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Topic:Diagnosis

Diagnosis in horses involves the systematic identification of diseases and conditions affecting equine health. This process relies on a combination of clinical evaluations, laboratory tests, imaging techniques, and other diagnostic tools to assess the health status of horses. Veterinarians utilize these methods to identify symptoms, determine the underlying causes of health issues, and formulate appropriate treatment plans. Diagnostic procedures in equine medicine can include blood tests, ultrasound, radiography, endoscopy, and more specialized tests such as genetic screening or advanced imaging modalities like MRI and CT scans. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various diagnostic techniques, their applications, and advancements in the field of equine veterinary medicine.
Determination of flunixin in equine urine and serum by capillary electrophoresis.
Journal of chromatography. B, Biomedical sciences and applications    April 25, 1997   Volume 692, Issue 1 187-198 doi: 10.1016/s0378-4347(96)00393-3
Gu X, Meleka-Boules M, Chen CL, Ceska DM, Tiffany DM.A capillary electrophoresis (CE) and a solid-phase extraction method was developed for the determination of flunixin in equine urine and serum. The suitable CE run conditions were described. The factors affecting flunixin recovery rates were investigated and optimum solid-phase extraction conditions for flunixin in equine urine and serum were established. Limits of detection and quantitation were 3.4 and 5.6 ng/ml for serum and 16.9 and 33.1 ng/ml for urine, respectively. The recoveries exceeded 96% for urine and 79% for serum. Urine samples from race horses and urine and serum samples from a ...
A kinase-negative mutation of DNA-PK(CS) in equine SCID results in defective coding and signal joint formation.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    April 15, 1997   Volume 158, Issue 8 3565-3569 
Shin EK, Perryman LE, Meek K.The equine SCID defect is more severe than its murine counterpart in that SCID foals are incapable of forming either coding or signal joints, whereas SCID mice manifest normal signal joint formation. To determine the basis of this difference and whether DNA-dependent kinase, catalytic subunit (DNA-PK(CS)), is involved in signal joint formation, equine DNA-PK(CS) transcripts were cloned and sequenced from normal and SCID cell lines. In the mutant allele, a frame-shift mutation truncates the protein N terminal of the domain with homology to the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase family resulting in c...
[Idiopathic pericardial effusion with tamponade in a Friesian gelding].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    April 15, 1997   Volume 122, Issue 8 216-219 
Wijnberg ID, Vink-Nooteboom M, Sloet van Oldruitenborgh-Oosterbaan MM.A 7-year-old Friesian gelding was referred to the Department of Large Animal Medicine and Nutrition of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine because of an inadequate response to treatment for vague symptoms of colic. An extensive physical examination showed there to be circulatory problems, with right-sided decompensation. Heart sounds were muffled on both sides of the thorax, and ECG showed a low voltage and variable amplitude of the QRS complex. Further investigations indicated idiopathic pericardial effusion. Pericardiocentesis was performed and supportive therapy started. Three weeks later th...
What is your diagnosis? Unilateral pneumothorax with collapse of the left caudal lung lobe.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1997   Volume 210, Issue 8 1109-1110 
Jorgensen JS.No abstract available
Epidemiologic aspects of Taylorella equigenitalis.
Theriogenology    April 15, 1997   Volume 47, Issue 6 1169-1177 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(97)00097-6
Parlevliet JM, Bleumink-Pluym NM, Houwers DJ, Remmen JL, Sluijter FJ, Colenbrander B.Contagious equine metritis (CEM) is a sexually transmissible disease in mares. Although the disease is commonly diagnosed by culturing the causative bacterium Taylorella equigenitalis (T. equigenitalis) . false negative results do occur. A recently developed Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) assay, however, appeared to be much more sensitive, with initial results indicating an unexpected high incidence of the agent in selected horses. In this study, samples from 107 randomly selected mares with no clinical signs of CEM submitted for conventional culture were all negative for T. equigenitalis . b...
Control of equine infectious anemia virus is not dependent on ADCC mediating antibodies.
Virology    April 14, 1997   Volume 230, Issue 2 275-280 doi: 10.1006/viro.1997.8502
Tschetter JR, Byrne KM, Perryman LE, McGuire TC.Horses infected with equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) have recurrent episodes of viremia which are eventually controlled, but the immune mechanisms have not been identified. Antibodies were detected to the surface of EIAV-infected cells within 1 month postinfection and remained for at least 3.5 years postinfection. These antibodies recognized cell surface-exposed envelope (Env) glycoproteins, but could not mediate antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) using EIAV-WSU5-infected equine kidney (EK) cells as targets and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) or polymorphonuclear c...
Traumatic cervical disc herniation–tetraparesis in a patient kicked by a horse.
Acta orthopaedica Scandinavica    April 1, 1997   Volume 68, Issue 2 176-177 doi: 10.3109/17453679709004003
Kotilainen EM, Kärki T, Satomaa OK.No abstract available
What is your diagnosis? Comminuted fracture of the proximal portion of the tibia extending to the articular surface of the tibia at the femorotibial joint.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1997   Volume 210, Issue 7 897-898 
Lopez MJ, Prichard MA, Nicoll RG.No abstract available
Leukoencephalomalacia.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 13-20 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30252-3
Uhlinger C.Leukoencephalomalacia in horses is caused by fumonisins. These mycotoxins are produced by Fusarium spp. that contaminate corn and corn byproducts while in the field. The most common clinical presentation is a multifocal neurologic disease that affects multiple horses in a herd. Although the majority of affected horses die, treatment directed at decreasing inflammation and edema in the CNS may result in recovery in some animals.
Equine herpesvirus 1 myeloencephalopathy.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 53-72 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30255-9
Wilson WD.Myeloencephalopathy is an uncommon manifestation of equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1), but it can cause devastating losses during outbreaks on individual farms. Clinical signs of neurologic disease reflect a diffuse multifocal hemorrhagic myeloencephalopathy secondary to vasculitis and thrombosis. Sudden onset and early stabilization of signs, including ataxia, paresis, and urinary incontinence; involvement of multiple horses on the premises; and recent history of fever, abortion, or viral respiratory disease in the affected horse or herdmates are typical features, although there is considerable va...
Chronic exertional rhabdomyolysis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 145-168 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30261-4
Beech J.This article presents a brief description of what is known about the cause and pathogenesis of chronic intermittent rhabdomyolysis in horses. Clinically applicable diagnostic tests and published results in affected horses, prophylaxis, and treatment of the acute case are discussed.
Effect of feeding deoxynivalenol (vomitoxin)-contaminated barley to horses. Johnson PJ, Casteel SW, Messer NT.No abstract available
[Rectal lesions in horses].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    April 1, 1997   Volume 122, Issue 7 196-197 
Warmerdam EP.No abstract available
White muscle disease of foals.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 169-185 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30262-6
Löfstedt J.White muscle disease (nutritional myodegeneration) of foals is a peracute to subacute myodegenerative disease affecting skeletal and cardiac muscle. It is caused by a dietary deficiency of selenium and vitamin E, usually in association with predisposing factors such as a high intake of dietary unsaturated fats or unaccustomed exercise. White muscle disease has been observed in foals from birth to 1 year of age, particularly those foals born to dams fed selenium-deficient diets, during gestation. The disease in foals may present as an acute, fulminant syndrome, which is rapidly fatal, or a suba...
Equine motor neuron disease.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 97-105 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30258-4
Divers TJ, Mohammed HO, Cummings JF.This article reviews the subject of equine motor neuron disease, a neurodegenerative disease of horses. The authors discuss various topics, including epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical signs, laboratory findings, diagnosis, and treatment.
Management of pyloric obstruction in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1997   Volume 210, Issue 7 902-907 
Aronoff N, Keegan KG, Johnson PJ, Wilson DA, Reed AL.No abstract available
Postanesthetic hemorrhagic myelopathy or myelomalacia.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 73-77 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30256-0
Trim CM.Hemorrhagic myelopathy or myelomalacia is an uncommon cause of failure to stand after general anesthesia. Affected horses are usually young and have been anesthetized for relatively short times in dorsal recumbency. Clinical signs involve the hind limbs and include loss of deep pain perception. Etiology of this condition is not known. Differentiation from other forms of neuropathy and myopathy is important to the prognosis.
Botulism.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 107-128 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30259-6
Whitlock RH, Buckley C.Equine botulism is being recognized with increasing frequency by veterinarians throughout North America. Muscular weakness and dysphagia that progress during a period of 1 to 4 days, in the absence of laboratory derangements that indicate the presence of systemic disease, are suggestive of botulism. A tentative diagnosis usually is based on the presence of the following findings on physical examination: delayed pupillary light response, mydriasis, ptosis, generalized weakness, decreased tail tone, and slow prehension of feed. Definitive diagnosis requires detection of botulinum toxin in plasma...
Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 129-144 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30260-2
Naylor JM.Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis is an autosomal codominant genetic disease of horses who are descendants of the quarter horse sire Impressive. It produces a muscular phenotype that has been selected by show judges, which has resulted in the rapid dissemination of this disease. Clinical attacks are characterized by muscle fasciculation and spasm, and they respond to treatments for the concurrent hyperkalemia.
Insertions, duplications and substitutions in restricted gp90 regions of equine infectious anaemia virus during febrile episodes in an experimentally infected horse.
The Journal of general virology    April 1, 1997   Volume 78 ( Pt 4) 807-820 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-78-4-807
Zheng YH, Nakaya T, Sentsui H, Kameoka M, Kishi M, Hagiwara K, Takahashi H, Kono Y, Ikuta K.We have studied a horse which exhibited typical clinical signs of disease when experimentally infected with a non-adapted virulent strain of equine infectious anaemia virus (EIAV), designated V70. Five viruses (F1V, F2V, F3V, F4V and F5V) were recovered during periodic febrile episodes. Cross-neutralization tests revealed that all of these variants and the parental V70 were antigenically distinct. Sequencing of their full-length env gp90 genes and gp45 5' sequences revealed novel mutations at a limited number of nucleotide positions, consisting of insertions and duplications in the gp90 princi...
Study of the duration and distribution of equine influenza virus subtype 2 (H3N8) antigens in experimentally infected ponies in vivo. Sutton GA, Viel L, Carman PS, Boag BL.The purpose of this experiment was to study the duration and distribution of equine influenza virus in actively infected ponies over a 3 wk period. Pony foals (6-8 mo old) were infected experimentally by nebulizing equine influenza subtype-2 virus ultrasonically through a face mask. Successful infection was clinically apparent as each of the foals (n = 6) had a febrile response, a deep hacking cough and mucopurulent nasal discharge for 7 to 10 d. The virus was isolated from nasopharyngeal swabs of all the ponies 3 and 5 d after infection and all the ponies seroconverted to the virus. Samples w...
Adverse reactions to veterinary drugs reported in Sweden during 1991-1995.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    April 1, 1997   Volume 20, Issue 2 105-110 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2885.1997.00050.x
Tjälve H.The present article gives a summary of suspected adverse reactions reported by Swedish veterinarians during the period 1991-1995. The summary shows that severe adverse drug-reactions sometimes occur in Swedish veterinary practice. In horses, several cases of acute reactions in animals treated with procaine benzylpenicillin were reported and seven horses died within a few minutes after intramuscular injections of the drug. In cattle and swine most reports referred to the use of antimicrobial agents. In dogs reactions to vaccines were the most frequently reported adverse effects. The reactions w...
Restriction endonuclease analysis of equine herpesvirus-1 isolates recovered in Ontario, 1986-1992, from aborted, stillborn, and neonatal foals. Nagy E, Idamakanti N, Carman S.Ninety-two equine herpesvirus type 1 isolates were recovered from aborted, stillborn, or neonatal foals from Ontario, Canada, from 1986 to 1992. From this total, 32 strains were randomly chosen for further study. Four or 5 isolates from each winter were selected, each from a different premises, and characterized by restriction enzyme analysis using BamHI, KpnI, BglII, HindIII, and EcoRI. Additional isolates from 2 premises and from a zebra foal were also assessed. For the strains isolated in 1986 and 1989-1992, the DNA pattern of 18 strains was similar to that of type 1P (Kentucky D) for BamHI...
Otitis media and interna and temporohyoid osteoarthropathy.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 1 21-42 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30253-5
Blythe LL.Otitis media/interna in the equine most commonly is a chronic, insidious infection with the unique sequella of temporohyoid osteoarthropathy in some horses. Head shaking may be the only clinical sign of the early stages of this disease. The arthritic condition often leads to fusion of the temporohyoid joint with resultant stress fractures of the petrous temporal bone. When this occurs, the horse presents as an acute neurologic case with clinical signs of vestibular and facial nerve dysfunction. Diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis are discussed. Recognition of this syndrome is important because...
Risk factors for colic in the Michigan (USA) equine population.
Preventive veterinary medicine    April 1, 1997   Volume 30, Issue 1 23-36 doi: 10.1016/s0167-5877(96)01102-6
Kaneene JB, Miller R, Ross WA, Gallagher K, Marteniuk J, Rook J.A population-based prospective epidemiological study was conducted to assess risk factors for equine colic. A stratified sample of 3925 equids in 138 randomly selected equine farms in the state of Michigan was monitored in two 12-month rounds of data collection. Incidence densities were used to describe the rate of development of colic in the study population. Mortality rates, case fatality rates and survival rates were used to describe the severity of colic on the study population. Multivariable logistic regressions with random effects (grouped according to farm) were used to identify risk fa...
Transforming growth factor-beta induced by live or ultraviolet-inactivated equid herpes virus type-1 mediates immunosuppression in the horse.
Immunology    April 1, 1997   Volume 90, Issue 4 586-591 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2567.1997.00202.x
Charan S, Palmer K, Chester P, Mire-Sluis AR, Meager A, Edington N.Up to 21 days after exposure to live or ultraviolet-inactivated equid herpesvirus type-1 (EHV-1) autologous serum from ponies caused an immunosuppressive effect if incorporated into T-cell proliferation assays to EHV-1. The suppressive factor in the sera of ponies also inhibited T-cell response to phytohaemagglutinin. Increased levels of circulating activated transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) were detected, and the suppressive activity of the serum could be reversed by antibody to TGF-beta 1. In a challenge experiment the ponies which exhibited circulating TGF-beta 1 activity succ...
Identification of noncytopathic equine rhinovirus 1 as a cause of acute febrile respiratory disease in horses.
Journal of clinical microbiology    April 1, 1997   Volume 35, Issue 4 937-943 doi: 10.1128/jcm.35.4.937-943.1997
Li F, Drummer HE, Ficorilli N, Studdert MJ, Crabb BS.Equine rhinovirus 1 (ERhV1) is a recognized cause of acute febrile respiratory disease in horse, although the virus is rarely isolated from such animals, despite seroprevalence rates as high as 50% in some horse populations. Recently, ERhV1 has been shown to be most closely related to foot-and-mouth disease virus, raising questions as to its disease associations in horses. We report that ERhV1 infection was the likely cause of two separate outbreaks of severe febrile respiratory disease which involved more than 20 horses. Attempts to isolate ErhV1 from nasopharyngeal swabs by conventional cell...
Comparison of intratumoral administration of cisplatin versus bleomycin for treatment of periocular squamous cell carcinomas in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 4 431-436 
Théon AP, Pascoe JR, Madigan JE, Carlson G, Metzger L.To compare therapeutic benefits of intratumoral administration of cisplatin and bleomycin for squamous cell carcinoma of the eyelids in horses. Methods: 25 horses with 27 T2-stage periocular squamous cell carcinomas. Methods: Horses were treated 4 times at 2-week intervals with a slow-release formulation of cisplatin (1 mg/cm3 of tissue) or bleomycin (1 IU/cm3 of tissue). A two-stage design was used to minimize the sample size in each treatment arm. Results: The local control rate at 1 year for lesions treated with cisplatin was 93 +/- 6%, and with bleomycin was 78 +/- 10%. Difference in local...
An investigation of the prevalence of the toxigenic types of Clostridium perfringens in horses with anterior enteritis: preliminary results.
Anaerobe    April 1, 1997   Volume 3, Issue 2-3 121-125 doi: 10.1006/anae.1997.0087
Griffiths NJ, Walton JR, Edwards GB.Equine anterior enteritis is an acute syndrome with unknown aetiology, although salmonellosis and infection with Clostridium perfringens have both been suggested as potential causes. The main aim of this preliminary study was to compare the prevalence of toxigenic types of C. perfringens in clinically healthy horses and in horses with anterior enteritis. From horses admitted with colic at Phillip Leverhulme Large Animal Hospital in 1995-1996, samples of gastric reflux, small intestinal contents and faeces were taken for isolation of C. perfringens. Five of those horses were admitted as anterio...
Genetical and physical assignments of equine microsatellites–first integration of anchored markers in horse genome mapping.
Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society    April 1, 1997   Volume 8, Issue 4 267-273 doi: 10.1007/s003359900407
Breen M, Lindgren G, Binns MM, Norman J, Irvin Z, Bell K, Sandberg K, Ellegren H.Twenty equine microsatellites were isolated from a genomic phage library, and their genetical and physical localization was sought by linkage mapping and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Nineteen of the markers were found to be polymorphic with, in most cases, heterozygosities exceeding 50%. The markers were mapped in a Swedish reference family for gene mapping, comprising eight half-sib families from Standardbred and Icelandic horse sires. Segregation was analyzed against a set of 35 other markers typed in the pedigree. Thirteen of the microsatellites showed linkage to at least one o...