Analyze Diet

Topic:Disease Treatment

Disease treatment in horses encompasses a range of medical interventions and management strategies aimed at addressing various health conditions affecting equine species. These treatments can include pharmacological approaches, such as the administration of antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, and antiparasitic medications, as well as non-pharmacological methods like physical therapy, dietary adjustments, and surgical procedures. The selection of appropriate treatments depends on the specific disease, its severity, and the individual needs of the horse. This topic brings together peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the efficacy, safety, and advancements in therapeutic options for equine diseases, providing insights into best practices and emerging trends in equine veterinary medicine.
Studies in Equine Encephalomyelitis.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine (Gardenvale, Quebec)    November 1, 1939   Volume 3, Issue 11 308-309 
Mitchell CA, Walker RV, McKercher DG.No abstract available
The Causative Agent of Infectious Equine Encephalomyelitis in Venezuela.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    July 7, 1939   Volume 90, Issue 2323 20-21 doi: 10.1126/science.90.2323.20
Kubes V, Ríos FA.No abstract available
Equine Encephalomyelitis.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine (Gardenvale, Quebec)    May 1, 1939   Volume 3, Issue 5 131-133 
Gwatkin R.No abstract available
Equine Encephalomyelitis in Venezuela: Advance Data Concerning the Causative Agent.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine (Gardenvale, Quebec)    February 1, 1939   Volume 3, Issue 2 43-44 
Kubes V, Rios FA.No abstract available
Oesophageal Conditions in Horses.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine (Gardenvale, Quebec)    January 1, 1939   Volume 3, Issue 1 26-28 
Hafele JA.No abstract available
Equine Encephalomyelitis From a Clinician’s Point of View.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine (Gardenvale, Quebec)    August 1, 1938   Volume 2, Issue 8 223-227 
McIntosh RA.No abstract available
Hepatitis and Jaundice Associated with Immunization against Certain Virus Diseases: (Section of Comparative Medicine).
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine    May 1, 1938   Volume 31, Issue 7 799-806 
Findlay GM, Maccallum FO.(1) Among 3,100 persons immunized against yellow fever with virus and immune serum over a period of five years, 89 cases of jaundice have been traced.(2) The symptoms are those of a hepatitis and closely resemble those produced by common infective hepatic jaundice, cases of which have frequently been noted as occurring in the same areas.(3) The average period between the time of inoculation and the development of hepatitis is between two and three months.(4) Attention is directed to the occurrence of hepatitis in horses, usually two to three months after immunization against the viruses of hor...
A Report of Two Outbreaks of Equine Encephalomyelitis in Saskatchewan.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine (Gardenvale, Quebec)    February 1, 1938   Volume 2, Issue 2 39-46 
Fulton JS.No abstract available
A Six-Chromosome Ascaris in Chinese Horses.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    July 30, 1937   Volume 86, Issue 2222 101-102 doi: 10.1126/science.86.2222.101-a
Li JC.No abstract available
The Results of Suturing Divided Nerves, with Special Reference to the Treatment of Laryngeal Paralysis in Horses: (Section of Comparitive Medicine).
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine    July 1, 1934   Volume 27, Issue 9 1207-1210 
No abstract available
THE MELANOMATA OF GREY AND WHITE HORSES.
Canadian Medical Association journal    November 1, 1931   Volume 25, Issue 5 519-530 
Hadwen S.No abstract available
The Transmission of Periodic Ophthalmia of Horses by Means of a Filterable Agent.
The Journal of experimental medicine    September 30, 1930   Volume 52, Issue 4 637-648 doi: 10.1084/jem.52.4.637
Woods AC, Chesney AM.A filterable agent has been obtained from the humors and tissues of the eyes of horses suffering from active periodic ophthalmia. The intra-vitreous injection of this filtrate produced in normal horses the same clinical and pathological picture observed in the natural disease. This filtrate injected into rabbits produced a different clinical picture, but the essential pathological lesions closely resembled those found in horses. After passage of the filterable agent through six generations of rabbits, it again produced the clinical and pathological picture of the natural disease when injected ...
THE PRODUCTION AND TITRATION OF POTENT HORSE ANTIPNEUMOTOXIN.
The Journal of experimental medicine    June 30, 1929   Volume 50, Issue 1 103-107 doi: 10.1084/jem.50.1.103
Parker JT, McCoy MV.1. The serum of horses immunized with increasing doses of certain anaerobically produced autolysates of pneumococci contain potent neutralizing antibodies for the pneumotoxin. 2. The method for the in vitro titration of these horse antipneumotoxic serums is given.
The Precipitin Reaction of Antipneumococcus Sera: II. The Ratio of Precipitin to Protective Antibody.
The Journal of experimental medicine    January 1, 1928   Volume 47, Issue 1 79-89 doi: 10.1084/jem.47.1.79
Friedlander M, Sobotka H, Banzhaf EJ.The precipitin indices for a number of monovalent and polyvalent antipneumococcus sera were determined under known conditions, and found to vary as did the number of protective units. The ratio precipitin index/protective units in monovalent sera was found to lie between 2.8 and 4.8 for Type I and to be about ten times greater for Type III. Lower values were found in polyvalent horses and when mixing heterologous monovalent sera with each other. The influence of the duration of treatment upon the quotient was studied. Several refined and concentrated preparations showed a relative increase in ...
A Study of Pneumococci Isolated from Horses Undergoing Pneumococcus Immunization.
The Journal of experimental medicine    April 30, 1927   Volume 45, Issue 5 787-797 doi: 10.1084/jem.45.5.787
Wadsworth AB, Sickles GM.IT HAS BEEN SHOWN THAT THE PNEUMOCOCCUS MULTIPLYING IN THE TISSUES OF THE IMMUNIZED ANIMAL (HORSE) BECOMES ATTENUATED: loses, in varying degrees, its virulence, capacity of capsule formation, susceptibility to phagocytosis, and type specificity. The antigenic activity as an immunizing agent and the production of "soluble specific substance" are also altered. In some instances, the typical pneumococcus characteristics may be quickly restored by one or two passages through a susceptible animal (mouse). In others, virulence is not recovered and the organism remains atypical. Whether these changes...
The Blood of Equines.
The Biochemical journal    January 1, 1922   Volume 16, Issue 6 770-779 doi: 10.1042/bj0160770
Neser CP.No abstract available
Toxins and Antitoxins of Bacillus Dysenteriae Shiga.
The Journal of experimental medicine    January 1, 1920   Volume 31, Issue 1 19-33 doi: 10.1084/jem.31.1.19
Olitsky PK, Kligler IJ.With the methods which have been described we have separated an exotoxin and an endotoxin from cultures of the Shiga dysenteric bacillus. The study of the nature and effect of the poison of this microorganism is thus simplified. The two toxins are physically and biologically distinct. The exotoxin is relatively heat-labile, arises in the early period of growth, and yields an antiexotoxic immune serum. The endotoxin, on the other hand, is heat-stable, is formed in the later period of growth, and is not neutralized by the antiexotoxic serum. The exotoxin exhibits a specific affinity for the cent...
The Streptococci of Equines.
The Journal of experimental medicine    August 1, 1919   Volume 30, Issue 2 159-178 doi: 10.1084/jem.30.2.159
Jones FS.The lower nasal mucosa and the pharynx of thirty eastern and twenty-three western horses have been examined for streptococci. Eight of the eastern horses carried non-hemolytic streptococci on the nasal mucosa. From the pharynx of six, non-hepiolytic streptococci were cultivated. The throats of eighteen contained strains of the hemolytic type. The nasal mucosa of the eastern horses failed to show hemolytic streptococci. Eight western horses carried non-hemolytic streptococci in the nasal passage; eight also harbored the hemolytic type. Twenty-two strains were isolated from the pharynx. Eleven w...
STANDARDIZATION OF ANTIMENINGOCOCCIC SERUM.
The Journal of experimental medicine    November 30, 1918   Volume 28, Issue 6 779-790 doi: 10.1084/jem.28.6.779
Amoss HL, Marsh P.Experiments were made for the purpose of testing the reaction of protection against infection as a measure of potency of antimeningococcic serum. The results of the experiments were extremely variable and bore no relation to the quality of the sera as determined by the period of immunization of the horses from which they were obtained, or the indications of efficiency based upon their employment in human cases of epidemic meningitis. The results also failed entirely to conform to the agglutination titer of the sera tested and to be affected by the different type forms of the meningococci. We r...
A Note on the Production of Antipneumococcus Sera.
The Journal of experimental medicine    May 1, 1917   Volume 25, Issue 5 629-632 doi: 10.1084/jem.25.5.629
Wadsworth AB, Kirkbride MB.Horses immunized to Type I pneumococci developed serum, 0.1 cc. of which protected against 0.5 cc. of a virulent culture, 0.000001 cc. of which killed mice in less than 40 hours. Protective tests of serum from horses immunized to Type II organisms varied, 0.1 cc. protecting, however, in certain instances against 0.1 and 0.01 cc. of virulent homologous culture. Types I and II sera obtained in our experiments with culture sediment and whole culture did not vary markedly for a given type and corresponded closely in their protective titer with samples of sera received from The Rockefeller Institut...
The Serum Treatment of Weil’s Disease (Spirochaetosis Icterohaemorrhagica).
The Journal of experimental medicine    November 1, 1916   Volume 24, Issue 5 485-496 doi: 10.1084/jem.24.5.485
Inada R, Ido Y, Hoki R, Ito H, Wani H.Horses immunized with cultures of Spirochaeta icterohaemorrhagiae yield an immune serum having therapeutic properties. With rare exceptions the serum destroys completely the spirochetes contained in the circulating blood. The development of antibodies is promoted by the serum injections. The number of spirochetes in the organs is reduced by the treatment. Secondary manifestations due to the serum are slight and disappear promptly. The ultimate effects of the serum treatment on the symptoms and final outcome of the disease have still to be determined.
PARAMENINGOCOCCUS AND ITS ANTISERUM.
The Journal of experimental medicine    September 1, 1914   Volume 20, Issue 3 201-217 doi: 10.1084/jem.20.3.201
Wollstein M.The parameningococci of Dopter are culturally indistinguishable from true or normal meningococci, but serologically they exhibit differences as regards agglutination, opsonization, and complement deviation. Because of the variations and irregularities of serum reactions existing among otherwise normal strains of meningococci it does not seem either possible or desirable to separate the parameningococci into a strictly definite class. It appears desirable to consider them as constituting a special strain among meningococci not, however, wholly consistent in itself. The distinctions in serum rea...
DENTAL SEPSIS.
British medical journal    June 6, 1914   Volume 1, Issue 2788 1244-1248 doi: 10.1136/bmj.1.2788.1244-a
Turner JG.No abstract available
Equine Piroplasmosis in the Canal Zone.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    March 7, 1913   Volume 37, Issue 949 370-371 doi: 10.1126/science.37.949.370-a
Darling ST.No abstract available
The Swamp Fever of Horses.
The Journal of medical research    June 1, 1911   Volume 24, Issue 3 213-242 doi: 10.5962/bhl.title.101893
Todd JL, Wolbach SB.No abstract available
Specimens of Equine Larynx, and Records of Cases illustrating the Results of the “Ventricle-stripping” Operation for the Relief of the Conditions known as “Whistling” and “Roaring” in Horses. Demonstrations of Instruments specially designed for this Operation.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine    January 1, 1911   Volume 4, Issue Laryngol Sect 87-92 
Hobday F.No abstract available
Hemorrhagic Hepatitis in Antitoxin Horses.
The Journal of medical research    December 1, 1906   Volume 15, Issue 3 449-468.1 
Lewis PA.No abstract available
Comparative Statistics of Antitoxin Horses: A Study of the Records of One Hundred Horses Immunized to Diphtheria Toxin, with Composite of Curves.
The Journal of experimental medicine    April 25, 1905   Volume 7, Issue 2 176-182 doi: 10.1084/jem.7.2.176
Hubbert WR.1. Better results in the production of diphtheria antitoxin can be obtained with greater experience in the selection of the most suitable type of horses to be used. Young animals are usually to be preferred. Over one-half of all such horses can be made to yield 300-unit serum, while a third will yield (5)oo-unit serum. 2. High-test horses require a shorter time to immunize and will yield a potent serum for a longer period than will low-test horses. 3. The period of usefulness of an antitoxin horse is short, and on an average endures only a few months. 4. A horse having attained a maximal antit...
Equine Piroplasmosis, or “Biliary Fever”.
The Journal of hygiene    January 1, 1905   Volume 5, Issue 1 7-17 doi: 10.1017/s0022172400002321
Bowhill T.No abstract available
Acute Pleurisy in Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    May 1, 1903   Volume 24, Issue 5 281-284 
Baker AH.No abstract available