Analyze Diet

Topic:Disease Etiology

Disease etiology in horses refers to the study of the causes and development of diseases within equine populations. It encompasses various factors, including genetic predisposition, environmental influences, infectious agents, and nutritional imbalances, that contribute to the onset and progression of diseases in horses. Understanding disease etiology is essential for identifying risk factors and implementing preventative measures in equine health management. This topic includes research on pathogen-host interactions, the impact of management practices on disease incidence, and the role of genetic and environmental factors in disease susceptibility. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms, contributing factors, and implications of disease etiology in horses.
A punch drunk jockey?
British journal of sports medicine    May 25, 2004   Volume 38, Issue 3 e3 doi: 10.1136/bjsm.2003.006338
McCrory P, Turner M, Murray J.The case is reported of a retired professional jockey with progressive memory loss. The concern is that he may be suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy or the "punch drunk syndrome".
Cushing’s syndromes, insulin resistance and endocrinopathic laminitis.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 194-198 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877279
Johnson PJ, Messer NT, Ganjam VK.No abstract available
The pathogenesis of acute laminitis: fitting more pieces into the puzzle.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 199-203 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877251
Bailey SR.No abstract available
Evaluation of urinary TBARS in normal and chronic laminitic ponies.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 292-294 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877233
Neville RF, Hollands T, Collins SN, Keyte FV.No abstract available
In vitro and in vivo studies of homocysteine in equine tissues: implications for the pathophysiology of laminitis.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 279-284 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877161
Berhane Y, Bailey SR, Harris PA, Griffiths MJ, Elliott J.Elevated plasma homocysteine (HCy) concentration is a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases associated with endothelial dysfunction, including the human digital ischaemic disease, Raynaud's phenomenon. Objective: HCy causes dysfunction of equine vascular endothelium and elevated plasma concentrations predispose to laminitis. Objective: To determine 1) the concentration of HCy in vitro, which inhibits equine vascular endothelial cell function and 2) any association between risk of laminitis and plasma HCy concentration. Methods: Endothelial function was studied by measuring endothelium-depend...
Equine laminitis: loss of hemidesmosomes in hoof secondary epidermal lamellae correlates to dose in an oligofructose induction model: an ultrastructural study.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 230-235 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877125
French KR, Pollitt CC.Light microscopical studies show that the key lesion of laminitis is separation at the hoof lamellar dermal-epidermal interface. More precise knowledge of the damage occurring in the lamellar basement membrane zone may result if laminitis affected tissue is examined with the transmission electron microscope. This could lead to better understanding of the pathogenesis of lesions and the means of treatment or prevention. Objective: To investigate the ultrastructure of acute laminitis as disease of greater severity is induced by increasing oligofructose (OF) dosage. Methods: Three pairs of normal...
The effects of vasoactive amines found in the equine hindgut on digital blood flow in the normal horse.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 267-272 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877297
Bailey SR, Menzies-Gow NJ, Marr CM, Elliott J.Disturbances of digital blood flow are thought to be fundamental to the pathophysiology of acute laminitis. However, factors linking the initiating events in the equine hindgut with these disturbances in the foot remain to be determined. Objective: Amine compounds, formed by bacteria in the equine hindgut, have digital vasoconstrictor effects in vivo. Methods: Tryptamine (1.6 microg/kg/min) and phenylethylamine (2.13 microg/kg/min) were infused i.v. into standing nonsedated horses. Digital blood flow was measured by Doppler ultrasound and foot surface temperature was monitored. Plasma 5-hydrox...
Equine laminitis: increased transcription of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) occurs during the developmental phase.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 221-225 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877242
Kyaw-Tanner M, Pollitt CC.The dysadhesion and destruction of lamellar basement membrane of laminitis may be due to increased lamellar metalloproteinase activity. Characterising lamellar metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and locating it in lamellar tissues may help determine if laminitis pathology is associated with increased MMP-2 transcription. Objective: To clone and sequence the cDNA encoding lamellar MMP-2, develop antibody and in situ hybridisation probes to locate lamellar MMP-2 and quantitate MMP-2 transcription in normal and laminitis tissue. Methods: Total RNA was isolated, fragmented by RT-PCR, cloned into vector a...
Increased expression of MAIL, a cytokine-associated nuclear protein, in the prodromal stage of black walnut-induced laminitis.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 285-291 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877099
Waguespack RW, Kemppainen RJ, Cochran A, Lin HC, Belknap JK.The mediators and signalling cascades important in the initiation of laminitis remain unclear. We therefore wanted to explore the genes and overall signalling mechanisms that play an important role in the developmental stage of laminitis. Objective: To use a broad genomic screening technique to identify novel genes that are differentially regulated in the equine lamellae during the developmental period of laminitis. Methods: Differential mRNA display (DRD) was performed to discover regulated genes, and real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) was then used to evaluate lamella...
Epidermal cell proliferation in the equine hoof wall.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 236-241 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877198
Daradka M, Pollitt CC.Current theories explaining how the hoof wall 'grows' and moves past the stationary distal phalanx are speculative and based on incomplete evidence. Movement in the lamellar region could occur by cell proliferation or an enzyme-based remodelling process. Since laminitis pathogenesis appears to involve increased transcription and activation of enzymes normally involved in tissue remodelling, it is important to know precisely which process dominates the lamellar region of the hoof.. Objective: To investigate epidermal cell proliferation in the equine hoof wall and calculate a proliferative index...
Biochemical indices of vascular function, glucose metabolism and oxidative stress in horses with equine Cushing’s disease.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 226-229 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877215
Keen JA, McLaren M, Chandler KJ, McGorum BC.The mechanisms underlying the increased risk of laminitis in horses with equine Cushing's disease (ECD) are poorly understood. Objective: That abnormalities in glucose homeostasis, similar to those which cause microvascular dysfunction in human diabetics, contribute to development of laminitis in horses with ECD. Methods: Thirty-one aged horses were divided into 3 groups based on clinical signs and dexamethasone suppression testing (DST). Group 1 (n = 12) had clinical ECD as evidenced by hirsutism. Group 2 (n = 10) had a positive DST but no hirsutism. Group 3 (n = 9) were controls without ECD,...
Equine laminitis: glucose deprivation and MMP activation induce dermo-epidermal separation in vitro.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 261-266 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877170
French KR, Pollitt CC.Acute laminitis is characterised by hoof lamellar dermal-epidermal separation at the basement membrane (BM) zone. Hoof lamellar explants cultured in vitro can also be made to separate at the basement membrane zone and investigating how this occurs may give insight into the poorly understood pathophysiology of laminitis. Objective: To investigate why glucose deprivation and metalloproteinase (MMP) activation in cultured lamellar explants leads to dermo-epidermal separation. Methods: Explants, cultured without glucose or with the MMP activator p-amino-phenol-mercuric acetate (APMA), were subject...
Chronic equine laminitis is characterised by loss of GLUT1, GLUT4 and ENaC positive laminar keratinocytes.
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 248-254 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877224
Mobasheri A, Critchlow K, Clegg PD, Carter SD, Canessa CM.Equine laminitis is a multifactorial connective tissue disorder with major implications for the welfare of horses. There are few published studies on phenotypic markers for identification of equine laminar keratinocytes using immunohistochemical techniques. Objective: To establish whether the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) and the GLUT1 and GLUT4 facilitative glucose transporters may be used as phenotypic markers for identification of equine laminar keratinocytes using immunohistochemical techniques to monitor changes in the keratinocyte population in laminitis. Methods: Histology and immuno...
Evidence for vascular and enzymatic events in the pathophysiology of acute laminitis: which pathway is responsible for initiation of this process in horses?
Equine veterinary journal    May 19, 2004   Volume 36, Issue 3 204-209 doi: 10.2746/0425164044877116
Moore RM, Eades SC, Stokes AM.To date, there is a substantial amount of data to support the hypotheses that vascular and enzymatic changes are ongoing in experimental laminitis. Furthermore, there is substantial in vitro evidence that the enzymatic changes weaken the dermo-epidermal attachments leading to mechanical failure of the hoof-bone interface of the equine digit. However, investigators of both the vascular and enzymatic theories have, to date, been unable to substantiate the effects of these pathophysiological changes in vivo on laminar tissues of horses afflicted with experimentally induced or naturally acquired l...
Assessment of apoptosis in epidermal lamellar cells in clinically normal horses and those with laminitis.
American journal of veterinary research    May 15, 2004   Volume 65, Issue 5 578-585 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2004.65.578
Faleiros RR, Stokes AM, Eades SC, Kim DY, Paulsen DB, Moore RM.To determine and compare the number, type, location, and distribution of apoptotic epidermal cells in the laminae of clinically normal horses and horses with laminitis. Methods: Formalin-fixed samples of digital lamellar tissue from 47 horses (including clinically normal horses [controls; n = 7], horses with acute [4] and chronic [7] naturally acquired laminitis, and horses with black walnut extract-induced [11] or carbohydrate overload-induced [18] laminitis). Methods: Blocks of paraffin-embedded lamellar tissues were stained for DNA fragmentation with the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferas...
Antimicrobial susceptibility of equine and environmental isolates of Clostridium difficile.
Microbial drug resistance (Larchmont, N.Y.)    May 14, 2004   Volume 10, Issue 1 57-63 doi: 10.1089/107662904323047817
Båverud V, Gunnarsson A, Karlsson M, Franklin A.The antimicrobial susceptibility of 50 Clostridium difficile isolates, 36 of them from horse feces and 14 from environmental sites, was determined by broth microdilution. The antimicrobial agents tested were avilamycin, cephalothin, chloramphenicol, clindamycin, erythromycin, gentamicin, neomycin, oxacillin, oxytetracycline, penicillin, spiramycin, streptomycin, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, vancomycin, and virginiamycin. All isolates were susceptible to vancomycin (MIC 16 microg/ml), oxytetracycline (MIC >/=32 microg/ml), spiramycin (MIC > 16 microg/ml), and virginiamycin (MIC 8-16 mi...
Assessment of subchondral bone mineral density in equine metacarpophalangeal and stifle joints.
Biomedical sciences instrumentation    May 12, 2004   Volume 40 272-276 
Walker JE, Lewis CW, MacLeay JM, Kawcak CE, Wheeler DL.Functional relationships between articular cartilage and underlying subchondral bone have been shown to be associated with the progression of osteoarthritis (OA). However, quantifiable factors substantiating this relationship do not exist. Therefore, the study objective involved quantifying subchondral bone mineral density (BMD) of the equine metacarpophalangeal (MCP) and stifle joints as a step in determining if regional subchondral BMD may be associated with OA changes. BMD was bilaterally quantified using dual energy xray absorptiometry (DEXA) for four subchondral regions: palmer and dorsal...
The mare reproductive loss syndrome and the eastern tent caterpillar: a toxicokinetic/statistical analysis with clinical, epidemiologic, and mechanistic implications.
Veterinary therapeutics : research in applied veterinary medicine    May 12, 2004   Volume 4, Issue 4 324-339 
Sebastian M, Gantz MG, Tobin T, Harkins JD, Bosken JM, Hughes C, Harrison LR, Bernard WV, Richter DL, Fitzgerald TD.During 2001, central Kentucky experienced acute transient epidemics of early and late fetal losses, pericarditis, and unilateral endophthalmitis, collectively referred to as mare reproductive loss syndrome (MRLS). A toxicokinetic/statistical analysis of experimental and field MRLS data was conducted using accelerated failure time (AFT) analysis of abortions following administration of Eastern tent caterpillars (ETCs; 100 or 50 g/day or 100 g of irradiated caterpillars/day) to late-term pregnant mares. In addition, 2001 late-term fetal loss field data were used in the analysis. Experimental dat...
An assessment of equine cartilage degeneration.
Biomedical sciences instrumentation    May 12, 2004   Volume 40 261-265 
Harmel JL, Lewis CW, Sah RL, Kawcak CE, Wheeler DL.Millions of Americans suffer from osteoarthritis, a joint disease characterized by cartilage degradation and subchondral bone sclerosis. However, little is known about its pathology. It remains to be discovered which comes first in the progression of osteoarthritis: subchondral bone remodeling or cartilage degeneration. This study assessed equine cartilage degeneration, based upon measurements of cartilage thickness and Indian ink stain uptake. By gaining a greater understanding of the determining factors in cartilage degeneration, we may be able to better understand the pathomechanics of oste...
Equine cardiovascular pathology: an overview.
Animal health research reviews    May 12, 2004   Volume 4, Issue 2 109-129 doi: 10.1079/ahr200353
Buergelt CD.The few data collections that evaluate the involvement of organ systems in horse diseases are in agreement that the locomotor, gastrointestinal and nervous systems are the sites of primary disease in the vast majority of sick horses. When compared with diseases of these organ systems, equine cardiovascular diseases occur infrequently. The most detailed and comprehensive survey of equine cardiac pathology was reported in 1972 by Else and Holmes, who summarized the gross and microscopic cardiac findings from 1500 abattoir horses. This paper reviews the pathology of the cardiovascular diseases ty...
Summer pheasant’s eye (Adonis aestivalis) poisoning in three horses.
Veterinary pathology    May 11, 2004   Volume 41, Issue 3 215-220 doi: 10.1354/vp.41-3-215
Woods LW, Filigenzi MS, Booth MC, Rodger LD, Arnold JS, Puschner B.Three horses died as a result of eating grass hay containing summer pheasant's eye (Adonis aestivalis L.), a plant containing cardenolides similar to oleander and foxglove. A 9-year-old thoroughbred gelding, a 20-year-old appaloosa gelding, and a 5-year-old quarter horse gelding initially presented with signs of colic 24-48 hours after first exposure to the hay. Gastrointestinal gaseous distension was the primary finding on clinical examination of all three horses. Two horses became moribund and were euthanatized 1 day after first showing clinical signs, and the third horse was euthanatized af...
[Idiopathic gastric rupture in a Friesian foal].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    May 6, 2004   Volume 129, Issue 8 270-271 
Borst GH, van der Weij PJ, Vos JH.Acute idiopathic gastric rupture resulted in sudden death of a 4.5-months-old healthy Friesian foal. No morphological lesions were present which could explain the preceding gastric impaction. In this case hypodypsia may have been (partially) responsible for the impaction as only a mechanical drinking apparatus, unsuitably for horses, was available.
Equine hyperlipaemia: a review.
Australian veterinary journal    April 20, 2004   Volume 82, Issue 3 136-142 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2004.tb12636.x
Hughes KJ, Hodgson DR, Dart AJ.No abstract available
Generalised granulomatous disease in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    April 20, 2004   Volume 82, Issue 1-2 48-51 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2004.tb14639.x
Axon JE, Robinson P, Lucas J.A 6-year-old gelding was referred with a 3-month history of recurrent fever, inappetance, lethargy and weight loss. On clinical examination major findings were depression, thin condition, thrombophlebitis, nodules on the scrotal skin, leukocytosis, hyperfibrinogenaemia and hyperglobulinaemia. Pleural fluid and areas of lung consolidation were seen on ultrasonographic examination of the thorax. A diagnosis of chronic respiratory disease was made. Initially there was a response to antibiotic therapy but the horse was presented 3 months later with continued weight loss, recurrent fever and multif...
Exotic Animal Diseases Bulletin.
Australian veterinary journal    April 20, 2004   Volume 82, Issue 1-2 16-17 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2004.tb14623.x
No abstract available
West Nile virus and other exotic diseases of horses.
Australian veterinary journal    April 17, 2004   Volume 81, Issue 8 456-457 
No abstract available
Transplacental transmission of Theileria equi in two foals born and reared in the United Kingdom.
The Veterinary record    April 16, 2004   Volume 154, Issue 13 406-408 doi: 10.1136/vr.154.13.406
Phipps LP, Otter A.No abstract available
Isolation of Ross River virus from mosquitoes and from horses with signs of musculo-skeletal disease.
Australian veterinary journal    April 15, 2004   Volume 81, Issue 6 344-347 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2003.tb11511.x
Azuolas JK, Wishart E, Bibby S, Ainsworth C.To report clinical and clinicopathological findings in horses naturally infected with Ross River virus (RRV) and identify likely mosquito arbovirus vector species. Methods: Veterinarians submitted serum samples from 750 horses because they suspected Ross River virus (RRV) infection. The samples were tested for the presence of IgM and IgG antibody to RRV and for the presence of virus. Mosquitoes were trapped, differentiated to species level and tested for the presence of RRV by virus isolation. Results: RRV was isolated from six species of mosquitoes (Ochlerotatus camptorhyncus, Culex globocoxi...
Coccidioidomycosis in Przewalski’s horses (Equus przewalskii).
Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine : official publication of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians    April 14, 2004   Volume 34, Issue 4 339-345 doi: 10.1638/02-005
Terio KA, Stalis IH, Allen JL, Stott JL, Worley MB.Coccidioidomycosis is a rare, often subclinical infection in domestic animals caused by the fungus Coccidioides immitis. Because of an apparent high incidence of coccidioidomycosis in Przewalski's horses (Equus przewalskii) housed at a single facility, necropsy records and biomaterials from animals that died between 1984 and 2000 were reviewed (n = 30, 15 males, 15 females). Coccidioidomycosis was the leading cause of death (33%) in this population with lesions in the lungs and tracheobronchial lymph nodes of all animals and variable involvement of the skeletal muscle, heart, kidney, liver, sk...
Culling rate of Icelandic horses due to bone spavin.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    April 13, 2004   Volume 44, Issue 3-4 161-169 doi: 10.1186/1751-0147-44-161
Björnsdóttir S, Arnason T, Lord P.A survival analysis was used to compare the culling rate of Icelandic horses due to the presence of radiographic and clinical signs of bone spavin. A follow-up study of 508 horses from a survey five years earlier was performed. In the original survey 46% of the horses had radiographic signs of bone spavin (RS) and/or lameness after flexion test of the tarsus. The horse owners were interviewed by telephone. The owners were asked if the horses were still used for riding and if not, they were regarded as culled. The owners were then asked when and why the horses were culled. During the 5 years, 9...