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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.
Preparation of hemagglutinating antigen of equine infectious anemia virus from infected equine leukocyte cultures.
National Institute of Animal Health quarterly    January 1, 1978   Volume 18, Issue 1 39-40 
Sentsui H, Kono Y.No abstract available
Artifact production with micromanometers used to record intracardiac pressure and sound.
Catheterization and cardiovascular diagnosis    January 1, 1978   Volume 4, Issue 3 275-282 doi: 10.1002/ccd.1810040309
Brown CM, Holmes JR.In horses experimental right and left heart catheterization using a catheter with two microtransducers 9 cm apart, usually in a transvalval position produced pressure and sound artifacts that confounded the diagnosis. Most were probably due to malpositioning resulting in movement through a valve during recording or impingement on the valve cusps or the chordae tendineae or lodgement in the apex of the heart. The recognition of these artifacts is particularly important in studies of large animals in which catheter siting cannot be monitored by radiography.
Isoelectric focusing of horse serum esterase isozymes and detection of new phenotypes.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1978   Volume 9, Issue 4 207-213 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1978.tb01438.x
Fisher RA, Scott AM.A new method for separating the isozymes of horse serum esterase is described. The improved resolution has enabled us to detect several previously undescribed phenotypes. This method has also been used to detect two different apparently 'silent' alleles.
[Purification of equine influenza virus A/Equi-2/W/9/69 by the sucrose step density gradient ultracentrifugation].
Medycyna doswiadczalna i mikrobiologia    January 1, 1978   Volume 30, Issue 3 189-192 
Weremowicz S.No abstract available
Diagnosis of equine neurologic problems.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1978   Volume 68 Suppl 7 122-132 
De Lahunta A.This is a review of the more common diseases of the spinal cord and various areas of the brain of horses. The results of a two and one-half year study of spinal cord disease are emphasized. After a description of the lesion the salient clinical signs are described and the features that differentiate them from other similar diseases. In the seminar, films of case and slides of lesions will be shown to document these diseases.
[Abnormal spermatozoa–one of the causes of polyploidy?].
Veterinarni medicina    January 1, 1978   Volume 23, Issue 1 55-62 
Zibrín M.No abstract available
[Effect of intravenous injections of Clostridium perfringens (welchii) spore (entero) toxin in the horse].
Revista latinoamericana de microbiologia    January 1, 1978   Volume 20, Issue 1 31-34 
Torres-Anjel MJ, Castro M, Cruz A, Ochoa R.No abstract available
Cryptosporidiosis in immunodeficient Arabian foals.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1978   Volume 15, Issue 1 12-17 doi: 10.1177/030098587801500102
Snyder SP, England JJ, McChesney AE.Five of six immunodeficient Arabian foals that died of adenoviral infection were found to be infected with an intestinal coccidian of the genus Cryptosporidium. Various developmental stages of the organism were found in the microvillous border of the intestinal mucosa. The foals had diarrhea but it was not possible to separate the effects of the cryptosporidial infection from those of the concomitant adenoviral enteritis.
Acute pulmonary edema.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1978   Volume 59, Issue 1 64-65 
Lindley WH.No abstract available
Isolation and characterisation of an equine rhinovirus.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    January 1, 1978   Volume 25, Issue 3 225-237 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1978.tb01180.x
Studdert MJ, Gleeson LJ.No abstract available
Sensitivity of mycoplasmas of the respiratory tract of pigs and horses to erythromycin and its use in selective media.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1978   Volume 24, Issue 1 121-123 
Lewis J, Poland J.The ability of erythromycin in liquid medium to suppress the growth of eight species of acholeplasma and of 13 species of mycoplasma was tested. The Acholeplasma spp and two glycolytic Mycoplasma spp from horses--a slow glucose-metabolising (SGM) mycoplasma and a strain N3, related to M mycoides--were sensitive to erythromycin. Thus the growth of acholeplasmas can be suppressed when attempts are made to isolate pathogens from the porcine respiratory tract, but, in the case of horses, erythromycin would suppress not only Acholeplasma spp but also two Mycoplasma spp of unknown pathogenicity in t...
Prevalence of latent cases of Babesia equi infection in some parts of North West India as measured by the capillary agglutination test.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 1 24-26 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02209.x
Malhotra DV, Banerjee DP, Gautam OP.The prevalence of Babesia equi infection in north west India was assessed by means of the capillary tube agglutination (CA) test. The particulate antigen used in the test was potent and no cross reaction with other related haemaprotozoa was observed. The serological survey showed that from 323 horses from 3 localities there was an overall incidence of 50.1 per cent. In Haryana the incidence was 38.3 per cent in the 196 horses tested, in Uttar Pradesh it was 47.2 per cent from 72 animals and in Rajasthan it was 96.4 per cent from 55 horses.
Horner’s syndrome in the horse: experimental induction and a case report.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 1 9-13 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02204.x
Firth EC.The findings in 6 experimental and 1 natural case of Horner's Syndrome (HS) are presented. The experimental cases were induced by unilateral surgical section of the cervical sympathetic trunk in the middle third of the neck. The naturally occurring case was seen in a 17 year old gelding with a mediastinal tumour. The signs of HS in these horses included ptosis, miosis, enophthalmos, hemilateral sweating and temperature increase of the face and cranial cervical region on the affected side. The intensity of these signs was variable between and within animals. Miosis, enophthalmos and temperature...
[Diagnosis of infectious anemia in horses using the Coggins test].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1978   Volume 15, Issue 3 19-25 
Tekerlekov P, Dilovski M, Enchev S, Peneva I.Coggins' immune diffusion test was modified, and was applied as a screening one in the study of the epizootic status. The positive reactions were characterized by the production of a precipitation line between the antigen and the respective serum that was tested. The appearance of such a line was associated with that formed with the use of the positive control serum, pointing to a reaction of identity. With the weakly positive reactions the ends of the precipitin lines, formed with the use of the positive control serum, were found to deviate slightly toward the site where the antigen had been ...
Close linkage between the albumin and Gc loci in the horse.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1978   Volume 9, Issue 3 169-173 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1978.tb01430.x
Sandberg K, Juneja RK.Evidence for close linkage between the structural loci for albumin and Gc protein in the horse was presented. A recombination frequency (c) of 0.009 +/- 0.006 (95% confidence limits: 0.001 less than c less than 0.032) was estimated. These results were based on a study of a large sire family comprising 223 offspring from informative matings. No evidence of linkage disequilibrium was observed in one horse population studied.
The development of a radio-stethoscope for use in the horse at rest and during exercise.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 1 14-17 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02206.x
Attenburrow DP.The development of a radio-stethoscope for horses is described. The equipment consisted of a sound transducer applied to the skin adjacent to the trachea and a radio transmitter attached to the saddle. The signals emitted were detected by telemetry and recorded on a magnetic tape-recorder. The recorder incorporated a monitor earphone so that sounds could be reproduced at the time of recording. The frequency response obtainable ranged from a few Hz to 4 KHz. This technique provided an objective means of studying the respiratory sounds generated during exercise although absolute values could not...
Antibodies to Akabane virus in Australia.
Australian veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 54, Issue 1 1-3 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1978.tb00256.x
Cybinski DH, St George TD, Paull NI.Neutralising antibody to Akabane virus was shown to develop in cattle in northern Australia throughout the year and also on the east coast of New South Wales in the summer during 1975/1976. Other species found to have antibody to Akabane virus were buffaloes, horses, camels and sheep, but no antibody was found in domestic chickens, ducks, wallabies or man. The biting midge Culicoides brevitarsis has been detected in all the major areas where antibody was demonstrated in this study.
The ‘normal range’ and precision of phytohaemagglutinin-induced equine lymphocyte transformation in vitro.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1978   Volume 24, Issue 1 87-91 
Dixon JB, Allan D, West CR.Data are presented on lymphocyte transformation by phytohaemagglutinin in 20 normal horses. The logarithms of transformation ratios were found to have an approximately normal distribution, giving (for the transformation ratios themselves) a geometric mean of 23.6, a range of 1.92 to 97.3, and an estimated 95 per cent tolerance interval of 1.1 to 488. Analysis of variance on the logarithms of the transformation ratios gave a coefficient of variation of 140 per cent of the transformation ratios themselves for the variation between horses; whereas the coefficient of variation between duplicate sa...
Equine leptospirosis with some clinical observations.
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1978   Volume 9, Issue 1 115-118 
Barsoum IS, Botros BA, Morcos MB.In a serologic survey on equine leptospirosis in Egypt, the following incidences of leptospiral serosensitivity were found: 1. Hospitalised horses 65/113 (57.5 %). 2. Hospitalised donkeys 90/125 (72.0 %). 3. Apparently healthy horses 21/72 (29.1 %). Sera of these animals were mostly reacting to serotypes butembo, pomona, icterohemorragiae, and grippotyphosa. Equine in Egypt are close animals to humans and may constitute a potential source of leptospiral infection. From the clinical point of view, it is very possible that ocular, hoof lesions and icterus in equines would be expected with leptos...
Antigenic relatedness of equine herpes virus types 1 and 3.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1978   Volume 56, Issue 1-2 33-45 doi: 10.1007/BF01317281
Gutekunst DE, Malmquist WA, Becvar CS.Antiserums prepared in specific pathogen free (SPF) ponies were used in direct and indirect immunofluorescence, immunodiffusion, complement fixation and serum neutralization procedures to study the interrelationships of the three types of equine herpes viruses (EHV-1, EHV-2, and EHV-3). Equine cell cultures infected with each type virus fluoresced when stained with homologous conjugated antiserum. In reciprocal tests EHV-1 and EHV-3 cross-fluoresced, but EHV-2 did not cross-fluoresce. Non-infected cell cultures did not fluoresce when stained with the 3 conjugates. EHV-1 and EHV-3 cross-fluores...
Contagious equine metritis.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 1 1-4 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02200.x
Powell DG.An outbreak of contagious equine metritis that occurred on stud farms in the Newmarket area during 1977 is described. A Gram-negative coccobacillus was isolated from field cases and the disease was reproduced experimentally by inoculating a pure culture of the organism through the cervix of clean pony mares. Natural spread of the disease occurred by venereal transmission and following the handling, examination or teasing of infected mares. Bacteriological screening of the genital tract of mares and stallions before covering plus stricter standards of hygiene on the stud farms have been recomme...
Immune response of ponies to experimental infection with Ehrlichia equi.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 1 15-18 
Nyindo MB, Ristic M, Lewis GE, Huxsoll DL, Stephenson EH.Four ponies experimentally infected with Ehrlichia equi developed substantial cell-mediated immune responses, as measured by the leukocyte migration-inhibition test. Serum anti-E equi antibodies up to 1:1,280 were demonstrated by the indirect fluorescent antibody test. Cell-mediated immune responses returned to a base-line value by day 200 after primary inoculation, but serum antibody titers persisted for at least 300 days after inoculation. Two additional susceptible ponies, which were inoculated with convalescent blood or organ homogenates from ponies recovered from acute equine ehrlichiosis...
Osteochondrosis in the horse. I. A clinical and radiologic investigation of osteochondritis dissecans of the knee and hock joint.
Acta radiologica. Supplementum    January 1, 1978   Volume 358 139-152 
Strömberg B, Rejnö S.The clinical and radiologic features of osteochondritis dissecans in the knee and hock joint of horses are described. The material includes 91 horses, of which 43 had the lesion in one or both knee joints, and 48 in one or both hock joints. It was found that osteochondritis dissecans of the knee joint was more common than the one in the hock joint in thoroughbreds and halfbreds, while the lesion in the hock joint was most common in standardbred trotters. In the knee the lesion was most often located to the lateral trochlear ridge. In the hock joint the predilection site was the intermediate ri...
Osteochondrosis in the horse. II. Pathology.
Acta radiologica. Supplementum    January 1, 1978   Volume 358 153-178 
Rejnö S, Strömberg B.An investigation was made of the pathology of osteochondritis dissecans of young foals and horses with clinical signs of the lesion. A randomly selected material of fetuses and young foals without clinical signs was also examined. It was demonstrated that osteochondritis dissecans is primarily a cartilaginous disease, as previously described in pigs and dogs. Thickening, disturbance of endochondral ossification, degeneration and necrosis of the cartilage were the four main features of osteochondritis dissecans. Cracks and fissures occurred in the degenerated and necrotic parts of the cartilage...
The null allele in the horse esterase (Es) system detected by enzyme assay and rocket immunoelectrophoresis in heterozygous animals.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1978   Volume 9, Issue 4 197-205 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1978.tb01437.x
Kaminski M.The detection of the recessive null allele of horse serum esterase (Es) is possible in heterozygotes Es+/EsO which by starch gel electrophoresis appear like homozygotes Es+/Es+. Two methods are proposed, the titration of enzymatic activity of esterase and the immunochemical titration of esterase as antigen. These methods can be applied to solve the cases of suspect parentage or in population studies.
The long search for the causes of congenital malformations in mammals.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 1 43-46 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02213.x
Woollam DH.The history of teratology is reviewed. Methods available for causing malformations in mammals by subtle changes in the environment during pregnancy are discussed. A table is provided in which the commoner teratogens are listed. Methods are described by means of which the activity of some common teratogens may be opposed. The occurrence at Battle Creek, Michigan, USA, of a chemical agent dangerous to health, life and development of all mammals is described. This gives an indication that injury and death to all mammals, as in the Sevaso disaster, including teratogenesis may be expected to be a f...
Special topics in clinical pathology.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1978   Volume 68 Suppl 7 306-317 
Bentinck-Smith J, Tasker JB.The following topics are discussed in this presentation: A. Recent advances in the use and interpretation and methodology of antibiotic susceptibility testing. B. Improvements in sample submittal to obtain accurate results from your laboratory. C. Staining blood, bone marrow, and cytology specimens in the office laboratory. D. Pathogenesis and differential diagnosis of lipemia. E. Differential diagnosis of abdominal effusions.
Demonstration of specific antibodies in the central nervous system of horses naturally infected with Borna disease virus.
Medical microbiology and immunology    December 27, 1977   Volume 163, Issue 4 215-226 doi: 10.1007/BF02125505
Ludwig H, Thein P.From 18 horses with clinical symptoms of an affection of the central nervous system and with histopathologic alterations in the brain, four were demonstrated to have Bornavirus-specific antibodies. The antibodies are monospecific, recognizing identical antigens from infected brains of different animal species as well as from persistently infected tissue culture cells. Discrete immunoglobulin species (oligoclonal IgG) can be demonstrated in concentrated horse cerebrospinal fluid; they carry Bornavirus antibody specificity. Their presence, together with the higher antibody titers in the cerebros...
Thiamine measurements in horses with laryngeal hemiplegia.
The Veterinary record    December 17, 1977   Volume 101, Issue 25 510 
Loew FM.No abstract available
[Long-term studies on the causes of abortion in the breeding of pure breeds].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 5, 1977   Volume 84, Issue 12 453-459 
von Benten C, Petzoldt K, Sonnenschein B, von Benten K.No abstract available