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.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycan from human and equine glomeruli and tubules.
The International journal of biochemistry    January 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 12 1391-1400 doi: 10.1016/s0020-711x(98)90007-6
van den Heuvel LP, Veerkamp JH, Monnens LA, Schröder CH.1. Proteoglycans were isolated from human and equine glomeruli or tubules by guanidine extraction and anion exchange chromatography. 2. These proteoglycan preparations contained about equal amounts of heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfates. 3. During the preparation of glomerular or tubular basement membranes the main part of proteoglycans (greater than 50%) was extracted in the salt extract. Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan was mainly found in the water and salt extracts of glomeruli and tubules, heparan sulfate proteoglycan in the deoxycholate extracts and the basement membranes. 4. The gl...
Asinine herpesvirus genomes: comparison with those of the equine herpesviruses.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1988   Volume 101, Issue 3-4 183-190 doi: 10.1007/BF01310999
Browning GF, Ficorilli N, Studdert MJ.Two previously unknown and distinct herpesviruses were isolated from donkeys. One, with the characteristics of a betaherpesvirus, was isolated from the leukocytes of an apparently healthy donkey, while the second, an alphaherpesvirus, was recovered from the nasal cavity of donkeys given high doses of corticosteroids, and caused rhinitis in two seronegative weanling donkeys when they were intranasally infected. Few, if any, restriction endonuclease fragments were shared by the donkey betaherpesvirus, equine herpesvirus 2 (EHV 2) or EHV 5, a second distinctly different equine betaherpesvirus, no...
Restriction fragment length polymorphisms of horse class II MHC genes observed using various human alpha- and beta-chain cDNA probes.
Animal genetics    January 1, 1988   Volume 19, Issue 4 395-408 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1988.tb00831.x
Hänni K, Hesford F, Lazary S, Gerber H.Genomic DNA isolated from 20 horses was digested with up to six restriction endonucleases and subjected to southern blot hybridization analysis using various human class II alpha- and beta-chain cDNA probes. A high degree of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) was found for the DQ alpha, DP beta, DQ beta and DR beta probes, about 20 polymorphic bands being detected for each. DR alpha showed 2-4 polymorphic bands, whereas no evidence for DP alpha-like genes was found. A number of correlations of RFLPs with individual alloantisera were apparent.
Effects of halothane anesthesia on the clearance of gentamicin sulfate in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 1 19-22 
Smith CM, Steffey EP, Baggot JD, Dunlop CI, Farver TB.Inhalation anesthetics decrease the clearance of some drugs that are eliminated by renal excretion. The purpose of the study reported here was to investigate the effects of halothane anesthesia on the pharmacokinetics and urinary excretion of gentamicin sulfate, using the horse as a model. Using a crossover design, pharmacokinetic values after a single IV dose of gentamicin (4 mg/kg) were compared in halothane-anesthetized and unanesthetized horses. Compared with unanesthetized horses, the anesthetized horses had significant decreases in total body clearance (P less than 0.01) and apparent vol...
O2 transport in the horse during rest and exercise.
Advances in experimental medicine and biology    January 1, 1988   Volume 227 333-336 doi: 10.1007/978-1-4684-5481-9_30
Landgren GL, Gillespie JR, Fedde MR, Jones BW, Pieschl RL, Wagner PD.We studied mechanisms of O2 transport in 6 adult (2-5 year old) horses at rest and during steady-state exercise on a treadmill (0% slope) at 12 m/s (a submaximal gallop). Oxygen consumption was measured using an open-flow system. Arterial and mixed venous blood samples were simultaneously obtained for measurement of O2 content and hemoglobin concentration. VO2 increased from 1.5 +/- 0.2 L/min at rest to 46.2 +/- 4.8 L/min during exercise. HR increased from a resting value of 36.9 +/- 2.5 bpm to 196.5 +/- 10.9 bpm and the arterio-venous O2 content difference (a-v O2) increased from 4.2 +/- 0.8 ...
Uterine contractions in nonpregnant and early pregnant mares and jennies as determined by ultrasonography.
Journal of animal science    January 1, 1988   Volume 66, Issue 1 250-254 doi: 10.2527/jas1988.661250x
Cross DT, Ginther OJ.Uterine contractions in 8 nonpregnant and 13 pregnant mares were studied using ultrasonography. A 1-min video tape recording was made of longitudinal real-time images of the uterine body. An overall uterine contractile activity score (0 = no or minimal activity to 4 = maximal activity) was assigned to each video tape segment. There was a day effect (P less than .01) and an interaction (P less than .01) of reproductive status X day. Uterine activity scores were highest on d 14 to d 18 (d 0 = day of ovulation) for nonpregnant mares and on d 10 to d 14 for pregnant mares. Uterine activity scores ...
The use of H(orse) INDEX: a method of analysing the ground reaction force patterns of lame and normal gaited horses at the walk.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 1 29-36 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01448.x
Merkens HW, Schamhardt HC, Hartman W, Kersjes AW.The amplitudes, impulses and times of occurrence of a number of selected peaks in the ground reaction force tracings of 17 horses with various clinical histories were compared with those of 20 horses used to establish values for the 'standard' Dutch Warmblood horse. The resulting factors were combined, using different weighting factors, into indices characterising each limb. The symmetry between the loading of the forelimbs and the hindlimbs was used to calculate amplitude and peak-time symmetry indices. Limb and symmetry indices were combined in one H(orse) INDEX. This method of quantifying t...
Ultrastructural description of a new chytrid genus of caecum anaerobe, Caecomyces equi gen. nov., sp. nov., assigned to the Neocallimasticaceae.
Bio Systems    January 1, 1988   Volume 21, Issue 3-4 403-415 doi: 10.1016/0303-2647(88)90039-1
Gold JJ, Heath IB, Bauchop T.Vegetative and reproductive stages of Caecomyces equi gen. nov., sp. nov. isolated from the horse caecum were examined by light and electron microscopy. This organism, which is similar to isolates known as Sphaeromonas communis, produces uniflagellate, uninucleate zoospores whose perikinetosomal structures, i.e. circumflagellar ring, spur, struts and scoop, are similar in many respects to those described in species of Neocallimastix. Microtubular roots extend basally from the spur and associate with hydrogenosomes and the nucleus. Another group of microtubules radiates laterally in a fan-shape...
Human recombinant interleukin-2(125) induced in vitro proliferation of equine, caprine, ovine, canine and feline peripheral blood lymphocytes.
Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases    January 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 1 51-60 doi: 10.1016/0147-9571(88)90008-2
Fenwick BW, Schore CE, Osburn BI.Equine, caprine, ovine, canine and feline peripheral blood lymphocytes were evaluated in a short term dose-response study for their in vitro blastogenic responsiveness to human recombinant interleukin-2(125) (HrIL-2(125] alone or in combination with phytohemagglutinin-P, concanavalin-A, and pokeweed mitogen. HrIL-2(125) induced lymphocyte proliferation in all of the animals tested. The magnitude of the proliferative response varied among the species of animal tested. In all cases the proliferative response was dependent on the concentration of HrIL-2(125). HrIL-2(125) at a minimum concentratio...
Serologic response of Babesia equi-infected horses as measured by complement-fixation and indirect fluorescent antibody tests.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1988   Volume 26, Issue 3-4 199-205 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(88)90088-x
Kuttler KL, Goff WL, Gipson CA, Blackburn BO.Both the complement-fixation test (CFT) and the indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT) were conducted on weekly serum samples from nine Arab geldings for 28 days before and 256 days after their exposure to Babesia equi of European origin. On an average the IFAT became positive 8 days before the CFT and showed higher relative serum titer increases. Both test procedures successfully detected infection and neither showed an appreciable drop in titer during this time frame, with the exception of the CFT, which showed a transient drop immediately following treatment with imidocarb. A test conduc...
Joint Report of the Fifth International Workshop on Lymphocyte Alloantigens of the Horse, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 31 October-1 November 1987.
Animal genetics    January 1, 1988   Volume 19, Issue 4 447-456 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1988.tb00836.x
Lazary S, Antczak DF, Bailey E, Bell TK, Bernoco D, Byrns G, McClure JJ.Six laboratories participated in the Fifth International Workshop on Lymphocyte Alloantigens of the Horse, testing 132 alloantisera against lymphocytes of 880 horses chosen to represent different families and breeds. Most of the alloantisera were produced by lymphocyte immunization between horses matched at the ELA-A locus. All horses were also tested with antisera contributed to the workshop by participating laboratories which identified ELA specificities A1-A10 and W12-W21. Previously identified workshop specificities ELA-W14, W15 and W19 were accepted as products of the ELA-A locus based on...
[Iron and iron-binding capacity in the serum of clinically healthy horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1988   Volume 16, Issue 2 163-165 
Schorr G.Serum iron concentration and iron-binding capacity were determined in 34 respectively 35 clinically healthy horses of different sex, with the age of 3 to 21 years. In the Warm blooded horse, the Half bred, the Haflinger horse, the Heavy horse and the Arabian Haflinger the mean serum iron concentration amounted to 253 +/- 66 micrograms/dl, 202 +/- 87 micrograms/dl, 166 +/- 67 micrograms/dl, 183 micrograms/dl and 366 micrograms/dl, while the iron-binding capacity in the Warm blooded horse, the Half bred, the Haflinger horse, the Thoroughbred, the Heavy horse and the Arabian Haflinger ran up to 4...
Use of an immediate, qualitative progesterone assay for determination of day of ovulation in an equine embryo transfer program.
Theriogenology    January 1, 1988   Volume 29, Issue 5 1123-1130 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(88)80037-2
Hinrichs K, Sertich PL, Solorzano NM, Caldwell LA.An immediate, qualitative enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for progesterone was evaluated for use in determining the day of ovulation in an equine embryo transfer program. Plasma samples were collected from 27 mares from the third day of estrus to the second day of diestrus for 50 cycles. Ovulation was detected by ultrasound examination per rectum. Plasma progesterone concentrations were estimated using the qualitative assay to detect the time of the rise in progesterone after ovulation. Qualitative scores were compared to progesterone concentrations for the same samples as measured b...
[Indirect blood pressure determination in the horse with the Dinamap 1255 research monitor].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1988   Volume 16, Issue 4 373-376 
Fritsch R, Hausmann R.In 26 horses measurings of blood pressure, using the Dinamap 1255 research monitor, were performed and compared for accuracy with blood pressure values obtained by direct measurement in the arteria carotis. It was found that oscillometrically ascertained initial blood values in standing horses have a sufficient correlation to initial blood pressure values obtained by direct measurement. But every blood pressure change is registered too late, when using the oscillometric blood pressure apparatus. This temporal delay becomes unacceptable, when a considerable increase in blood pressure occurs. A ...
Astrocytes in the guinea pig, horse, and monkey retina: their occurrence coincides with the presence of blood vessels.
Glia    January 1, 1988   Volume 1, Issue 1 74-89 doi: 10.1002/glia.440010109
Schnitzer J.In the present study the distribution of astrocytes in the nerve fiber layer (NFL) has been studied in the sparsely vascularized retinae of the guinea pig and horse and in the richly vascularized retina of the Old World monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops) using immunocytochemical methods. In the guinea pig retina glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-positive astrocytes could not be detected. They were found, however, in the myelinated region of the optic nerve. The optic nerve head and a small retinal region immediately adjacent to it contained few vimentin-positive astrocytes. Histological sect...
Difference in growth behavior of human, swine, equine, and avian influenza viruses at a high temperature.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1988   Volume 100, Issue 3-4 231-244 doi: 10.1007/BF01487686
Murakami Y, Nerome K, Yoshioka Y, Mizuno S, Oya A.Growth characteristics of a wide range of influenza A viruses from different mammals and bird species were examined in an established line of canine kidney (MDCK) cells at an ordinary (37 degrees C) and a high temperature (42 degrees C). Although all viruses employed in the present study possessed a capability of replicating at 37 degrees C, virus growth at 42 degrees C showed considerable variation and reflected differences in the natural hosts of the isolates. All reference strains and isolates from bird species grew well in the MDCK cells maintained at 42 degrees C, but human viruses did no...
Comparative topography of the immunoreactive alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone neuronal systems in the brains of horses and rats.
Brain, behavior and evolution    January 1, 1988   Volume 32, Issue 4 226-235 doi: 10.1159/000116550
Melrose PA, Knigge KM.The present study describes and compares the topography of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH)-immunoreactive neurons in the forebrain of rats and horses. Two groups of immunoreactive cells were present in both species. These groups were distinguished by their cross-immunoreactivity and topography. The topography of cell bodies with cross-immunoreactivity for peptides derived from pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) including adrenocorticotropin, 16K, alpha-MSH and beta-endorphin was similar in both species. However, the topography of perikarya which stained only for alpha-MSH, and not fo...
Antigenic variation of equine infectious anemia virus as detected by virus neutralization. Brief report.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1988   Volume 98, Issue 1-2 91-97 doi: 10.1007/BF01321009
Kono Y.The antigenic structure of 16 viruses isolated from four horses which were inoculated with a clone of equine infectious anemia (EIA) virus was compared by the neutralization test. The antigenic structure of viruses isolated after development of neutralizing antibody differed from virus to virus. Back mutation of the antigenic structure was also demonstrated by serial passage of the virus in horses. These results suggest that EIA virus is subject to multidirectional antigenic variation. The possibility that the variants originated in the heterologous virus population in the inoculum seems to be...
Plasma heparin values and hemostasis in equids after subcutaneous administration of low-dose calcium heparin.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 1 13-18 
Gerhards H, Eberhardt C.Different doses of heparin were given to equids SC to establish 0.05 to 0.20 U of heparin/ml of plasma. Plasma heparin values and antithrombin III activities were assayed, using chromogenic substrate methods. Activated partial thromboplastin and thrombin times were determined, using conventional coagulation assays. Tests were run every hour (or every 2 hours for antithrombin III) for 12 hours from 5 groups of 5 equids each after single injection of 40, 60, 80, 100, or 125 U of calcium heparin/kg of body weight and from 11 equids after injection of 150 U of calcium heparin/kg. The smaller dose ...
Structural aspects of the plasminogen of various species.
Enzyme    January 1, 1988   Volume 40, Issue 2-3 63-69 doi: 10.1159/000469147
Schaller J, Rickli EE.The N-terminal amino acid sequence of equine, ovine, canine, goat and rabbit plasminogen were determined and compared with those already known of the human, bovine, porcine and feline molecule. Furthermore, the kringle 4 domains of equine, ovine, canine and goat plasminogen, prepared by limited cleavage with elastase, were sequenced and compared with the known species of human, bovine, porcine and chicken plasminogen. Homology with the human kringle 4 ranges between 73% (chicken) and 90% (bovine). Comparison of sequences, fragmentation patterns with elastase and adsorption on lysine-Bio-Gel su...
Breathing during exercise: demands, regulation, limitations.
Advances in experimental medicine and biology    January 1, 1988   Volume 227 257-276 doi: 10.1007/978-1-4684-5481-9_23
Forster HV, Pan LG.In humans alveolar ventilation (VA) is adjusted almost perfectly to the metabolic demands of mild and moderate exercise. For example, in exercise transitions and in the steady state, PaCO2 rarely deviates by more than 1 to 3 mmHg from the value at rest. This near-homeostasis contrasts to most other mammalian species; equines for example, demonstrate a progressive hypocapnia and alkalosis as exercise intensity is increased to moderate levels. In equines, the control systems seem programmed for a specific hyperventilation that contributes to maintenance of PaO2 homeostasis. Generally, during hea...
The A system of horse erythrocyte alloantigens: a new allele and another look at factor Ae.
Animal genetics    January 1, 1988   Volume 19, Issue 1 43-45 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1988.tb00787.x
Bowling AT, Ewalt-Evans R.Family data are presented for a new allele (Aabdg) in the A system of horse erythrocyte alloantigens which includes factors Aa and Ab traditionally thought to be products of allelic genes. Evidence for incorrect assignment of the codominant factor Ae in the presence of Ab and Ac and the absence of Aa is discussed.
Iodide-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity in horse and dog thyroid.
European journal of biochemistry    December 30, 1987   Volume 170, Issue 1-2 435-442 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1987.tb13718.x
Cochaux P, Van Sande J, Swillens S, Dumont JE.The characteristics of the iodide-induced inhibition of cyclic AMP accumulation in dog thyroid slices have been previously described [Van Sande, J., Cochaux, P. and Dumont, J. E. (1985) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 40, 181-192]. In the present study we investigated the characteristics of the iodide-induced inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity in dog and horse thyroid. The inhibition of cyclic AMP accumulation by iodide in stimulated horse thyroid slices was similar to that observed in dog thyroid slices. The inhibition was observed in slices stimulated by thyroid-stimulating hormone, cholera tox...
[Sperm received in shipment versus fresh sperm in relation to fertilization results].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    December 15, 1987   Volume 112, Issue 24 1410-1412 
Berghuis GA.The conception rates of semen intended for shipment and those of recently obtained semen are compared in the present paper. Conception rates using recently obtained semen were significantly superior to those obtained with semen intended for shipment. A number of factors to which this difference could be due are briefly discussed.
Defective thymocyte maturation in horses with severe combined immunodeficiency.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    December 15, 1987   Volume 139, Issue 12 4072-4076 
Wyatt CR, Magnuson NS, Perryman LE.Six monoclonal antibodies, designated EqT2, EqT3, EqT6, EqT7, EqT12, and EqT13, which identify T lymphocyte antigens present at different stages of T cell maturation were used to examine T lymphocyte development in foals with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). Flow microfluorimetry demonstrated the presence of EqT12+ and EqT13+ prothymocytes and a few phenotypically mature EqT2+ and EqT3+ thymocytes within the thymic remnants of SCID foals. However, very few EqT6+ and EqT7+ resident cortical thymocytes were detected. The near absence of EqT6+ and EqT7+ cortical thymocytes was confirmed b...
Reconstituted and native iron-cores of bacterioferritin and ferritin.
Journal of molecular biology    December 5, 1987   Volume 198, Issue 3 405-416 doi: 10.1016/0022-2836(87)90290-7
Mann S, Williams JM, Treffry A, Harrison PM.The structural and magnetic properties of the iron-cores of reconstituted horse spleen ferritin and Azotobacter vinelandii bacterioferritin have been investigated by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, electron diffraction and Mossbauer spectroscopy. The structural properties of native horse spleen ferritin, native Az. vinelandii, and native and reconstituted Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacterioferritins have also been determined. Reconstitution in the absence of inorganic phosphate at pH 7.0 showed sigmoidal behaviour in each protein but was approximately 30% faster in initial rate f...
Eumycotic mycetoma: review and report of a cutaneous lesion caused by Pseudallescheria boydii in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1987   Volume 191, Issue 11 1459-1461 
McEntee M.A cutaneous mass (1.5 cm in diameter) was removed from the head of a horse and was diagnosed histologically as eumycotic mycetoma. Immunofluorescence, performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue, identified Pseudallescheria boydii as the etiologic agent. Findings from earlier reports of eumycotic mycetoma were compared with those of this horse.
Plasma lysozyme activity of Polish primitive horses under physiological conditions and in experimental fever.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    December 1, 1987   Volume 34, Issue 10 776-781 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1987.tb00345.x
Wiśniewski E, Kuźma K.The normal level of plasma lysozyme of 9 Tarpane-like horses was 0.922pg/ml. This was calculated from determinations performed 5 times in a period of 14 months. Observations on the normal plasma level of lysozyme in the horse revealed marked variations in individual animals, as well as in the whole group and in the mean values calculated for individual horses. The model for the subsequent studies was an experimental fever evoked by the administration of E. colz LPS in a dose of 0.1 pg/kg body weight. Blood samples from the jugular vein were taken just before LPS injection, and then for 8...
Role of the host immune response in selection of equine infectious anemia virus variants.
Journal of virology    December 1, 1987   Volume 61, Issue 12 3783-3789 doi: 10.1128/JVI.61.12.3783-3789.1987
Carpenter S, Evans LH, Sevoian M, Chesebro B.Equine infectious anemia virus was isolated from peripheral blood leukocytes collected during two early febrile cycles of an experimentally infected horse. RNase T1-resistant oligonucleotide fingerprint analyses indicated that the nucleotide sequences of the isolates differed by approximately 0.25% and that the differences appeared randomly distributed throughout the genome. Serum collected in the interval between virus isolations was able to distinguish the isolates by membrane immunofluorescence on live cells. However, no neutralizing antibody was detected in the interval between virus isola...
Comparison of Ham’s F10 with CO2 or Hepes buffer for storage of equine embryos at 5 C for 24 H.
Journal of animal science    December 1, 1987   Volume 65, Issue 6 1775-1781 doi: 10.2527/jas1987.6561775x
Carnevale EM, Squires EL, McKinnon AO.Forty equine embryos collected 7 d post-ovulation were stored at 5 C for 24 h in one of two culture media (n = 20/group): 1) Ham's F10 + 10% heat-treated fetal calf serum (FCS) buffered by gassing with 5% CO2, 5% O2 and 90% N2 and 2) Ham's F10 + 10% FCS with Hepes buffer (25 mM). Embryos cultured in Ham's F10 + CO2 maintained a better quality score and had a larger average increase in diameter (+34.8 micron) than embryos stored in Hepes buffered Ham's F10 (-10.2 micron). Embryos were transferred surgically into recipient mares that ovulated -3 to +1 d in relation to the donor mare. Twenty embr...