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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.
Optic neuropathy in a horse.
Acta neuropathologica    November 1, 1979   Volume 48, Issue 2 145-148 doi: 10.1007/BF00691156
Kelly DF, Pinsent PJ.A 10-month-old thoroughbred colt developed sudden complete blindness; no other neurological abnormality was detected. At necropsy 3.5 months later lesions were confined to both optic pathways in which there was extensive degeneration of axons and myelin and gliosis. The cause of the optic lesion was not determined but the lesion may be a toxic neuropathy.
Minimal changes in blood cell counts and biochemical values associated with prolonged isoflurane anesthesia of horses.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 11 1646-1648 
Steffey EP, Zinkl J, Howland D.The potential toxicity to horses of 7.33 +/- 0.87 SD minimal alveolar concentration hours of isoflurane anesthesia was evaluated by sequential determination of blood cell counts, electrolyte concentrations, and certain blood chemical values. Minimal or no serious toxicosis was observed for up to 7 days after anesthesia was terminated.
Plasma and synovial fluid lysozyme activity in horses with experimental cartilage defects.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 11 1531-1536 
Torbeck RL, Prieur DJ.Cartilaginous defects were created in the radiocarpal joints of 12 horses. Synovial fluid cytologic features, lysozyme activity, and beta-glucuronidase activity were monitored for 16 days. A comparison was made of plasma lysozyme and beta-glucuronidase activity and of synovial fluid lysozyme, beta-glucuronidase, and leukocyte concentrations. Plasma lysozyme was found to be independent of synovial fluid lysozyme activity. Synovial fluid lysozyme was significantly increased (P less than 0.001) in all joints with surgically induced defects (group I) compared with controls (arthrocentesis done; gr...
Dorsal displacement of the left ventral and dorsal colon in two horses.
Australian veterinary journal    November 1, 1979   Volume 55, Issue 11 542-544 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1979.tb07027.x
Speirs VC, Hilbert BJ, Blood DC.This paper describes the clinical signs and surgical treatment of 2 cases of dorsal displacement of the left ventral and dorsal colon. The condition, in which the colon becomes enclosed in the space bounded by the base of the spleen, the dorsal aspect of the suspensory ligament of the spleen (phrenicosplenic ligament), the left kidney and the adjacent body wall, is characterised by moderate to severe pain, minimal signs of shock, no response to medical therapy and a tendency for a ventral midline abdominal paracentesis to enter the spleen. Both horses recovered after surgical replacement of th...
Code of practice for the control of contagious equine metritis and other equine venereal diseases for the 1980 covering season.
The Veterinary record    October 27, 1979   Volume 105, Issue 17 395-397 doi: 10.1136/vr.105.17.395
Frank CJ, David JS, Smith H.No abstract available
Equine parasite control using pyrantel embonate.
The Veterinary record    October 27, 1979   Volume 105, Issue 17 389-391 doi: 10.1136/vr.105.17.389
Clayton HM, Duncan JL, Gilbert GA.Over a period of several years the use of pyrantel embonate in the control of helminth infections on three equine establishments was monitored by the examination of faecal samples collected immediately before each anthelmintic treatment. With a monthly interval between treatments for three years the faecal egg output of the horses remained at a very low level. One one establishment this was maintained when the treatment interval was extended to one-and-a-half months after treating monthly for two years. If a treatment interval of one-and-a-half months was used continuously for a number of year...
Evaluation of uterine tube function in pony mares.
The Veterinary record    October 20, 1979   Volume 105, Issue 16 364-366 doi: 10.1136/vr.105.16.364
Allen WE, Kessy BM, Noakes DE.Two experimental procedures were investigated in order to assess their usefulness in diagnosing occlusion of the equine uterine tube. The starch grain test, which involves the injection of a starch suspension onto the ovary and the subsequent recovery of starch from the cervix, proved to be safe and reliable. Each tube could be investigated separately. It was found that when starch was injected onto the ovulating ovary on the day of ovulation, there was a delay of four to seven days before starch was recovered from the cervix. The phenolsulphonphthalein (PSP) test, which involves the depositio...
[Problems of feeding foals].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 15, 1979   Volume 92, Issue 20 389-394 
Meyer H.No abstract available
[Forms of the vector loops in the atrial electrocardiogram of the horse].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 15, 1979   Volume 92, Issue 20 394-398 
Grauerholz H.No abstract available
Diagnosis and treatment of equine uveitis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1979   Volume 175, Issue 8 803-808 
Rebhun WC.No abstract available
Persistent right aortic arch associated with a persistent left ductus arteriosus and an interventricular septal defect in a horse.
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    October 15, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 20 189-194 
van der Linde-Sipman JS, Goedegebuure SA, Kroneman J.In this article a description is given of the clinical and postmortem findings of a persistent right aortic arch in association with a persistent left ductus arteriosus and a ventricular septal defect in a horse.
Equine hydatidosis.
The Veterinary record    October 6, 1979   Volume 105, Issue 14 335-336 doi: 10.1136/vr.105.14.335
Thompson RC.No abstract available
Klebsiella infections in mares.
The Veterinary record    October 6, 1979   Volume 105, Issue 14 335 doi: 10.1136/vr.105.14.335-a
Crouch JR.No abstract available
Equine IgG and IgG(T) antibodies: dependence of precipitability on both antigen and antibody structure.
Molecular immunology    October 1, 1979   Volume 16, Issue 10 787-790 doi: 10.1016/0161-5890(79)90156-1
McGuire TC, Archer BG, Crawford TB.No abstract available
Clinical aspects of mycotic keratitis in the horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1979   Volume 69, Issue 4 364-374 
Bistner SI, Riis RC.Several manifestations of equine corenal ulcers caused by mycotic agents are discussed. Antifungal therapy is reviewed. Mycotic keratitis should be suspected when routine corneal ulcer therapy is nonproductive.
Amputation of the equine urethral process affected with habronemiasis.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    October 1, 1979   Volume 74, Issue 10 1453-1457 
Stick JA.No abstract available
A re-evaluation of the D (+) xylose absorption test in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 4 239-243 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01355.x
Roberts MC, Norman P.The absorption of d-xylose forms the basis of a useful screening test in the investigation of small intestinal disorders in the horse. A comparison has been made of different assay methods and there was no significant difference between the results obtained with the parabromoaniline (PBA) method or the ferric chloride-orcinol (FCO) method. The orthotoluidine method was unsatisfactory. The anticoagulant agent did not affect the test. A dose of 0.5 g commercial grade xylose/kg body weight as a 10 per cent solution given by stomach tube, produced a peak plasma xylose level after 90 min and should...
Diagnosis and treatment of septic arthritis in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1979   Volume 175, Issue 7 701-704 
Leitch M.No abstract available
Ossifying ameloblastoma in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 55, Issue 10 498-500 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1979.tb00380.x
Summers PM, Wells KE, Adkins KF.The features of an ossifying ameloblastoma in a 5-year-old gelding are described. The tumour developed in the angle of the right mandible and microscopically consisted of multiple follicles and islands of epithelial tissue adjacent to which were trabeculae of bone, osteoid and compact collagenous tissue.
[Mesotheliomas of the serous membranes in horses].
Patologia polska    October 1, 1979   Volume 30, Issue 4 603-607 
Kotz J, Houszka M.No abstract available
Some biochemical and haematological changes in horses in Czechoslovakia.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 4 267-268 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01364.x
Komarek J, Matousek V.No abstract available
A review of the salient features of osteochondrosis in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 4 211-214 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01346.x
Stromberg B.There appears to be an increasing incidence of osteochondrosis in young fast-growing horses in Europe and the USA. The disease is thought to be congenital in type and affects endochondral ossification in growing bones. It can be localised to one joint or may be a generalised condition. The clinical manifestations of the disease lead to a secondary chronic degenerative joint disease in adult animals. There is a genetic predisposition to the condition which is associated with rapid growth and excessive high energy feeding. The careful genetic selection of bloodstock and restricted intake in earl...
Chronic phenylmercuric acetate toxicity in a horse.
Veterinary and human toxicology    October 1, 1979   Volume 21, Issue 5 321-327 
Roberts MC, Seawright AA, Ng JC.Phenylmercuric acetate (PMA) was administered orally to a horse over a period of 27 weeks (190 days) at a dose rate of 0.4 mg Hg/kg per day. The effects produced were consistent with those of chronic inorganic mercury intoxication. The clinical features included masseter muscle atrophy, difficulty in prehension and mastication, malodorous breath, reduced appetite and weight loss, and reflected significant pathological changes involving the buccal, mandibular and dental tissues. Renal dysfunction was evident terminally and there was degeration and necrosis of the proximal tubular epithelium. Ne...
[Contagious metritis of horses].
Veterinariia    October 1, 1979   Issue 10 84-87 
Tret'iakov AD, Koromyslov GF, Luchko MA.No abstract available
Immunity: autoimmunity, isoimmunity, and immunodeficiency in the foal.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    October 1, 1979   Volume 74, Issue 10 1430-1440 
Coffman J.No abstract available
Bacteria isolated from uterine washings from mares in the Sudan.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 4 219-222 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01349.x
El Sanousi SM, El Tayeb Amna B, Shadad EY.Uterine washes collected from 200 barren mares were examined at the Khartoum veterinary clinic during the period May 1977 to May 1978. A variety of bacteria was isolated from 77 per cent of the mares investigated. Thirty mares were treated by parenteral injection and intrauterine infusion of the appropriate antibiotics. Twenty-one of these mares conceived, of which 17 delivered normal foals and 4 had early embryonic deaths.
Evaluation of equine radial and median nerve conduction velocities.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 10 1406-1410 
Henry RW, Diesem CD, Wiechers DO.Eleven ponies and 13 horses were used to develop a technique for determining conduction velocity for the radial and median nerves and establishing normal limits for these values. One pony was euthanatized to determine the course of the radial and the median nerves. From this dissection, both proximal and distal stimulation sites for the radial and the median nerves were selected, as well as areas for recording muscle evoked responses from the abductor digiti I longus (extensor carpi obliquus) and the radial head of the deep digital flexor muscles. The other ten ponies and the horses were used ...
[Protein and enzymatic activity levels of the synovial fluid in the horse].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    October 1, 1979   Volume 121, Issue 10 521-531 
Poncet PA, Gerber H, Tschudi P, Diehl M.No abstract available
Evaluation of functional thymic hormones in Arabian horses with severe combined immunodeficiency.
Clinical and experimental immunology    October 1, 1979   Volume 38, Issue 1 37-44 
Splitter GA, Incefy G, Iwata T, McGuire TC.Arabian horses with severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCID) were evaluated for thymic hormone activities using thymic extracts and sera. Extracts prepared from thymus of SCID horses were able to increase the number of spleen cells responding to sheep red blood cells in irradiated, bone marrow-reconstituted mice. In addition, ultrafiltrates prepared from sera of these immunodeficient horses, which contained material with molecular weight of less than 50,000 Daltons could (a) induce a population of human bone marrow precursor cells to differentiate into cells bearing SRBC receptors and f...
Identification of alpha1-lipoproteins in crossed immunoelectrophoresis.
Clinical chemistry    October 1, 1979   Volume 25, Issue 10 1749-1756 
Cline LJ, Crowle AJ.Evans Blue dye binds selectively, but with different avidities, to five major antigens in human serum. The anodic mobility of the antigen-dye complexes is greater than that of the antigens alone in crossed immunoelectrophoresis, which is of practical value for identification. We used this characteristic to show that in some human sera there is a population of alpha1-lipoprotein molecules that migrates electrophoretically in the beta-lipoprotein region, where in conventional zone electrophoresis it could be mistaken for beta-lipoprotein. We also demonstrate that horses, unlike rabbits, rarely m...