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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.
Pulmonary lobar hypertrophy in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 15, 1986   Volume 188, Issue 4 422-423 
Hultgren BD.Pulmonary lobar hypertrophy was diagnosed in a 4-hour-old Quarter Horse full-term foal that had respiratory arrest shortly after birth. The gross and microscopic appearances were consistent with polyalveolar lobe, a congenital anomaly of human infants.
Brucellosis in horses.
The Veterinary record    February 8, 1986   Volume 118, Issue 6 163 doi: 10.1136/vr.119.6.163-b
O'Brien JK, Cripps PJ.No abstract available
The sympatho-adrenal system and plasma levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone, cortisol and catecholamines in equine grass sickness.
The Veterinary record    February 8, 1986   Volume 118, Issue 6 148-150 doi: 10.1136/vr.119.6.148
Hodson NP, Wright JA, Hunt J.Plasma levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), cortisol and catecholamines were used to study the role of the sympatho-adrenal system in equine grass sickness. Statistical evaluation determined differences of hormone levels between seven horses with grass sickness (one acute, five subacute and one chronic), six horses with colic (one with laminitis) and 16 control horses before and after mild stress. Plasma levels of the hormones were higher in horses with acute and subacute grass sickness than in the other groups. No differences were detected between horses with colic and stressed contr...
American dog tick (Acari: Ixodidae), summer activity on equine premises enzootic for Potomac horse fever in south-central Maryland.
Journal of economic entomology    February 1, 1986   Volume 79, Issue 1 62-66 doi: 10.1093/jee/79.1.62
Carroll JF, Schmidtmann ET.The American dog tick, Dermacentor variabilis (Say), was the only ixodid tick found feeding on horses in Montgomery County, Md., from May to August. Average tick burdens were low (less than one tick per horse per week), but >80% of 33 horses examined weekly were exposed to tick feeding during the summer. Of the 98 ticks collected, 78% were attached to the tail and 12% were present in the mane. Host-seeking adult D. variabilis were active on vegetation in pastures from May to early August, with most specimens along hedgerows, woods margins, and horse paths.
Malignant melanoma of the coronary band in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1986   Volume 188, Issue 3 297-298 
Kunze DJ, Monticello TM, Jakob TP, Crane S.A malignant melanoma developed in the digit of a horse. Metastasis was extensive.
Ultrastructure of granulomatous infiltrates in the small bowel in equine granulomatous enteritis.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    February 1, 1986   Volume 33, Issue 2 111-122 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1986.tb00515.x
Lindberg R.No abstract available
Eyeworms (Thelazia lacrymalis) in one- to four-year-old Thoroughbreds at necropsy in Kentucky (1984 to 1985).
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1986   Volume 47, Issue 2 315-316 
Lyons ET, Tolliver SC, Drudge JH, Swerczek TW, Crowe MW.From Mar 1, 1984, to Feb 28, 1985, both eyes from 189 one- to four-year-old Thoroughbreds (88 males, 90 females, and 11 geldings) in Kentucky were examined at necropsy for eyeworms. Thelazia lacrymalis was recovered from 45% of 1-year-old horses, 26% of 2-year-old horses, 45% of 3-year-old horses, and 50% of 4-year-old horses; overall, 43% of 1- to 4-year old horses were infected. Prevalence of eyeworms in horses in the present study was comparable with that in horses of similar ages examined at necropsy in Kentucky in 2 previous studies (1975 to 1976 and in 1979), except for the lower percent...
Osteopetrosis in two foals.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    February 1, 1986   Volume 27, Issue 2 74-77 
Nation PN, Klavano GG.This account describes two neonatal foals affected with osteopetrosis. One of these foals, a full term Peruvian Paso, was born alive, was bright and alert but was unable to stand and was euthanized at two days of age. The second foal, an Appaloosa, was also born alive at full term and was blind, weak, uncoordinated and unable to stand. Postmortem examination of both foals revealed generalized osteopetrosis and brachygnathia inferior. The osteopetrosis was characterized by failure of bone remodelling resulting in spicules of mineralized and nonmineralized cartilage covered by osteoid occupying ...
Risk factors for salmonellosis in hospitalized horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 15, 1986   Volume 188, Issue 2 173-177 
Hird DW, Casebolt DB, Carter JD, Pappaioanou M, Hjerpe CA.A case-control study to identify risk factors associated with isolation of Salmonella was accomplished, using data from records of horses hospitalized in the period July 1971 through June 1982. Horses in which nasogastric tubes were passed were at 2.9 times greater risk of having Salmonella isolated, compared with horses that did not undergo this procedure. Horses treated with antibiotics parenterally were at 6.4 times greater risk, and those treated with antibiotics orally and parenterally were at 40.4 times greater risk of developing salmonellosis, compared with horses not receiving such tre...
Skin lesions in horses.
The Veterinary record    January 4, 1986   Volume 118, Issue 1 27-28 doi: 10.1136/vr.118.1.27-a
Sutton DJ, Evans JM.No abstract available
An outbreak of suspected equine infectious anaemia in Guyana.
The British veterinary journal    January 1, 1986   Volume 142, Issue 1 36-40 doi: 10.1016/0007-1935(86)90005-9
Motie A.An outbreak of suspected equine infectious anaemia (EIA) among a population of 678 horses from 16 farms occurred in the Rupununi Savannahs of Guyana. Clinical signs of EIA were detected in 110 horses. Agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID) tests on 92 sera examined showed positive serological evidence of EIA in 67 (72·8%). The mean packed cell volume of 50 horses studied was 0·178 and the mean red blood cell count was 3·7 × 1012/l with the mean white blood cell count 4·1 × 109/l. The morbidity rate of the disease was 14·0% and the mortality rate 11·1%. The majority (78%) of all seroposi...
XO syndrome in the mare.
Nordisk veterinaermedicin    January 1, 1986   Volume 38, Issue 1 16-21 
Mäkinen A, Katila T, Kuokkanen MT.Only one X chromosome was found in each of the lymphocyte metaphases studied in an infertile mare. Karyotype analysis was made with the CBG and GTG banding techniques. The most obvious clinical abnormality was gonadal hypoplasia.
[Endoscopic findings in horses with diseases of the upper respiratory tract].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1986   Volume 14, Issue 1 91-99 
Deegen E.With the aid of a flexible glassfibre endoscope, a 300 W cold light source and a special adapted camera, colour photographs of the upper respiratory tract of horses were taken. These pictures served to present especially the disease processes of the different areas of the upper respiratory tract which lead to a constriction of the lumen. These included proliferation in the nose, guttural pouch diseases and larynx diseases such as hemiplegia, subepiglottic cysts, epiglottic entrapment and rostral displacement of the plica palatopharyngica. Furthermore endoscopic findings of changes in the soft ...
Atrial fibrillation: bad news for man and horse?
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 1 3-4 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03523.x
Petch MC.No abstract available
Electromyographic, myomechanical, and intraluminal pressure changes associated with acute extraluminal obstruction of the jejunum in conscious ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1986   Volume 47, Issue 1 7-11 
MacHarg MA, Adams SB, Lamar CH, Becht JL.Bipolar electrodes, strain gauge force transducers, intraluminal pressure recording catheters, and extraluminal intestinal obstructors were surgically implanted in 4 ponies to record myoelectrical and mechanical activity of the distal portion of the jejunum and ileum. After determining normal intestinal activity and pressures, the distal portion of the jejunum was obstructed with an extraluminal obstructor. Myoelectrical and mechanical activity recorded from jejunal segments proximal to the obstruction increased significantly (P less than 0.01), whereas activity distal to the obstruction remai...
Antistreptolysin O titer in horses.
Acta microbiologica Polonica    January 1, 1986   Volume 35, Issue 1-2 91-95 
Romanowska D, Szynkiewicz Z, Rita J.Antistreptolysin O (ASO) titers were determined in the sera of 532 horses from stud farms and 436 working horses from small farms. A statistically significant correlation was seen between the ASO titer and the age of the horses. There was a significant difference between mean ASO titer in horses 0-2 years and horses 2-10 years In horses older than 10 years the titer was significantly higher than mean ASO titer for the group. Twenty four of 30 horses in which ASO titer was higher or equal to 80 I.U. had histories which suggested that streptococcal infection had occurred. Clinical and bacteriolo...
Leu-enkephalin and somatostatin immunoreactivities in canine and equine pheochromocytomas.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1986   Volume 23, Issue 1 96-98 doi: 10.1177/030098588602300122
Wilson RB, Holscher MA, Kasselberg AG, Jones M.No abstract available
Sarcosporidiosis in equines of Morocco.
The British veterinary journal    January 1, 1986   Volume 142, Issue 1 70-72 doi: 10.1016/0007-1935(86)90011-4
Kirmse P.No abstract available
Malignant melanomas causing Horner’s syndrome in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 1 74-75 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03545.x
Milne JC.No abstract available
Blind-end atresia coli in two foals.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1986   Volume 76, Issue 1 11-15 
Cho DY, Taylor HW.Blind-end atresia coli was observed in two genetically unrelated foals at about the same time and location. The two foals, one an Appaloosa and the other a Quarterhorse, were born 4 days apart on nearby but separate farms. The Appaloosa foal died after surgical anastomosis of the affected segments of the colon. The Quarterhorse foal was euthanized after the defect was found at laparotomy. Both foals were necropsied and representative tissues were examined histopathologically. Histopathologic results were unremarkable. No cause of the defects could be determined and the timing and geographical ...
Segregation distortion within the equine MHC; analogy to a mouse T/t-complex trait.
Immunogenetics    January 1, 1986   Volume 24, Issue 4 225-229 doi: 10.1007/BF00364526
Bailey E.Segregation distortion was found for a haplotype of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) system in an extended family of American Standardbred horses. In one sire family, consisting of a stallion and his 17 sons and grandsons, the gene for ELA-A10 (A10) was transmitted to 57.7% of 638 offspring scored (P = 0.001). Significant segregation distortion was not seen for mares or for unrelated stallions, regardless of the ELA markers they possessed. Since the effect was seen for this one sire family and not seen for other stallions with A10, it is unlikely that the gene for A10 is the cause of this p...
[Nomenclature of the clitoris and preputium of the mare in relation to the surgical removal of the clitoral sinus according to CEM regulations].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1986   Volume 14, Issue 3 371-375 
Wissdorf H, Nautrup CP.The cavity, that belongs to the glans clitoridis and that has to be removed in accord with the regulations and rules for the import of horses of CEM carrier states, has not been taken up in the NAV (1983). Conform to the statements of the clinical physicians and to the declarations of the American literature the nomenclature "Sinus clitoridis" is proposed for the international use.
Comparison of antiproteolytic activities of alpha-1-proteinase inhibitors from the plasma of some mammalian species.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1986   Volume 83, Issue 2 375-380 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(86)90383-4
Dubin A, Potempa J, Kurdowska A, Pajdak W, Koj A.Alpha-1-proteinase inhibitors isolated from plasmas of horse, ox, pig, rabbit and man were used for determination of some kinetic parameters of interaction with three horse leucocyte proteinases and bovine pancreatic trypsin and chymotrypsin. Effective molar ratio of enzyme-to-inhibitor, inactivation rate constant and inhibition constant were measured. In horse, ox, pig and rabbit two principal electrophoretic forms of alpha 1-PI could be distinguished. Both forms effectively inhibited trypsin but usually only one form reacted promptly and stoichiometrically with chymotrypsin and leucocyte ela...
[Treatment of gasterophilosis in horses].
Wiadomosci parazytologiczne    January 1, 1986   Volume 32, Issue 4-6 571-574 
Fagasiński A.No abstract available
[Parasites of domestic animals in “De re rustica” by L.I. Columella. I. Internal parasites].
Wiadomosci parazytologiczne    January 1, 1986   Volume 32, Issue 1 3-10 
Kreyser K, Zarnowski E.No abstract available
An experimental study of the healing process of equine chondral and osteochondral defects.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 1 18-24 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03529.x
Kold SE, Hickman J, Melsen F.Four full thickness cartilage defects, two linear and two elliptical, and four subchondral cavity defects were created at the point of weightbearing of the medial femoral condyle in four experimental ponies. This study showed that subchondral bone cysts can develop following full thickness (cartilage only) linear cartilage defects at a weightbearing location. Subchondral bone cysts did not develop following the removal of an elliptical piece of cartilage, exposing the subchondral bone. Primary subchondral defects created in communication with the joint cavity did not heal by replacement with b...
[Chaetotaxy of Gastrodiscus aegyptiacus cercaria (Trematoda, Paramphistomoidea) a horse parasite].
Annales de parasitologie humaine et comparee    January 1, 1986   Volume 61, Issue 3 289-296 doi: 10.1051/parasite/1986613289
Diaw OT, Bayssade-Dufour C, Pino De Morales LA, Albaret JL, Vassiliades G.Cercarial chaetotaxy of Gastrodiscus aegyptiacus (Paramphistomoidea), parasite of the Horse, is described. Cercariae were shed by experimentally infected Bulinus forskalii. This description is the first one of a Gastrodiscidae. The cercarial chaetotaxy of the Gastrodiscidae is quite different from those of Paramphistomoidea and Diplodiscidae.
Phalangeal and navicular bone hypoplasia and hoof malformation in the hind limbs of a foal.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1986   Volume 27, Issue 1 28-34 
Smith DR, Leach DH, Bell RJ.Anatomical anomalies in the hind feet of a seven month old Appaloosa foal were identified and investigated through the use of gross anatomical dissection, radiography and angiography. Abnormalities were restricted to the distal aspect of both hind legs, the right hind leg being more severely affected. Anatomically the right foot resembled that of an equine fetus of approximately 120 days gestational age. Disruption of vascular perfusion to hoof structures was evident in both hind legs and was related to areas of abnormal bone conformation as well as to areas of abnormal ossification and calcif...
Studies on the sequence of variable antigen types in ponies infected with a clone of Trypanosoma evansi.
Zeitschrift fur Parasitenkunde (Berlin, Germany)    January 1, 1986   Volume 72, Issue 2 145-151 doi: 10.1007/BF00931142
Diesing L, Steuber S, Ahmed JS, Hörchner F.The sequential appearance of variable antigen types (VATs) of a clone of Trypanosoma evansi was studied in four ponies. Using luminol-dependent chemiluminescence, VAT populations which had been isolated from parasitemic peaks of single ponies, were tested for specificity with serum samples collected from other ponies. When antibody activity was demonstrated in a combination of trypanosomes and serum, it was concluded that a major VAT appeared in common. In the serum of all animals antibody activity was demonstrated to all VAT populations isolated from the other ponies during the first 4 weeks ...
Equine leukocyte antigens: relationships with sarcoid tumors and laminitis in two pure breeds.
Immunogenetics    January 1, 1986   Volume 23, Issue 4 221-225 doi: 10.1007/BF00373016
Meredith D, Elser AH, Wolf B, Soma LR, Donawick WJ, Lazary S.Frequencies of equine leukocyte antigen distribution were determined by complement-mediated cytotoxicity testing among populations of Thoroughbred and Standardbred horses, including animals affected with equine sarcoid and laminitis. A highly significant association is described between the presence or history of sarcoid lesions in Thoroughbreds and the expression of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-encoded antigens, W3 and B1. No association was found between antigenic expression frequencies and laminitis in either breed. These findings suggest that a strong relationship exists betw...