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Topic:Diagnostic Technique

Diagnostic techniques in equine medicine encompass a range of procedures and tools used to identify diseases, injuries, or other health conditions in horses. These techniques include imaging methods such as radiography, ultrasonography, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as well as laboratory tests like blood work and tissue biopsies. Each diagnostic method provides specific information that can aid in the assessment and management of equine health issues. Radiography is commonly used for evaluating bone structures, while ultrasonography is useful for soft tissue examination. MRI offers detailed images of both soft and hard tissues, though its use is limited by cost and availability. Laboratory tests can detect biochemical and hematological changes indicative of disease. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the development, application, and efficacy of various diagnostic techniques in equine veterinary practice.
Prognostic value of endometrial biopsy of the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 347-348 
Kenney RM.No abstract available
Distribution of immunoglobulins in equine tissues by indirect immunofluorescence.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1975   Volume 85, Issue 4 611-622 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(75)90127-9
Khaleel SA, Kenney RM, Allen PZ.No abstract available
Metabolic profiles of newborn foals.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 705-707 
Kitchen H, Rossdale PD.No abstract available
Pelviscopy in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 319-321 
Heinze H.A method of endoscopic examination of the internal genital (pelvic) organs of the mare is described. Special emphasis is placed on the induction of artificial pneumoperitoneum and the installation of an endoscopic peritoneal fistula device for prolonged observation. The potential of pelviscopy in the mare as a diagnostic aid, a new device for research in equine reproduction and as an auxillary aid to teaching is discussed.
Bacteriostatic activity of the mare uterus: a progress report on immunoglobulins.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 357-358 
Kenney RM, Kahleel SA.No abstract available
Pulmonary arterial wedge pressures: blood gas tensions and pH in the resting horse.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 10 1431-1434 
Milne DW, Muir WW, Skarda RT.Blood pressure recordings were made from right atrium, right ventricle, pulmonary trunk, and pulmonary arterial "wedge" positions in the standing, resting, adult horse. Similarly, comparisons were made of blood samples collected from these vascular positions, as well as from jugular vein and carotid artery. A consistently lower partial pressure of carbon dioxide and a greater partial pressure of oxygen and pH were found in blood samples from pulmonary arterial wedge than from carotid artery. A technique for safe and rapid collection of pulmonary trunk and pulmonary arterial wedge blood gases, ...
A surgical technique applied to the study of tubal eggs in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 519-524 
Betteridge KJ, Mitchell D.An efficient surgical technique of collecting eggs from the oviducts of mares is described. Within 6 days after ovulation recovery was successful in 22/29 mares. The technique has been used to investigate the retention and ageing of eggs in the oviducts and to determine the origin and the nature of the accessory CL during pregnancy.
Oestrogen excretion in mares in relation to various reproductive states.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 223-230 
Hillman RB, Loy RG.The rate of urinary oestrogen excretion was studied in four ovariectomized mares. In two animals ovariectomized when urinary oestrogen concentration was high, levels fell to a minimun within 48 hr. Intramuscular injection of oestradiol-17beta produced maximum urinary oestrogen levels within 3 to 6 hr and a return to minimum detectable levels within 24 hr. The major urinary oestrogen in mares was oestrone. In nine maiden mares studied between September and June, the cycle, the durations of dioestrus and oestrus, and the time of ovulation were similar in autumn (September to December) and spring...
Comparison of the methods of rectal palpation and haemagglutination-inhibition assay for diagnosis of pregnancy in mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 489-493 
Parker WG, Sullivan JJ, Larson LL.The diagnostic value of rectal palpation and immunological assay of PMSG was tested at different stages of pregnancy in mares inseminated with frozen semen in three separate studies. The results were based on foaling success and particular attention was paid to the numbers of inconsistent results obtained by the two tests. Generally, the number of false positive diagnoses was lower for the immunological assay than for palpation in early pregnancy (Days 40 to 60) and the relationship became reversed later in gestation.
Aspects of respiration in anaesthetized newborn foals.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 681-684 
Littlejohn A.The arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) in clinically normal newborn foals at 1300 m above sea-level is considerably lower (less than 60 mmHg) than in similarly aged foals at lower altitudes. This figure is further reduced to less than 50 mmHg without adverse effect in newborn foals at 1300 m maintained under pentobarbitone anaesthesia for prolonged periods. Measurement of O2 dissociation curves indicates that haemoglobin becomes saturated at a lower blood O2 tension in newborn foals than adult horses.
Follicular and luteal development in pregnant mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 429-433 
Squires EL, Ginther OJ.Examination of the ovaries of mares at various stages of pregnancy and after hysterectomy, together with measurement of progesterone concentrations in the peripheral plasma of pregnant and hysterectomized mares and in uterine and ovarian venous plasma of pregnant mares, demonstrated that the primary CL of pregnancy remains functional until at least Day 160 of gestation. The results showed that primary and secondary CL, and the placenta or uterus, all contribute to the total progesterone pool in mares during pregnancy. Similarities and differences in ovarian function observed between pregnant a...
Plasma progestagens in the pregnant mare in the first and last 90 days of gestation.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 435-439 
Burns SJ, Fleeger JL.Plasma progestagens were measured in eighteen pregnant mares to establish normal levels in the first and last 90 days of gestation. Progestagens increased from 25 ng/ml at 90 days before birth to 60 ng/ml at 10 days before birth, decreased to 58 ng/ml at 5 days before, and were 3 ng/ml or less by 5 days after perturition. During the first 90 days of pregnancy, progestagens reflected luteal activity with an increase in plasma levels from Day 30 to Day 60.
Ontogeny of equine haemoglobins.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 595-598 
Kitchen H, Bunn HF.Studies were made of the O2 affinities of fetal and maternal haemoglobins in the horse, and correlations were found with erythrocytic levels of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate.
The site of ovulation in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 329-330 
Witherspoon MD.Serial photography of the ovary of a mare by periodic surgical exteriorization of the ovary and peritonescopy in situ revealed that the ovulatory fossa is the site of ovulation in this species.
Plasma progestagens in pregnant mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 419-424 
Holtan DW, Nett TM, Estergreen VL.Peripheral plasma progestagens were quantified by a competitive protein-binding assay throughout pregnancy. The level of progesterone increased significantly between Days 0 and 8 (P less than 0-05) and again between Days 28 and 44 and reached a maximum on Day 64. Subsequently, it fell slowly until about Day 300 and then rose again during the last 30 days before reaching a minimum on the day after foaling. Very low concentrations of 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone were found except between Days 40 and 120 and during the last 30 days before birth. Two unidentified compounds, one eluting slightly bef...
Serum concentrations of FSH, LH and progesterone during the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 193-200 
Evans MJ, Irvine CH.Heterologous radioimmunoassays were developed for equine FSH and LH. Serum concentrations were measured in twenty-three mares throughout the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy. FSH concentrations were raised fivefold by 'surges' rather than 'spiked', occurring at 10- to 11-day intervals during the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy. The late oestrous/early dioestrous surge of FSH appeared to initiate development of up to twenty follicles. The mid-dioestrous surge may be important for the further development of follicles destined to ovulate 10 to 13 days later. Levels of LH were increasing by t...
The effect of rectal palpation on the fertility of cyclic mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 285-290 
Voss JL, Pickett BW.The effect of rectal palpation of fertility of non-lactating, normal cyclic mares was studied over 3 years. During the first year (1971), the conception rates in mares after daily paplaption during oestrus only, and during oestrus and the first 50 days of pregnancy, were not significantly lower (P greater than 0-05) than the conception rates recorded in mares not palpated. No abortions could be attributed to palpation. Oestrus lasted longer (P less than 0-05) in non-palpated than palpated mares. During the second year (1972), first-cycle pregnancy rates in two groups of mares palpated daily du...
The use of intravascular catheters for long-term studies on the mare and fetus.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 583-588 
Comline RS, Hall LW, Lavelle R, Silver M.Methods developed for the insertion of catheters into the umbilical artery and vein and the uterine vein of the pregnancy mare are described. The technique requires careful anaesthesia and the maintenance of normal blood gas tensions, pH and arterial blood pressure. Fetal survival was variable: three mares delivered live foals and six fetuses survived more than 15 days with a maximal period of 41 days. The erythrocytes sedimentation rate (ESR) of the fetal foal was always very low at operation but subsequently increased slightly; a sudden large rise in ESR usually indicated imminent fetal deat...
Plasma progestagens in cyclic, pregnant and post-partum mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 441-447 
Ganjam VK, Kenney RM, Flickinger G.The pattern of plasma progestagen levels during the oestrous cycle was similar to that previously reported except for lower peak levels. The lack of significant difference (p less than 0-01) between CPBA and RIA values suggests that progesterone itself is the major component during the oestrous cycle. Progesterone levels during the first and second post-parturient oestrous cycles were similar to those observed during the cycle of the non-pregnant mare. During pregnancy there were two peaks of plasma progestagens. The first, which occurred during the 3rd month, coincided with high levels of PMS...
[Production of antirickettsial sera by immunizing horses. II. Obtaining and testing an immune serum to D. sibericus].
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    October 1, 1975   Issue 10 27-31 
Barban PS, Gol'din RB, Misenzhnikov AV, Prusakova ZM, Pantiukhina AN.The authors present the results of immunization of horses-producers with a commercial antigen and the yolk culture of the living R. sibericus (strain K1) for the purpose of obtaining specific immune sera for many purposes. It was shown that the original combined scheme of immunization and reimmunization of horses, successfully approved in the preparation of immune sera to Rickettsia prowazeki also proved to be highly effective for obtaining the antisera to R. sibericus. Sera obtained after the primary immunization of horses could be successfully used as diagnostic sera, but they were of no use...
Identification of multiple equine infectious anemia antigens by immunodiffusion reactions.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    October 1, 1975   Volume 39, Issue 4 411-415 
Malmquist WA, Becvar CS.Equine infectious anemia (EIA) cell antigens prepared from infected equine spleen, equine leukocyte cultures or a persistently infected equine dermis cell line contained at least two serologically reacting components. For convenience one component was designated as soluble antigen (SA) and the other as cell-associated antigen (CAA). The SA appeared as a single component when it was prepared from EIA virus precipitated from infectious tissue culture fluid with polyethylene glycol and ether treated but it was mixed with CAA when the source was infected cells. Cytolytic or mechanical disruption o...
Morphology and histochemistry of the endometrial cup.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 397-400 
Yamauchi S.The luminal and cut surface of endometrial cups were examined by scanning electron microscopy. The distribution of PAS-positive and lipid materials in cup tissue was studied and most of the lipid material was localized in the large polyhedral cup cells. The lipid droplets gave positive reactions for DNPH in the cholesterol test of Schultz. They also exhibited autofluorescence and were therefore considered to be steroidal in nature. The significance of this possibility, particularly with regard to maintenance of early pregnancy in the mare, is discussed.
Evaluation of reproductive status of nonpregnant mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1975   Volume 167, Issue 6 449-458 
Greenhoff GR, Kenney RM.No abstract available
Examination for soundness.
Modern veterinary practice    September 1, 1975   Volume 56, Issue 9 643-646 
No abstract available
Plasma immunoreactive calcitonin levels in pregnant mares and newborn foals.
Hormone and metabolic research = Hormon- und Stoffwechselforschung = Hormones et metabolisme    September 1, 1975   Volume 7, Issue 5 429-432 doi: 10.1055/s-0028-1093699
Garel JM, Martin-Rosset W, Barlet JP.Plasma calcium and calcitonin levels were measured periodically during the two last months of pregnancy and at the time of parturition in 9 pregnant mares and their foals. In pregnant animals, there was an increase in plasma calcitonin levels in the days before parturition, which was not due to any change in plasma calcium. This result indicates that in the mare, as in the cow, in the days before parturition CT secretion escapes from its control by plasma calcium. In 0-day and 7-day-old foals plasma calcium levels were significantly higher than in their mothers, but plasma calcitonin levels we...
Effect of rectal palpation on pregnancy rate of nonlactating, normally cycling mares.
Journal of animal science    September 1, 1975   Volume 41, Issue 3 829-834 doi: 10.2527/jas1975.413829x
Voss JL, Pickett BW, Back DG, Burwash LD.No abstract available
Collection of bone grafts from the tuber coxae of the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1975   Volume 167, Issue 5 397-400 
Stashak TS, Adams OR.Autogenous bone grafts were obtained from the tuber coxae of 9 horses. The method used involved an oblique incision to expose the lateral aspect of the tuber coxae. The periosteum was incised and reflected in order to make a 5- by 2.5-cm opening in the lateral cortex for graft retrieval. The method provided good visualization, ample grafting material, and freedom from postsurgical complications.
Bile acid kinetics and bile secretion in the pony.
The American journal of physiology    September 1, 1975   Volume 229, Issue 3 592-597 doi: 10.1152/ajplegacy.1975.229.3.592
Anwer MS, Gronwall RR, Engelking LR, Klentz RD.Bile acid pool size and synthesis rate were determined by both isotope-dilution and washout methods in ponies with chronic external biliary fistulas. Bile acid pool size (10.9 mumol/kg) and synthesis rate (11.2 mumol/day per kg) estimated by the isotope-dilution method did not differ significantly from pool size (9.4 mumol/kg) and synthesis rate (9.5 mumol/day per kg) estimated by washout method. Bile acid-dependent and -independent fractions of bile flow, determined by a method that circumvents any inevitable correlation of flow to bile acid secretion due to common factors in both parameters,...
Nerve distribution in the metacarpus and front digit of the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 15, 1975   Volume 167, Issue 4 298-305 
Sack WO.The nerve distribution to the digit of the horse was studied with the compound microscope in serial transverse sections of fetal limbs and plotted on life-size outlines of the horse's foot. It was learned that there is much variation in the topography of the branches of the principal nerves. There is no mirror-image nerve distribution on the 2 sides of the foot. The dorsal branch of the ulnar nerve does not extend below the fetlock. The communication between the palmar metacarpal nerves and branches of the dorsal branch of the digital nerves is only a crossing of nerves without exchange of fib...
Atrioventricular dissociation with synchronous diaphragmatic flutter in a horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    August 1, 1975   Volume 70, Issue 8 967-974 
White NA, White SL.No abstract available