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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.
Torsion in quadrupeds and its impact on mammalian joints.
Clinical orthopaedics and related research    May 1, 1994   Issue 302 11-16 
Turner AS.Congenital and acquired torsion occur in the limbs of domestic animals. Congenital abnormalities are of clinical significance in foals; they are also seen in calves whose dams have ingested certain toxic plants that contain teratogenic agents. Acquired torsional deformities are most common in foals, but are also observed in adult horses, dogs, and llamas. Acquired rotational deformities are almost always associated with angular limb deformities. The clinical consequence of torsional deformities is the early development of degenerative joint disease.
Kinematic detection of superior gait quality in young trotting warmbloods.
The veterinary quarterly    May 1, 1994   Volume 16 Suppl 2 S91-S96 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1994.9694510
Back W, Barneveld A, Bruin G, Schamhardt HC, Hartman W.This study was conducted to identify objective criteria to select young horses with a good gait, which is a prerequisite for good performance in adult horses. The trot of 24 26-month-old Dutch Warmbloods, led on a loose shank, was subjectively scored by a judge and objectively assessed on a treadmill by using kinematic analysis equipment. It appeared that forelimb and hind limb stride and swing duration, scapula rotation, forelimb maximal fetlock extension, forelimb maximal retraction, hind limb maximal protraction, maximal stifle flexion, and maximal tarsal flexion significantly correlated wi...
Atlanta 1996–heat, humidity and horses.
The British veterinary journal    May 1, 1994   Volume 150, Issue 3 211-213 doi: 10.1016/S0007-1935(05)80001-6
Carlson GP.No abstract available
Trichophyton equinum from riding bareback: first reported U.S. case.
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology    May 1, 1994   Volume 30, Issue 5 Pt 1 785-787 doi: 10.1016/s0190-9622(08)81513-7
Shwayder T, Andreae M, Babel D.No abstract available
Asks for uniform interstate regulations on movement of horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 9 1322-1323 
Houlding KD.No abstract available
Severe urinary tract hemorrhage in two horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 9 1320 
Schott HC, Hines MT.No abstract available
Hydrops amnii in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 9 1481-1482 
Sertich PL, Reef VB, Oristaglio-Turner RM, Habecker PL, Maxson AD.A multiparous pregnant Welsh Pony mare was examined because of anorexia, dyspnea, and a large abdomen. Ultrasonography of the uterus revealed an excessive amount of amniotic fluid surrounding the fetus. Transabdominal ultrasonography permitted differentiation of hydrops amnii from hydrops allantois. The mare aborted a 7-month-old fetus with brachygnathia and a large, edematous umbilical cord. Hydrops amnii, an excessive accumulation of amniotic fluid in the amniotic cavity, is most commonly reported in cattle and sheep.
The relationship between intra-articular and juxta-articular intraosseous pressures in the metatarsophalangeal region of the pony.
The veterinary quarterly    May 1, 1994   Volume 16 Suppl 2 S81-S86 
Stolk PW, Firth EC.Eight metatarsophalangeal (fetlock) joints were studied in anaesthetized young ponies. Pressure measurements were made in the joint and at various sites in the marrow cavity of the third metatarsal bone with simultaneous measurement of systemic arterial and venous blood pressures. Fetlock joint flexion was always associated with a statistically significant initial decrease in intra-articular pressure (p < 0.05) followed by a marked increase in pressure (p < 0.05). Subsequent extension was accompanied by a similar pressure pattern, although there appeared to be a hysteretic relationship. ...
Trypanosoma brucei, T. congolense and T. vivax infections in horses on a farm in Kenya.
Tropical animal health and production    May 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 2 95-101 doi: 10.1007/BF02239908
Kihurani DO, Nantulya VM, Mbiuki SM, Mogoa E, Nguhiu-Mwangi J, Mbithi PM.Equines are particularly susceptible to infection with Trypanosoma evansi and T. brucei, but rarely is natural T. congolense and T. vivax infection seen in horses. An outbreak of trypanosomosis occurred in a herd of horses used for patrolling the pineapple fields on the Del Monte Farm, Thika, Kenya initially involving 6 horses. On subsequent screening of the entire group, T. brucei, T. congolense and T. vivax infections were detected in 16 of the 35 horses. The tests used for diagnosis included microscopic examination of stained blood smears, buffy coat technique, mouse inoculation and antigen...
Lipid analysis of lavage samples from the equine guttural pouch (auditory tube diverticulum).
The Annals of otology, rhinology, and laryngology    May 1, 1994   Volume 103, Issue 5 Pt 1 383-388 doi: 10.1177/000348949410300508
Baptiste KE, Cake MH.The guttural pouch is a large, air-filled diverticulum of the auditory tube, present in the horse and other species. Lipid analysis of saline lavage from the equine guttural pouch has demonstrated the presence of phospholipids and neutral lipids in amounts that are variable but consistently greater than in any other species described. A stain specific for choline-containing phospholipids has demonstrated the presence of phospholipid-containing vesicles only within the cells of subepithelial, seromucoidlike glands, suggesting that these cells incorporate phospholipids in their secretions. The f...
Infection due to Actinobacillus lignieresii after a horse bite. Benaoudia F, Escande F, Simonet M.No abstract available
Tidal breathing flow-volume loop analysis as a test of pulmonary function in exercising horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 5 589-594 
Connally BA, Derksen FJ.The usefulness of tidal breathing flow-volume loops (TBFVL) to evaluate pulmonary function was investigated in 6 Standardbreds during treadmill exercise. Tidal breathing flow-volume loops are a graphic representation of airflow rate vs tidal volume for each individual breath. These TBFVL were obtained from horses exercising at speeds corresponding to 75 and 100% of maximum heart rate. Measurements were recorded in each horse before and after ovalbumin-induced allergic lung disease. Moderate obstructive lung disease, characterized by a significant increase in pulmonary resistance, was observed ...
Histochemical and functional evidence for a cholinergic innervation of the equine ureter.
Journal of the autonomic nervous system    May 1, 1994   Volume 47, Issue 3 159-170 doi: 10.1016/0165-1838(94)90177-5
Prieto D, Simonsen U, Martín J, Hernández M, Rivera L, Lema L, García P, García-Sacristán A.The distribution of acetylcholinesterase (AChE)-positive nerve fibers and cells, as well as the effects of acetylcholine (ACh) on ureteral smooth muscle and small resistance arteries were investigated in the equine ureter by means of histochemical, classic organ baths and myograph techniques. AChE-positive nerve fibers were widely distributed throughout the ureteral wall forming muscular, subepithelial and perivascular nerve plexuses, whose density was highest at the intravesical ureter. AChE-positive nerve cells were also identified grouped as adventitial or intramural ganglia. ACh increased ...
Gastric emptying of solid, non-digestible, radiopaque markers in ponies.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1994   Volume 56, Issue 3 386-388 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(94)90157-0
Baker SJ, Gerring EL.The gastric emptying of different forms of ingesta occurs by a variety of mechanisms and dysfunction may selectively affect different components of the gastric contents. A technique for assessing gastric emptying of solid, indigestible, radiopaque markers was developed. Emptying of these markers in four ponies was variable in both pattern and rate (half emptying time ranged from less than one hour to more than 24 hours). However, whereas in man physically similar markers appear to empty relatively rapidly when fasting but are delayed by a meal, no such delay was evident in these ponies. The ho...
The equine embryonic capsule practical implications of recent research.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 3 184-186 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1994.tb04366.x
Oriol JG.In most domestic animals, the zona pellucida is the outermost extracellular layer that covers the blastocyst before implantation. However, in the horse, an acellular membrane, the capsule, replaces the zona pellucida and envelops the developing conceptus during the 2nd and 3rd weeks of gestation. Although this structure was first described by Bonnet in 1889, it received little attention until the 1970s when its rediscovery by Marrable and Flood (1975) led to a series of reports (see review by Betteridge 1989). Nevertheless, until recently the structure, origin, and function of the capsule have...
Proximal suspensory desmitis in the hindlimb: 42 cases.
The British veterinary journal    May 1, 1994   Volume 150, Issue 3 279-291 doi: 10.1016/S0007-1935(05)80008-9
Dyson S.Proximal suspensory desmitis of the hindlimb was diagnosed using local analgesic techniques and ultrasonography in 42 horses. Subtarsal analgesia resulted in substantial improvement in lameness in 36 of 41 horses in which local analgesic techniques were used. In the remaining five horses lameness was improved by perineural analgesia of the tibial nerve (three) or the tibial and fibular nerves. Intra-articular analgesia of the tarso-metatarsal joint produced a similar degree of improvement in two of 24 horses in which lameness had been improved by subtarsal analgesia. Ultrasonographic abnormali...
Purification of a plasminogen activator from Streptococcus uberis.
FEMS microbiology letters    May 1, 1994   Volume 118, Issue 1-2 153-158 doi: 10.1111/j.1574-6968.1994.tb06818.x
Leigh JA.A protein capable of activating bovine, equine and ovine plasminogen, but not that from human or porcine plasma, was purified from culture filtrates of Streptococcus uberis (strain 0140J). Purification was achieved by ammonium sulphate precipitation followed by molecular exclusion chromatography. The elution position of the native molecule was equivalent to a molecular mass of approximately 57 kDa. However, the molecular mass, as determined by SDS-PAGE, was 29 kDa, suggesting the existence of a dimeric structure. Purified immunoglobulin from three out of five monoclonal antibodies raised to th...
Arthroscopic approach and intra-articular anatomy of the plantar pouch of the equine tarsocrural joint.
Veterinary surgery : VS    May 1, 1994   Volume 23, Issue 3 161-166 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1994.tb00464.x
Zamos DT, Honnas CM, Hoffman AG.Arthroscopic examination of structures within the plantar pouch of the tarsocrural joint was accomplished via portals in both the plantaromedial and plantarolateral aspects of the joint. Flexion and extension of the tarsus while examining the joint through either portal allowed observation of the proximal and plantar aspects of the lateral and medial trochlear ridges, the trochlear groove, the caudal aspect of the distal tibia, and the deep digital flexor tendon (DDFT) in its sheath. From a plantarolateral portal, the plantar talocalcaneal ligament and the plantar aspect of the lateral malleol...
Influence of estrogen on antibacterial and immunoglobulin secretory activities of uterine fluids from ovariectomized mares.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 5 643-649 
Johnson JU, Oxender WD, Berkhoff HA.Effect of estrogen (E2) and progesterone (P4) on uterine antibacterial activity and immunoglobulin concentrations in mares was studied. In 2 in vitro experiments, 6 mixed-breed mares were ovariectomized, and uterine fluid and blood serum were analyzed. Antibacterial assay methods were used to determine inhibitory effects on Streptococcus zooepidemicus of uterine fluid samples collected on days 3, 5, and 8, and serum obtained on day 8 of treatment. Single radial immunodiffusion methods were used to quantify amounts of IgA and IgG in uterine fluid and serum on days 3, 5, 8, and 14 of treatment. ...
Avulsion of the origin of the peroneus tertius tendon in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 9 1483-1485 
Blikslager AT, Bristol DG.A 3-month-old foal was examined because of lameness and fracture of the left lateral trochlear ridge of the femur. Arthroscopy of the left femoropatellar joint was elected. After induction of general anesthesia and placement of the foal in dorsal recumbency, it was noticed that the left hind limb was extended at the tibiotarsal joint and flexed at the femorotibial joint. Avulsion fracture at the origin of the peroneus tertius tendon was diagnosed. Fracture fragments were excised. The horse had mild left hind limb lameness at the time of follow-up evaluation 1 year after discharge.
MHC Class II positive cells and T cells in the equine endometrium throughout the oestrous cycle.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    May 1, 1994   Volume 41, Issue 1-2 55-72 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(94)90057-4
Frayne J, Stokes CR.The quantity and distribution of MHC Class II positive cells and T cells in the equine endometrium was investigated throughout the oestrous cycle. Significantly more MHC Class II positive cells were detected in the stratum compactum and stratum spongiosum of endometria from naturally cycling mares during the follicular than during the luteal phase of the oestrous cycle. Significantly more T cells were also detected in the stratum compactum, but not stratum spongiosum, of these mares during the follicular phase. Furthermore, there was a marked increase in the number of MHC Class II positive cel...
Comparison of the stride kinematics of the collected, working, medium and extended trot in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 3 230-234 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1994.tb04375.x
Clayton HM.Highly-trained dressage horses were studied to test the hypothesis that stride length is altered independently of stride duration in the transitions between the collected, working, medium and extended trot. Six well-trained dressage horses were filmed at a frame rate of 150 frames/s performing the collected, working, medium and extended trots in a sand arena. Temporal, linear and angular data were extracted from the films, with 4 strides being analysed for each horse and gait type. There were no significant asymmetries between the left and rights limbs or diagonals when data from the whole gro...
Oral bioavailability of pivampicillin in foals at different ages.
The veterinary quarterly    May 1, 1994   Volume 16 Suppl 2 S113-S116 
Ensink JM, Barneveld A, Klein WR, van Miert AS, Vulto AG.The plasma disposition of ampicillin after intravenous administration at a dose rate of 15 mg/kg was studied in six healthy, 1-month-old foals. The oral bioavailability of pivampicillin was determined in the same foals at four ages, ranging from 11 days to 4 months. Pivampicillin was administered orally at a dose rate of 19.9 mg/kg, which is equivalent on a molecular basis to 15 mg/kg ampicillin. Ampicillin concentrations in plasma were determined up to 12 hours after administration. After intravenous administration, the mean distribution and elimination half-lives of ampicillin were 0.121 and...
Diagnosis of Babesia caballi infections in horses by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and western blot.
International journal for parasitology    May 1, 1994   Volume 24, Issue 3 347 
Böse R, Peymann B.From Babesia caballi in vitro cultures a preparation of 100% infected erythrocytes was obtained. From this, B. caballi antigens were extracted with the detergent 3-[(3-Cholamidopropyl)-dimethylammonio]-1-propane-sulfonate (CHAPS) and used as ELISA antigens. A control antigen of normal erythrocytes from the same donor horse was prepared in an identical manner. The ELISA and Western blot were validated by testing of sera from horses experimentally infected with B. caballi or B. equi or not infected with Babesia spp. ELISA and Western blot results were compared with those obtained by the immunofl...
Laboratory and clinical evaluation of a chromogenic endotoxin assay for horses with acute intestinal disorders.
The veterinary quarterly    May 1, 1994   Volume 16 Suppl 2 S117-S121 
Steverink PJ, Salden HJ, Sturk A, Klein WR, van der Velden MA, Németh F.In this study the laboratory and clinical performance of a chromogenic endotoxin assay for equine plasma was evaluated. The assay was sensitive (detection limit 3 ng LPS/L plasma), reproducible (within and between-assay CV at 50 ng LPS/L E. coli O111:B4 LPS standard addition was 5% and 7.5%, respectively), and not substantially affected by enhancement or inhibition phenomena (recovery of an in vitro spike was 75-125% in 80% of the samples). LPS added to whole blood was rapidly inactivated upon incubation at 37 degrees C but not at 0 degrees C. A recently developed blood collection tube for LPS...
A silver-impregnation and immunocytochemical study of innervation of the distal sesamoid bone and its suspensory ligaments in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 3 212-219 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1994.tb04372.x
Bowker RM, Rockershouser SJ, Linder K, Vex KB, Sonea IM, Caron JP.The innervation of the navicular bone (os sesamoideum distale) and its suspensory ligaments (ligamenta sesamoidea collateralia) (CSL) or proximal suspensory ligament and the ligamentum sesamoideum distale impar or the distal sesamoidean impar ligament (DS-impar ligament) was examined using combined anatomical techniques of silver impregnation and immunocytochemistry. Silver impregnation studies revealed an abundance of nerve fibres present in both the CSL and DS-impar ligament with the latter having relatively more nerve fibres. These silver-impregnated nerves coursed parallel to and were asso...
Pattern recognition in equine locomotion.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 3 173-174 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1994.tb04363.x
Dalin G.No abstract available.
What is your diagnosis? Rostral displacement of the palatopharyngeal arch.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 9 1347-1348 
Crabill M, Schumacher J, Walker M.No abstract available
Ultrasonographic evaluation and long-term follow-up of flexor tendonitis/desmitis in the metacarpal/metatarsal region in Dutch warmblood horses and standardbred racehorses.
The veterinary quarterly    May 1, 1994   Volume 16 Suppl 2 S76-S80 
van den Belt AJ, Dik KJ, Barneveld A.Over a 2 year-period, the ultrasonographic localization and distribution of flexor tendinous and ligamentous injuries, the long-term follow-up, and the outcome were studied in 101 Dutch Warmblood horses (DW) with a mean age of 8.7 years and in 71 Standardbred racehorses (ST) with a mean age of 5.2 years. The ratio between forelimb and hind limb flexor tendonitis/desmitis in the DW-group was 4:1 and in the ST-group group 4:3. In the DW-group, tendonitis/desmitis of the suspensory ligament (32%), the superficial digital flexor tendon (29%), the distal carpal check ligament (17%) of the forelimb ...
A modified technique for implantation of polypropylene mesh for the repair of external abdominal hernias in horses: a review of 21 cases.
The veterinary quarterly    May 1, 1994   Volume 16 Suppl 2 S108-S110 
van der Velden MA, Klein WR.During a 3-year period 21 horses were surgically treated because of large abdominal wall defects. In each case the defect was bridged with a polypropylene mesh, which was placed on the outside of the hernial ring. This was in contrast with the technique for mesh herniorrhaphy generally described in human and veterinary literature, in which the mesh is always implanted on the inside of the hernial ring. One horse was destroyed on the first postoperative day because of postanaesthetic myelomalacia. Surgical repair as described was successful in 18 patients. Recurrence of herniation occurred in t...