Analyze Diet

Topic:Equine Health

Equine health encompasses the study and management of diseases, disorders, and overall well-being of horses. It involves understanding various physiological systems, preventive care, and treatment strategies to maintain optimal health in equine populations. Common areas of focus include nutrition, infectious diseases, orthopedic conditions, and reproductive health. Research in equine health aims to advance knowledge on diagnostic methods, therapeutic interventions, and management practices that improve horse welfare and performance. This page collects peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the diverse aspects of equine health, offering insights into current findings and advancements in the field.
Surgical repair of the parotid gland in a gelding.
The Veterinary record    March 15, 1997   Volume 140, Issue 11 280-282 doi: 10.1136/vr.140.11.280
Newton SA, Knottenbelt DC, Daniel EA.The surgical repair of a traumatic injury to the parotid (Stenson's) duct of an adult horse is described and compared with previous reports. The diagnosis was confirmed by the analysis of a flow of saliva-like fluid observed while the horse was eating. The repair was attempted under general anaesthesia three days after the injury. Surgical anastomosis was considered to have improved the rate of healing. However, there was some evidence of leakage of saliva from the site for three days after the removal of the in-dwelling catheter, seven days postoperatively. A full recovery followed.
Anorectal lymphadenopathy causing colic, perirectal abscesses, or both in five young horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 1997   Volume 210, Issue 6 804-807 
Magee AA, Ragle CA, Hines MT, Madigan JE, Booth LC.Enlarged anorectal lymph nodes can cause colic in young horses by obstructing the caudal aspect of the rectum. Dyschezia and clinical signs consistent with abdominal pain were the predominant reasons for evaluation of the 5 young (3 to 15 month old) horses of this report. Digital transrectal palpation revealed a firm mass obstructing the caudal aspect of the rectum in each horse. Results of cytologic evaluation of the masses revealed a lymphoid population of cells in 4 of 5 horses. These nodes regressed over time or became abscesses and drained into the rectum. In 1 horse, detection of a matur...
Cardiovascular responses to heat and exercise in the horse.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    March 15, 1997   Volume 813 600-603 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1997.tb51751.x
McConaghy FF, Hales JR, Hodgson DR.Heat-induced increases in skin blood flow (BF) are well known to be reduced if exercise is superimposed.' However, whether exercise-induced increases in muscle BF are compromised by superimposed heat stress remains a controversial issuc. The horse has now been studied because of its human-like thermoregulatory mechanisms and good exercise capacity.
Swabbing protocols in screening for contagious equine metritis.
The Veterinary record    March 15, 1997   Volume 140, Issue 11 268-271 
Watson ED.Outbreaks of contagious equine metritis in Britain during 1996 emphasised the importance of preventing the disease through full and widespread implementation of the Horserace Betting Levy Board's code of practice. The provision of satisfactory samples for testing represents an integral part of applying the code. Here, in an article commissioned by the British Equine Veterinary Association, Dr Elaine Watson describes the techniques involved.
What is your diagnosis? Compression fracture of the 12th thoracic vertebra.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 1997   Volume 210, Issue 6 755-756 
Rhoads WS, Cox JH.No abstract available
Use of the GnRH analogue, deslorelin acetate, in a slow-release implant to accelerate ovulation in oestrous mares.
The Veterinary record    March 8, 1997   Volume 140, Issue 10 249-252 doi: 10.1136/vr.140.10.249
Meyers PJ, Bowman T, Blodgett G, Conboy HS, Gimenez T, Reid MP, Taylor BC, Thayer J, Jöchle W, Trigg TE.In two separate controlled clinical trials, the efficacy and safety of 2.2 mg of the GnRH analogue deslorelin, administered subcutaneously as a short-term implant to normally cycling mares in oestrus with a dominant ovarian follicle more than 30 mm in diameter, were evaluated, using a placebo as a negative control. The oestrous cycle of each mare was followed by teasing, palpation per rectum and transrectal ultrasonography. Follicles were monitored every 24 hours by ultrasonography until ovulation occurred. The mares were either mated naturally or inseminated artificially. In trial 1, 174 mare...
Novel di-O-acetylated GM3s from equine erythrocytes, one containing 4,9-di-O-acetyl-N-glycolylneuraminic acid and another containing 4-O-acetyl-N-glycolylneuraminic acid and 6-O-acetyl-D-galactose.
Carbohydrate research    March 5, 1997   Volume 298, Issue 3 201-212 doi: 10.1016/s0008-6215(96)00307-2
Yachida Y, Tsuchihashi K, Gasa S.A novel GM3 O-acetylated at C-4 and at C-9 of N-glycolylneuraminic acid (4,9-di-O-Ac GM3), together with a second GM3 O-acetylated at O-4 of the neuraminic acid and O-6 of D-galactose (4,6'-di-O-Ac GM3) were isolated from equine erythrocytes as a mixture in approximate 1:1 ratio. These two major species were chromatographically inseparable. Their structures, especially the positions of the acetoxy group(s), were determined by means of 1D- and 2D-1H NMR and fast atom bombardment-MS as well as by gas chromatography-MS of partially O-methylated O-trimethylsilylated monosaccharides derived from th...
Partial cloning of prohibitin cDNA from canine, feline, bovine, equine, and rabbit liver mRNA by RT-PCR.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    March 1, 1997   Volume 59, Issue 3 201-203 doi: 10.1292/jvms.59.201
Matsuyama S, Kubo K, Ohashi F, Takamori Y.Prohibitin is the protein which has an inhibitory function in cell growth, and its gene is suggested to be one of putative tumor suppressor genes. In this report, we described a partial cloning of prohibitin cDNAs from canine, feline, bovine, equine, and rabbit liver mRNAs by RT-PCR, and their homology analysis. The sequences of these RT-PCR products were compared with each other as well as those reported for human and rat. The homology in this region of prohibitin cDNA was approximately 90%, and the amino acid sequence of each RT-PCR product shared more than 95% identity. Therefore, it is con...
Effect of feeding and feed deprivation on plasma concentrations of prolactin, insulin, growth hormone, and metabolites in horses.
Journal of animal science    March 1, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 3 736-744 doi: 10.2527/1997.753736x
Nadal MR, Thompson DL, Kincaid LA.Two experiments were conducted to determine 1) the prolactin response to different kinds of feedstuffs in stallions and 2) the effects of total feed deprivation on prolactin secretion in mares and its interaction with the prolactin response to feeding. Experiment 1 was performed with stallions as a 6 x 6 Latin square: A) no feed; B) pelleted feed fed to meet 82.5% of the horses' CP requirements; C) pelleted feed at 25% of the amount in B; D) pelleted feed as in B plus water ad libitum; E) cracked corn at the weight in B; and F) chopped alfalfa at the weight in B. The positive prolactin respons...
Fracture of the intercondylar eminence of the tibia treated by arthroscopic internal fixation.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 2 148-150 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb01657.x
Walmsley JP.No abstract available
Oxidant injury, nitric oxide and pulmonary vascular function: implications for the exercising horse.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 1, 1997   Volume 153, Issue 2 125-148 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(97)80034-2
Mills PC, Higgins AJ.The athletic ability of the horse is facilitated by vital physiological adaptations to high-intensity exercise, including a thin (but strong) pulmonary blood-gas barrier, a large pulmonary functional reserve capacity and a consequent maximum oxygen uptake (VO2max) far higher than in other species. A high pulmonary artery pressure also serves to enhance pulmonary function, although stress failure of lung capillaries at high pulmonary transmural pressures, and the contribution of other factors which act in the exercising horse to increase pulmonary vascular tone, may lead to pathological or path...
Anatomy of the distal interphalangeal joint of the mature horse: relationships with navicular suspensory ligaments, sensory nerves and neurovascular bundle.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 2 126-135 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb01654.x
Bowker RM, Linder K, Van Wulfen KK, Sonea IM.The anatomy of the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joint in the adult horse is described in relationship to the suspensory ligaments of the navicular bone, the neurovascular bundle and the sensory nerves to these periarticular regions. Using polymer plastic injections, the synovial cavity of the DIP joint was observed to have a complex relationship to the proximal suspensory or collateral sesamoidean ligament (CSL) of the navicular bone with the cavity forming cranial and caudal compartments around the CSL abaxially. Sensory nerves, as identified by peptide immunocytochemistry and silver/gold chl...
Frequency dependence of forced oscillatory respiratory mechanics in horses with heaves.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    March 1, 1997   Volume 82, Issue 3 983-987 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1997.82.3.983
Young SS, Tesarowski D, Viel L.The effect of measurement frequency on respiratory mechanics was investigated in six horses with reversible allergic airway disease. Total respiratory impedance was measured at 1.5, 2.0, 3.0, and 5.0 Hz by using the forced oscillation technique with the horses in remission, after acute antigenic challenge producing clinical heaves, and with heaves but after the administration of 2 mg fenoterol by inhalation. The slopes of the magnitude (magnitude of Zrs) and real part (R) of total respiratory impedance over the frequency range 1.5-3 Hz changed significantly after antigenic challenge and fenote...
The effect of doxapram-induced hyperventilation on respiratory mechanics in horses.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1997   Volume 62, Issue 2 143-146 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(97)90136-3
Aguilera-Tejero E, Pascoe JR, Smith BL, Woliner MJ.To investigate the influence of increased respiratory frequency on respiratory mechanics in the horse, measurements were made in two groups of seven tracheostomized horses before and after the administration of doxapram. The horses in group I had normal base line values for respiratory mechanics, whereas the horses in group II had significantly lower values of dynamic compliance (Cdyn), higher respiratory resistance (R), and a higher total change in pleural pressure (delta P). The administration of 0.3 mg kg-1 doxapram intravenously resulted in a significant increase in respiratory frequency (...
Patterns of secretion of GnRH, LH and FSH during the postovulatory period in mares: mechanisms prolonging the LH surge.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    March 1, 1997   Volume 109, Issue 2 263-271 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1090263
Irvine CH, Alexander SL.To study the mechanisms responsible for the unusually slow decline of the ovulatory LH surge in mares, secretion patterns of GnRH, LH and FSH were monitored in pituitary venous blood collected every 2 or 5 min for 10.5-18.0 h from five mares on the third (n = 4) or fifth day after ovulation (first sampling period). To determine the effectiveness of progesterone negative feedback, mares were then given a luteolytic dose of a prostaglandin analogue (PGF2 alpha) and pituitary venous sampling (every 2 or 5 min for 16 h) recommenced 20-22 h later (second sampling period). During the declining arm o...
In vitro cultivation of Babesia equi: detection of carrier animals and isolation of parasites.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1997   Volume 64, Issue 1 51-56 
Zweygarth E, Just MC, De Waal DT.By means of an in vitro culture technique, 75 samples of horse blood were examined for Babesia equi, a causative agent of equine piroplasmosis. At the time of culture initiation, 15 samples were microscopically positive for B. equi, and this was subsequently confirmed by culture diagnosis. Sixty samples showed no parasites in Giemsa-stained thin blood smears. However, after the culturing process, parasites were found in blood smears of 36 of these samples. The sensitivity of the in vitro culture method was such that 2.5 microliters (1/40 of the usual volume used for the above-mentioned samples...
Evaluation of skin bacterial flora before and after aseptic preparation of clipped and nonclipped arthrocentesis sites in horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    March 1, 1997   Volume 26, Issue 2 121-125 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1997.tb01474.x
Hague BA, Honnas CM, Simpson RB, Peloso JG.This study evaluates skin bacterial flora before and after aseptic preparation of clipped and nonclipped arthrocentesis sites in horses. Methods: The hair over one midcarpal joint and one distal interphalangeal joint on each horse was clipped. The contralateral joint served as the nonclipped comparison. Methods: Twelve adult horses. Methods: A prescrub sample for microbial culture was taken from the dorsal surface of all four joints for each horse. Each site was aseptically prepared with povidone iodine and 70% alcohol, followed by postscrub sampling for microbial culture. Colony forming units...
Acute arsenic toxicosis in five horses.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1997   Volume 34, Issue 2 160-164 doi: 10.1177/030098589703400211
Pace LW, Turnquist SE, Casteel SW, Johnson PJ, Frankeny RL.Five adult horses presented with acute clinical signs of watery diarrhea, excessive salivation, muscle tremors, ataxia, and depression. Four died within 24 hours and the fifth was euthanatized approximately 48 hours after onset of clinical signs. Necropsy finds in two of the horses included hyperemia of gastric mucosa, intestines filled with green to black watery fluid, and multifocal to coalescing, hemorrhagic 1.0-2.0-cm-diameter ulcers of the mucosa of the cecum and large colon. Histopathologic changes in the cecum and large colon consisted of mucosal necrosis and ulceration, vascular thromb...
Expression of horse and donkey LH in COS-7 cells: evidence for low FSH activity in donkey LH compared with horse LH.
The Journal of endocrinology    March 1, 1997   Volume 152, Issue 3 371-377 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1520371
Chopineau M, Martinat N, Troispoux C, Marichatou H, Combarnous Y, Stewart F, Guillou F.Horse (Equus caballus) luteinizing hormone (eLH) and chorionic gonadotrophin (eCG), which have the same amino acid sequence, are unusual in that, although they express only LH activity in equids, they express dual LH and FSH activities in all other species tested. Donkey (Equus asinus) LH (dkLH) and CG (dkCG), which also share an identical peptide backbone, have been less well characterized and conflicting results concerning their FSH activity in heterologous species have appeared in the literature. In order to assess and compare the intrinsic LH and FSH activities of the horse and donkey LHs ...
Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain of normal neonatal foals. Chaffin MK, Walker MA, McArthur NH, Perris EE, Matthews NS.Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed on the brain of 5 normal, anesthetized, neonatal (age 3-to-6 days) Quarter Horse foals. The objectives of the study were to develop a technique for imaging the brain of neonatal foals, and to ascertain their normal brain anatomy. Intravenous propofol was administered for induction and maintenance of general anesthesia. Using spin echo MR techniques, T1 weighted sagittal and transverse views, and spin density and T2 weighted transverse views were successfully made of each foal. MR images provided excellent visualization of many anatomic structures ...
A developmental switch in expression from blastocyst to endometrial/placental-type cytochrome P450 aromatase genes in the pig and horse.
Biology of reproduction    March 1, 1997   Volume 56, Issue 3 688-696 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod56.3.688
Choi I, Collante WR, Simmen RC, Simmen FA.Pig blastocysts exhibit a transient period of estrogen production at periimplantation, with a second, more sustained period of estrogen synthesis occurring in endometrium and placenta at later pregnancy. Previously we reported the isolation of cDNA clones encoding a novel isoform of cytochrome P450 aromatase (the terminal enzyme in the estrogen biosynthetic pathway) from porcine periimplantation blastocysts. The present study investigated pregnancy-associated expression, in blastocysts and maternal reproductive tract tissues of this and an additional mRNA transcript encoding a distinct P450 ar...
Equine epidemiology–still struggling to find a seat at the table.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 2 82-84 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb01644.x
Reeves MJ.No abstract available
Thermoregulation in sick foals aged less than one week.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 1, 1997   Volume 153, Issue 2 185-196 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(97)80039-1
Ousey JC, McArthur AJ, Rossdale PD.Metabolic rate, rectal temperature Tr and respiratory quotient (RQ) were determined in 16 sick foals, aged 0-182 h. The foals were categorized into three groups: premature, dysmature or those suffering from neonatal maladjustment syndrome. The mean metabolic rate of the premature foals was 71 watts per unit area of body surface (W m(-2)), significantly lower than that of the other two groups. The overall mean metabolic rate for the sick foals was 82 W m(-2), about 25% below that of healthy foals of similar age. Air temperature (Ta) was 9.5-26.3 degrees C, and several foals shivered despite the...
Amantadine in man and horse–can we learn from each other?
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 2 89-91 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb01647.x
Oxford JS.The research examines the impact of administering amantadine to horses and humans to combat influenza A, speculating on potential benefits of dual-field research between human and animal health. The study […]
Liver biopsy techniques for adult horses and neonatal foals to assess copper status.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 3 194-198 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1997.tb10065.x
Pearce SG, Firth EC, Grace ND, Fennessy PF.To evaluate standing, percutaneous, ultrasound-guided, transthoracic liver biopsy in mares, and transabdominal laparoscopically-guided, liver biopsy under general anaesthesia in foals, as techniques for obtaining tissue for assessment of copper status. The techniques were evaluated with respect to ease of use and effect on the animal. Methods: Twenty of 24 Thoroughbred mares and 21 of their foals were biopsied. The animals were part of a larger study of the effect of copper supplementation on copper status and the prevalence of developmental orthopaedic disease. Livers were also collected from...
Tricuspid valve atresia with main pulmonary artery atresia in an Arabian foal.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 2 160-162 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb01661.x
Meurs KM, Miller MW, Hanson C, Honnas C.No abstract available
The hemoglobin polymorphism of the Sardinian wild dwarf horse and the oxygen binding properties of the four different horse hemoglobins.
The Italian journal of biochemistry    March 1, 1997   Volume 46, Issue 1 7-14 
Pellegrini MG, Corda EM, Manca L, Olianas A, Sanna MT, Fais A, Masala B.A study was made of the Hb phenotype of the Sardinian dwarfhorse (Equus caballus jara), one of the last surviving wild horse species in Europe. Hb haplotypes and their frequencies were found to be similar to those described in the Arabian horse (BI = 0.551, BII = 0.389, A = 0.036, V = 0.015), which suggests possible introduction onto the island from North Africa. The oxygen binding properties of the whole hemolysates and of the four different horse Hbs, separated by ion-exchange chromatography, were considered with regard to the effect of chloride, 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate and lactate. Results ...
Body weight, fluid, electrolyte, and hormonal changes in horses competing in 50- and 100-mile endurance rides.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 3 303-309 
Schott HC, McGlade KS, Molander HA, Leroux AJ, Hines MT.To investigate effects of prolonged exercise on fluid and electrolyte losses in horses competing in 50- and 100-mile endurance competitions, with emphasis on recovery. Methods: Changes in body weight (BW); PCV; serum osmolality; plasma total protein, lactate, aldosterone, and serum electrolyte concentrations; and exchangeable cation content were measured in 12 and 7 horses before and after and before, during, and after successful completion of 50- and 100-mile endurance rides, respectively. Methods: BW was measured by use of a portable load bar scale, and blood samples were collected during th...
Restriction enzyme analysis of the virulence plasmids of VapA-positive Rhodococcus equi strains isolated from humans and horses.
Journal of clinical microbiology    March 1, 1997   Volume 35, Issue 3 738-740 doi: 10.1128/jcm.35.3.738-740.1997
Nicholson VM, Prescott JF.Restriction enzyme digestion patterns of the large virulence plasmids of 8 human and 37 foal isolates of virulence-associated protein (VapA)-positive Rhodococcus equi strains from different sources were compared. Foal isolates came from five continents. Digestion with EcoRI divided these plasmids into three closely related types, and digestion with BamHI divided them into three major types which corresponded to the EcoRI types. The only EcoRI and BamHI type 3 plasmid was from a single foal isolate obtained from Japan. There are thus two major but related virulence plasmids in isolates from foa...
Giardia and Cryptosporidium in Canadian farm animals.
Veterinary parasitology    March 1, 1997   Volume 68, Issue 4 375-381 doi: 10.1016/s0304-4017(96)01072-2
Olson ME, Thorlakson CL, Deselliers L, Morck DW, McAllister TA.Giardia intestinalis and Cryptosporidium spp. are commonly identified intestinal pathogens in humans and animals. In light of the clinical disease, production losses and zoonotic potential of both Giardia and Cryptosporidium infections, a study was undertaken to investigate the prevalence of these parasites in cattle, sheep, pigs and horses in Canadian farms at different geographical locations. A total of 104 cattle, 89 sheep, 236 pigs and 35 horses were sampled from 15 different Canadian geographical locations. Fecal samples were examined after concentration and immunofluorescent staining. Gi...