Analyze Diet

Topic:Equine Diseases

Equine diseases encompass a wide range of health conditions that can affect horses, including infectious diseases, metabolic disorders, and genetic conditions. These diseases can impact the overall health, performance, and well-being of horses. Common equine diseases include equine influenza, equine herpesvirus, laminitis, and equine metabolic syndrome. Diagnosis and management of these diseases often require a combination of clinical evaluation, laboratory testing, and appropriate treatment strategies. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the etiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment options for various equine diseases, providing valuable insights for veterinarians and researchers in the field.
Equine monocytic ehrlichiosis (Potomac horse fever): a review.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 6 400-404 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03749.x
Mulville P.In the late 1970s, a new infectious disease in horses, involving acute enteritis, was recognised in the Potomac River area of Maryland, U.S.A. The causative agent was identified subsequently as a new species of rickettsial organism, later named Ehrlichia risticii. Since then, the disease has been reported in many other states, and in enzootic areas vaccination is common. Signs associated with the clinical disease included depression, fever, anorexia, decreased or absent intestinal sounds, profuse watery diarrhoea and laminitis. However, considerable variation in clinical manifestations has bee...
Traumatic injuries involving tendons of the distal limbs in horses: a retrospective study of 55 cases.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 6 422-425 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03754.x
Foland JW, Trotter GW, Stashak TS, McIlwraith CW, Turner AS, Aanes WA.Fifty-five horses were presented to Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital between 1st of January 1980 and 31st of December 1989 for treatment of distal limb lacerations involving flexor tendons (n = 35) or extensor tendons (n = 20). Of the 35 flexor tendon lacerations, 11 horses were killed without treatment and 24 horses were treated. Twenty-two horses were included in determining outcome. Four (18 per cent) returned to their original level of use, nine (41 per cent) returned to limited riding, seven (32 per cent) returned to breeding or pasture soundness and two (9 per cent)...
Time of embryo transport through the mare oviduct.
Theriogenology    November 1, 1991   Volume 36, Issue 5 823-830 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(91)90348-h
Freeman DA, Weber JA, Geary RT, Woods GL.The objectives of this study were 1) to determine the time of embryo transport through the mare oviduct, 2) to determine whether equine embryos increase in diameter prior to the time of oviductal transport, and 3) to assess the stage of equine embryonic development at the time of oviductal transport. The time of oviductal transport (interval from ovulation to uterine entry) was estimated by collecting embryos from the mare oviduct or uterus at 2-hour intervals from 120 to 168 h postovulation. The time of oviductal transport was 130 to 142 h, since 9 9 embryos were located in the oviduct from 1...
Actinobacillus spp. and related bacteria in infected wounds of humans bitten by horses and sheep.
Journal of clinical microbiology    November 1, 1991   Volume 29, Issue 11 2535-2538 doi: 10.1128/jcm.29.11.2535-2538.1991
Peel MM, Hornidge KA, Luppino M, Stacpoole AM, Weaver RE.We describe the isolation of Actinobacillus lignieresii and an A. equuli-like bacterium from an infected horse-bite wound in a 22-year-old stable foreman and A. suis from a bite injury in a 35-year-old man who had been attacked by a horse. A. lignieresii was also isolated in pure culture from an infected sheep-bite wound in a rural worker. These species of the genus Actinobacillus are primarily associated with animals and animal diseases and are rarely isolated from humans. The purpose of this report is to raise awareness of the possible occurrence of Actinobacillus spp. in bite wounds inflict...
Morphine and etorphine: XIV. Detection by ELISA in equine urine.
Journal of analytical toxicology    November 1, 1991   Volume 15, Issue 6 305-310 doi: 10.1093/jat/15.6.305
Stanley S, Jeganathan A, Wood T, Henry P, Turner S, Woods WE, Green M, Tai HH, Watt D, Blake J.We have raised antibodies to morphine and etorphine and developed one-step enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for these drugs as part of a panel of post race tests for drugs in racing horses. These tests are simple, can be completed in 2 h, and can be read by visual inspection. The morphine ELISA has an I50 for morphine of about 1.5 ng/mL, while the etorphine ELISA has an I50 for etorphine of 250 pg/mL. Cross-reactivity studies show that the antimorphine antibody cross-reacts well with levorphanol, hydromorphone, and oxycodone, while the anti-etorphine antibody showed no cross-reactivi...
Measurements of the accuracy of clinical diagnoses of equine neurologic disease.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    November 1, 1991   Volume 5, Issue 6 332-334 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1991.tb03146.x
Mayhew IG.Parameters for the accuracy of clinical diagnosis of neurologic diseases in the horse were determined from 210 horses in which a definitive pathologic diagnosis was confirmed. The overall efficiency of diagnosis for all diseases was 0.95 although the validity varied from 0.79 to 1.00, the sensitivity varied from 0.73 to 0.95, and the specificity varied from 0.88 to 1.00 for individual disease categories. Equine protozoal myeloencephalitis was overdiagnosed, whereas Eastern equine encephalomyelitis, equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy, and traumatic neurologic disease were underdiagnosed. T...
Influence of age on neutrophil function in foals.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 6 466-469 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03763.x
Wichtel MG, Anderson KL, Johnson TV, Nathan U, Smith L.Functional activities (phagocytosis and killing) of neutrophil leucocytes (NL) and immunoglobulin G concentrations were evaluated in six healthy foals from birth to 6 months of age. Peripheral blood NL were reacted with Streptococcus equisimilis in 20 per cent pooled equine serum for 30, 60 and 90 mins and functional activities of NL were determined using a fluorochrome microassay. Values for foal NL function were compared with those of healthy adult horses (n = 28). Foal neutrophil function was influenced by age. Killing capacity of NL decreased, whereas phagocytic capacity increased, until 1...
Co-culture of day-5 to day-7 equine embryos in medium with oviductal tissue.
Theriogenology    November 1, 1991   Volume 36, Issue 5 815-822 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(91)90347-g
Freeman DA, Butler JE, Weber JA, Geary RT, Woods GL.Oviductal and uterine embryos were collected from mares at 5 to 7 days following ovulation 1) to evaluate the effects of oviductal tissue explants on in vitro growth and development of equine embryos and 2) to study the morphologic development of equine embryos in culture. Embryos were incubated for 5 days in a medium (control group) or in medium supplemented with oviductal tissue explants (co-culture group). Embryos were evaluated and the media changed daily. Following 5 days in culture, 10 10 (100%) control embryos and 27 29 (93%) co-cultured embryos had doubled in diameter. All embryos that...
Reciprocal apparatus dysfunction as a cause of severe hind limb lameness in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1991   Volume 199, Issue 8 1047-1048 
Reeves MJ, Trotter GW.A 2-year-old Appaloosa mare was admitted because of acute, severe hind limb lameness (grade 4 of 5). The hock could be flexed or extended without influencing the position of the stifle joint, and the fetlock and proximal interphalangeal joints could be extended while the hock was maintained in flexion. The diagnosis was functional loss of the reciprocal apparatus. The differential diagnoses for functional loss of the reciprocal apparatus include disruption of the common calcaneal tendon, the gastrocnemius muscle, the peroneus tertius, or the superficial digital flexor muscle. In this horse, th...
Investigating equine ingestive, maternal, and sexual behavior in the field and in the laboratory.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1991   Volume 69, Issue 10 4161-4166 doi: 10.2527/1991.69104161x
Houpt KA.Some of the techniques that may be used to study social, reproductive, and ingestive behavior in horses are described in this paper. One of the aspects of equine social behavior is the dominance hierarchy or patterns of agonistic behavior. Paired or group feeding from a single food source may be used to determine dominance hierarchies quickly. Focal animal studies of undisturbed groups of horses may also be used; this method takes longer, but may reveal affiliative as well as agonistic relationships among the horses. Reproductive behavior includes flehmen, the functional significance of which ...
Serum tumor necrosis factor activity in horses with colic attributable to gastrointestinal tract disease.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 10 1565-1569 
Morris DD, Moore JN, Crowe N.Over a 24-month period, serum tumor necrosis factor (TNF) activity was determined in 289 horses with colic attributable to gastrointestinal tract disease. Serum TNF activity was quantitated by use of a modified in vitro cytotoxicity bioassay, using WEHI 164 clone-13 murine fibrosarcoma cells. Causes for colic, determined by clinical and laboratory evaluation, exploratory celiotomy, or necropsy included: gastrointestinal tract rupture (GTR); ileal impaction; small intestinal strangulating obstruction (SIO); proximal enteritis (PE); transient small intestinal distention; large-colon displacement...
Malignant mast cell tumours in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1991   Volume 68, Issue 10 346-347 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1991.tb03099.x
Riley CB, Yovich JV, Howell JM.No abstract available
Prostaglandin E2 secretion by oviductal transport-stage equine embryos.
Biology of reproduction    October 1, 1991   Volume 45, Issue 4 540-543 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod45.4.540
Weber JA, Freeman DA, Vanderwall DK, Woods GL.This study was conducted to identify embryonic products whose secretion was temporally associated with the oviductal transport period of the mare. Chemicals secreted by oviductal-transport-stage equine embryos were identified by incubating Day 6 or Day 7 early uterine embryos with 35S-methionine/cysteine, 3H-progesterone, or 3H-arachidonic acid for 24 h, and subsequently identifying radioactively labeled proteins (SDS-PAGE; n = 3 embryos), steroids (HPLC; n = 3 embryos), or prostaglandins (HPLC; n = 3 embryos) in the culture medium. Early uterine embryos secreted 116.1 +/- 45.5 pg of prostagla...
[The effect of nutrition on the origin of colic (digestive disorders) in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    October 1, 1991   Volume 19, Issue 5 515-520 
Meyer H.Colics are often initiated by mistakes in feeding inadequate feed quality or quantity or poor feeding technique. The consequences are obstruction, impaction or dysbiosis with increased production of organic acids, gas or toxins. Nutritional anamnesis in patients with colic may give information on the pathogenesis of the disease.
Relationships between lymphoid nodules and lymph sinuses in lymph nodes: a study in horses.
Journal of anatomy    October 1, 1991   Volume 178 39-43 
Heath TJ, Nikles SA.Secondary lymphoid nodules in lymph nodes of the horse are surrounded by a network of lymph sinuses, including the subcapsular sinus and its extensions around tabeculae, tubular and tubule-like sinuses deeper in the cortex, and sinuses between cord-like projections of cortical tissue. The precise role of this close association between sinuses and nodules in the transport of immune complexes, cells and cytokines is not known.
[Phenol in the serum of dogs and horses and its clinical significance].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 1, 1991   Volume 104, Issue 10 353-356 
Kraft VW, Menghistu D, Zeilmann M, Grabner A, Ghermai A.Reference values of serum phenols between 0.3 and 0.7 mmol/L in dogs respectively between 0.25 and 0.37 mmol/L in horses are determined. In dogs increased phenol values were found frequently in hepatopathy. Furthermore elevations, particularly in diseases of the gastrointestinal tract, were obtained; especially in hemorrhagic enteritis of dogs, associated with parvovirosis, and in mechanical ileus of the small intestine and the large intestine respectively in horses. In renal and endocrine diseases increased phenol values were seldom obtained.
Diagnostic application of polymerase chain reaction for detection of Ehrlichia risticii in equine monocytic ehrlichiosis (Potomac horse fever).
Journal of clinical microbiology    October 1, 1991   Volume 29, Issue 10 2228-2233 doi: 10.1128/jcm.29.10.2228-2233.1991
Biswas B, Mukherjee D, Mattingly-Napier BL, Dutta SK.Genomic amplification by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to identify a unique genomic sequence of Ehrlichia risticii directly in DNA isolated from peripheral-blood buffy coat cells of E. risticii-infected horses (Potomac horse fever) and from infected cell cultures. A specific primer pair, selected from a cloned, species-specific, 1-kb DNA fragment of the E. risticii genome as a template, was used for the amplification of the target DNA of 247 bp. The optimal number of 40 PCR cycles, determined by analyzing an amplification profile obtained with a constant Taq polymerase concentra...
The equine major plasma serpin multigene family: partial characterization including sequence of the reactive-site regions.
Biochemical genetics    October 1, 1991   Volume 29, Issue 9-10 477-499 doi: 10.1007/BF02399689
Patterson SD, Bell K, Shaw DC.The equine Pi system, which is highly polymorphic and was considered to be controlled by a single locus, has been shown to be controlled by four loci (named Spi 1-4). This system is the equine equivalent of the major human plasma serpin (serine protease inhibitor), human alpha 1 PI. Twenty-two haplotypes of the equine Pi system have been characterized by two-dimensional electrophoresis, resulting in the assignment of pI, Mr, and bovine trypsin and chymotrypsin inhibition characteristics to 109 proteins. These proteins have been analyzed further to determine their relatedness to each other as w...
Xanthine oxidase formation during experimental ischemia of the equine small intestine.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    October 1, 1991   Volume 55, Issue 4 310-314 
Prichard M, Ducharme NG, Wilkins PA, Erb HN, Butt M.We hypothesized that xanthine oxidase plays a role in the postischemic reperfusion injury in the equine small intestine. Under anesthesia, four horses and two ponies underwent ischemic strangulating obstructions of segments of the proximal jejunum, mid-jejunum and ileum. Prior to vascular occlusion, and at 1 h and 2 h of ischemia, full-thickness intestinal biopsies were collected for histopathological evaluation and for determination of combined xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) plus xanthine oxidase (XO) activity, and XO activity alone. The level of XO activity was expressed in percentage accordin...
Identification and comparative sequence analysis of a gene in equine herpesvirus 1 with homology to the herpes simplex virus glycoprotein D gene.
Virus genes    October 1, 1991   Volume 5, Issue 4 313-325 doi: 10.1007/BF00271530
Whalley M, Robertson G, Bell C, Love D, Elphinstone M, Wiley L, Craven D.A homologue of the herpes simplex virus (HSV) glycoprotein D gene has been identified in the genome of equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1, equine abortion virus). An open reading frame in the middle of the short unique (US) region is capable of encoding a polypeptide of 402 amino acids that has 26% and 20% of its residues matching pseudorabies virus (PRV) gp50 and HSV-1 gD, respectively. Despite this low level of similarity, the positional identity of six cysteine residues and certain motifs, and the location of the EHV-1 gene, clearly define the EHV-1 polypeptide as one of a family of "gD-like" prot...
Chronic cervical compressive myelopathy in horses: clinical correlations with spinal cord alterations.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1991   Volume 68, Issue 10 326-334 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1991.tb03091.x
Yovich JV, leCouteur RA, Gould DH.Histological examination was performed on the cervical spinal cord from 13 horses with chronic cervical compressive myelopathy of 4 to 29 months duration. Structural alterations were correlated with clinical features. At the level of compression, the spinal cord was grossly deformed. Histological alterations included nerve fibre swelling and degeneration, occasional spheroids, astrocytic gliosis, increased macrophage activity and increased perivascular collagen. Myelin degeneration or loss at the level of the compressive lesion was greatest in the ventral and lateral funiculi and less consiste...
Influence of polysulfated glycosaminoglycan on equine articular cartilage in explant culture.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 10 1622-1625 
Caron JP, Eberhart SW, Nachreiner R.Articular cartilage explants from 3 horses were maintained in tissue culture to test the effects of a polysulfated glycosaminoglycan on proteoglycan biosynthesis. Cultures were exposed to concentrations of 0, 50, or 200 micrograms of the drug/ml for either 2 days or 6 days, and labeled with 35S, before measuring the content of sulfated proteoglycan in the culture media and in extracts of cartilage. In a second experiment, the explants were incubated with the isotope and subsequently exposed to the same concentrations of the polysulfated glycosaminoglycan for 4 days. Subsequently, the amount of...
In vitro cultivation of Sarcocystis neurona from the spinal cord of a horse with equine protozoal myelitis.
The Journal of parasitology    October 1, 1991   Volume 77, Issue 5 789-792 
Davis SW, Speer CA, Dubey JP.Asexual stages of Sarcocystis neurona were seen in cultured bovine monocytes (M617) inoculated with tissue homogenates from the spinal cord of a horse with naturally acquired protozoal myelitis. Organisms first were observed as intracytoplasmic schizonts and later as motile extracellular zoites capable of infecting surrounding M617 cells. Parasites most often occurred as clusters of merozoites dispersed throughout the host cell cytoplasm; however, schizonts also contained merozoites arranged in a radial fashion surrounding a prominent residual body. Schizonts divided by endopolygeny. The paras...
[Taylorella equigenitalis: cell wall proteins, gene fingerprints, plasmids, adhesion and toxicity].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    October 1, 1991   Volume 38, Issue 8 589-598 
Lapan G, Awad-Masalmeh M, Hartig A, Silber R.In this study 55 strains of Taylorella equigenitalis isolated from horses of four different studs in Austria, and a comparative strain from the Federal Republic of Germany were investigated by different methods. These investigations were carried out with the help of SDS-PAGE, immunoblotting, the analyses of genomes and by proof of plasmids. Furthermore, pathogenic mechanisms such as adhesion or the formation of toxins were investigated in vitro. On the basis of the results carried out by means of SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting all tested strains of Taylorella equigenitalis were alike, whereas by ...
Chronic cervical compressive myelopathy in horses: patterns of astrocytosis in the spinal cord.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1991   Volume 68, Issue 10 334-337 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1991.tb03092.x
Yovich JV, Gould DH, LeCouteur RA.The distribution and morphology of fibrous astrocytes in the cervical spinal cord of normal horses and horses with chronic compressive myelopathy were demonstrated using immunohistochemical staining for glial fibrillary acidic protein. In the spinal cord from normal horses, astrocytes with stellate cell bodies and short processes were irregularly distributed in grey matter. In the white matter, their cell bodies were small and angular in areas adjacent to grey matter and larger and more stellate-shaped in the subpial area. Astrocyte processes were fine, and evenly distributed in a predominantl...
Prostaglandin E2 hastens oviductal transport of equine embryos.
Biology of reproduction    October 1, 1991   Volume 45, Issue 4 544-546 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod45.4.544
Weber JA, Freeman DA, Vanderwall DK, Woods GL.The hypothesis that treatment of pregnant mares with prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) hastens the oviductal transport of equine embryos was tested by treating bred mares with PGE2 on Day 3 after ovulation and subsequently measuring the rate of hastened oviductal transport (estimated by the uterine embryo recovery rate on Day 4 after ovulation). In a preliminary, noncontrolled experiment, oviductal transport was apparently not hastened after intramuscular, intrauterine, or intraperitoneal PGE2 administration to bred mares (0/6, 0/3, and 0/3 mares, respectively). Oviductal transport appeared to be hasten...
The Tat protein of equine infectious anemia virus is encoded by at least three types of transcripts.
Virology    October 1, 1991   Volume 184, Issue 2 521-530 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(91)90422-8
Noiman S, Yaniv A, Tsach T, Miki T, Tronick SR, Gazit A.Nucleotide sequence analysis of a cDNA library of EIAV-infected canine cells established a complex pattern of gene expression, characterized by alternatively spliced polycistronic transcripts. The EIAV tat gene product was shown to be encoded by at least three species of mRNA which differed in their ability to trans-activate the EIAV LTR upon expression in canine cells. The most active cDNA was monocistronic, consisting of three exons. The most abundant cDNA in the library contained four exons and was identical to a polycistronic transcript previously described (Noiman et al., 1990b) which con...
Effect of viral inoculum size on appearance of clinical signs in equine Getah virus infection.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 1, 1991   Volume 53, Issue 5 803-806 doi: 10.1292/jvms.53.803
Kamada M, Wada R, Kumanomido T, Imagawa H, Sugiura T, Fukunaga Y.A study was performed to examine the effect of viral inoculum size on the appearance of clinical signs in equine Getah virus (GV) infection by intramuscular inoculation with 10(1.3) to 10(6.3) TCID50 of the MI-110 strain in 6 experimental horses. When inoculated with more than 10(3.3) TCID50 of the virus, every horse developed pyrexia, edema in the hind legs, serous nasal discharge, lymphopenia and viremia in the relatively early stage of disease. On the other hand, enlargement of the submandibular lymph node was observed only in horses inoculated with 10(5.3) and 10(6.3) TCID50 of the virus, ...
Soft palate hypoplasia in a horse.
The Veterinary record    September 28, 1991   Volume 129, Issue 13 284-286 doi: 10.1136/vr.129.13.284
Proudman CJ, Knottenbelt DC, May SA, Edwards GB.Several imaging techniques were used to diagnose hypoplasia of the soft palate in a horse. The absence of the caudal soft palate, hypertrophied lymphoid tissue and the formation of a pseudouvula were observed endoscopically. Plain and contrast radiography were used to demonstrate a soft palate remnant and to identify structures rostral to the epiglottis. Retrograde endoscopy of the pharynx via a tracheotomy incision is described.
Use of manual stimulation for collection of semen from an atactic stallion unable to mount.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1991   Volume 199, Issue 6 753-754 
McDonnell SM, Pozor MA, Beech J, Sweeney RW.A 9-year-old atactic breeding stallion was trained to ejaculate, with only manual stimulation, while standing on the ground. Ejaculates obtained yielded fertile semen with morphologic and motility characteristics within the range for normal stallions. This method extended the breeding life of a stallion unable to mount a live or dummy mare or to ejaculate into an artificial vagina while standing on the ground.