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.
Separation of the immunosuppressive and glomerular basement membrane-reactive antibodies in horse antiserum to human thymus.
Transplantation    February 1, 1974   Volume 17, Issue 2 188-193 doi: 10.1097/00007890-197402000-00006
Wilson S, Sakac E, Logan L.No abstract available
Stomach tubes.
Modern veterinary practice    February 1, 1974   Volume 55, Issue 2 106 
Whitney WH.No abstract available
Non-extractable lipids in the adipose tissues of horses and ponies affected with generalized steatitis.
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    January 15, 1974   Volume 100, Issue 2 106-112 
Wensvoort P, Steenbergen-Botterweg WA.When adipose tissues of horses and ponies affected with generalized steatitis were extracted by acetone, methanol and chloroform, non-extractable lipids were found to be present, which had become insoluble as a result of peroxidation and polymerization and had acquired autofluorescent characteristics. The origin of these lipids varies. Peroxidation occurs in three different lipid compartments, namely in the cytoplasm of the necrotized adipose cells, in the macrophagess and in the fat globules present in stroma.
[Occurrence of Klebsiella in the genitalia and fetuses of thoroughbred horses].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    January 1, 1974   Volume 81, Issue 1 20-22 
Floer W.No abstract available
[Ecology of African horsesickness].
Revue d'elevage et de medecine veterinaire des pays tropicaux    January 1, 1974   Volume 27, Issue 2 163-168 
Bourdin P, Laurent A.No abstract available
Fine structure of spontaneous Pneumocystis carinii pulmonary infection in foals.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1974   Volume 64, Issue 1 72-88 
Shively JN, Moe KK, Dellers RW.No abstract available
Toxoplasmosis in two horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1974   Volume 164, Issue 1 77-80 
Cusick PK, Sells DM, Hamilton DP, Hardenbrook HJ.No abstract available
Equine infectious anemia. Henson JB, McGuire TC.No abstract available
Toxoplasma-like encephalomyelitis in the horse.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1974   Volume 11, Issue 1 87-96 doi: 10.1177/030098587401100110
Beech J, Dodd DC.No abstract available
Correlation of electrocardiographic findings to clinical disease in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1974   Volume 164, Issue 1 46-56 
White NA, Rhode EA.No abstract available
Some aspects of chronic pulmonary diseases of horses and methods used in their investigation.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1974   Volume 6, Issue 1 1-6 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1974.tb03918.x
McPherson EA, Lawson GH.No abstract available
Respiratory viral infections among thoroughbred horses in training during 1972.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1974   Volume 6, Issue 1 19-24 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1974.tb03922.x
Powell DG, Burrows R, Goodridge D.No abstract available
Tyzzer’s disease in a foal. Light- and electron-microscopic observations.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1974   Volume 11, Issue 3 203-211 doi: 10.1177/030098587401100302
Pulley LT, Shively JN.Tyzzer's disease was diagnosed in a 17-day-old foa l after the demonstra tion of mu ltip le foci of hepat ic necro sis and organisms morphologically compatible with Bacillus piliformis in hepa tocytes at the margins of the necrotic foci. Th e bac illi were 300 to 500 nm in diameter with occa sional giant bacilli 1000 nm in d iameter. Ma ny intranuclear organisms were seen, and a n a pparent sequence of nuclear penetration by these organisms was demonstrated . There was hem orrhage in the hear t a nd inflamma tory cha nges in the mesenteric lymph node . Enteritis was no t pre sent in the j...
[Interstitial cell adenoma of the hypophysis with Cushing-like symptomatology in the horse].
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1974   Volume 11, Issue 5 417-429 doi: 10.1177/030098587401100503
Pauli BU, Rossi Straub R.A trabecular adenoma of the pars intermedia of the hypophysis was seen in a 13-year-old half-bred mare that presented symptoms corresponding to Cushing's disease of man. The spindle-shaped tumor cells were for the most part ‘light’, seldom ‘dark’. Both of them were characterized by well-developed rough endoplasmic reticulum, small Golgi apparatus, and typical secretory granules with a diameter of about 200 μm. The pituitary tumor and the symptoms were accompanied by increased plasma adenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) and by bilateral hyperplasia of the adrenal cortex. The tumor cells ...
Combined (B- and T-lymphocyte) immunodeficiency: a fatal genetic disease in Arabian foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1974   Volume 164, Issue 1 70-76 
McGuire TC, Poppie MJ, Banks KL.Thirty sick Arabian foals and 78 clinically normal Arabian foals were examined for combined (B- and T-lymphocyte) immunodeficiency. Diagnosis was based on lymphocyte counts and serum immunoglobulin (Ig) content or microscopic examination of lymphoid organs. Ten of the 30 sick foals and 2 of the 78 clinically normal foals had combined immunodeficiency. The 2 affected foals in the group of 78 subsequently developed fatal pneumonia. Lymphocyte counts were made from 9 of the 12 immunodeficient foals; the range was 0 to 936/cmm., whereas the normal mean was 4,119/cmm., with a standard deviation ...
Equine infectious anemia.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1974   Volume 55, Issue 1 59 
No abstract available
Myopathies of animals–a brief view.
Advances in cardiology    January 1, 1974   Volume 13 68-80 doi: 10.1159/000395527
Hadlow WJ.No abstract available
Proceedings: Alpha-excitatory receptors in horse intestine.
Japanese journal of pharmacology    January 1, 1974   Volume 24 135 
Okuda H, Okubo Y.No abstract available
Squamous cell carcinoma of the equine stomach.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1974   Volume 164, Issue 1 81-84 
Meagher DM, Wheat JD, Tennant B, Osburn BI.No abstract available
[Site lamp examinations of unfixed vitreous in the horse (author’s transl)]. Eisner G, Bachmann E.No abstract available
Equine infectious anemia: plasma clearance times of passively transferred antibody in foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1974   Volume 164, Issue 1 64-65 
Burns SJ.No abstract available
Occurrence of antibodies to group specific chlamydia antigen in Finnish sheep, cattle and horse sera.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1974   Volume 15, Issue 2 256-263 doi: 10.1186/BF03547486
Neuvonen E, Estola T.A serological survey on the occurrence of group-specific chlamydial antibodies in random sera of Finnish sheep, cattle and horses was performed. The whole material consisted of 1347 serum samples, including 432 ovine, 454 bovine and 461 equine sera. The sera were sent to the laboratory for various serological tests during 1968–1972. Of the ovine sera 9.5%, bovine 12.8 % and equine 7.1 % showed a titer ≥ 1:16 in the complement fixation test. No definite geographic differences could be found in the distribution of the herds which showed positive results. The ubiquity of chlamydial infections...
Cerebellar hypoplasia and degeneration in part-Arab horses.
Australian veterinary journal    January 1, 1974   Volume 50, Issue 1 25-28 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1974.tb09367.x
Baird JD, Mackenzie CD.No abstract available
[50 years as veterinarian. Glimpses from the daily professional life of a rural practice].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1974   Volume 2, Issue 3 249-256 
Schmidt-Treptow WA.No abstract available
Titration of precipitating antibody in equine infectious anemia.
National Institute of Animal Health quarterly    January 1, 1974   Volume 14, Issue 1 1-8 
Nakajima H, Fukunaga Y, Ushimi C.No abstract available
Experimental osteoarthritis.
Annales chirurgiae et gynaecologiae Fenniae    January 1, 1974   Volume 63, Issue 3 235-237 
Sokoloff L.No abstract available
Pasteurella haemolytica associated with pneumonia in a foal. A case report.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1974   Volume 15, Issue 3 439-441 doi: 10.1186/BF03547470
Saxegaard F, Svenkrud R.No abstract available
Limb edema associated with ingestion of moldy hay by horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1974   Volume 164, Issue 1 41 
Meyerholz GW, Lee WJ, Meyer CJ.No abstract available
Linkage between the K blood group locus and the 6-PGD locus in horses.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1974   Volume 5, Issue 3 137-141 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1974.tb01323.x
Sandberg K.No abstract available
[Mutability of viruses of the equine encephalitis group under the influence of alkylating compounds. 2. Genetic characteristics of mutants of eastern and Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses produced by formaldehyde and by N-nitroso-methyl-urea].
Revue roumaine de virologie    January 1, 1974   Volume 25, Issue 3 259-263 
Solianik RG, Fedorov IuV.No abstract available