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.
Treatment of pre-patent equine strongyliasis.
The Veterinary record    September 3, 1977   Volume 101, Issue 10 187 doi: 10.1136/vr.101.10.187
Jeggo MH, Sewell MM.No abstract available
Phenylalanine inhibited p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity in the serum as an indication of intestinal cellular disruption in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1977   Volume 23, Issue 2 146-152 
Blackmore DJ, Palmer A.Examination of tissues obtained from thoroughbred horses showed that the 'intestinal' phosphatase activity could be differentiated from other phosphatases by analysis at a pH of 9-5 and inhibition with 15 mM L-phenylalanine. A simple method for the measurement of 'intestinal' phosphatase in heparinised plasma or serum is described. Application of the technique to serum or plasma from normal and diseased horses indicates that the increase in the activity of 'intestinal' phosphatase is associated with cases showing clinical, biochemical and haematological evidence of intestinal damage.
Problems of the equine iris: what is your diagnosis?
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    September 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 9 1467-1471 
Joyce JR.No abstract available
[Strongyloides westeri Ihle, 1917 (Nematoda: Strongyloididae). I. Parasitological features of natural infection (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    September 1, 1977   Volume 102, Issue 17 1039-1043 
Mirck MH.Patent S. westeri infection is particularly common in unweaned foals (61.2 per cent). It is much less common in foals which have been weaned (15.4 per cent). Examination of the faeces of ten artificially reared foals (free from worms) did not supply any evidence of possible prenatal (intra-uterine) helminth infection. In one Shetland pony mare, larvae of S. westeri were found to be present in the milk on the tenth, twenty-fourth and thirty-second day after parturition. Larvae were not detected in the milk of the other mares but all foals showed patent S. westeri infection within from thirteen ...
Disseminated septic meningitis in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1977   Volume 171, Issue 5 452-454 
Rumbaugh GE.Physical, neurologic, and clinicopathologic findings in a 3-year-old female Morgan horse with anorexia and nasal discharge suggested suppurative meningitis. Necropsy findings substantiated the tentative diagnosis. Actinomyces sp was cultured from a meningeal abscess surrounding the pituitary gland and from resolving lung abscesses.
Effects of storage on the methaemoglobin content of equine blood.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1977   Volume 23, Issue 2 241-243 
Dixon PM, Brown R.Equine blood containing different levels of methaemoglobin was stored under varying conditions and the methaemoglobin content was monitored during the storage period. Only under aerobic storage at 4 degrees C did the methaemoglobin content of all samples appear to remain stable.
Sebaceous carcinoma in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1977   Volume 14, Issue 5 532-534 doi: 10.1177/030098587701400518
McMartin DN, Gruhn RF.No abstract available
Ischemic myelopathy caused by fibrocartilaginous emboli in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1977   Volume 14, Issue 5 479-481 doi: 10.1177/030098587701400507
Taylor HW, Vandevelde M, Firth EC.A horse that suddenly became recumbent had a focal ischemic infarct of the spinal cord between C6 and C7. The infarct was attributed to multiple fibrocartilaginous emboli. Adherence of fibrocartilaginous debris to the outer surface of the dura was interpreted as evidence that intervertebral disc degeneration and displacement of the nucleus pulposus had occurred and that the emboli arose from the disc.
Prosthetic filling of a cement defect in premolar tooth necrosis in a horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    September 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 9 1475-1477 
Swanstrom OG, Wolford HA.No abstract available
Lymphosarcoma in a horse.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    September 1, 1977   Volume 18, Issue 9 257-258 
Green PD, Donovan LA.No abstract available
Practical methods of determining serum immunoglobulin M and immunoglobulin G concentrations in foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1977   Volume 171, Issue 5 455-458 
Buening GM, Perryman LE, McGuire TC.Serum concentrations of immunoglobulin M (IgM) and immunoglobulin G (IgG) can be determined in the horse with a satisfactory degree of accuracy, using commercially available reagents. Selected lots of anti-human IgM can be used in precipitation tests to detect and quantitate equine IgM. Commercially available anti-equine IgG tended to overestimate the amount of IgG in single radial immunodiffusion tests. Even with these limitations, commercial reagents can be used to differentiate immunodeficiency disorders of foals, including combined immunodeficiency and failure of passive transfer of colost...
Pericardial mesothelioma in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1977   Volume 14, Issue 5 513-515 doi: 10.1177/030098587701400512
Carnine BL, Schneider G, Cook JE, Leipold HW.No abstract available
Bromide intoxication of horses, goats, and cattle.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1977   Volume 171, Issue 5 446-448 
Knight HD, Costner GC.During the summer and fall of 1973, a few horses, goats, and cattle in the Napa Valley of California became intoxicated by bromide via the ingestion of volunteer oat hay that had been cut from a field treated with methyl bromide, a soil fumigant. The bromide content of the hay ranged from 6,00 to 8,400 ppm. Signs of intoxication were lethargy, weakness, and ataxia. Animals experimentally fed the contaminated hay developed signs of intoxication between the 7th and 9th days.
An outbreak of Swainsona poisoning in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    September 1, 1977   Volume 53, Issue 9 446-447 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1977.tb05496.x
O'Sullivan BM, Goodwin JA.On 6 properties in south-western Queensland an outbreak of nervous disease occurred horses due to ingestion of Swainsonia (Darling pea). Loss of condition, depression, hyperaesthesia and hyperexcitability were seen in affected horses. At autopsy of 2 horses generalised c ytoplasmic vacuolation was seen in the neurones of the central nervous system and in the liver, adrenal and thyroid. The clinical and pathological features were similar to those described in horses suffering from Swainsona poisoning in Australia and Astragalus and Oxytropis in North America.
RAST in the diagnosis of hypersensitivity to horse allergens. A comparison with clinical history and in vivo tests.
Clinical allergy    September 1, 1977   Volume 7, Issue 5 455-464 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.1977.tb01476.x
Leegaard J, Roth A.Case history, skin tests and RAST were compared in a group (n = 40) of children with a history suggesting allergy to horses and in a group (n = 43) in whom there was no suspicion of hypersensitivity to horses. There was an agreement of 91% between case history and prick test. The same magnitude of agreement was found between case history and RAST (89%), and the agreement between RAST and prick test was 90%. The results of this investigation are clearly in contrast to earlier earlier reports, in that there was a very good correlation between prick test, RAST and case history. The results sugges...
Inhibition of the growth of some strains of Mycoplasma mycoides subsp mycoides by the blood of certain horses.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1977   Volume 23, Issue 2 252-254 
Dyson DA, Smith GR.When incorporated in solid medium at a concentration of 15 per cent, the defibrinated blood of certain horses strongly suppressed the growth of some, but not all, strains of Mycoplasma mycoides subsp mycoides so that many colonies failed to develop to a visible size. Blood from a single rabbit was tested and found to exert a similar effect. There was striking variation in the degree of inhibition produced by different samples of horse blood and, of five strains of the organism examined, the T1 vaccine strain was the most susceptible. The results suggested that the effect was not due to antibod...
Dirofilaria immitis recovered from a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 15, 1977   Volume 171, Issue 4 354-355 
Klein JB, Stoddard ED.No abstract available
[Clinical aspects of nutritional muscular dystrophy in foals].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    August 5, 1977   Volume 84, Issue 8 293-296 
Bostedt H.No abstract available
[Diagnosis and prognosis of chronic respiratory diseases in horses].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    August 1, 1977   Volume 119, Issue 8 341-345 
Minder HP.No abstract available
Equine herpesviruses. Experimental infection of a foetus with type 2.
Australian veterinary journal    August 1, 1977   Volume 53, Issue 8 360-362 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1977.tb07951.x
Gleeson LJ, Studdert MJ.Intrauterine infection of pregnant mare with equine herpesvirus type 2 (EHV 2) did not result in foetal abortion, stillbirth or recognisable disease. Collection of uterine fluid by allantocentesis or amniocentesis 107 days after inoculation confirmed that intrauterine infection was established. EHV 2 was isolated from both allantoic and amniotic fluid separately collected at the time of elective Caesarean section 156 days after inoculation and virus neutralising antibody to EHV 2 was present in the foal's presuckle serum at birth. A very mild clinical disease, characterised by a scant, mucous ...
Studies on equine immunoglobulins–V. Horse antibodies to donkey IgGa.
Immunochemistry    August 1, 1977   Volume 14, Issue 8 577-586 
Allen PZ, Dalton EJ, Khaleel SA, Kenney RM.No abstract available
Cell-mediated immune response in equine babesiosis.
Tropical animal health and production    August 1, 1977   Volume 9, Issue 3 153-158 doi: 10.1007/BF02236589
Banerjee DP, Singh B, Gautam OP, Sarup S.An intradermal skin test, to demonstrate a delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity reaction in Babesia equi infection in donkeys, was developed. A skin reaction to B. equi antigen was elicited in vaccinnated, infected and carrier intact and splenectomised donkeys. The histopathological examination of the skin biopsy revealed infiltration of mononuclear cells and accumulation of oedematous fluid in the deeper layers of the dermis. A leucocyte migration inhibition test was developed and its specificity as an in vitro measure of cell-mediated immunity to B. equi antigen was established. The results of...
Cecal inversion in a horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    August 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 8 1346-1348 
Cowles RR, Bunch SE, Flynn DV, Schmidt GR.No abstract available
Small strongyles of horses with cross resistance to benzimidazole anthelmintics and susceptibility to unrelated compounds.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    August 1, 1977   Volume 18, Issue 8 212-217 
Slocombe JO, Cote JF.No abstract available
A contagious genital infection of mares.
The Veterinary record    July 30, 1977   Volume 101, Issue 5 103 doi: 10.1136/vr.101.5.103-a
Timoney PJ, Ward J, Kelly P.No abstract available
Recurrent convulsions in a thoroughbred foal: management and treatment.
The Veterinary record    July 23, 1977   Volume 101, Issue 4 76-77 doi: 10.1136/vr.101.4.76
May CJ, Greenwood RE.A thoroughbred foal had a convulsive attack 12 hours after birth followed by further convulsions on the 10th, 11th and 12th days after birth. It was treated successfully by medication with primidone, feeding by stomach tube and careful nursing.
Duodenum rupture in a nine-month-old colt due to Anoplocephala magna.
The Veterinary record    July 23, 1977   Volume 101, Issue 4 80 doi: 10.1136/vr.101.4.80-a
Oliver DF, Jenkins CT, Walding JP.No abstract available
Genital infection in mares.
The Veterinary record    July 16, 1977   Volume 101, Issue 3 65 doi: 10.1136/vr.101.3.65
Ricketts SW, Rossdale PD, Wingfield-Digby NJ, Falk NM, Hopes R, Hunt MD, Peace CK.No abstract available
Fibrous foreign body impaction colic in young horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1977   Volume 171, Issue 2 193-195 
Boles CL, Kohn CW.OF 207 horses with colic seen over a 36-month period, 10 were determined to have impaction colic caused by ingestion of synthetic fencing material. In 6 cases, there was history of exposure to rubberized fencing products. All horses affected were less than or equal to 3 years of age, had signs of mild to moderate abdominal pain, and were unresponsive to usual symptomatic therapy. At surgery, each horse was found to have an impaction involving the distal right dorsal colon, transverse colon, or small colon, and in some cases, all 3 bowel segments. In 9 cases, the involved segment of bowel could...
Clinical application of cerebrospinal fluid creatine phosphokinase determination.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1977   Volume 171, Issue 2 200-202 
Wilson JW.Creatine phosphokinase activity was determined in cerebrospinal fluid samples submitted for analysis from 126 animals suspected of having central nervous system disease. Values less than 1 sigma unit/ml were obtained on 32 samples and values less than or equal to 1 sigma unit/ml were obtained on 94 samples. The creatine phosphokinase values were increased in all cases of feline toxoplasmosis and feline infectious peritonitis. From other cases, especially seizure disorders and suspected poisonings, and apparent aid in prognosis for future cases was identified.