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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.
The effect of diagnostic regional nerve blocks in the fore limb on the locomotion of clinically sound horses.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1996   Volume 18 Suppl 2 S106-S109 
Keg PR, Schamhardt HC, van Weeren PR, Barneveld A.The practice of applying diagnostic nerve blocks relies on the assumption that the blocks in themselves do not alter the horse's gait. This assumption has recently been challenged. In the present paper a series of sequential nerve blocks (low palmar digital block, abaxial sesamoid block, high palmar block) was applied to clinically sound horses. Before and after each block the gait was clinically scored and Ground Reaction Forces (GRF) were measured. Clinical scoring did not change after any of the nerve blocks. None of the GRF variables changed significantly except for a slight alteration of ...
Lack of acid-resistant trypsin inhibitor in mare’s colostrum: short communication.
Acta veterinaria Hungarica    January 1, 1996   Volume 44, Issue 1 95-97 
Baintner K, Csapó J.Mare's colostrum was collected and examined for the presence of trypsin inhibitors. It was found to contain a low level of trypsin inhibitor which could be denatured by 2.5% trichloroacetic acid and, therefore, it clearly differs from the acid-resistant colostral inhibitor of Artiodactyla and Carnivora. This finding is exceptional for a species that concentrates IgG in the colostrum and whose newborn absorbs colostral proteins non-selectively by the gut. It appears that the presence of colostral trypsin inhibitor is not essential for the transmission of maternal immunity via the colostrum and ...
Relationship of plasma lactate production to cortisol release following completion of different types of sporting events in horses.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1996   Volume 20, Issue 4 371-379 doi: 10.1007/BF00366544
Desmecht D, Linden A, Amory H, Art T, Lekeux P.Fifty-eight healthy horses were studied during five sporting events of various intensities and durations, namely show-jumping (n = 6), cross-country in a three-day event (n = 30), trotting races (n = 7), galloping races (n = 7) and endurance rides (n = 8). Venous blood samples were collected at rest and immediately after exercise and analysed for plasma cortisol (CORT) and lactate (LA) levels. The experimental procedure was the same throughout the investigation so as to permit a reliable comparison between the five types of exercise. The type of event significantly affected both the resting (p...
Equine infectious anemia virus replication is upregulated during differentiation of blood monocytes from acutely infected horses.
Journal of virology    January 1, 1996   Volume 70, Issue 1 590-594 doi: 10.1128/JVI.70.1.590-594.1996
Sellon DC, Walker KM, Russell KE, Perry ST, Covington P, Fuller FJ.Equine infectious anemia virus is a lentivirus that replicates in mature tissue macrophages of horses. Ponies were infected with equine infectious anemia virus. During febrile episodes, proviral DNA was detectable, but viral mRNA was not detectable. As cultured blood monocytes from these ponies differentiated into macrophages, viral expression was upregulated. In situ hybridization confirmed that viral transcription occurred in mature macrophages.
Effects of exercise intensity and environmental stress on indices of oxidative stress and iron homeostasis during exercise in the horse.
European journal of applied physiology and occupational physiology    January 1, 1996   Volume 74, Issue 1-2 60-66 doi: 10.1007/BF00376495
Mills PC, Smith NC, Casas I, Harris P, Harris RC, Marlin DJ.The effects of prolonged variable-intensity and short-term high-intensity exercise on indices of oxidative stress and iron homeostasis were compared in six fit horses under cool [20 degrees C, 40% relative humidity (RH)] or hot/humid (30 degrees C, 80% RH) environmental conditions. The exercise protocols were designed to simulate equine competition, including racing (intense exercise) or the speed and endurance phase of a 3-day event (prolonged exercise). Increased plasma concentrations of lipid hydroperoxides and haemolysate concentrations of oxidised glutathione (GSSG) were measured within 3...
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
Effects of aging on the endodontic system, reserve crown, and roots of equine mandibular cheek teeth.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 1 31-38 
Kirkland KD, Baker GJ, Manfra Marretta S, Eurell JA, Losonsky JM.To document age-related changes in the morphology of the endodontic system, reserve crown, and roots of equine mandibular cheek teeth. Methods: Equine mandibular cheek teeth from horses of various ages were compared, using radiography, x-ray computed tomography, and histologic examinations. Methods: 48 right hemi-mandibles from horses 2 to 9 years old. Methods: Hemi-mandibles were radiographed, imaged by computed tomographic reconstruction, and reformatted. Histologic examination was used to identify and correlate tissue types. Results: Permanent mandibular cheek teeth of the horse, at the tim...
The diagnostic nerve block of the sesamoidean nerve: desensitized structures and possible clinical applications.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1996   Volume 18 Suppl 2 S97-S102 
Cornelissen BP, Rijkenhuizen AB, Barneveld A.The sesamoidean nerve branches from the palmar nerve and runs towards the proximal sesamoid bone. To study the structures innervated by this nerve, a technique for blocking it was developed. The effect of this nerve block was determined in ponies with an induced lameness located in the lateral proximal sesamoid bone (5 ponies) or in the distal part of the lateral branch of the suspensory ligament (5 ponies), and in 10 horses with clinical sesamoidosis. A lameness provoked by the implantation of an expansion plug in the proximal sesamoid bone could, to a large extent, be anaesthetized by a sesa...
A comparison of N-butylscopolammonium bromide and butorphanol tartrate for analgesia using a balloon model of abdominal pain in ponies. Boatwright CE, Fubini SL, Grohn YT, Goossens L.The analgesic effect of N-butylscopolammonium bromide (0.3 mg/kg) using a balloon-induced model of colic in ponies was evaluated and compared with butorphanol tartrate (0.1 mg/kg). Eight adult ponies were used and each received both treatments during the two different trials. The order in which the treatment was received was randomly assigned. At the start of each trial, moderate abdominal pain was induced by inflation of a balloon placed in the lumen of the caecum. The ponies were evaluated every 5 minutes, and a cumulative pain score (CPS) was assigned. Two baseline measurements were recorde...
[The history of neurectomy in horses with navicular disease].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1996   Volume 138, Issue 1 15-21 
Meier HP.The genetic predisposition to navicular disease is proven nowadays, but otherwise, etiology and pathogenesis are still unclear. Causal therapy isn't possible and because of the poor prognosis, neurectomy is still of bearing. This operation was performed already 200 years ago, but in the middle of the last century, critical voices have been raised in regard to the surgical procedure and its indication both for medical reasons and breeding. Clear instructions for exclusion of diseased animals from breeding are also older than one hundred years. These facts call for ethic considerations which con...
Osmolality of equine blastocyst fluid from day 11 to day 25 of pregnancy.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    January 1, 1996   Volume 8, Issue 6 981-988 doi: 10.1071/rd9960981
Waelchli RO, Betteridge KJ.Horse conceptuses collected between Day 11 and Day 18 of pregnancy float in isotonic media. To investigate this phenomenon, blastocyst fluids from 30 conceptuses from 13 mares were analysed for osmolality and for concentrations of Na+, Cl-, K+, glucose, urea and creatinine. In conceptuses from Group A, samples from Day 11 to Day 16 yielded the following results (mean +/- s.e.m.): osmolality, 121.4 +/- 1.5 mOsm kg-1; Na+, 11.0 +/- 2.2 mM; Cl-, 29.3 +/- 2.5 mM; K+, 26.2 +/- 2.6 mM; glucose, 0.6 +/- 0.1 mM; urea, 6.0 +/- 0.6 mM; creatinine, 9.6 +/- 1.1 microM. Between Day 16 and Day 25, the osmol...
A partially automated pretreatment module for routine analyses for seventeen non-steroid antiinflammatory drugs in race horses using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry.
Analytical chemistry    January 1, 1996   Volume 68, Issue 1 118-123 doi: 10.1021/ac950566j
Cárdenas S, Gallego M, Valcárcel M, Ventura R, Segura J.A partially automated module for the routine determination of illicit non-steroid antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in biological fluids from race horses was built, tested, refined, and shown to work. This pretreatment module retains 17 NSAIDs on an Amberlite XAD-2 column before back-elution derivatization with methyl iodide in acetonitrile. Methylated derivatives are manually injected into a gas chromatograph connected to a mass spectrometer. The quantification limits thus achieved are 50-100 ng/mL in 1 mL of urine or plasma. The proposed method is more expeditious than its manual liquid-liquid...
Fatal musculoskeletal injuries incurred during racing and training in thoroughbreds.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1996   Volume 208, Issue 1 92-96 
Estberg L, Stover SM, Gardner IA, Johnson BJ, Case JT, Ardans A, Read DH, Anderson ML, Barr BC, Daft BM, Kinde H, Moore J, Stoltz J, Woods LW.To characterize and contrast data from Thoroughbreds that incurred a fatal musculoskeletal injury (FMI; injury resulting in death or euthanasia) during racing or training and data from all California race entrants during a 9-month period in 1991. Methods: Case-control study. Methods: Thoroughbreds that incurred a FMI during racing or training at a California race-meet and all California race entrants from January through June and October through December 1991. Methods: Age and sex were compared with chi 2 and Fisher's exact tests among horses fatally injured while racing and training. A log-li...
Rapid and quantitative analysis of bilirubin in equines by high-performance liquid chromatography.
Microbios    January 1, 1996   Volume 86, Issue 346 39-47 
Mizobe M, Kondo F, Kumamoto K, Terada T, Nasu H.Rapid and quantitative analytical methods for bilirubin using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with UV detection were developed for samples from equines at a meat inspection site. Sharp HPLC peaks for bilirubins, unconjugated bilirubin (UCBL) and conjugated bilirubin (CBL), were obtained using a simple mobile phase of methanol:0.5 M Tris-HCl buffer (65:35, v/v, pH 7.4). A variable wavelength detector set at 450 nm, 0.01 AUFS and a recorder set at 4 cm/min were used for detection. Peaks for UCBL and CBL occurred at 7.1 min and 4.9 min, the lower limits of detection ranged between 0...
Collagen fibril diameter distributions in ligaments and tendons of the carpal region of the horse.
Connective tissue research    January 1, 1996   Volume 34, Issue 1 11-21 doi: 10.3109/03008209609028889
Davankar SP, Deane NJ, Davies AS, Firth EC, Hodge H, Parry DA.Since horses bred for the racing industry are subject to rigorous training procedures there is a real need to understand how the stresses experienced by their tendons and ligaments in vivo relate to the major load-bearing elements-the collagen fibrils. Consequently, an age-related study has been made of the collagen fibril diameter distributions of nine ligaments in and around the equine carpus. This is the first stage of a larger study aimed at understanding the ultrastructural changes that occur as a result of exercise. Most of the ligaments showed a bimodal diameter distribution at maturity...
Chiral inversion of fenoprofen in horses and dogs: an in vivo-in vitro study.
Veterinary research    January 1, 1996   Volume 27, Issue 1 13-22 
Soraci A, Jaussaud P, Benoit E, Delatour P.Fenoprofen (FPF) is a chiral non-steroid antiinflammatory drug, marketed as a racemic mixture of its R(-) and S(+) enantiomers. Its stereoselective disposition in humans and animals is due to a chiral inversion converting R(-)FPF into S(+)FPF. The first step of this reaction, which produces an acyl-CoA thioester, is catalysed by an acyl-CoA ligase. A stereospecific high performance liquid chromatography assay was used to study the disposition of FPF enantiomers in four geldings and three male beagle dogs, following intravenous doses of racemic FPF (1 mg/kg in horses), R(-)FPF (0.5 mg/kg in hor...
Head and trunk movement adaptations in horses with experimentally induced fore- or hindlimb lameness.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 1 71-76 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb01592.x
Buchner HH, Savelberg HH, Schamhardt HC, Barneveld A.The kinematic patterns of head and trunk were studied in horses during induced supporting limb lameness to understand the mechanisms horses use to compensate for lameness and to evaluate different symmetry indices for their significance as lameness indicators. Using the locomotion analysis system CODA-3 the kinematics of 11 clinically nonlame Dutch Warmblood horses were recorded while walking (1.6 m/s) and trotting (3.5 m/s) on a treadmill. A transient lameness model, evoking pressure induced pain on the hoof sole, was used to induce 3 degrees of fore- and hindlimb lameness. Peak vertical disp...
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 ...
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,...
Ixodes pacificus (Acari: Ixodidae) as a vector of Ehrlichia equi (Rickettsiales: Ehrlichieae).
Journal of medical entomology    January 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 1 1-5 doi: 10.1093/jmedent/33.1.1
Richter PJ, Kimsey RB, Madigan JE, Barlough JE, Dumler JS, Brooks DL.Ehrlichia equi, a rickettsia described from horses in California 30 yr ago, causes equine granulocytic ehrlichiosis throughout the Americas and possibly Europe. Here, we report experimental transmission of E. equi from infected to susceptible horses through bites of western blacklegged ticks, Ixodes pacificus (Cooley & Kohls). In preliminary field studies, only I. pacificus consistently infested horses and vegetation at 3 locations with contemporary cases of equine ehrlichosis, and in particular, I. pacificus was the only species found attached to all of the infected horses. Exposure to bites ...
Equine intestinal clostridiosis in a group of polo ponies in Dubai, U.A.E.
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    January 1, 1996   Volume 109, Issue 1 10-13 
Wernery U, Nothelfer HB, Böhnel H, Collins WR.An acute outbreak of a C. perfringens Type C enterotoxemia in a polo club killed 8 polo ponies in less than 24 hours. Hay with a massive fungal contamination (Aspergillus and Fusarium sp.) is suspected to have triggered the enterotoxemia. Our cases show numerous similarities with the previously reported cases of EIC. However, acute toxic tubulonephrosis in the necropsied horses and longstanding elevation of AST and gamma GT-levels in survivors is unique in our cases.
Dense microspheres in normal horse brain.
Acta neuropathologica    January 1, 1996   Volume 91, Issue 4 440-443 doi: 10.1007/s004010050449
Furuoka H, Yamada M, Miyazawa K, Taniyama H, Matsui T.Here were report eosinophilic globular bodies referred to as dense microspheres (DMS), in the brains of normal horse in relation to the ageing process. The characteristic structures of DMS found in the horse were in similar to those previously reported in the human. The DMS were found predominantly in the neuropil of the cerebral cortex, and were shown histochemically to have a proteinaceous content. Electron microscopy showed that the DMS consisted of homogeneous electron-dense material bound by a single membrane and that they were found within the neuronal processes. In addition, immature or...
Do horses gallop in their sleep? Consciousness, evolution, and the problem of animal minds.
James Arthur lecture on the evolution of the human brain    January 1, 1996   Volume 66 1-23 
Cartmill M.No abstract available
Differences between Taylorella equigenitalis strains in their invasion of and replication in cultured cells.
Clinical and diagnostic laboratory immunology    January 1, 1996   Volume 3, Issue 1 47-50 doi: 10.1128/cdli.3.1.47-50.1996
Bleumink-Pluym NM, ter Laak EA, Houwers DJ, van der Zeijst BA.The ability of Taylorella equigenitalis, the causative agent of contagious equine metritis, to invade and replicate in equine derm cells was studied. The kinetics of invasion and replication were determined for four T. equigenitalis strains. On the basis of these experiments, a simpler assay in which the invasive as well as the replicative properties of a particular strain could be determined was developed. This assay was used to characterize 32 strains, which had previously been typed by field inversion gel electrophoresis of genomic restriction fragments. The invasiveness of T. equigenitalis...
Cytofluorescent assay to quantify adhesion of equine spermatozoa to oviduct epithelial cells in vitro.
Molecular reproduction and development    January 1, 1996   Volume 43, Issue 1 55-61 doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-2795(199601)43:1<55::AID-MRD7>3.0.CO;2-T
Thomas PG, Ball BA.To facilitate the study of interactions between equine spermatozoa and homologous oviduct epithelial cells, we developed an assay to count labelled spermatozoa bound to oviduct epithelial cell (OEC) monolayers and used the assay to compare the binding ability of spermatozoa from different stallions. Washed spermatozoa from three stallions were incubated with the fluorochrome Hoechst 33342 (5 micrograms/ml) for 1 min. Spermatozoa were then layered over confluent monolayers of oviduct epithelial cells in 2 cm2 culture wells. Coculture treatments comprised five concentrations of spermatozoa (10(5...
HBLB Workshop on Equine Anaesthesia: the importance of pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 1 3-4 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb01579.x
Lees P.No abstract available
Cardiac rod body: hypertrophic Z-line in an aged pony.
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1996   Volume 155, Issue 4 266-273 doi: 10.1159/000147815
Tangkawattana P, Karkoura A, Muto M, Yamano S, Taniyama H, Yamaguchi M.Numerous rod bodies were found in a heart sample from a 33-year-old pony by a conventional electron-microscopic technique. The rod bodies were concentrated in localized areas of both atria and ventricles, without a specific pattern of distribution. The rods appear to have a typical crystalline-like structure which presumably contains actin backbone filaments and alpha-actinin as major protein constituents. Diminution, fragmentation, and disorganization of the myofibrils, random expansion of electron-dense materials, especially at the fasciae adherens of the intercalated disc, an increase of in...
Pyrrole detection and the pathologic progression of Cynoglossum officinale (houndstongue) poisoning in horses. Stegelmeier BL, Gardner DR, James LF, Molyneux RJ.Houndstongue (Cynoglossum officinale), a noxious weed that contains pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs), infests pastures and fields in the western United States and Europe. The purpose of this study was to develop techniques to better diagnose PA poisoning and describe the progression of gross and microscopic lesions caused by houndstongue intoxication. Six horses were gavaged daily with a suspension of houndstongue containing 5 or 15 mg/kg total PA for 14 days. Two horses were treated similarly with ground alfalfa as controls. Liver biopsy samples and serum biochemical and hematologic values were ...
Evolution during growth of the mechanical properties of the cortical bone in equine cannon-bones.
Medical engineering & physics    January 1, 1996   Volume 18, Issue 1 79-87 doi: 10.1016/1350-4533(95)00022-4
Bigot G, Bouzidi A, Rumelhart C, Martin-Rosset W.Two specimens (70.0 x 4.5 x 1.8 mm) (proximal and distal) of cortical bone were taken from each of the cranial, caudal, lateral and medial quadrants at mid-diaphysis of the third metacarpus and metatarsus of French saddle horses (12 males and seven females) aged from 1 day to 4 years. The mechanical properties (bending strength, Young's modulus, yield stress and ultimate specific deflection) were determined by a 4-point bending test, loading at a rate of 166 x 10(-6) ms-1. During growth, the mechanical properties of the cortical bone were not significantly different (p > 0.05) between metacarp...
Regulatory aspects of fumonisins with respect to animal feed. Animal derived residues in foods.
Advances in experimental medicine and biology    January 1, 1996   Volume 392 363-368 doi: 10.1007/978-1-4899-1379-1_32
Miller MA, Honstead JP, Lovell RA.The fumonisins are a recently discovered class of mycotoxins produced primarily by Fusarium (F.) moniliforme and F. proliferatum. Fumonisins present in mycotoxin-contaminated feed have been identified as the causative agent of equine leukoencephalomalacia and porcine pulmonary edema. To prevent these diseases, FDA has utilized informal guidance levels for fumonisins in feed and initiated a surveillance program for fumonisins in feed corn and corn by-products during FY 93 and 94. Natural contaminants present in animal feed can enter the human food supply as residues present in animal tissues an...