Analyze Diet

Topic:Diarrhea

Diarrhea in horses is a condition characterized by the frequent passage of loose or watery stools. It can result from various causes, including dietary changes, infections, parasites, or underlying gastrointestinal disorders. The condition can lead to dehydration and electrolyte imbalances, necessitating prompt veterinary assessment and intervention. Diarrhea can affect horses of all ages, but foals and older horses may be more susceptible to severe outcomes. This topic encompasses a collection of peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the etiology, pathophysiology, diagnostic approaches, and management strategies for diarrhea in equine patients.
Outbreak of acute colitis on a horse farm associated with tetracycline-contaminated sweet feed.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    November 26, 1999   Volume 40, Issue 10 718-720 
Keir AA, Stämpfli HR, Crawford J.Exposure of a group of horses to tetracycline-contaminated feed resulted in acute colitis and subsequent death in one horse and milder diarrhea in 3 others. The most severely affected animal demonstrated clinical and pathological findings typical of colitis X. The other herdmates responded well to administration of zinc bacitracin.
Lawsonia intracellularis-like organism infection in a miniature foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 26, 1999   Volume 215, Issue 4 511-483 
Brees DJ, Sondhoff AH, Kluge JP, Andreasen CB, Brown CM.A 7-month-old foal was admitted to the hospital with a history of lethargy, weight loss, mild diarrhea, and anorexia. A diagnosis of proliferative enteritis caused by Lawsonia intracellularis-like organisms was made after necropsy and histologic examination of the small intestine. Although infection with L intracellularis-like organisms is a rare cause of enteritis in foals, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis, especially if the foal was housed in the proximity of pigs or pig feces. Antemortem diagnosis remains challenging because isolation of the organism in fecal material r...
The prevalence of Aeromonas species in feces of horses with diarrhea.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    August 17, 1999   Volume 13, Issue 4 357-360 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(1999)013<0357:tposif>2.3.co;2
Hathcock TL, Schumacher J, Wright JC, Stringfellow J.Feces collected from 40 horses with diarrhea and 34 horses without diarrhea were examined to determine if an association existed between isolation of Aeromonas spp. and diarrhea. Samples were also examined for Salmonella spp., and identification of viruses and parasite ova. Neither Salmonella spp. nor Aeromonas spp. were isolated from the feces of 34 control horses. Aeromonas spp. were isolated from feces of 22 of 40 (55%) horses with diarrhea. Salmonella spp. were isolated from feces of 8 (20%) horses, and of these, 5 (12.5%) were also positive for Aeromonas spp. Twenty-nine isolates of Aerom...
Prevalence of Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin and Clostridium difficile toxin A in feces of horses with diarrhea and colic.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 6, 1999   Volume 215, Issue 3 358-361 
Donaldson MT, Palmer JE.To determine prevalence of clostridial enterotoxins in feces of horses with diarrhea and colic, and to determine whether an association exists between detection of clostridial enterotoxins in feces and development of diarrhea as a complication of colic. Methods: Prospective case series and case-control study. Methods: 174 horses with diarrhea, colic, or problems not related to the gastrointestinal tract. Methods: Horses were assigned to 1 of 4 groups: colic with diarrhea (group 1; n = 30); colic without diarrhea (group 2; 30); diarrhea without colic (group 3; 57); and control (group 4; 57). Fe...
Necrotizing mycotic vasculitis with cerebral infarction caused by Aspergillus niger in a horse with acute typholocolitis.
Veterinary pathology    July 27, 1999   Volume 36, Issue 4 347-351 doi: 10.1354/vp.36-4-347
Tunev SS, Ehrhart EJ, Jensen HE, Foreman JH, Richter RA, Messick JB.An 18-year-old Morgan mare was presented to the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, University of Illinois, with a 10-day history of watery diarrhea, depression, and dysphagia. On admission, the animal was severely dehydrated, depressed, and unable to swallow and had no clinical signs of diarrhea. The respiratory and heart rate and body temperature were within normal limits. Following fluid therapy, the mare developed severe watery diarrhea and continued to be depressed, incoordinated, and dysphagic. The animal died on the fourth day after admission and was sent to the Laboratories of Veteri...
Myeloperoxidase activity of the large intestine in an equine model of acute colitis.
American journal of veterinary research    July 17, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 7 807-813 
McConnico RS, Weinstock D, Poston ME, Roberts MC.To determine whether quantification of myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity could be a useful laboratory technique to detect granulocyte infiltration in equine intestinal tissues. Methods: Intestinal tissue (inflamed or healthy) collected from 16 age- and sex-matched Shetland Ponies. Methods: Intestinal tissue MPO activity was determined, and histologic assessment of adjacent specimens from healthy and inflamed intestine was done. Results: Intestinal tissue MPO activity and histopathologic score increased with time after castor oil challenge and peaked at 16 hours in an equine diarrhea model in whic...
Diagnosis of larval cyathostominosis in horses in Belgium.
The Veterinary record    July 15, 1999   Volume 144, Issue 24 665-668 doi: 10.1136/vr.144.24.665
Smets K, Shaw DJ, Deprez P, Vercruysse J.Between October 1996 and May 1997, 94 horses which were suspected of being infected with strongyles were examined clinically, and samples of faeces were examined for strongyle eggs and cyathostome larvae (L4) and adults. Blood samples were monitored for total protein, albumin and beta-globulins. In 28 of the horses (30 per cent) cyathostome L4 and adults were detected in the faeces, and were significantly associated with the horses' condition, the occurrence of diarrhoea, with lower concentrations of total protein and albumin, and with higher percentages of beta-globulin. Thirty-four of the ho...
Comparison of medical and surgical treatment for impaction of the small colon in horses: 84 cases (1986-1996).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 14, 1999   Volume 214, Issue 7 1042-1047 
Rhoads WS, Barton MH, Parks AH.To characterize clinical findings and compare effects of treatment and outcome for horses treated medically or surgically for impaction of the small colon. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: 84 horses with impaction of the small colon. Methods: Medical records were reviewed for history, physical examination findings, laboratory values, treatment, response to treatment, complications, out-come, and necropsy findings. Results: 47 horses were treated medically and 37 horses were treated surgically. Significant differences between groups were not identified for duration of clinical signs, phys...
Characteristics and risk factors for failure of horses with acute diarrhea to survive: 122 cases (1990-1996).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 19, 1999   Volume 214, Issue 3 382-390 
Cohen ND, Woods AM.To characterize horses with acute diarrhea and determine risk factors for failure to survive. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: 122 adult horses admitted for acute diarrhea at the teaching hospital between Jan 1, 1990 and Dec 31, 1996. Methods: Medical records of horses with acute diarrhea were reviewed to abstract information regarding signalment, history, physical examination, clinicopathologic testing, treatment, and outcome. Results: 91 of 122 (74.6%) horses lived and were discharged from the hospital. Horses with history of administration of antimicrobials for a problem preceding dia...
Association of Clostridium difficile with enterocolitis and lactose intolerance in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 2, 1999   Volume 214, Issue 2 229-205 
Weese JS, Parsons DA, Staempfli HR.Diagnoses of Clostridium difficile enterocolitis and lactose intolerance were made in a neonatal foal with persistent diarrhea. It was determined that the foal had lactose intolerance on the basis of the results of a lactose tolerance test, and a diagnosis of C difficile enterocolitis was subsequently made. The foal responded to oral administration of metronidazole and lactase. Lactose intolerance is a secondary problem most commonly associated with rotavirus infection, but it can be caused by any condition affecting the small intestine. Because C difficile can affect the small intestine in fo...
Clostridium difficile associated with acute colitis in mares when their foals are treated with erythromycin and rifampicin for Rhodococcus equi pneumonia.
Equine veterinary journal    December 9, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 6 482-488 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04523.x
Båverud V, Franklin A, Gunnarsson A, Gustafsson A, Hellander-Edman A.In Sweden, mares sometimes develop acute, often fatal, colitis when their foals are treated orally with erythromycin and rifampicin for Rhodococcus (R.) equi infection. Clostridium (C.) difficile, or its cytotoxin, was demonstrated in faecal samples from 5 of 11 (45%) mares with diarrhoea. By contrast C. difficile was not found in the faecal flora of 12 healthy mares with foals treated for R. equi infection or in 56 healthy mares with healthy untreated foals. No other enteric pathogen was isolated from any diarrhoeic mare. Of 7 investigated treated foals, 4 had a high (1651.0, 1468.3, 273.0 an...
Enterotoxigenic Clostridium perfringens type A necrotic enteritis in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 12, 1998   Volume 213, Issue 9 1305-1280 
Bueschel D, Walker R, Woods L, Kokai-Kun J, McClane B, Songer JG.A Thoroughbred-Quarter Horse crossbred foal developed hemorrhagic enteritis and died < 48 hours after birth. Gross and histologic findings were suggestive of Clostridium perfringens type C infection, and large numbers of C perfringens were isolated from intestinal contents. However, genotyping of isolates indicated that they were enterotoxigenic C perfringens type A, and isolates were found to produce C perfringens enterotoxin in vitro. This case suggests that enterotoxigenic C perfringens type A may cause enteric disease in horses.
Prevalence of and risk factors for fecal shedding of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 12, 1998   Volume 213, Issue 9 1296-1302 
Cole DJ, Cohen ND, Snowden K, Smith R.To determine prevalence of and risk factors for fecal shedding of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts among 3 populations of horses. Methods: Cross-sectional study. Methods: 152 horses participating in the 1996 Texas State 4-H Horse Show, 144 horses examined by the veterinary teaching hospital, and 70 broodmares and their 10- to 21-day-old foals. Methods: Information on signalment and potential risk factors for fecal shedding of oocysts was obtained. Fecal samples were evaluated for oocysts by means of acid-fast (AF) staining, immunofluorescence assay (IFA), and, for selected samples, flow cytometr...
Use of metronidazole in equine acute idiopathic toxaemic colitis.
The Veterinary record    July 3, 1998   Volume 142, Issue 23 635-638 doi: 10.1136/vr.142.23.635
McGorum BC, Dixon PM, Smith DG.Sixteen cases of acute idiopathic toxaemic colitis developed in a veterinary hospital over a period of three years. Before the onset of colitis, 15 horses had received antibiotics, 11 had undergone general anaesthesia and various surgical procedures, and 10 had been treated with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The horses had acute onset, profuse watery diarrhoea, profound depression, mild to moderate abdominal pain, reduced intestinal borborygmi, tachycardia, dehydration and endotoxic shock. Leucopenia, neutropenia and pyrexia were common early indicators of impending colitis. Metronida...
Molecular analysis of the virulence determinants of Clostridium perfringens associated with foal diarrhoea.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    June 25, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 3 289-294 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(05)80025-5
Netherwood T, Wood JL, Mumford JA, Chanter N.During an epidemiological study of foal diarrhoea, over half of the cases yielded Clostridium perfringens which was significantly associated with disease (Netherwood et al., 1996b). However, the association could not be accounted for by enterotoxigenic isolates which had a low prevalence (Netherwood et al., 1997). Nonetheless, we have hypothesized that the association may be caused by a pathogenic sub-population which would be significantly more common amongst C. perfringens-positive cases compared with C. perfringens-positive healthy controls if it acted as a pathogen when present. Conversely...
Impact of mixed strongyle infections in foals after one month on pasture.
Equine veterinary journal    June 11, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 3 240-245 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04494.x
Thamsborg SM, Leifsson PS, Grøndahl C, Larsen M, Nansen P.Twelve Standardbred foals (age 3-6 months), with little previous exposure to parasites, were allocated to 2 groups and put onto pasture with low (Group L) or high (Group H) levels of larval contamination of large strongyles and cyathostomes. After 4 weeks grazing in September, the foals were housed indoors until necropsy 15 weeks later. Foals in Group H became clinically more affected than those of Group L in that they showed loss of vigour, weight gain depression, intermittent soft faeces and inappetence. One foal of Group H had persistent diarrhoea and was subjected to euthanasia 12 weeks af...
Adrenal insufficiency in a neonatal foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 30, 1998   Volume 212, Issue 10 1594-1596 
Couëtil LL, Hoffman AM.A 3-day-old female Pinto was admitted with profuse watery diarrhea and severe hypovolemic shock. After 1 week of intensive care, the foal developed seizures associated with profound serum electrolyte abnormalities suggestive of hypoadrenocorticism. Treatment with prednisone and isotonic saline (0.9% NaCl) solution led to prompt clinical response. Premature withdrawal of prednisone resulted in relapse of clinical signs. A diagnosis of adrenal insufficiency was made on the basis of clinical signs, electrolyte abnormalities, low baseline cortisol concentration, and lack of response to administrat...
Aorto-iliac thrombosis in a foal.
The Veterinary record    May 29, 1998   Volume 142, Issue 17 459-462 doi: 10.1136/vr.142.17.459
Moore LA, Johnson PJ, Bailey KL.A six-day-old Missouri foxtrotter colt was examined because it had had diarrhoea since it was 24 hours old. A diagnosis of colitis, septicaemia, and disruption of the arterial blood flow to the pelvic limbs was made on the basis of clinical and laboratory findings. Despite intensive medical therapy, the foal died 13 hours after being examined. Postmortem examination revealed diffuse fibrinous enteritis with lymphoid necrosis, multifocal fibrinonecrotic typhlocolitis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and a large occluding thrombus at the aortic termination. The results of bacteriological...
The Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin from equine isolates; its characterization, sequence and role in foal diarrhoea.
Epidemiology and infection    May 21, 1998   Volume 120, Issue 2 193-200 doi: 10.1017/s0950268897008534
Netherwood T, Binns M, Townsend H, Wood JL, Mumford JA, Chanter N.During a survey of foal diarrhoea between 1991 and 1994, Clostridium perfringens was significantly associated with disease with 56% of cases infected [1]. The contribution of enterotoxigenic C. perfringens to this association, was assessed by use of the reverse passive latex agglutination test for enterotoxin (RPLA; Oxoid Unipath) and vero cell toxicity neutralized by antitoxin on stored faecal samples and sporulated faecal isolates of C. perfringens. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR1) based on the DNA sequence for the whole enterotoxin gene [2] yielded a fragment from an equine isolate of the a...
Prevention of rotavirus diarrhoea in foals by parenteral vaccination of the mares: field trial.
Developments in biological standardization    May 15, 1998   Volume 92 253-257 
Barrandeguy M, Parreño V, Lagos Mármol M, Pont Lezica F, Rivas C, Valle C, Fernandez F.Many countries have reported rotavirus diarrhoea in foals. In Argentina it causes important economic losses to the horse industry. In this work we present the results obtained using an experimental vaccine in a farm with enzootic infection of rotavirus. A hundred mares were vaccinated 60 and 30 days before foaling with inactivated rotavirus SA11 (G3P2), H2 (G3P12), Lincoln (G6P1), with aluminum hydroxide as adjuvant; 65 mares were included in the unvaccinated, control group. To evaluate the vaccine, morbidity, duration of the diarrhoea and rotavirus shedding were recorded. Antibody levels were...
Induced diarrhoea in horses. Part 1: Fluid and electrolyte balance.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 2, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 2 149-159 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80010-5
Ecke P, Hodgson DR, Rose RJ.Sodium, potassium and water balance, and measurements of acid-base status, haematocrit, packed cell volume and plasma total protein, were studied in four adult standardbred geldings following castor oil induced diarrhoea. Castor oil (2 mL kg-1) administration resulted in signs consistent with mild to moderate acute colitis. The total (combined faecal and urinary losses) losses of sodium and potassium ions were 2169 and 2864 mmol, respectively. Faeces constituted the major route for sodium loss, while urine was the major route for potassium loss at all times. Faecal dry matter potassium concent...
Oral fluids for equine diarrhoea: an underutilized treatment for a costly disease?
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 2, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 2 119-121 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80005-1
Schott HC.No abstract available
Induced diarrhoea in horses. Part 2: Response to administration of an oral rehydration solution.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 2, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 2 161-170 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80012-9
Ecke P, Hodgson DR, Rose RJ.Hydration status, electrolyte balance and acid-base balance were studied in four adult standardbred geldings with castor oil-induced diarrhoea. The horses received an oral rehydration solution (ORS) at a point when signs consistent with mild decreases in effective circulating fluid volume were first detected. Within 1.5 h of ORS administration, all horses exhibited a significant metabolic acidosis. At this time, mean values for venous blood pH, [HCO3], and standard base excess were 7.264 +/- 0.011, 17.7 +/- 0.3 mmol L-1, and -8.2 +/- 0.4 mmol L-1, respectively. Throughout the duration of the s...
Clostridium difficile infection in a horse.
The Veterinary record    March 3, 1998   Volume 142, Issue 2 47 
Teale CJ, Naylor RD.No abstract available
Idiopathic hypocalcemia in foals.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    February 21, 1998   Volume 11, Issue 6 356-360 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1997.tb00480.x
Beyer MJ, Freestone JF, Reimer JM, Bernard WV, Rueve ER.Five thoroughbred foals (4 fillies and 1 colt), all in good to excellent body condition, ranging in age from 4 days to 5 weeks at the time of onset of signs, were presented to 2 Kentucky equine hospitals from 1992 through 1996. All 5 foals presented with tachycardia, hyperhidrosis, diarrhea or a recent history of diarrhea, and muscle rigidity or stiff gait. Four of the 5 foals presented for recumbency, seizure-like activity with opisthotonos, or pronounced extensor muscle rigidity. All 5 foals were hypocalcemic. All foals either died or had euthanasia performed. None responded to oral calcium ...
Nosocomial transmission of Cryptosporidium in a veterinary hospital.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    February 21, 1998   Volume 11, Issue 6 340-343 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1997.tb00477.x
Konkle DM, Nelson KM, Lunn DP.An outbreak of cryptosporidiosis occurred at a veterinary hospital, involving multiple species, including humans. The index case was an infected dairy calf that presented with diarrhea. Several other cases of cryptosporidial diarrhea subsequently developed during a 1-month period. The key features of this outbreak were the multiple species affected, the increased morbidity in immunocompromised neonates, and the failure of implemented control measures to contain the disease.
An outbreak of foal yersiniosis in Poland: pathological and bacteriological examination.
Zentralblatt fur Bakteriologie : international journal of medical microbiology    January 24, 1998   Volume 286, Issue 4 542-546 doi: 10.1016/s0934-8840(97)80058-8
Czernomysy-Furowicz D.In the springtime of 1995, 10 per cent of foals at a stud-farm died due to suppurative lesions. Three dead foals were examined. The manifestations of watery diarrhoea and pneumonia were observed. A profuse growth of an enterotoxigenic strain of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was obtained from the internal organs of the foals. The foals with clinical symptoms of pneumonia and watery diarrhoea were immunized with Propionibacterium acnes t. II. All mares and their offspring from the stud were treated with an immunomodulator (Propionibacterium acnes t. II) and then vaccinated with a formalin-inactiva...
Clostridium difficile associated with acute colitis in mature horses treated with antibiotics.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 4 279-284 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb03124.x
Båverud V, Gustafsson A, Franklin A, Lindholm A, Gunnarsson A.Clostridium (C.) difficile, or its cytoxin, was demonstrated in faecal samples from 10 of 25 (40%) mature horses investigated with acute colitis treated primarily with antibiotics for disorders other than diarrhoea. C. difficile was not found in faecal samples from 140 horses without signs of enteric disorders, from 21 nondiarrhoeic horses treated with antibiotics, nor from 22 horses with colitis untreated with antibiotics. Except for C. difficile neither Salmonella nor any other investigated intestinal pathogen was isolated in any of the diarrhoeic horses. The findings strongly support some e...
Review of oral rehydration solutions for horses with diarrhoea.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 6 417-420 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1997.tb14345.x
Ecke P, Hodgson DR, Rose RJ.No abstract available
Acquired B lymphocyte deficiency and chronic enterocolitis in a 3-year-old quarter horse.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    June 1, 1997   Volume 57, Issue 1-2 49-57 doi: 10.1016/s0165-2427(96)05778-9
MacLeay JM, Ames TR, Hayden DW, Tumas DB.This case report describes a 3-year-old American Quarter Horse with acquired immunodeficiency. Clinical signs included chronic diarrhea due to Salmonella typhimurium and bacterial pneumonia. Characterization of the immunodeficiency involved in vivo phytohemagglutinin (PHA) intradermal testing, in vitro lymphocyte proliferation in response to concanavalin A, immunofluorescence flow cytometry data on blood lymphocytes, serum protein electrophoresis and immunoglobulin (Ig) quantification. A diagnosis of B lymphocyte deficiency with resulting deficiencies in serum IgG, IgA and IgM and a concurrent...
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