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.
Effects of season and lower ambient temperature on the structure of the sweat glands in anhidrotic horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 59-65 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02090.x
Jenkinson DM, Loney C, Elder HY, Montgomery I, Mason DK.Histological studies of the sweat glands of anhidrotic horses in the Hong Kong summer and under conditions of reduced thermal stress, both natural and controlled, were undertaken to determine if glandular regeneration occurs. Clinical data were collected for comparison with the histological results in each instance. Horses were assigned to one of three categories on the basis of the resulting change in the number of thin glandular profiles in a cooler environment. Group 1, which was classed as normal, had a low initial value, which was maintained. Group 2, typical of mild and moderately affect...
Enzymatic deacylations of esterified saccharides–III. Comparison of de-esterifications by serum esterases from different sources.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1989   Volume 92, Issue 4 681-684 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(89)90249-6
Tomić S, Sesartić L, Tomasić J.1. 14C-labelled methyl 2,6-di-O-pivaloyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (1) was used as a substrate for esterases from rabbit, guinea pig, mouse, donkey, pig, horse, sheep and human sera. 2. Stepwise de-esterification of the diester substrate 1 occurred with rabbit, guinea pig and mouse serum. Data on time-course experiments and kinetic data are reported. 3. The use of donkey, pig, horse, sheep and human serum led to the migration of the 2-O-pivaloyl group in substrate 1 to the position 4- in the sugar molecule, followed by stepwise de-esterifications of both 1 and the newly formed methyl 4,6-di-O-pi...
Simulation of quadrupedal locomotion using a rigid body model.
Journal of biomechanics    January 1, 1989   Volume 22, Issue 1 33-41 doi: 10.1016/0021-9290(89)90182-6
van den Bogert AJ, Schamhardt HC, Crowe A.Locomotion of the horse is simulated using a mathematical model based on rigid body dynamics. A general method to generate the equations of motion for a two-dimensional rigid body model with an arbitrary number of hinge joints is presented and a numerical solution method, restricted to tree-structured models, is described. Joint movements originating from muscular forces or moments are simulated, but the method also allows that parts of the model follow strictly the pattern of kinematic data. Moment-generators with first-order linear feedback were used as a rotational muscle-equivalent. Ground...
Radiographic measurement from the lateromedial projection of the equine foot with navicular disease.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1989   Volume 46, Issue 1 15-21 
Verschooten F, Roels J, Lampo P, Desmet P, De Moor A, Picavet T.Radiographic measurements from the lateromedial projection of the equine foot were compared in three groups of horses. Group 1 consisted of 143 normal horses, group 2 were 60 horses with clinical navicular disease and group 3 were 161 horses with clinical and radiographic navicular disease. Several measurements tended to be larger in group 3 than group 1. An enlargement of the navicular bone was observed in proximodistal and dorsopalmar directions. Partial enlargement of the pedal bone was observed in groups 2 and 3. Few differences were observed between age classes. All horses aged four years...
Fat cell size in various body region. A statistical analysis in Equus caballus.
Anatomischer Anzeiger    January 1, 1989   Volume 169, Issue 5 351-366 
Bianchi M.In 13 horses from both sexes, between 5 months and 18 years of age, in good nutritional state, statistical evaluations of fat cell sizes were performed in 16 body regions. From direct and indirect measurements referred to the cell diameter and cell number in equivalent areas, carried out on sections from paraffin embedded material and on preparations of dissociated whole cells, it emerged that the adipose cells of the subserous fat of the abdominal floor are consistently the largest, whereas those of the orbital fat body and supraorbital fossa are the smallest. In the other regions the cells h...
Resistance of mammalian red blood cells of different size to hypertonic milieu.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. A, Comparative physiology    January 1, 1989   Volume 93, Issue 2 429-432 doi: 10.1016/0300-9629(89)90061-3
Betticher DC, Geiser J.1. The resistance of different mammalian red blood cells (RBCs) to hyperosmotic environments was studied. RBCs of six mammalian species were exposed to 10 increasingly hyperosmotic NaCl solutions for 24 hr at 5 degrees C. 2. The osmolality at which the amount of liberated haemoglobin reached a preset level (e.g. 3-4% of the total haemoglobin) showed a linear correlation with negative slope with RBC volume. This indicates that small RBCs are more resistant to hyperosmotic milieu than large ones. 3. A similar relation can be found from literature data when maximal urinary tonicities are plotted ...
Alleviation of postanesthetic hypoxemia in the horse.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1989   Volume 30, Issue 1 37-41 
McMurphy RM, Cribb PH.This study was designed to investigate the effect of the nasotracheal insufflation of oxygen at a flow rate of 15 L/min on the arterial partial pressure of oxygen during the recovery period following inhalation anesthesia in the horse. It has been stated that this is a suitable flow rate to prevent postoperative hypoxemia but without any experimental evidence to support those statements. Horses being used for the study of healing of cartilage were anesthetized on two separate occasions. Following one period of anesthesia they were allowed to recover breathing room air, and following the other ...
Use of high-speed cinematography and computer generated gait diagrams for the study of equine hindlimb kinematics.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 48-58 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02089.x
Kobluk CN, Schnurr D, Horney FD, Sumner-Smith G, Willoughby RA, Dekleer V, Hearn TC.High-speed cinematography with computer aided analysis was used to study equine hindlimb kinematics. Eight horses were filmed at the trot or the pace. Filming was done from the side (lateral) and the back (caudal). Parameters measured from the lateral filming included the heights of the tuber coxae and tailhead, protraction and retraction of the hoof and angular changes of the tarsus and stifle. Abduction and adduction of the limb and tarsal height changes were measured from the caudal filming. The maximum and minimum values plus the standard deviations and coefficients of variations are prese...
The nature of embryo reduction in mares with twin conceptuses: deprivation hypothesis.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 1 45-53 
Ginther OJ.Ultrasonography was used to determine whether there is embryo reduction in mares with unilaterally fixed twins when a major portion of the vascularized area of the wall of one of the embryonic vesicles is in apposition with the wall of the adjacent vesicle, rather than with the endometrium (deprivation hypothesis). In addition, the effect of ovulatory pattern (synchronous and asynchronous) on the incidence of embryo reduction was studied. Twin vesicles were ultrasonically detected on days 11 to 15 (ovulation = day 0) and were examined daily until there was embryo reduction or until day 40. In ...
Serum vitamin E and blood glutathione peroxidase values of horses with degenerative myeloencephalopathy.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 1 166-168 
Dill SG, Kallfelz FA, deLahunta A, Waldron CH.Serum vitamin E and blood glutathione peroxidase values were determined in 40 horses with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of degenerative myeloencephalopathy and in 49 age-matched control horses with normal neurologic function. Significant differences were not detected in serum vitamin E or blood glutathione peroxidase values between horses affected with degenerative myeloencephalopathy and control horses. These findings fail to support a reported role of vitamin E deficiency as a cause of equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy.
Membrane viscosity of lymphocytes and influence of phytohemagglutinin.
Biorheology    January 1, 1989   Volume 26, Issue 1 45-54 doi: 10.3233/bir-1989-26104
Tajima M, Araiso T, Koyama T, Fujinaga T, Otomo K, Koike T.The membrane viscosity of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) of equine, bovine and canine was measured by the use of time-resolved fluorescence depolarization technique with 1, 6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH). The viscosity values were 0.55, 0.59 and 0.50 poise for equine, bovine and canine PBLs, respectively. These values were compared with steady-state anisotropies and order parameters measured from electron spin resonance (ESR) of 5-doxyl stearic acid. Both values were increased with increase of viscosity. The fluid property of the membranes stimulated with phytohemagglutinin-P (PHA) was...
Spinal hyperostosis in comparative pathology. A useful approach to the concept.
Skeletal radiology    January 1, 1989   Volume 18, Issue 2 99-107 doi: 10.1007/BF00350656
Lagier R.Spinal hyperostosis, an anatomical and radiological concept primarily described in man, is characterized by enthesopathic bony overgrowth on vertebral bodies in the form of spurs or intervertebral bridges. It can also be part of a more diffuse enthesopathic condition, including the appendicular skeleton. These changes are distinct from those of osteoarthrosis. Similar changes can be observed in all kinds of mammals, independent of their type of locomotion (bipodic, quadrumanous, quadrupedic, or aquatic). An anatomical and radiological study is presented of six cases (with histological examinat...
Biochemical evidence that equine leucocyte antigens W13, W22 and W23 are present on horse major histocompatibility complex class II molecules.
Animal genetics    January 1, 1989   Volume 20, Issue 4 415-420 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1989.tb00897.x
Hesford F, Lazary S, Curty-Hänni K, Gerber H.A number of horse alloantisera were characterized biochemically as being directed against MHC class I or class II antigens by immunoprecipitation of the corresponding antigens from lysates of biosynthetically radioactively labelled lymphocytes and determination of their molecular weights by SDS-PAGE and fluorography. Sera recognizing A2 and A3 specificities precipitated antigens of 44,000 Daltons molecular weight (class I heavy chain), whereas sera with specificities W13, W22 and W23 precipitated antigens corresponding to class II dimers (30,000 and 32,000 Daltons). Comparison with antigens pr...
Urogenital paraneurons in several mammals.
Archives of histology and cytology    January 1, 1989   Volume 52 Suppl 403-413 doi: 10.1679/aohc.52.suppl_403
Cecio A, Vittoria A.Amines and/or peptide-producing cells, deserving to be called paraneurons, were demonstrated in the urethro-prostatic complex of the man, rabbit, buffalo and sheep and in the uterine horns of the pig, horse and mouse, by means of histochemical, immunohistochemical, immunofluorescent and double labeling immunofluorescent techniques. In particular, the urethro-prostatic complex of the sheep contains cells producing serotonin, chromogranin A and somatostatin. Often the amine and the "marker"-protein were colocalized in the same cells. Chromogranin A- and somatostatin-containing cells were found i...
Isolation of granulocytes and mononuclear cells from the blood of dogs, cats, horses and cattle.
Veterinary clinical pathology    January 1, 1989   Volume 18, Issue 2 33-36 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-165x.1989.tb00510.x
Weiss DJ, Kraemer R, Schmit K.A simple discontinuous Percoll density-gradient technique was adapted for isolation of granulocytes and mononuclear cells from cats, dogs, horses and cattle. Separation was accomplished at low speeds using a standard tabletop centrifuge. Cell purity was 100% for both granulocytes and mononuclear cells and cell viability exceeded 95%. Percent recovery of leukocytes ranged from 69 to 83%.
Survival of day-4 embryos from young, normal mares and aged, subfertile mares after transfer to normal recipient mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    January 1, 1989   Volume 85, Issue 1 187-194 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0850187
Ball BA, Little TV, Weber JA, Woods GL.The estimated embryonic loss rate between Days 4 and 14 after ovulation for young, normal mares (9%) was significantly lower (P less than 0.01) than the estimated embryonic loss rate for aged subfertile mares (62%). Fertilization rates, which were based on the recovery of embryos at Day 4 after ovulation, were 96% and 81% (P less than 0.1) for normal and subfertile mares, respectively. Day-4 embryos were collected from the oviducts of normal and subfertile donors mares. These embryos were transferred to the uteri of synchronized, normal recipient mares to test the hypothesis that the high inci...
A comparative study on acetyl-CoA synthesising enzymes in spinal cord from cows, horses and pigs.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. C, Comparative pharmacology and toxicology    January 1, 1989   Volume 93, Issue 2 201-206 doi: 10.1016/0742-8413(89)90221-1
Björkman C.1. Comparative data are presented of the activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and acetyl-CoA synthetase and of the acetate content in homogenates from ventral grey matter in spinal cord from cows and two non-ruminant species, pigs and horses. The methods used in the study are evaluated and discussed. 2. The total pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity was 24.9-29.9 mU/mg protein and did not differ between the species. The part of the complex that was in active form at the sampling occasion was 60, 85 and 95% in cows, pigs and horses, respectively. 3. Acetyl-CoA synthetase activity dif...
Evolution of the herpes thymidine kinase: identification and comparison of the equine herpesvirus 1 thymidine kinase gene reveals similarity to a cell-encoded thymidylate kinase.
Nucleic acids research    December 9, 1988   Volume 16, Issue 23 11303-11317 doi: 10.1093/nar/16.23.11303
Robertson GR, Whalley JM.We have identified the equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) thymidine kinase gene (TK) by DNA-mediated transformation and by DNA sequencing. Alignment of the amino acid sequence of the EHV-1 TK with the TKs from 3 other herpesviruses revealed regions of homology, some of which correspond to the previously identified substrate binding sites, while others have as yet, no assigned function. In particular, the strict conservation of an aspartate within the proposed nucleoside binding site suggests a role in ATP binding for this residue. Comparison of 5 herpes TKs with the thymidylate kinase of yeast revea...
Comparison of sensory nerve conduction velocities in horses versus ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2138-2142 
Blythe LL, Engel HN, Rowe KE.Normal sensory nerve conduction velocity (SNCV) values in 8 ponies and 8 horses were compared by use of a percutaneous signal-averaging technique. Nerve fibers evaluated included those in the medial and lateral palmar and plantar digital nerves. Mean SNCV values were significantly slower (P less than 0.0002) for horses, compared with those values for ponies. Animal height and nerve segment length were inversely related to SNCV consistently. The SNCV values were affected by surface skin temperature by a factor of approximately 1.2 m/s change for 1 degree C change in temperatures from 35 C. The ...
Do the cardiac glands exist? 4. The horse.
Okajimas folia anatomica Japonica    December 1, 1988   Volume 65, Issue 5 245-253 doi: 10.2535/ofaj1936.65.5_245
Imai M, Shibata T, Moriguchi K.No abstract available
Evolution of tooth structure in the Equoidea.
The Journal of Nihon University School of Dentistry    December 1, 1988   Volume 30, Issue 4 287-296 doi: 10.2334/josnusd1959.30.287
Kozawa Y, Mishima H, Sakae T.During the evolution of the Equoidea, the histological structures of the teeth have become more complex as the molars have become hypsodont in form. The straight Hunter-Schreger bands of Hiracotherium have evolved into a more complex pattern in Equus. The enamel prisms changed from an arched form (about 5μm in diameter) with an alternating pattern in Hiracotherium to an oval form (about 2 μm width) arranged in straight rows in Equus. In Equus the rows of prisms are separated by interprismatic sheets. This pattern may have increased the architectural strength of the enamel, and is related to ...
Identification of Highlands J virus from a Florida horse.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    December 1, 1988   Volume 39, Issue 6 603-606 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1988.39.603
Karabatsos N, Lewis AL, Calisher CH, Hunt AR, Roehrig JT.A virus, strain 64A-1519, isolated from the brain of a horse dying of encephalitis in Florida in 1964, was identified as western equine encephalomyelitis (WEE) virus. Recently, we used polyclonal and monoclonal immune reagents to identify this isolate by comparing it to 2 strains of WEE virus and to Highlands J (HJ) virus in hemagglutination-inhibition, immunofluorescent antibody, and plaque-reduction neutralization tests. These tests demonstrate that strain 64A-1519 is a strain of HJ virus distinct from WEE virus.
Some factors affecting isolation of Clostridium tetani from human and animal stools.
The Japanese journal of experimental medicine    December 1, 1988   Volume 58, Issue 6 233-241 
Ebisawa I, Takayanagi M, Kigawa M.Clostridium tetani was isolated from human and animal stools at the following rates [95% confidence interval (CI)]: Human, 0% (1.5-0); horse, 1% (5-0); cow in cowshed, 4% (10-1); cow in pasture, 8.3% (17-1), calf in pasture, 0% (7-0); dog, 2% (11-0) and sheep in pasture, 25% (44-14). Quantification of C. tetani in 16 animal stools positive for the bacillus was impossible in most cases, as the number of tetanus bacilli present was not large enough for this purpose. Contaminating anaerobic and facultative anaerobic bacteria in human and animal stools, i.e., C. perfringens and Streptococcus sp., ...
Hereditary junctional mechanobullous disease in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1988   Volume 193, Issue 11 1420-1424 
Frame SR, Harrington DD, Fessler J, Frame PF.Mechanobullous disease was diagnosed in a male Belgian foal that had sloughed hooves at 30 hours and at 6 and 12 days of age. Histologic and electron microscopic studies disclosed that lesions were the result of separation of the basal epithelial cell layer from the lamina densa of the basement membrane zone along the lamina lucida. Results of immunofluorescence on tissue specimens were negative for immunoglobulin deposition. The breeding history of the foal's dam indicated that the foal was produced from breeding of the mare to its full sibling stallion. This same mare had produced a female f...
Studies on the effect of short term, high dose praziquantel treatment against protoscoleces of ovine and equine Echinococcus granulosus within the cyst, and in vitro. Richards KS, Riley EM, Taylor DH, Morris DL.Protoscoleces of Echinococcus granulosus were subjected to high concentrations of praziquantel (10-1000 micrograms/ml medium or cyst fluid) for a short, 10 min duration in vitro or in situ within cysts. Drug efficacy was then monitored either by in vitro culture in drug-free medium and/or by passage into rodents. The in vitro test of effectiveness suggested that ovine-derived protoscoleces were more sensitive than those of equine origin, and that the in vitro method of treatment was more successful than that performed in situ. However, the subsequent passage of treated protoscoleces, whether i...
Communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2161-2164 
Ford TS, Ross MW, Orsini PG.To study communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints of the horse, 50 forelimbs were obtained from fresh cadaver specimens. Blue latex solution (20 +/- 2.5 ml) was injected into the middle carpal joint, and the specimens were frozen in extension. Frozen specimens were cut into 1-cm sagittal sections from the middle of the radius to the middle of the metacarpus. The communications between the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints and the presence, length, and position of the distopalmar outpouchings of the carpometacarpal joint were recorded. The middle carp...
Effect of phenytoin on the clinical signs and in vitro muscle twitch characteristics in horses with chronic intermittent rhabdomyolysis and myotonia.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2130-2133 
Beech J, Fletcher JE, Lizzo F, Johnston J.In vitro twitch characteristics of the semimembranosus muscle were evaluated in 9 clinically normal horses, in 15 horses with chronic intermittent rhabdomyolysis (CIR) and in 2 horses with myotonia. Effects of phenytoin on in vitro muscle twitch and clinical signs of CIR and myotonia were evaluated in these same horses. Times to 90% relaxation were prolonged in the horses with CIR (mean +/- SEM, 186 +/- 5.9 ms) and in 2 horses with myotonia (197 and 177 ms) compared with those in clinically normal horses (mean +/- SEM, 146 +/- 2.1 ms). Horses with CIR also had significantly (P less than 0.05) ...
Mitochondrial size and shape in equine skeletal muscle: a three-dimensional reconstruction study.
The Anatomical record    December 1, 1988   Volume 222, Issue 4 333-339 doi: 10.1002/ar.1092220405
Kayar SR, Hoppeler H, Mermod L, Weibel ER.Individual mitochondria were reconstructed from ultrathin serial sections of selected muscle fibers in the M. semitendinosus of a horse, over a length of nearly two sarcomeres. Mitochondria were found to be highly variable, with size and complexity of single mitochondria increasing with the fractional part of a fiber occupied by mitochondria. In fibers with a mitochondrial volume density of less than 4%, corresponding to the mitochondrial content of fast-twitch glycolytic fibers, mitochondria were generally rather simple cylindrical shapes, oriented parallel to the myofibrils. In fibers with a...
The accuracy of three different heart rate meters used for studies in the exercising horse.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    November 1, 1988   Volume 35, Issue 9 665-672 
Sloet van Oldruitenborgh-Oosterbaan MM, van den Hoven R, Breukink HJ.No abstract available
An immunochemical demonstration of a pregnancy-specific protein in the horse and its use in the serological detection of early pregnancy.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1988   Volume 84, Issue 2 431-436 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0840431
Lea RG, Bolton AE.Two-dimensional crossed immunoelectrophoresis of sera from pregnant and non-pregnant horses, using antisera developed against early pregnant mare serum, revealed the presence of two immunologically related proteins one of which appeared to be specific to the pregnant state. This pregnancy-specific protein had beta 2-electrophoretic mobility and was first detectable at Day 6 after successful mating with a stallion. The second protein had gamma 2-electrophoretic mobility and was present in sera from pregnant and non-pregnant horses. The proteins were termed beta 2-horse pregnancy protein and gam...