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.
Central to peripheral sound propagation in excised lung.
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America    October 1, 1987   Volume 82, Issue 4 1139-1144 doi: 10.1121/1.395249
Rice DA, Rice JC.The time it takes audible sound to travel from the trachea to the pleura in five intact, excised horse lungs and one dog lung inflated with several gases was measured. Regression estimates of sound speed at total lung capacity (TLC) using straight line distance from the carina to the pleura are: helium, 775 +/- 60.5 m/s (means +/- 95% confidence limits); air, 282 +/- 23.5; carbon dioxide, 219 +/- 25.5; sulfur hexafluoride, 142 +/- 43.5. With the exception of sulfur hexafluoride, these speeds are 15%-20% less than the free-field speed of sound in each gas. Total airway length did not predict ti...
In vitro febantel transformation by sheep and cattle ruminal fluids and metabolism by hepatic subcellular fractions from different animal species.
Biochemical pharmacology    October 1, 1987   Volume 36, Issue 19 3107-3114 doi: 10.1016/0006-2952(87)90619-8
Beretta C, Fadini L, Stracciari JM, Montesissa C.Febantel and one of its main metabolites, febantel sulphoxide, are chemically modified to only a slight extent when incubated in vitro with sheep and cattle ruminal fluids; other major metabolites, fenbendazole and oxfendazole, are respectively, oxidized to oxfendazole and reduced to fenbendazole. Febantel is negligibly metabolized by hepatic cytosol fractions but microsome preparations effect more extensive metabolic transformations. Important differences in this respect were found between microsome preparations from rat, horse, pig, cattle, sheep, chicken and trout livers.
Can the product of the theta gene be a real globin?
Nature    October 1, 1987   Volume 329, Issue 6138 465-466 doi: 10.1038/329465a0
Clegg JB.A new member (theta 1, or psi alpha) of the alpha-globin gene family has recently been identified in a number of species. In higher primates the theta 1 gene has all the structural features apparently necessary for expression, and it appears to have long been under strong selective constraints which suggests that it could still be, or recently have been, a functional gene. No corresponding 'globin' has yet been identified, however. In some other species, galago and rabbit for example, the theta 1 and psi alpha genes have accumulated enough inactivating mutations for them to be considered genui...
Solar elastosis with squamous cell carcinoma in two horses.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1987   Volume 24, Issue 5 463-464 doi: 10.1177/030098588702400517
Campbell GA, Gross TL, Adams R.No abstract available
Definition of 15 equine leucocyte antigens.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1987   Volume 43, Issue 2 191-198 
Matthews SM, Joysey VC.Fifteen equine leucocyte antigens were defined by absorption and titration analysis of alloantisera obtained by natural sensitisation through pregnancy and by planned experimental immunisation. Definitive sera were tested on the cells of 90 unrelated horses and members of eight equine families. The family data suggested that 13 specificities were coded by a single locus (first locus) and one specificity (Eq 14) was coded by a second linked locus. The remaining specificity (Eq 7) was controlled by a third locus unlinked to the first or second loci. Tests on the cells of unrelated horses showed ...
Gene conversions in the horse alpha-globin gene complex.
Molecular biology and evolution    September 1, 1987   Volume 4, Issue 5 492-503 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a040456
Clegg JB.The sequences of the linked alpha 2- and alpha 1-globin genes of the equine BI and BII haplotypes are greater than 99% identical within a 1.2-kb region extending from approximately 75 bp upstream of the putative cap site to a point approximately 150 bp 3' to the poly A addition signal. Differences between the alpha 2 and alpha 1 genes that are common to both haplotypes indicate that a major gene conversion occurred approximately 12 Myr ago and that this has been followed by shorter, more localized, conversions. Interhaplotype (allelic) comparisons at the alpha loci suggest that the BI and BII ...
Exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage in the horse: results of a detailed clinical, post mortem and imaging study. VI. Radiological/pathological correlations.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 5 419-422 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02634.x
O'Callaghan MW, Pascoe JR, O'Brien TR, Hornof WJ, Mason DK.This study was initiated to determine if the extent and intensity of lung lesions associated with exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) in horses could be predicted from thoracic radiographs. Sets of thoracic radiographs from 24 horses with varied histories of EIPH were subjectively coded for radiographic quality, and perceived extent and intensity of diffuse interstitial opacity by three radiologists who had no knowledge of the corresponding autopsy results. Codes assigned from radiographs for the chosen parameters were compared with coded estimates of lung surface staining assigned a...
Ethoxyformylation of histidine residues in equine growth hormone.
International journal of peptide and protein research    September 1, 1987   Volume 30, Issue 3 365-370 doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3011.1987.tb03343.x
Fukushima JG, Cascone O, Santomé JA, Biscoglio de Jimenez Bonino MJ.Reactivity of histidine residues in equine growth hormone to ethoxyformic anhydride was studied. The existence of two kinetically different sets was demonstrated: one of them including only the slow reacting histidine 169 (k = 0.164 min-1) and the other containing fast reacting histidines 19 and 21 (k = 0.892 min-1). A correlation between the decrease in the capacity to compete with 125I-labeled hormone for rat liver binding sites and the degree of ethoxyformylation of the fast group was found. Circular dichroism studies indicated no significant conformational changes in the protein with all t...
Site-directed chemical modification of horse cytochrome c results in changes in antigenicity due to local and long-range conformational perturbations.
The Journal of biological chemistry    August 25, 1987   Volume 262, Issue 24 11591-11597 
Cooper HM, Jemmerson R, Hunt DF, Griffin PR, Yates JR, Shabanowitz J, Zhu NZ, Paterson Y.Comparative binding studies with peptide fragments of the whole antigen, or with evolutionarily related intact proteins with varying degrees of sequence homology, have been used extensively to map antigenic sites on proteins to the resolution of single amino acid residues. These methods are limited, however, since high affinity antibodies will often not react with peptides and evolutionarily related proteins are available for only a few antigens. In this study we use site-directed chemical modification of horse cytochrome c to identify residues involved in the binding sites of four monoclonal ...
The concentrations of free Mg2+ and free Zn2+ in equine blood plasma.
The Journal of biological chemistry    August 15, 1987   Volume 262, Issue 23 11140-11148 
Magneson GR, Puvathingal JM, Ray WJ.The enzyme phosphoglucomutase can be used as a metal ion indicator to measure the concentrations of free Mg2+ and free Zn2+ in physiological fluids. In horse plasma, the concentration of free Mg2+ is close to 0.5 mM, whereas that of free Zn2+ is about 2 X 10(-10) M, although numerous physiological roles for Zn2+ have been postulated that would require free Zn2+ concentration orders of magnitude higher than this. A titration of plasma with Zn2+ shows that the fractional increase in free Zn2+ is essentially the same as the fractional increase in total exchangeable Zn2+, and the results are consi...
Identification of the ligand-exchange process in the alkaline transition of horse heart cytochrome c.
The Biochemical journal    August 15, 1987   Volume 246, Issue 1 43-54 doi: 10.1042/bj2460043
Gadsby PM, Peterson J, Foote N, Greenwood C, Thomson AJ.Magnetic-circular-dichroism (m.c.d.) spectra over the wavelength range 300-2000 nm at room temperature and at 4.2K of horse heart cytochrome c are reported at a series of pH values between 7.8 and 11.0, encompassing the alkaline transition. The effect of glassing agents on the e.p.r. spectrum at various pH values is also reported. Comparison of these results with spectra obtained for the n-butylamine adduct of soybean leghaemoglobin support the hypothesis that lysine is the sixth ligand in the alkaline form of horse heart cytochrome c. The m.c.d. and e.p.r. spectra of horse heart cytochrome c ...
Species differences in the changes in heart rate and T-wave amplitude after autonomic blockade in Thoroughbred horses, ponies, cows, pigs, goats and chickens.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    August 1, 1987   Volume 49, Issue 4 637-644 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.49.637
Matsui K, Sugano S.No abstract available
Survival of equine embryos transferred to normal and subfertile mares.
Theriogenology    August 1, 1987   Volume 28, Issue 2 167-174 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(87)90264-0
Ball BA, Hillman RB, Woods GL.To test the hypothesis that an abnormal uterine environment was a cause of early embryonic loss in subfertile mares, morphologically normal embryos were transferred to normal mares (n = 20) and subfertile mares (n = 20), and embryo survival rates were compared. Embryos were recovered nonsurgically at Days 7 to 8 postovulation and transferred surgically to normal and subfertile mares that had ovulated on the same day or within 2 d after a donor. Survival of transferred embryos was monitored by ultrasonography of the recipient mare's uterus from Day 9 through Day 28 postovulation. There were no ...
Structural and functional studies on ferritins.
Biochemical Society transactions    August 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 4 744-748 doi: 10.1042/bst0150744
Harrison PM, Ford GC, Rice DW, Smith JM, Treffry A, White JL.No abstract available
The meiotic stage of preovulatory oocytes in mares.
Genome    August 1, 1987   Volume 29, Issue 4 679-682 doi: 10.1139/g87-114
King WA, Bezard J, Bousquet D, Palmer E, Betteridge KJ.Confusion exists as to whether the oocytes of the domestic horse are ovulated at the first meiotic metaphase (MI) or the second (MII). In this study eight oocytes were collected from the preovulatory follicles of 16 mares 36 h after human chorionic gonadotropin CG treatment. Six of the eight oocytes were judged to be at MII by the presence of the first polar body and this judgement was confirmed by semithin sectioning in one. Of the two that had no polar body, one was found to be at MII after fixation for chromosomal analysis and the meiotic stage of the other remained undetermined. Since all ...
Heterogeneity of amino acid transport in horse erythrocytes: a detailed kinetic analysis of inherited transport variation.
The Journal of physiology    August 1, 1987   Volume 389 385-409 doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1987.sp016662
Fincham DA, Mason DK, Paterson JY, Young JD.1. Thoroughbred horses were divisible into five distinct amino acid transport subgroups on the basis of their erythrocyte permeability to L-alanine, measured uptake rates ranging from 5 to 625 mumol l cells-1 h-1 (0.2 mM-extracellular L-alanine, 37 degrees C). 2. Erythrocytes from animals belonging to the lowest L-alanine permeability subgroup (5-15 mumol l cells-1 h-1) (transport-deficient type) exhibited slow nonsaturable transport of this amino acid. In contrast, cells from horses of the four transport-positive subgroups possessed additional high-affinity (apparent L-alanine Km (Michaelis c...
Steroid hormone secretory patterns in mares with granulosa cell tumours.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    August 1, 1987   Volume 34, Issue 7 545-560 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1987.tb00315.x
Meinecke B, Gips H.No abstract available
Effect of halothane, enflurane and isoflurane on bronchomotor tone in anaesthetized ponies.
British journal of anaesthesia    August 1, 1987   Volume 59, Issue 8 1022-1026 doi: 10.1093/bja/59.8.1022
Watney GC, Jordan C, Hall LW.The effects of halothane, enflurane and isoflurane on bronchial calibre were investigated in five anaesthetized ponies using a computer-aided forced airflow oscillation technique to derive specific lower airways conductance (s.Glaw) and expiratory reserve volume (ERV). All the agents tended to increase s.Glaw (indicating bronchodilatation), but ERV was reduced by halothane and enflurane, and increased by isoflurane. It was concluded that the effects of these agents on bronchomotor tone were similar to those which occur in man. However, the reasons for the differences in their effects on ERV co...
Pharmacokinetics of phenolsulfonphthalein in horse and pony mares.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 8 1256-1260 
Hinchcliff KW, McGuirk SM, MacWilliams PS.Pharmacokinetics of phenolsulfonphthalein (PSP) in horse and pony mares was determined after injection of 1 mg/kg of body weight, IV. A plasma PSP concentration vs time curve was described adequately in horses and ponies by an open, 2-compartment model. There were significant differences in the elimination phase parameters, apparent volume of distribution at steady state, and apparent volume of distribution of horses and ponies. The harmonic mean elimination half-life of PSP in horses was significantly longer (P less than 0.001) than that in the ponies (16.4 and 10.0 minutes, respectively). Th...
The distribution of ventilation-perfusion ratios in the lungs of newborn foals.
Journal of developmental physiology    August 1, 1987   Volume 9, Issue 4 309-324 
Stewart JH, Young IH, Rose RJ, Costas L, Barko AM.The distributions of ventilation-perfusion ratios, and the effects of 100% oxygen administration on the distributions, were studied in 3 foals from 4h to 9 days of age, using the multiple inert gas elimination technique. The distributions were calculated from the pulmonary clearance of 6 inert gases following infusion into a peripheral vein of a solution containing the inert gases. The results from a total of 8 studies showed several consistent features. The major findings were (i) the absence of low ventilation-perfusion ratios, i.e. regions where blood flow was greatly in excess of ventilati...
Ovarian disorders in domestic animals.
Environmental health perspectives    August 1, 1987   Volume 73 27-33 doi: 10.1289/ehp.877327
MacLachlan NJ.The histologic appearance of the ovaries and persistence of corpora lutea vary considerably among domestic animals, particularly between spontaneous and induced ovulators. The seasonally polyestrous mare has a variety of unique characteristics in ovarian structure and general reproductive function. Among the anomalies of ovarian development is the bovine freemartin with gonads containing a mixture of male and female elements. A variety of ovarian cysts occur in domestic animals, and persistent corpora lutea with associated reproductive perturbations occur in several species. Ovarian tumors are...
The role of aromatic side chain residues in micelle binding by pancreatic colipase. Fluorescence studies of the porcine and equine proteins.
The Biochemical journal    August 1, 1987   Volume 245, Issue 3 821-829 doi: 10.1042/bj2450821
McIntyre JC, Hundley P, Behnke WD.Fluorescence techniques have been employed to study the interaction of porcine and equine colipase with pure taurodeoxycholate and mixed micelles. Nitrotyrosine-55 of porcine colipase is obtained by modification with tetranitromethane (low excess, in the presence of taurodeoxycholate) of the protein followed by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. Verification of the residue modified was obtained by h.p.l.c. peptide purification and sequence analysis. Reduction and quantitative reaction with dansyl chloride yields a fluorescent derivative that is twice as active in conjunction with ...
Urethral pressure profilometry in mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1987   Volume 191, Issue 2 212-216 
Kay AD, Lavoie JP.A technique was developed for recording urethral pressure profiles (UPP) in mares. Profiles were obtained from 12 clinically normal mares and from 3 mares with urinary incontinence. Variables measured on the profile included intravesicular pressure and maximal urethral closure pressure. The mean maximal urethral closure pressure of the incontinent mares was significantly less (P less than or equal to 0.001) than that of the normal mares. The technique is simple and reliable for objectively evaluating urethral pressures in mares.
Retinal astrocytes: their restriction to vascularized parts of the mammalian retina.
Neuroscience letters    July 9, 1987   Volume 78, Issue 1 29-34 doi: 10.1016/0304-3940(87)90556-8
Schnitzer J.The distribution of astrocytes has been studied in whole-mounted horse and monkey retinae by the immunocytochemical localization of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). In the horse, astrocytes were found to be restricted to a narrow zone close to the optic nerve head. This is also the only region of the horse retina that is vascularized. In the monkey, astrocytes were found ubiquitously in the nerve fiber layer of the retina, apart from the avascular fovea centralis which lacked astrocytes. These observations strongly suggest that retinal astrocytes co-occur with blood vessels, a feature w...
Myotonia in man and animals: confusing comparisons.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 4 266-267 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb01401.x
McKerrell RE.No abstract available
Surgical treatment of fractures of the olecranon in the horse: a comparative review of 25 cases.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 4 319-325 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb01420.x
Denny HR, Barr AR, Waterman A.A series of 25 horses with olecranon fractures are reviewed. Twenty-one cases were treated surgically by the application of a tension band plate to the caudal aspect of the ulna. Seventy six per cent of these regained full limb function. The results of treatment are compared with two other series of conservatively and surgically treated cases.
Blood products in large animal medicine: a comparative account of current and future technology.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 4 272-275 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb01406.x
Morris DD.THERE are indications for therapeutic uses of all portions of whole blood in large animal patients but plasma and its isolated components have the largest number of immediate applications. As recently as 10 years ago, whole fresh blood was the only routinely administered blood product. However, as even cross-match compatible erythrocytes are removed from circulation within two to four days by the reticuloendothelial system, whole blood is a poor product for expansion of vascular volume or supplying plasma components if the patient has no immediate need for increased oxygen carrying cap...
The amino acid sequence of an amyloid fibril protein AA isolated from the horse.
Scandinavian journal of immunology    July 1, 1987   Volume 26, Issue 1 79-84 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3083.1987.tb02237.x
Sletten K, Husebekk A, Husby G.The amino acid sequence of the amyloid fibril protein AA from horse was established from characterization of cyanogen bromide fragments, tryptic peptides, and a peptide derived from a digest with Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteinase. The protein was found to consist of 80 amino acid residues. Sequence homologies with protein AA from other species were very striking, and revealed an insertion of two amino acid residues between positions 72 and 73. In position 44, two amino acid residues were found which provide further evidence for a polymorphism in the amyloid fibril protein AA.
Equine linkage group II: phase conservation of To with AlB and GcS.
The Journal of heredity    July 1, 1987   Volume 78, Issue 4 248-250 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a110376
Bowling AT.Blood type analysis of 29 foals in a paternal half-sib family verified linkage of five LGII loci (Es, E, To, Gc, Al). Population and parentage data from other tobiano-spotted horses suggested conservation of a tightly linked (To:GcS:AlB) marker complex.
Proton hyperfine resonance assignments using the nuclear Overhauser effect for ferric forms of horse and tuna cytochrome c.
Biophysical journal    July 1, 1987   Volume 52, Issue 1 101-107 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(87)83193-4
Satterlee JD, Moench S.Proton hyperfine resonance assignments for cytochromes c from several species are currently being successfully pursued by several laboratories. These efforts focus mostly on the ferrous forms. In contrast to that work, we have pursued assignments of the proton hyperfine shifted resonances for horse and tuna ferricytochromes c. Our results indicate that assignments are nearly identical in those two proteins. Using the pre-steady state nuclear Overhauser effect, several additional assignments have been made for the tuna protein, whereas for the horse protein, the following protons have been assi...