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.
Differences in a ribosomal DNA sequence of Strongylus species allows identification of single eggs.
International journal for parasitology    March 1, 1995   Volume 25, Issue 3 359-365 doi: 10.1016/0020-7519(94)00116-6
Campbell AJ, Gasser RB, Chilton NB.In the current study, molecular techniques were evaluated for the species identification of individual strongyle eggs. Adult worms of Strongylus edentatus, S. equinus and S. vulgaris were collected at necropsy from horses from Australia and the U.S.A. Genomic DNA was isolated and a ribosomal transcribed spacer (ITS-2) amplified and sequenced using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques. The length of the ITS-2 sequence of S. edentatus, S. equinus and S. vulgaris ranged between 217 and 235 nucleotides. Extensive sequence analysis demonstrated a low degree (0-0.9%) of intraspecific variation...
Immunohistochemical localisation of met-enkephalin in the adrenal gland of the fetal and newborn horse.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 2 147-149 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb03052.x
Challis JR, Han X, Matthews SG, Fowden AL, Silver M, Holdstock N, McGladdery A, Ousey JC, Allen WR, Rossdale PD.No abstract available
The macroscopic vascular anatomy of the equine ethmoidal area.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    March 1, 1995   Volume 24, Issue 1 39-45 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1995.tb00007.x
Bell BT, Baker GJ, Abbott LC, Foreman JH, Kneller SK.The vascular anatomy of the ethmoidal area in six normal horses and two normal ponies was studied using vascular-corrosion casts. The major arterial supply to the ethmoidal area stems from an intracranial source. The internal and external ethmoidal arteries anastomose on the rostral intracranial surface of the cribriform plate to form the arterial ethmoidal rete which arborizes and passes through the perforations of the cribriform plate to supply the ethmoid labyrinth. A minor arterial supply to the ventral portion of the ethmoid labyrinth stems from a small caudal nasal branch of the sphenopa...
Development of PCR assays to detect genetic variation amongst equine herpesvirus-1 isolates as an aid to epidemiological investigation.
Journal of virological methods    March 1, 1995   Volume 52, Issue 1-2 183-194 doi: 10.1016/0166-0934(94)00162-a
McCann SH, Mumford JA, Binns MM.A search for variable restriction sites has been carried out for equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) in an attempt to develop markers which can be used to group epidemiologically related viruses into groups, and to learn more about the dynamics of EHV-1 disease. Crude viral DNA extracts of EHV-1, prepared by Hirt extraction, were digested with AluI, HaeIII, or RsaI, and Southern blotted following electrophoresis. DNA fingerprints, produced by probing the Southern blots with the EHV-1 EcoR1-I fragment, separated 56 isolates into 16 groups. The variable sites within the EcoR1-I fragment were mapped app...
Regulation of respiratory muscle activities during chemoreceptor stimulation in adult horses.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1995   Volume 56, Issue 3 366-373 
Ainsworth DM, Ducharme NG, Hackett RP, Eicker SW, Snedden K.We examined the electromyographic activity of the costal portion of the diaphragm and the transverse abdominal and external oblique muscles in 6 chronically instrumented awake adult horses during eupneic breathing, during 2 levels of hypercapnia (fractional concentration of inspired CO2; FICO2 = 0.4 and 0.6), and during 2 levels of hypocapnic hypoxia (FIO2 = 0.15 and 0.12). Using the inert gas technique, we also measured the end-expiratory lung volumes of the 6 horses during eupnea, 6% CO2 challenge, and 12% O2 breathing. During eupneic breathing, phasic electrical activity of these 3 muscles ...
Intraperitoneal use of sodium carboxymethylcellulose in horses undergoing exploratory celiotomy.
Veterinary surgery : VS    March 1, 1995   Volume 24, Issue 2 112-117 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1995.tb01304.x
Mueller PO, Hunt RJ, Allen D, Parks AH, Hay WP.The effect of intraperitoneal sodium carboxymethylcellulose (SCMC) administration on clinical outcome and survival was evaluated in horses undergoing exploratory celiotomy for acute gastrointestinal disease. Comparison of variables was made retrospectively between 44 horses that had SCMC and 92 horses (controls) not treated with SCMC. Mean age, body weight, heart rate, packed cell volume and plasma total protein of horses at admission, and convalescent period were not significantly different between control and SCMC groups. No significant differences were noted between control horses and SCMC ...
Identification of the causative agent of granulocytic ehrlichiosis in Swedish dogs and horses by direct solid phase sequencing of PCR products from the 16S rRNA gene.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1995   Volume 58, Issue 2 109-112 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(95)90061-6
Johansson KE, Pettersson B, Uhlén M, Gunnarsson A, Malmqvist M, Olsson E.Seven Swedish isolates of Ehrlichia species from the blood of four dogs and three horses with clinical granulocytic ehrlichiosis, were identified by direct solid phase DNA sequencing of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products from the 16S rRNA gene. The amplified DNA fragments were produced with primers complementary to the universal regions, U1, U2, U5 and U8 of the 16S rRNA molecule. Identical sequences were obtained from all seven isolates. This nucleotide sequence was similar to the sequences deposited in GenBank for Ehrlichia phagocytophila and E equi. The sequence of the Swedish ehrlich...
Acetylcholine release from airway cholinergic nerves in horses with heaves, an airway obstructive disease.
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine    March 1, 1995   Volume 151, Issue 3 Pt 1 830-835 doi: 10.1164/ajrccm/151.3_Pt_1.830
Wang ZW, Yu MF, Robinson NE, Derksen FJ.The present study was conducted to determine if acetylcholine (ACh) release from airway cholinergic nerves is increased and if modulation of ACh release by prejunctional receptors is altered in horses with heaves, an obstructive airway disease characterized by airway inflammation and bronchospasm. Trachealis strips and bronchial segments of normal horses and horses affected with heaves were suspended in 2-ml tissue baths. ACh release was induced by electrical field stimulation and the bath ACh content was measured by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with electrochemical detection....
Exercise induced ventilation/perfusion inequality in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 2 104-109 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb03044.x
Seaman J, Erickson BK, Kubo K, Hiraga A, Kai M, Yamaya Y, Wagner PD.Exercise in normal human subjects causes deterioration of matching of ventilation to blood flow in the lungs, but only in about 50% of those examined. A previous study (Wagner et al. 1989) of 5 horses showed no significant worsening of ventilation/blood flow (VA/Q) relationships during heavy exercise as determined by multiple inert gas elimination technique (MIGET). Because of the small number of horses in that study and the 50% human incidence of exercise induced VA/Q mismatch, we studied an additional 6 Thoroughbreds, comparing VA/Q relationships at the walk (1.4 m/s, 0 degrees incline) and ...
Enhanced sensitivity to neutralizing antibodies in a variant of equine infectious anemia virus is linked to amino acid substitutions in the surface unit envelope glycoprotein.
Journal of virology    March 1, 1995   Volume 69, Issue 3 1493-1499 doi: 10.1128/JVI.69.3.1493-1499.1995
Cook RF, Berger SL, Rushlow KE, McManus JM, Cook SJ, Harrold S, Raabe ML, Montelaro RC, Issel CJ.Serial passage of the prototype (PR) cell-adapted Wyoming strain of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) in fetal donkey dermal (FDD) rather than fetal horse (designated fetal equine kidney [FEK]) cell cultures resulted in the generation of a variant virus strain which produced accelerated cytopathic effects in FDD cells and was 100- to 1,000-fold more sensitive to neutralizing antibodies than its parent. This neutralization-sensitive variant was designated the FDD strain. Although there were differences in glycosylation between the PR and FDD strains, passage of the FDD virus in FEK cells di...
Distribution of inspired gas to each lung in the anaesthetised horse and influence of body shape.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 2 110-116 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb03045.x
Moens Y, Lagerweij E, Gootjes P, Poortman J.The distribution of inspired gas to each lung, time constants of the lungs and parameters of gas exchange were studied in 2 groups of horses (mean bwt 606 kg), anaesthetised using thiopentone and chloral hydrate and breathing room air. One group (n = 4) had a downward curved abdominal contour (round-bellied) and the other group (n = 4) had an upward curved abdominal contour (flat-bellied). An equal distribution of inspired gas between the lungs existed in both groups in dorsal recumbency. Flat-bellied horses maintained this equal distribution in lateral recumbency whereas in round-bellied hors...
An 80-kDa syncytiotrophoblast alloantigen bound to maternal alloantibody in term placenta.
American journal of reproductive immunology (New York, N.Y. : 1989)    March 1, 1995   Volume 33, Issue 3 213-220 doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0897.1995.tb00887.x
Jalali GR, Rezai A, Underwood JL, Mowbray JF, Surridge SH, Allen WR, Matthias S.We have shown that most of the IgG present on term syncytiotrophoblast, membrane, microvesicles is bound to an 80 kDa protein antigen (R80K). Methods: Microvesicles were prepared from term human placenta, and the IgG eluted at pH3. Results: When IgG antibody was eluted at pH3 and reacted with acid-treated vesicles of other placentae, the alloantibody always bound to the preparation from which it was obtained, but only to about 10% of acid-treated preparations from other placentae. A similar polymorphic protein found in association with IgG antibody was found in term horse placentae. Cross-reac...
Capillary-tissue arrangement in the skeletal muscle optimized for oxygen transport in all mammals.
Microvascular research    March 1, 1995   Volume 49, Issue 2 163-179 doi: 10.1006/mvre.1995.1013
Baba K, Kawamura T, Shibata M, Sohirad M, Kamiya A.The aim of this computer simulation study is to evaluate the efficiency of capillary networks in the skeletal muscle for oxygen (O2) delivery to tissue for all mammals. This was performed by: (1) employing Krogh's cylinder model for the capillary-tissue system and the minimum volume model for the vascular system, (2) allometrically assessing the muscle blood flow and O2 consumption rate (the main input data) in the resting and exercising states as power functions of body weight from the data reported for several mammals, and (3) calculating the cost-performance of the system from the ratio (ma...
D-glucose transport and glycolytic enzyme activities in erythrocytes of dogs, pigs, cats, horses, cattle and sheep.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1995   Volume 58, Issue 2 195-196 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(95)90078-0
Arai T, Washizu T, Sagara M, Sako T, Nigi H, Matsumoto H, Sasaki M, Tomoda I.The activities of D-glucose transport (D-GT) and the glycolytic enzymes hexokinase (HK) and pyruvate kinase (PK), were measured in the erythrocytes of dogs, pigs, cats, horses, cattle and sheep. The erythrocytes of dogs had the highest activities of D-GT, HK and PK, significantly higher than the activities in the erythrocytes of the herbivores. The activities of D-GT and HK in cat erythrocytes were significantly lower than in those of dogs. The differences between the activities of D-GT in the erythrocytes of the different species followed the differences in activities of HK but not those in t...
Regulation of granule size in human and horse eosinophils by number of fusion events among unit granules.
The Journal of physiology    February 15, 1995   Volume 483 ( Pt 1), Issue Pt 1 201-209 doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1995.sp020578
Hartmann J, Scepek S, Lindau M.1. We have investigated the granule size distributions in human and horse eosinophils by time-resolved patch-clamp capacitance measurements. 2. During exocytosis of single granules the electrical capacitance of the plasma membrane increases in discrete steps. The steps in horse cells are about six times larger than those in human cells in accordance with the difference in granule size. 3. In both species a multimodal capacitance step size distribution is observed with a first peak at 6-7 fF corresponding to granules with a diameter of about 450-500 nm and a surface area of about 0.7 microns2, ...
The proximal ligand variant His93Tyr of horse heart myoglobin.
Biochemistry    February 14, 1995   Volume 34, Issue 6 1997-2005 doi: 10.1021/bi00006a021
Hildebrand DP, Burk DL, Maurus R, Ferrer JC, Brayer GD, Mauk AG.The spectroscopic and structural properties of the His93Tyr variant of horse heart myoglobin have been studied to assess the effects of replacing the proximal His residue of this protein with a tyrosyl residue as occurs in catalases from various sources. The variant in the ferric form exhibits electronic spectra that are independent of pH between pH 7 and 10, and it exhibits changes in absorption maxima and intensity that are consistent with a five-coordinate heme iron center at the active site. The EPR spectrum of the variant is that of a high-spin, rhombic system similar to that reported for...
Morphology and location of attached follicular cumulus-oocyte complexes in horses, cattle and llamas.
Theriogenology    February 1, 1995   Volume 43, Issue 3 533-542 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(94)00058-3
Del Campo MR, Del Campo CH, Mapletoft RJ, Ginther OJ.Morphology and location of the attached cumulus-oocyte complex (COC) were studied in slaughter-house ovaries in horses (49 follicles, 9 to 44 mm), cattle (68 follicles, 6 to 18 mm), and llamas (38 follicles, 3 to 14 mm). The expected point of ovulation was marked, using the ovulation fossa in mares and the center of the projecting follicular surface in cattle and llamas. A follicle was dissected from an ovary, and tissue was removed from the follicle until the COC became visible by transillumination. However, most llama follicles protruded prominently from the ovarian surface so that dissectio...
Plasmid profiles of Klebsiella pneumoniae isolated from horses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    February 1, 1995   Volume 57, Issue 1 113-115 doi: 10.1292/jvms.57.113
Kikuchi N, Blakeslee JR, Hiramune T.Plasmid profiles of Klebsiella pneumoniae isolated from horses were examined. Thirty-nine strains of K. pneumoniae capsular type 1 (K1) isolated from cervical swabs of mares suffering from metritis, and from semen of stallions showed similar plasmid profile patterns, and all strains possessed a 125 megadaltons (Md) plasmid. There was no difference in plasmid profiles between the heavily-encapsulated and the less heavily-encapsulated strains of K. pneumoniae K1. Non-capsulated variants derived from the strains of K1 showed the same plasmid profile pattern as the parent strains. Plasmid profiles...
Validation of the shrinkage temperature of animal tissue for bioprosthetic heart valve application by differential scanning calorimetry.
Biomaterials    February 1, 1995   Volume 16, Issue 3 251-258 doi: 10.1016/0142-9612(95)92125-p
Loke WK, Khor E.Shrinkage temperature is most often used to report the degree of cross-linking in glutaraldehyde-fixed animal tissue for use in bioprosthetic heart valve fabrication. Present practice utilizes the measurement of hydrothermal shrinkage observed when a sample is subjected to a temperature programme. This measurement at best gives a general indication of the efficiency of the treatment, i.e. the extent of cross-linking in the tissue. When differential scanning calorimetry has been used, the ambiguity arising from the scant reporting of the protocols used does not permit easy comparison of experim...
Clinical, virological and serological responses of donkeys to intranasal inoculation with the KY-84 strain of equine arteritis virus.
Journal of comparative pathology    February 1, 1995   Volume 112, Issue 2 207-211 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(05)80062-3
McCollum WH, Timoney PJ, Tengelsen LA.The clinical, virological and serological responses of seven female donkeys (Equus asinus) to inoculation with the KY-84 strain of equine arteritis virus (EAV), a strain that causes moderate to severe clinical signs in horses, was investigated. In the donkeys, the only clinical signs observed were fever (mainly 3-9 days after inoculation), mild depression in four animals, and a slight nasal or ocular discharge in three. All of the donkeys became infected with EAV as shown by recovery of the virus for periods of up to 14 days from the nasopharynx and buffy coat and, in three out of four donkeys...
Characterisation of a membrane receptor on ruminants and equine platelets and peripheral blood leukocytes similar to the human integrin receptor glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (CD41/61).
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    February 1, 1995   Volume 44, Issue 3-4 359-368 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(94)05310-o
Pintado CO, Friend M, Llanes D.This paper describes two anti-glycoprotein IIb/IIIa or CD41/61 murine monoclonal antibodies (Co.35E4 and Co.2oA1). The cellular distribution and apparent molecular weight of the antigen detected by these antibodies is consistent with their reaction with ruminant and equine glycoprotein IIb/IIIa. Biochemical analysis of the equine molecule using sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) revealed bands of 24, 100 and 110 kDa under reducing conditions and 115 and 80 kDa under nonreducing conditions. Biochemical analysis of ruminant antigen revealed that the 24 kDa band...
Ontogeny and ultradian rhythms of adrenocorticotropin and cortisol in the late-gestation fetal horse.
The Journal of endocrinology    February 1, 1995   Volume 144, Issue 2 271-283 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1440271
Cudd TA, LeBlanc M, Silver M, Norman W, Madison J, Keller-Wood M, Wood CE.Fetal maturation and the timing of parturition in both sheep and primates are thought to be controlled by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis but little is known about the endocrinology of the equine fetus. We investigated the ontogeny of plasma concentrations of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), cortisol and corticosteroid binding capacity in the late-gestation fetal horse. We also wished to determine whether there is ultradian rhythmic release of ACTH and cortisol in fetal horses and we compared fetuses to maternal and non-pregnant adult horses. Six fetuses, 278-304 days gestation (ter...
Electrostatics of hemoglobins from measurements of the electric dichroism and computer simulations.
Biophysical journal    February 1, 1995   Volume 68, Issue 2 655-664 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80226-2
Antosiewicz J, Porschke D.Hemoglobins from normal human cells, from sickle cells, and from horse were investigated by electrooptical methods in their oxy and deoxy forms. The reduced linear dichroism measured as a function of the electric field strength demonstrates the existence of permanent dipole moments in the range of 250-400 Debye units. The reduced limiting dichroism is relatively small (< or = 0.1); it is negative for hemoglobin from sickle cells and positive for the hemoglobins from normal human cells and from horse. The dichroism decay time constants are in the range from about 55 to 90 ns. Calculations of th...
The effects of three models of airway disease on tidal breathing flow-volume loops of thoroughbred horses.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 6 517-527 doi: 10.1007/BF01839340
Guthrie AJ, Beadle RE, Bateman RD, White CE.The effects of histamine and methacholine aerosols and of a fixed inspiratory resistance on tidal breathing flow-volume loops (TBFVL) were investigated using 18 unsedated, standing, healthy thoroughbred horses. The data were first analysed using traditional flow-volume loop indices and then reduced using standardized factor scoring coefficients obtained in a previous study in this laboratory using similar experimental techniques. On the basis of resting TBFVL analysis, the degree of pulmonary dysfunction caused by inhalation of histamine and methacholine aerosols with concentrations of 10 and ...
Meniscus lesions in man and horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 1 6 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb03022.x
Dandy DJ.No abstract available
The complete cDNA and deduced amino acid sequence of equine IgE.
Molecular immunology    January 1, 1995   Volume 32, Issue 1 1-8 doi: 10.1016/0161-5890(94)00143-o
Navarro P, Barbis DP, Antczak D, Butler JE.The cDNA from a transcript encoding the complete heavy chain of the equine immunoglobulin IgE has been cloned and sequenced. A fragment of the equine epsilon gene was amplified from cDNA using PCR and this fragment was then used to probe a horse cDNA library prepared from peripheral blood lymphocytes. A recombinant clone containing the cDNA encoding the complete horse epsilon chain and its associated V-D-J and leader, was subsequently isolated and sequenced. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence of equine IgE with the C epsilon heavy chains of other species indicates it to be most simi...
A new GC allele in horses.
Hereditas    January 1, 1995   Volume 122, Issue 1 91-93 doi: 10.1111/j.1601-5223.1995.00091.x
Ouragh L, Juneja RK, Bengtsson S.No abstract available
Molecular analysis of an XY mare with gonadal dysgenesis.
Hereditas    January 1, 1995   Volume 122, Issue 2 109-112 doi: 10.1111/j.1601-5223.1995.00109.x
Pailhoux E, Cribiu EP, Parma P, Cotinot C.In this study, cytogenetic analysis of an infertile mare revealed a 64, XY karyotype. The XY sex-reversed animal had a female phenotype with gonadal dysgenesis. Using Southern blot analysis, we tested for the presence of two Y-specific genes SRY and ZFY by using DNA isolated from peripheral blood leukocytes. The results showed that at least the DNA-binding domain of the SRY gene was deleted from the Y chromosome of the XY mare but that the ZFY gene was present on this chromosome.
[Differentiation between glanders and melioidosis].
Klinicheskaia laboratornaia diagnostika    January 1, 1995   Issue 1 47-48 
Dunaev GS, Lobanov AN, Larionov GM, Britanova AL.No abstract available
The comparison of pepsin and trypsin action on goat, cow, mare and human caseins.
Roczniki Akademii Medycznej w Bialymstoku (1995)    January 1, 1995   Volume 40, Issue 3 486-493 
Jasińska B.The degree of proteolysis of micellar caseins of human, goat's, mare's and two breeds (Black&White and Red Polish) of cow's milk was compared for pepsin and trypsin action in vitro. Human and goat's caseins were hydrolysed in 100% and 96%, respectively, mare's casein--92%, Black&White cow's casein--90%, Red Polish cow's casein--76%. The differences can be related to the micelle structure, especially to the prevalence of beta casein in the human and goat's casein. The significant dissimilarity between the two breeds of investigated cows is surprising and indicates a different geometry o...