Analyze Diet

Topic:Disease

The study of diseases in horses encompasses a wide range of conditions affecting equine health, including infectious diseases, metabolic disorders, and genetic abnormalities. These diseases can impact various systems within the horse, such as respiratory, gastrointestinal, and musculoskeletal systems, and can lead to significant health challenges. Research in this area focuses on understanding the pathophysiology, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of equine diseases. Common diseases studied include equine influenza, equine herpesvirus, and laminitis. This page provides access to peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the etiology, clinical presentation, and management strategies of diseases in horses, contributing to the advancement of equine veterinary medicine.
Theriogenology question of the month. Placental insufficiency, probably the result of twin fetuses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 15, 1996   Volume 208, Issue 2 201-202 
Wolfsdorf K.No abstract available
Actinobacillus suis septicaemia in two foals.
The Veterinary record    January 13, 1996   Volume 138, Issue 2 39-40 doi: 10.1136/vr.138.2.39
Nelson KM, Darien BJ, Konkle DM, Hartmann FA.A 24-hour-old Hackney ony filly developed signs of weakness, depression and a poor suck reflex, with harsh lung sounds over both fields, and a 48-hour-old Arabian colt from a normal birth which had sucked vigorously developed loose stools and became depressed, weak and anorectic. Both foals had serum IgG concentrations greater than 800 mg/dl, but each had a severe neutropenia with a left shift, and blood cultures from both of them yielded Actinobacillus suis. The A suis isolates had different antimicrobial susceptibility patterns and, in the case of the Arabian, the isolate was resistant to co...
Basement membrane pathology: a feature of acute equine laminitis.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 1 38-46 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb01588.x
Pollitt CC.Thirty-two dorsal, mid-hoof wall, lamellar sections from 8 Standardbred horses, humanely killed 48 h after the administration of an alimentary carbohydrate overload, were sectioned and examined by light microscopy. Sections were stained with the connective tissue and basement membrane stains periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), Azan and periodic acid silver methanamine (PASM) and with routine haematoxylin and eosin (H&E). Lesions of the epidermal lamellae, attributable to laminitis, were graded in order of increasing severity from Grade N (normal), Grade 1 (mild), Grade 2 (moderate) to Grade 3 (severe ...
Attempts to find phenotypic markers of the virulence plasmid of Rhodococcus equi. De La Peña-Moctezuma A, Prescott JF, Goodfellow M.Four isolates of Rhodococcus equi, from pneumonic foals, and containing the 85 kb virulence plasmid, a porcine isolate containing an 80 kb plasmid, and their plasmid cured derivatives, were examined for 239 phenotypic properties in an attempt to find characters other than the virulence-associated protein (VapA) which might be encoded by the virulence plasmid in organisms grown at 37 degrees C. Tests chosen included those which have previously given variable results for R. equi isolates, since such variability might be attributed to plasmid curing, and characteristics which have been described ...
Neuroaxonal dystrophy in a two-year-old quarter horse filly.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1996   Volume 37, Issue 1 43-44 doi: 10.4141/cjas57-006
Adams AP, Collatos C, Fuentealba C, Illanes O, Blanchard R.No abstract available
Spontaneous vascular mineralization in the brain of horses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    January 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 1 35-40 doi: 10.1292/jvms.58.35
Yanai T, Masegi T, Ishikawa K, Sakai H, Iwasaki T, Moritomo Y, Goto N.Cerebral vascular mineralization was found in 12 (60%) of 20 3- to 10-year-old healthy horses collected at an abattoir. It was variable in degree and occurred mostly in the pallidal arteries showing two types of lesions; small globoid bodies along capillaries, and amorphous deposits in the wall of arterioles, small- or medium-sized arteries and veins. Both types were strongly positive for periodic acid-Schiff reaction, and weakly positive for von Kossa's and Berlin blue stains. Elemental analysis of the deposit revealed the presence of large amounts of aluminum, moderate amounts of phosphorus,...
Use of ELISA to quantify the antitoxin content of commercial equine tetanus antitoxin.
Developments in biological standardization    January 1, 1996   Volume 86 336 
Kolbe DR.No abstract available
Three cases of carcinoid in the equine nasal cavity and maxillary sinuses: histologic and immunohistochemical features.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 1 92-95 doi: 10.1177/030098589603300114
van Maanen C, Klein WR, Dik KJ, van den Ingh TS.Three cases of carcinoid tumor in horses are described. The tumors originated from the maxillary sinuses and the retrobulbar region and caused exophthalmos. Histologically, they had a characteristic endocrine pattern and were argyrophilic with the Grimelius stain. All tumors contained reactivity for neuron-specific enolase and synaptophysin. Two of three tumors were reactive for both bovine and porcine chromogranin A. These immunohistochemical results confirm the neuroendocrine nature of these tumors. Neuroendocrine cells could not be detected in the nasal mucosa and maxillary sinuses of a nor...
[Occurrence of Parascaris equorum in foals and adult horses under different breeding conditions].
Wiadomosci parazytologiczne    January 1, 1996   Volume 42, Issue 2 213-219 
Gawor JJ.Autopsies and analyses of faecal samples from working horses have shown common occurrence of ascarids in foals, whereas 19.6% of adult horses have been found infected. No influence of season on EPG in adult horses has been found. Study based on faecal samples from stud horses has shown that 5-6-month old animals were most susceptible to the infection. 50% of foals have been found infected in spite of deworming with the use of bezimidazole compounds. It has been stated that the proper dose of an anthelminthic is a basic problem in the control of ascarids.
Congenital cleft vertebral centrum and intra- and extraspinal cyst in a foal.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 1 87-89 doi: 10.1177/030098589603300112
Doige CE.A midsagittal centrum cleft of T5-6, malformation and fusion of T3-7, intra- and extraspinal cyst, and myelodysplasia were found in a 3-month-old female Arabian foal that had experienced posterior ataxia since birth. Based on studies in other species, ecto-endodermal adhesions early in embryogenesis leading to formation of an enterogenous cyst is the most probable pathogenesis.
Thrombosis of the aorta and the caudal arteries in the horse; additional diagnostics and a new surgical treatment.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1996   Volume 18 Suppl 2 S85-S89 
Brama PA, Rijkenhuizen AB, van Swieten HA, Warmerdam EP.The prognosis of aortic-iliac thrombosis (TAI) is usually considered to be poor, although affected horses are reported to have recovered following treatment with sodium gluconate. This paper presents some diagnostic techniques to monitor the development of hypoxemia in the diseased limb and to visualise the extension of the thrombosis into the femoral artery. Also, a surgical technique using a Fogarty thrombectomy catheter for partial or total removal of thrombi to restore blood flow, is described. One horse recovered completely, allowing it to resume its former career, the other horse improve...
Visceral neosporosis in a 10-year-old horse. Gray ML, Harmon BG, Sales L, Dubey JP.No abstract available
Acute post-treatment enterocolitis in 13 horses treated in a Norwegian surgical ward.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1996   Volume 37, Issue 2 203-211 doi: 10.1186/BF03548112
Larsen J, Dolvik NI, Teige J.Case histories, results of laboratory analyses, treatment regimens and outcome are described for 13 horses that developed acute enterocolitis after various surgical treatments. Twelve of the 13 horses had been cast in lateral recumbency, and 10 of those 12 had received general anesthesia. Eleven horses had been treated with antimicrobial drugs. Most horses (11) developed diarrhea 2 days after initiation of treatment, with a variation from 1 to 5 days. The most apparent symptoms were fever, up to 40.5 degrees C, elevated heart rate, discoloration of mucous membranes, and diarrhea. Dehydration, ...
Nucleotide sequence of exons 5 to 9 of the p53 tumour-suppressor gene of the horse (Equus caballus).
DNA sequence : the journal of DNA sequencing and mapping    January 1, 1996   Volume 6, Issue 3 185-187 doi: 10.3109/10425179609010208
Nasir L, Reid SW.An evolutionary conserved 1.3 kb fragment corresponding to the horse p53 tumour suppressor gene was PCR amplified, cloned and the nucleotide sequence determined. The p53 fragment encoded exons 5 to 9 and the intervening introns. The nucleotide sequence and the predicted aminoacid sequence showed a high level of homology with human and donkey p53 sequences.
Transrectal ultrasonographic diagnosis of an ileocaecal intussusception in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 1 81-83 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb01594.x
Edens LM, White NA, Dabareiner RM, Sullins KE.No abstract available
Equine papillary ependymoma.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 1 77-80 doi: 10.1177/030098589603300109
Carrigan MJ, Higgins RJ, Carlson GP, Naydan DK.A 17-year-old Arabian gelding with progressive neurologic signs had a velvety, reddish brain tumor protruding from the ventral midline caudal to the optic chiasma. Histologically, the tumor had a papillary formation with a single layer of elongate cells radially oriented around a central fibrovascular core. Intracytoplasmic globular inclusions were positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein and weakly positive for vimentin. Ultrastructurally, these inclusions were comprised of whorling intermediate filaments. Neoplastic cells also had cytoplasmic interdigitations and numerous zona adherens a...
The effect of arthritis in the carpal joint on performance in Norwegian cold-blooded trotters.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 6 505-512 doi: 10.1007/BF00396293
Dolvik NI, Klemetsdal G.The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of arthritis of the carpal joint on performance of Norwegian cold-blooded trotters. Two performance variables were used in the analyses. The first was the start status, for which horses that had started in one or more races within a certain age received the value 1, and horses that had not raced were correspondingly assigned the value 0. The second variable was the accumulated, transformed and standardized earnings (ATSE), which is the power transformation of earnings (earnings .2, with unraced horses assigned a value of zero) expressed as a...
[Identification and diagnosis of Taylorella equigenitalis by a DNA amplification method (PCR)].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1996   Volume 138, Issue 3 115-120 
Miserez R, Frey J, Krawinkler M, Nicolet J.A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for identification of Taylorella equigenitalis was developed. The oligonucleotide primers are based on the DNA sequence of the rrs gene of T. equigenitalis, encoding for the 16S ribosomal RNA. Analysis of 21 strains of T. equigenitalis from England, USA and Switzerland showed an amplification product of 410 bp with identical Sau3A restriction profile. The sensitivity of the PCR-Assay was estimated to detect 50 to 500 bacteria of T. equigenitalis in a mixture with frequently found contaminants. Further analysis of culture from 60 genital swabs, taken in the cou...
Prevalence of G and P serotypes among equine rotaviruses in the faeces of diarrhoeic foals.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1996   Volume 141, Issue 6 1077-1089 doi: 10.1007/BF01718611
Browning GF, Begg AP.Variant types of VP4 and VP7 gene segments of faecal rotaviruses from diarrhoeic foals were identified by restriction endonuclease digestion of reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction (RT/PCR) products. The variants observed were correlated with serotypes by determination of the sequence of representative RT/PCR products (entire coding sequence for VP7 and the VP8 region of VP4) and comparison to published sequences of equine G and P serotype genes. Both G and P serotypes could be predicted for 95/116 (82%) strains, P serotype only for a further 8 (7%) strains and G serotype only for 1...
Survey of equine rotaviruses shows conservation of one P genotype in background of two G genotypes.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1996   Volume 141, Issue 9 1601-1612 doi: 10.1007/BF01718285
Isa P, Wood AR, Netherwood T, Ciarlet M, Imagawa H, Snodgrass DR.DIG-labelled ssRNA probes were prepared from variable regions of VP4 and VP7 cognate genes, and used in hybridization assays for P and G genotyping of group A cell culture-adapted equine rotaviruses and fecal samples collected from foals with and without diarrhea. The probes confirmed known P and G serotypes of sixteen cell culture-adapted strains. From one-hundred and twenty-one rotavirus-positive samples, 83 reacted when tested for their P and G genotype specific probes. From these, 71 were found to contain G3 P12 genotypes, and 11 G14 P12 genotypes. No sample reacted with H1 or L338 P and G...
Species-specific and interspecies relatedness of NSP1 sequences in human, porcine, bovine, feline, and equine rotavirus strains.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1996   Volume 141, Issue 1 1-12 doi: 10.1007/BF01718584
Kojima K, Taniguchi K, Kobayashi N.We have sequenced gene 5 encoding NSP1 for three human, two porcine, two bovine, one feline, and five equine rotavirus strains, and compared the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences with the published sequences for other various strains. Subgroup I human strains L26, 69M, and DS-1 were found to have a similar NSP1 sequence despite their different G serotypes, VP4 genotypes, and RNA patterns. The NSP1 sequence of the human strain K8 showed a high degree of homology to those of porcine strains OSU and YM. A high degree of homology was found among three equine strains (H2, FI-14, and FI23)...
Comparison of nucleic and amino acid sequences and phylogenetic analysis of the Gs protein of various equine arteritis virus isolates.
Virus genes    January 1, 1996   Volume 13, Issue 1 87-91 doi: 10.1007/BF00576983
Lepage N, St-Laurent G, Carman S, Archambault D.The genetic variation in equine arteritis virus (EAV) Gs protein encoding gene was investigated. Nucleic and deduced amino acid sequences from eight different EAV isolates (one European, two American and five Canadian isolates) were compared with those of the Bucyrus reference strain. Nucleotide and amino acid identities between these isolates and the Bucyrus reference strain ranged from 92.3 to 96.4%, and 93.2 to 95.5%, respectively. However, phylogenetic tree analysis and estimation of genetic distances based on the Gs protein encoding gene sequences showed that the European prototype Vienna...
Sequence variability of Borna disease virus open reading frame II found in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Journal of virology    January 1, 1996   Volume 70, Issue 1 635-640 doi: 10.1128/JVI.70.1.635-640.1996
Kishi M, Arimura Y, Ikuta K, Shoya Y, Lai PK, Kakinuma M.A cDNA fragment of the Borna disease virus (BDV) open reading frame II (ORF-II), which encodes a 24-kDa phosphoprotein (p24 [P protein]), was amplified from total RNA of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from three psychiatric inpatients. The amplified cDNA fragments were cloned, sequenced, and analyzed. A total of 15 clones, 5 from each patient, were studied. Intrapatient divergencies of the BDV ORF-II nucleotide sequence were 4.2 to 7.3%, 4.8 to 7.3%, and 2.8 to 7.1% for the three patients, leading to differences of 7.7 to 14.5%, 10.3 to 17.1%, and 6.0 to 16.2%, respectively, in the ...
[Jenner’s cowpox vaccine in light of current vaccinology].
Verhandelingen - Koninklijke Academie voor Geneeskunde van Belgie    January 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 5 479-538 
Huygelen C.Two hundred years ago Edward Jenner inoculated James Phipps with vaccinia and 181 years later smallpox had disappeared from the surface of the earth as a result of generalized vaccination. Compared to the requirements of modern vaccinology, the procedures used by Jenner and his successors, were extremely primitive because of an almost total lack of knowledge in the field of microbiology and immunology. The active principle of smallpox vaccine is vaccinia virus, which in many respects, differs from that of natural cowpox; the term "cowpox" has been used for more than a century and a half to des...
Lymphoid leukosis viruses, their recognition as ‘persistent’ viruses and comparisons with certain other retroviruses of veterinary importance.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 1 83-108 doi: 10.1007/BF00346580
Darcel C.Diseases caused by lymphoid leukosis virus (LLV), a retrovirus, take a long time after infection to develop and have a wide variety of pathological manifestations. This long latent period is characteristic of 'persistent virus infections'. Disease produced by LLV infection and its underlying mechanisms is compared with 'persistent' infections caused by other retroviruses in birds and mammals of veterinary importance. The diseases considered for comparison are those caused by reticuloendotheliosis, feline leukaemia, bovine leukosis and equine infectious anaemia viruses. There are significant ch...
Oral ivermectin paste for the treatment of chorioptic mange in horses.
The Veterinary record    December 23, 1995   Volume 137, Issue 26 661-663 
Littlewood JD, Rose JF, Paterson S.A single blind controlled clinical trial of oral ivermectin paste at a dose rate of 0.1 mg/kg daily for seven days for the treatment of chorioptic mange in horses was carried out. There was a statistically significant reduction in the numbers of mites in the samples taken from the treated horses compared with the untreated horses, but the mites were not eliminated from all the treated animals. Two further groups of horses were treated, one at a dose rate of 0.1 mg/kg daily for 10 days and the other with two doses of 0.2 mg/kg given two weeks apart. There were no statistically significant diffe...
Acute encephalopathy and hyperammonaemia in a horse without evidence of liver disease.
The Veterinary record    December 16, 1995   Volume 137, Issue 25 642-643 
Mair TS, Jones RD.No abstract available
[Ryegrass cramps in horses].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    December 15, 1995   Volume 120, Issue 24 710-711 
van Essen GJ, Blom M, Fink Gremmels-Gehrmann J.To elaborate the diagnosis of rye-grass intoxication in a stallion demonstrating a neurotoxic syndrome characterized by ataxia and incoordination, a number of diagnostic tests were performed. Results of both, blood chemistry and haematology gave no indication for organ-specific or systemic lesions. Chemical analysis of the hay fed to the horse revealed the presence of the mycotoxin lolitrem B in concentrations consistent with those described in sheep and cattle with similar symptoms. Thus, it was concluded that the animals demonstrated the rye-grass-stagger(RGS)-syndrome.
Equine severe combined immunodeficiency: a defect in V(D)J recombination and DNA-dependent protein kinase activity.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    December 5, 1995   Volume 92, Issue 25 11485-11489 doi: 10.1073/pnas.92.25.11485
Wiler R, Leber R, Moore BB, VanDyk LF, Perryman LE, Meek K.V(D)J rearrangement is the molecular mechanism by which an almost infinite array of specific immune receptors are generated. Defects in this process result in profound immunodeficiency as is the case in the C.B-17 SCID mouse or in RAG-1 (recombination-activating gene 1) or RAG-2 deficient mice. It has recently become clear that the V(D)J recombinase most likely consists of both lymphoid-specific factors and ubiquitously expressed components of the DNA double-strand break repair pathway. The deficit in SCID mice is in a factor that is required for both of these pathways. In this report, we show...
Hematology and hemostasis in the horse: normal functions and common abnormalities.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1995   Volume 11, Issue 3 351-389 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30306-1
Lassen ED, Swardson CJ.In diseased animals, laboratory evaluations of erythrocytes, leukocytes, and hemostasis provide important information that contributes to either narrowing the list of potential diagnoses or to determining a specific diagnosis. To adequately interpret the results of these evaluations, normal erythrocyte and leukocyte kinetics and normal hemostatic function must be understood. In addition, knowledge of common diseases resulting in abnormalities of these laboratory tests and of typical changes in these tests caused by these diseases is vital. This article has reviewed normal erythrocyte and leuko...