Matière médic...
Blue-cone horizontal cells in the retinae of horses and other equidae.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience    May 15, 1996   Volume 16, Issue 10 3381-3396 doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.16-10-03381.1996
Sandmann D, Boycott BB, Peichl L.The morphology of horizontal cells chiefly of the horse, but also of asses, mules, and a zebra, has been examined by Lucifer yellow injections into lightly fixed retinae and by immunocytochemistry. In common with other mammals, equids have a B-type horizontal cell, i.e., a cell with dendrites synapsing with cones and possessing a single axon synapsing with rods. Most mammalian retinae have a further type of horizontal cell, the A-type, also synapsing with cones but without an axon. The second type of horizontal cell in equids also has no axon; otherwise, it is most unusual. Compared with other...
Ultrasound in medical obstetrics: is it applicable to equine fetal medicine?
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 3 174-176 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03769.x
Lindsay PC, McGLADDERY AJ.No abstract available
Mycoplasma infections in horses: a fresh look using modern methods may reveal an elusive ‘virus’.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 3 177-179 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03770.x
Wood JLN, Chanter N.No abstract available