Analyze Diet

Topic:Disease Prevalence

Disease prevalence in horses refers to the frequency and distribution of various diseases within equine populations. Understanding disease prevalence is essential for identifying health trends, assessing risk factors, and implementing effective disease management and prevention strategies. Common diseases affecting horses include equine influenza, equine herpesvirus, strangles, and equine infectious anemia. The study of disease prevalence involves collecting and analyzing data from veterinary reports, field studies, and laboratory diagnostics. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the patterns, causes, and implications of disease prevalence in horses, providing insights into equine health management and epidemiology.
Observations on eastern equine encephalitis in Maryland in 1959.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1961   Volume 139 661-664 
BYRNE RJ, HETRICK FM, SCANLON JE, HASTINGS JW, LOCKE LN.No abstract available
Tuberculosis in Horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 1, 1961   Volume 2, Issue 6 229-230 
Zajac RD.No abstract available
Evaluation of activity of viral encephalitides in Minnesota through measurement of pigeon antibody response.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 1, 1961   Volume 10 266-270 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1961.10.266
OLSON TA, KENNEDY RC, RUEGER ME, PRICE RD, SCHLOTTMAN LL.No abstract available
Influenza of horses.
The American review of respiratory disease    February 1, 1961   Volume 83(2)Pt 2 48-53 doi: 10.1164/arrd.1961.83.2P2.48
DOLL ER.No abstract available
Clinical and epidemiological observations in a focus of brucellosis infection in horses.
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    January 1, 1961   Volume 32 923-924 
POBEREZKIN MN.No abstract available
Studies on epizootic lymphangitis in the Sudan.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1960   Volume 70 457-463 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(60)80043-4
AWAD FI.No abstract available
A preliminary survey for equine abortion virus infection by complement fixation test in Hokkaido, Japan.
The Japanese journal of experimental medicine    June 1, 1959   Volume 29 203-211 
KAWAKAMI Y, KAJI T, SUGIMURA K, SHIMIZU T, MATUMOTO M.No abstract available
The cytopathogenesis of vesicular stomatitis virus infection in cattle.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1958   Volume 19, Issue 70 66-73 
RIBELIN WE.No abstract available
Incidence of leptospira in horses; a laboratory report.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1956   Volume 128, Issue 12 601 
SCHLICHTING M, SANDERS RH.No abstract available
Infection of Mansonia perturbans and Psorophora ferox mosquitoes with Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    February 1, 1956   Volume 91, Issue 2 215-216 doi: 10.3181/00379727-91-22216
CHAMBERLAIN RW, SIKES RK, NELSON DB.No abstract available
Mosquitoes and encephalitis in Nebraska.
The Nebraska state medical journal    August 1, 1955   Volume 40, Issue 8 290-292 
RAPP WF.No abstract available
[Equine encephalomyelitis virus in the population of Córdoba, Argentina; serological tests].
La Semana medica    April 14, 1955   Volume 106, Issue 15 444-452 
BETTINOTTI CM.No abstract available
Some observations on carriers of equine infectious anemia.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1955   Volume 126, Issue 937 277-286 
STEIN CD, MOTT LO, GATES DW.No abstract available
Experimental Studies in Equine Infectious Anemia.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine and veterinary science    March 1, 1955   Volume 19, Issue 3 103 
No abstract available
Eastern equine encephalitis in Connecticut: a serological survey of pheasant farmers.
The Yale journal of biology and medicine    February 1, 1955   Volume 27, Issue 4 287-296 
LIAO SJ.No abstract available
Mites as possible vectors or reservoirs of equine encephalomyelitis in Texas.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    January 1, 1955   Volume 4, Issue 1 119-135 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1955.4.119
SULKIN SE, WISSEMAN CL, IZUMI EM, ZARAFONETIS C.No abstract available
[Leptospiroses in horses; serological study].
Revista do Instituto Adolfo Lutz    January 1, 1955   Volume 15 186-193 
CORREA MO, NETO VA, VERONESI R, FABBRI OS.No abstract available
Studies on the North American arthropod-borne encephalitides. V. The extrinsic incubation of eastern and western equine encephalitis in mosquitoes.
American journal of hygiene    November 1, 1954   Volume 60, Issue 3 269-277 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a119720
CHAMBERLAIN RW, CORRISTAN EC, SIKES RK.No abstract available
Studies on the North American arthropod-borne encephalitides. II. Eastern equine encephalitis in horses.
American journal of hygiene    November 1, 1954   Volume 60, Issue 3 237-250 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a119717
KISSLING RE, CHAMBERLAIN RW, EIDSON ME, SIKES RK, BUCCA MA.No abstract available
[Iridocyclitis of horses and leptospirosis].
Revue de pathologie generale et de physiologie clinique    March 1, 1954   Volume 54, Issue 656 432-479 
ROSSI P, KOLOCHINE-ERBER B.No abstract available
Equine encephalomyelitis in Utah; a survey of horses and man utilizing serum-neutralization tests.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1954   Volume 124, Issue 922 40-42 
GRUNDMANN AW, LEYMASTER GR.No abstract available
The 1952 outbreak of encephalitis in California; epidemiologic aspects.
California medicine    August 1, 1953   Volume 79, Issue 2 84-90 
HOLLISTER AC, LONGSHORE WA, DEAN BH, STEVENS IM.For the most part, epidemiologic phenomena observed in the outbreak of encephalitis in 1952 accorded with patterns that had been apparent in previous years. Ninety-seven per cent of the 414 laboratory-confirmed cases of western equine and St. Louis encephalitis in humans occurred in the 20 Central Valley counties. The cases of western equine encephalomyelitis in horses were generally scattered over the state. In the Central Valley most of the cases in horses were in animals less than two years of age; elsewhere the incidence was higher in older horses.There were no laboratory-confirmed cases o...
California encephalitis virus, a newly described agent.
California medicine    November 1, 1952   Volume 77, Issue 5 303-309 
HAMMON WM, REEVES WC.In three cases of encephalitis in humans that occurred in the area where the newly described California virus was isolated from mosquitoes, serological evidence seemed to indict the California virus as the etiological agent. In the case of an infant with very severe disease, the serological evidence was convincing; the evidence was almost as strong in the case of a seven-year-old boy; the results in an adult were equivocal. Inapparent infection in man is quite common as indicated by neutralization tests on the sera of nearly 600 residents of California, but encephalitic manifestations of infec...
An outbreak of leptospirosis in horses on a small farm.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1952   Volume 121, Issue 907 237-242 
ROBERTS SJ, YORK CJ, ROBINSON JW.No abstract available
[Onchocerca of horses].
Acta tropica    January 1, 1952   Volume 9, Issue 2 125-150 
MOIGNOUX JB.No abstract available
Infectious equine encephalomyelitis in the United States in 1950.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1951   Volume 119, Issue 893 110-111 
SIMMS BT.No abstract available
[The role of climate in the occurrence of equine piroplasmosis].
Zeitschrift fur Tropenmedizin und Parasitologie    January 1, 1951   Volume 2, Issue 3 401-410 
ENIGK K.No abstract available
[Infectious anemia in the horse].
Medycyna weterynaryjna    November 1, 1950   Volume 6, Issue 11 647 
DOMANSKI .No abstract available
[Infectious anemia of the horse in Haute-Marne].
La Pathologie generale    November 1, 1950   Volume 50, Issue 622 728-752 
LAMARRE L.No abstract available
Bionomics of Culex tarsalis in relation to Western equine encephalomyelitis.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    November 1, 1950   Volume 30, Issue 6 909-916 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1950.s1-30.909
JENKINS DW.No abstract available