Analyze Diet

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.
[X-ray study of the hock of healthy foals. A contribution to late diagnosis].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 2 211-216 
Münzer B, Fries S, Hartung K.No abstract available
Tracheotomy in the horse: a photo essay.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1984   Volume 65, Issue 1 9-12 
Krpan MK.No abstract available
[Hoof injury in a horse stepping on a nail].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 1 55-58 
Girtler D.No abstract available
Urolithiasis in the horse – a review of 13 cases.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 1 31-34 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01844.x
Holt PE, Pearson H.The presenting signs, treatment and postoperative progress of 13 horses with vesical and urethral calculi are reviewed. Single, discrete stones were present in 10 animals in which the results of treatment were generally good. In three horses with sabulous cystic deposits, urolithiasis was associated with bladder paralysis and the response to treatment was poor.
[Limb fractures in trotters. 2. Frequency, distribution and treatment results].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 1 39-44 
Keller H.No abstract available
[Initial results of thermographic studies in the diagnosis of lameness in horses using an infrared thermograph].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 2 229-238 
Pick M.No abstract available
Toxic hepatopathy in neonatal foals.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1984   Volume 21, Issue 1 3-9 doi: 10.1177/030098588402100102
Acland HM, Mann PC, Robertson JL, Divers TJ, Lichtensteiger CA, Whitlock RH.Six foals of three different breeds, born to healthy mares, appeared normal at birth, and died at two to five days of age with icterus, ataxia, head pressing, and terminal hepatic coma. Their livers were less than one-half normal weight. Most of the liver was dark red-brown and slightly rubbery. Histologically, these areas were characterized by severe bile ductule proliferation, mild portal tract fibrosis, and massive hepatocellular necrosis and lobular collapse. A small proportion of the liver, usually on the peripheral part of the lobes, was grossly light brown and slightly raised. Histologi...
Genetic linkage in the horse. I. Linkage relationships among 15 blood marker loci.
Hereditas    January 1, 1984   Volume 100, Issue 2 199-208 doi: 10.1111/j.1601-5223.1984.tb00120.x
Sandberg K, Andersson L.No abstract available
Suppressor lymphocyte activity in normal and immunodeficient horses.
Thymus    January 1, 1984   Volume 6, Issue 4 263-272 
Perryman LE, Wyatt CR.Equine lymphocytes incubated with Con A and isolated on discontinuous BSA density gradients suppressed mixed lymphocyte reactions in a cell dose- and Con A dose-dependent manner. Suppressor lymphocytes were radiosensitive, even after the initial Con A incubation phase was completed. Suppressor activity was consistently demonstrated using peripheral blood mononuclear leukocytes from normal horses, but was absent in thymus cells and variably present in lymph node cells. Suppressor lymphocytes were present in horses with selective IgM deficiency, and within neoplastic lymph nodes from a horse wit...
[Nutrition and skin diseases in the horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 4 493-498 
Meyer H.Skin diseases of the horse can be produced or enhanced through nutrient deficiency, intestinal formation of detrimental substances, photosensitizing compounds and by intake of allergenes. An exact case history regarding feeding is useful for evaluation of every skin abnormality.
Pheochromocytoma in the horse and measurement of norepinephrine levels in horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1984   Volume 25, Issue 1 21-25 
Yovich JV, Horney FD, Hardee GE.Ten cases of pheochromocytoma in horses were obtained from the literature and a computer search of medical records. The clinical, laboratory and pathological features of pheochromocytoma in horses were reviewed. Pheochromocytoma is a catecholamine secreting tumor which tends to occur in older horses without breed or sex predisposition. It is usually unilateral adrenal medullary in location and benign. Malignancy was present in one horse. The most common clinical signs were sweating, tachycardia, tachypnea, muscle tremor and anxiety; however the tumor may be asymptomatic. Clinical signs were no...
[Trichophyton verrucosum infection in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 1 49-53 
Weiss R, Földy I, Christoph H.No abstract available
[Topography of the guttural pouch (diverticulum tubae auditivae) in the horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 2 219-227 
König HE.No abstract available
Epidemiological survey of Corynebacterium equi infections on five Ontario horse farms.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    January 1, 1984   Volume 48, Issue 1 10-13 
Prescott JF, Travers M, Yager-Johnson JA.Corynebacterium equi was cultured from manure or soil on five horse-breeding farms in Ontario at monthly intervals on three occasions during the summer of 1982. The organism was widespread. Contamination by C. equi of the loafing paddock and pasture areas was significantly greater in a farm established 30 years than in two established for four and six years and there was a significant correlation between the C. equi burden in stables, paddocks and pastures and the length of use of the five farms for horses. In all farms, numbers of C. equi in pasture soil exceeded numbers in fresh manure, sugg...
Interpreting radiographs. 2: The fetlock joint and pastern.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 1 4-10 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01835.x
Edwards GB.No abstract available
[Hypophyseal adenocarcinoma in a horse. A case study].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 3 354-358 
Martens J, Rosenbruch M.The paper presents the case-history of a 5-year-old pony suffering from an adenocarcinoma which proceeded from the pars intermedia of the pituitary gland. Neurological and patho-morphological findings are reported.
[Immune complexes in the peripheral blood of healthy horses and horses with laminitis].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    January 1, 1984   Volume 97, Issue 1 25-28 
Stanek C, Mayr B, Graninger W, Hofmann R.No abstract available
The toxicity of Datura stramonium (thorn apple) to horses.
New Zealand veterinary journal    January 1, 1984   Volume 32, Issue 20 47 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1984.11728696
Williams S, Scott P.Meal contaminated by Datura stramonium seeds at the rate of 0.5% by weight was fed to two horses. Both horses showed clinical signs of depression, anorexia, weight loss, rapi heart and respiration rates, mydriasis, polyuria, polydipsia and diarrhoea. Both recovered with treatment. Maize screenings contaminated by the seeds had been used in the manufacture of the meal.
Verminous (Strongylus vulgaris) myelitis in a donkey.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1984   Volume 74, Issue 1 30-37 
Mayhew IG, Brewer BD, Reinhard MK, Greiner EC.A fifth stage Strongylus vulgaris migrated through the spinal cord of a 2-year-old, male donkey resulting in progressive paraparesis and then tetraplegia. A profound neutrophilic pleocytosis was detected on analysis of cerebrospinal fluid. The parasite appeared to have entered the mid-lumbar spinal cord, migrated to the cranial thoracic segments, exited, then re-entered the spinal cord a few segments craniad. It then traveled further cranially and was found in the third cervical spinal cord segment. Some parts of the lesion were remarkably free from tissue necrosis, hemorrhage and inflammation...
[Cardiovascular complications during anesthesia in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 4 477-480 
Schatzmann U, Girard P.This paper summarizes causes of cardiovascular complications. Treatment of drug related hypotension as well as etiology and therapy of cardiac arrest are discussed.
Studies of erythrocyte glyoxalase II in various domestic species: discovery of glyoxalase II deficiency in the horse.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1984   Volume 15, Issue 1 67-70 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1984.tb01099.x
Agar NS, Board PG, Bell K.No abstract available
Chronic chondritis of the arytenoid cartilages in a pony mare.
Australian veterinary journal    January 1, 1984   Volume 61, Issue 1 27-28 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1984.tb07127.x
MacLean AA, Robertson-Smith RG.The upper respiratory tract of a pony mare with marked exercise intolerance and respiratory stridor was examined with a flexible fibreoptoscope. Both arytenoids were adducted and distorted. A diagnosis of bilateral chondritis of the arytenoids was made and confirmed at autopsy after surgery to enlarge the rima glottidis was unsuccessful. Other space occupying lesions of the rima glottidis are discussed and theories on the aetiology are postulated.
In utero fractures in foals.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1984   Volume 65, Issue 1 37 
Sprinkle FP, Crowe MW.No abstract available
Retained cartilage in the distal radial physis of foals.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1984   Volume 21, Issue 1 10-17 doi: 10.1177/030098588402100103
Firth EC, Poulos PW.Examination of growth plate defects in the distal radial physis of 13 foals three to 70 days of age revealed lesions in the lateral and medial aspects of the distal radial physis; the lateral defects were more numerous and obvious. Lesions consisted of widening of the zone of hypertrophying cells of the metaphyseal growth plate (retained cartilage), retained cartilage with discontinuity of cartilage and primary spongiosa, and microfracture of the primary spongiosa. In some foals, the cartilage retention was thought to be due to primary spongiosa microfracture, although fracture subsequent to c...
[Skin necrosis in a horse as a consequence of a disinfection accident].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 1 45-48 
Stanek C.No abstract available
Three cases of obstruction of the small colon by a foreign body.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1984   Volume 6, Issue 1 31-36 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1984.9693904
van Wuijckhuise-Sjouke LA.This report describes fatal obstruction of the small colon of three horses. The obstructions were caused by irregularly shaped enteroliths of which the centres contained a foreign body, namely a guy-rope, a piece of baling twine , and a fishing-line, respectively. The diagnosis was made by post-mortem examination.
Muscle perfusion in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 1 66-68 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01857.x
Weaver BM, Lunn CE, Staddon GE.Muscle perfusion was studied in conscious and anaesthetised horses by monitoring the clearance of a locally injected bolus of saline containing radioactive xenon (133Xe). The mean of all the measurements made from the brachiocephalicus and semimembranosus muscles in conscious subjects was 1.29 ml/min/100 g while in anaesthetised subjects it was 0.40 ml/min/100 g. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to the clinical occurrence of post anaesthetic myositis.
Comparison of ELY-2.1 with blood group and ELY-1 markers in the horse.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1984   Volume 15, Issue 2 117-122 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1984.tb01106.x
Bailey E, Henney PJ.The distribution of ELY-2 was compared to the distribution of blood group factors Aa, Ab, Ac, Ae, Ca, Da, Db, Dc, Dd, De, Df, Dh, Dk, Ka, Pa, Pb, X, Qa, Qc, Ua, and W in 2465 American Standardbred horses and to ELY-1 in 193 American Standardbred horses. The distribution patterns were different in each case. The segregation of ELY-2.1 and factors at the A, C, D, K, P, Q, U and T (W) blood group loci and at the ELA locus indicated that ELY-2.1 is not a product of any of those loci. No segregation data were available for the ELY-1 locus. Family studies indicated that the gene for ELY-2.1 is not s...
Adrenergic receptors in the urethra and prostate of the horse.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1984   Volume 36, Issue 1 57-60 
García-Sacristán A, Casanueva CR, Castilla C, Labadia A.The presence and types of alpha and beta adrenergic receptors in the urethra and prostate of the horse were studied in vitro using adrenergic agonist and antagonist drugs. The existence of these receptors was shown. This finding was based on the observation that the contractile action was mediated by adrenergic receptors of alpha-1 type, although in the prostate alpha-2 type receptors also participated. Relaxation in both tissues was controlled by receptors of the beta-2 type.
[Diagnosis and therapy of guttural pouch diseases in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 3 329-341 
Grabner A.Using a fibreoptic endoscope ("small gastroscope" with outside diameter of 9.3 mm) a simple and sparing inspection of the guttural pouch is performed. The flap-type tube cover is opened by means of medial leverage with a guidance probe shifted through the work duct of the endoscope. The same procedure is used in diagnostic specimen collection and therapeutical measures such as irrigations. Guttural pouch topography and pathological disorders are illustrated by endoscopic photography. The different diseases such as follicular hyperplasia, ascending pharyngeal catarrh, perforating abscesses of t...