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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.
A survey of neurological diseases in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1993   Volume 70, Issue 12 445-449 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1993.tb00846.x
Tyler CM, Davis RE, Begg AP, Hutchins DR, Hodgson DR.Case records of 450 horses with signs of neurological disease are reviewed. One hundred and nineteen horses with neurological disease due to trauma were examined, of which 60 were due to spinal cord trauma, 47 to brain or cranial nerve trauma and 12 to peripheral nerve trauma. Cervical vertebral fractures/trauma were the most common injury. Basisphenoid/basioccipital bone fractures were the most common form of cranial trauma and facial nerve paralysis the most common cranial nerve injury. Eighty-nine horses with neurological disease due to malformation were examined. Cervical vertebral malform...
A comparison of the reduction in immunoglobulin (IgG) concentration of frozen equine plasma treated by three thawing techniques.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1993   Volume 70, Issue 12 442-444 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1993.tb00845.x
O'Rielly JL.The IgG concentration of plasma from 13 mares was measured by radial immunodiffusion when fresh and after storage at -4 degrees C and thawing by 3 methods. There was no significant (P > 0.05) reduction in the IgG concentration when plasma was thawed over 6 hours at 22 degrees C (1352.9 +/- 101.6 mg/dL) (mean +/- SEM) compared with the fresh sample (1369.5 +/- 88.1 mg/dL). In contrast, there was a significant (P < 0.05) reduction in the IgG concentration of plasma that was rapidly thawed at 57 degrees C over 50 minutes (1142.9 +/- 66.2 mg/dL), or placed in a microwave oven for 20 to 25 minutes ...
Ischemia/reperfusion injury of the ascending colon in ponies: a correlative study utilizing microvascular histopathology and corrosion casting.
Scanning microscopy    December 1, 1993   Volume 7, Issue 4 1311-1320 
Darien BJ, Sims PA, Stone WC, Schilly DR, Dubielzig RR, Albrecht RM.Volvulus of the ascending colon (ACV) in the horse results in microvascular injury and necrosis of the intestinal mucosa. This study investigated the site and type of microvascular injury which occurs within the mucosa and submucosa following ACV. Histopathology of volvulus treated ponies demonstrated mucosal necrosis with microvascular hemorrhage and thrombosis. Thrombi occurred within the subepithelial capillaries and edema and hemorrhage developed throughout the mucosa and submucosa. Vascular casts allowed 3-D viewing of samples obtained from the entire pelvic flexure and demonstrated two d...
Factors affecting drug withholding time estimates in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 3 461-479 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30380-2
Gerken DF, Sams RA.Although all the factors discussed in this article may have an effect on drug withholding time estimates, the factors that have the potential for the greatest effect or that have been found to cause positive tests in the past are 1. Dosage: Increasing the drug dosage will require a longer withholding time. 2. Dosing interval: Narrowing the dosing interval will require a longer withholding time. 3. Administration route: In general, oral administration results in lower peak plasma concentrations but may result in longer excretion in the urine and therefore longer withholding time. 4. Drug intera...
[Cryopreservation trial with semen of purebred Arabian and Haflinger stallions in the Turkish national stud in Karacabey].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1993   Volume 100, Issue 12 476-478 
Tekin N, Yurdaydin N, Klug E, Daskin A, Keskin O, Kücük H.Within a German-Turkish university partnership deep freezing preservation of stallion semen was performed as a part project of the cooperation contract. In this study a modification of the introduced Makrotüb method was used for semen freezing. The investigated characteristics of fresh semen of the Arab stallions were in the normal range cited in the international literature. However, the semen data obtained from the Haflinger stallions were markedly and partially significantly in lower range than measured for the Arab stallions. This may reflect an incomplete adaptation process of the import...
Myocarditis following envenoming with Vipera palaestinae in two horses.
Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology    December 1, 1993   Volume 31, Issue 12 1623-1628 doi: 10.1016/0041-0101(93)90347-l
Hoffman A, Levi O, Orgad U, Nyska A.Cardiac disease developed several days to weeks after resolution of local inflammation caused by envenoming by Vipera palaestinae in two horses. In one horse (case A), referred to the hospital for recurrent abdominal pain 8 days after envenoming, a tachyarrhythmia was detected; ventricular premature depolarizations were diagnosed by ECG. A second horse (case B) was found dead without premonitory signs 60 days after envenoming. In both horses, there was extensive necrosis of cardiac ventricular tissues.
Aromatase activity in the mare ovary during estrous cycle. Measurement of endogenous steroids and of their in vitro inhibitory effect.
Acta endocrinologica    December 1, 1993   Volume 129, Issue 6 536-542 doi: 10.1530/acta.0.1290536
Amri H, Silberzahn P, al-Timimi I, Gaillard JL.This present study was undertaken to clarify estrogen synthesis in the mare ovary. First of all, an evaluation of endogenous steroid contents was carried out in the follicular fluid and in the luteal tissue at different stages of the luteal phase. Radioimmunoassays were performed after separation and purification of each hormone by chromatography. High amounts of conjugated (0.9 mg/l) and unconjugated (4 mg/l) estradiol-17 beta were found in the follicular fluid of the large follicules (50 mm). These concentrations of estrogens decreased drastically in the luteal tissue, and only low levels of...
Evaluation of serum amyloid A protein as an acute-phase reactive protein in horses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    December 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 6 1011-1016 doi: 10.1292/jvms.55.1011
Nunokawa Y, Fujinaga T, Taira T, Okumura M, Yamashita K, Tsunoda N, Hagio M.Serum amyloid A protein (SAA) was isolated from equine acute-phase serum by repeating Sephadex G-75 gel filtration 3 times. Quantitative measurement of equine SAA was performed by the single radial immunodiffusion technique with rabbit anti-equine SAA serum. In clinically normal horses, the SAA concentration remained relatively high from immediately after birth up to 1 week of age. After this the concentration showed periodic fluctiation in the range of approximately 13 to 30 micrograms/ml. The mean (+/- SD) concentration of SAA in foals ( or = 18 months old) was 19.37 +/- 9.41 and 21.53 +/- 9...
Clinical use and characteristics of the corticosteroids.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 3 543-562 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30385-1
Harkins JD, Carney JM, Tobin T.Corticosteroids possess potent anti-inflammatory activity and are commonly injected intra-articularly for local relief of inflammatory lesions in performance horses. However, the suppression of anabolic activity in the joint may lead to an increased rate of joint breakdown. Complications associated with intra-articular corticosteroid therapy include septic arthritis, which is usually due to inadvertent joint contamination at the time of corticosteroid injection, and steroid arthropathy, which is characterized by an accelerated rate of joint destruction and radiographic evidence of severe degen...
The effect of added dietary soybean oil on vitamin E status of the horse.
Journal of animal science    December 1, 1993   Volume 71, Issue 12 3399-3402 doi: 10.2527/1993.71123399x
Siciliano PD, Wood CH.Fourteen 2-yr-old Quarter Horses and Quarter Horse x Thoroughbreds were randomly assigned to either a control (CTRL) diet or a diet supplemented with 6.4% soybean oil (SBO). The amounts of both diets that were fed met current NRC nutrient requirements and were isoenergetic with similar nutrient:energy ratios. Venous blood samples (20 mL) were taken at d 0, 30, 60, and 90 of the experiment and analyzed for serum alpha-tocopherol, serum cholesterol, and serum triglyceride. The sum of serum cholesterol and serum triglyceride values was used as an estimate of serum total lipid. The ratio of serum ...
Duration of antigen-induced hyperresponsiveness in horses with allergic respiratory disease and possible links with early airway obstruction.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1993   Volume 16, Issue 4 469-476 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1993.tb00213.x
Fairbairn SM, Lees P, Page CP, Cunningham FM.Antigen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness in allergic horses has previously been demonstrated when clinical signs of acute airway obstruction were apparent, as a consequence of exposure of animals to hay and straw for variable periods of time, and repeat measurements of hyperresponsiveness have been made no earlier than 1 week after challenge. In the present study airway responsiveness to methacholine has been measured in normal horses and allergic horses in clinical remission before and 24, 48 and 72 h after a hay and straw challenge of fixed, short, duration (7 h). Correlations between earl...
Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE): a description of the 1989 outbreak, recent epidemiologic trends, and the association of rainfall with EEE occurrence.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    December 1, 1993   Volume 49, Issue 6 677-685 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1993.49.677
Letson GW, Bailey RE, Pearson J, Tsai TF.An Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) outbreak in 1989 led to nine human and 196 equine cases, chiefly in coastal Atlantic and Gulf Coast counties. In the past two decades, EEE age-specific incidence and mortality rates have declined compared with earlier years. Analysis of rainfall patterns in areas where human EEE cases occurred between 1983 and 1989 revealed an association between occurrence of human cases and excess rainfall. The association was stronger with data from local weather stations than from statewide rainfall averages and the predictive models were best when applied to northern s...
[HYPP–hyperkalemic periodic paralysis in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    December 1, 1993   Volume 21, Issue 6 524-527 
Zeilmann M.A literature review of the clinical syndrome HYPP (Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis) affecting Quarter Horses is given. HYPP is characterized by sporadic attacks of muscle tremors, weakness and/or collapse, lasting for variable periods of time. Diagnosis is based on physical findings in association with hyperkalemia. In horses with HYPP, the regulation of ion transport through the sodium channels in the muscle cells occasionally fails, causing uncontrollable muscle twitching. Further investigations into molecular genetics reveals a mutation in the gene responsible for sodium and potassium regul...
Survey of selected design and ventilation characteristics of racehorse stables in the Pretoria, Witwatersrand, Vereeniging area of South Africa.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    December 1, 1993   Volume 64, Issue 4 149-153 
Lund RJ, Guthrie AJ, Killeen VM.Stables housing more than 20 horses in training were surveyed in the Pretoria, Witwatersrand, Vereeniging area of South Africa. Most racehorses were kept in loose boxes, bedded on straw or sawdust and remained indoors while the stables were cleaned. The average floor area was 13 m2 and airspace was 55 m3 per animal. The average predicted minimum air change rate by natural convection in calm winds was 7.0 air changes per hour, which was reduced to 2.2 when the doors and shutters were closed. The survey showed that many of the stables had been built without due consideration to factors that migh...
Pharmacokinetic values of drugs frequently used in performance horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 3 481-491 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30381-4
Dyke TM.Tables of values of pharmacokinetic variables (volume of distribution, total body clearance, and plasma elimination half-life) of drugs frequently administered to performance horses are accompanied by explanatory notes. Drugs described include the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, corticosteroids, anabolic steroids, central nervous system-modifying drugs, respiratory system drugs, diuretics, local anesthetics, and antibacterial drugs.
Molecular cloning and expression of equine interleukin 2.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    December 1, 1993   Volume 39, Issue 4 395-406 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(93)90070-k
Vandergrifft EV, Horohov DW.We have cloned equine IL-2 cDNA in vitro using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and primers based on the human IL-2 sequence. The cloned product appears to contain the entire coding region for equine IL-2 based on homology with other known sequences. When expressed in COS cells, the recombinant product augmented the proliferative response of equine peripheral blood mononuclear cells to concanavalin A, however, it failed to support the continued proliferation of murine CTLL-2 cells. Specific substitutions in those regions associated with p55 and p75 binding appear to account for this species...
Effects of single intravenously administered doses of omeprazole and ranitidine on intragastric pH and plasma gastrin concentration in nonfed ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 12 2068-2074 
Baker SJ, Gerring EL.We investigated the effects of a range of IV administered doses of omeprazole (0.125 to 2.0 mg/kg of body weight) on gastric pH (monitored by indwelling electrode) and plasma gastrin concentration, compared with those of IV administered ranitidine (1.0 mg/kg) in 4 Welsh mountain-type ponies. Pharmacokinetic variables of IV administered omeprazole also were examined. Episodes of high gastric pH in the basal state obscured the effect of acid suppression on intragastric pH; however, omeprazole induced dose-dependent increase in mean gastric pH (P < 0.01) during the 11 hours after its administr...
Anabolic steroids.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 3 563-576 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30386-3
Snow DH.Anabolic steroids have been employed extensively in equine practice over the past 25 years. Their usefulness is largely dependent on subjective opinions, as only minimal studies have been carried out in horses. Therefore, their use will vary markedly between practitioners depending on their personal experiences and pressures by trainers to use them. They form part of rational therapy in a variety of conditions. In addition to use for increasing muscle mass, they are used to a varying extent in the raising of yearlings and in the training and racing of horses with the view of improving performa...
Effect of furosemide on physiologic variables in exercising horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 12 2104-2109 
Harkins JD, Hackett RP, Ducharme NG.Twelve horses (6 Standardbreds and 6 Thoroughbreds) received IM injections of furosemide (250 mg) or physiologic saline solution and performed standard exercise tests, to assess the effects of furosemide and breed on blood gas values, PCV, plasma lactate concentration, and heart rate during exercise. After furosemide administration, arterial and venous blood pH values were significantly (P < 0.05) increased. Partial pressures of O2 and CO2 in arterial blood and of CO2 in venous blood (PaO2, PaCO2, and PVCO2, respectively) were unaffected by furosemide treatment, whereas venous partial press...
Short echo time magnetic resonance imaging of tendon.
Investigative radiology    December 1, 1993   Volume 28, Issue 12 1095-1100 doi: 10.1097/00004424-199312000-00003
Koblik PD, Freeman DM.Current clinical magnetic resonance (MR) imaging studies provide almost no useful signal from normal tendon and have no clear advantage over other imaging modalities in the evaluation of tendon injuries. The authors believe that tendon MR signal may be T2-limited, and, if so, could be enhanced by short echo time (TE) pulse sequences. The relationship of tendon signal intensity and tendon infrastructure conspicuity to TE was assessed at three different field strengths. Methods: Magnetic resonance imaging studies were performed on samples of normal equine tendon at 3 different field strengths wi...
Fluids, electrolytes, and bicarbonate.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 3 577-604 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30387-5
Schott HC, Hinchcliff KW.In an attempt to enhance performance, primarily by delaying the onset of fatigue, a variety of formulations of fluids, electrolytes, and sodium bicarbonate are administered to performance horses. Some current practices of fluid and electrolyte supplementation are well justified; others have no basis to support their use. In addition, occasional combined administration of certain agents (i.e., furosemide and sodium bicarbonate) can have detrimental effects on performance.
Furosemide, bumetanide, and ethacrynic acid.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 3 511-522 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30383-8
Hinchcliff KW, Mitten LA.Furosemide and, less commonly, bumetanide and ethacrynic acid are potent diuretics administered to horses for a variety of reasons, including prophylaxis of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage. These drugs affect urine volume and composition, and furosemide has marked effects on plasma volume and composition and on systemic hemodynamics at rest and during exercise.
The intramuscular bioavailability of a phenylbutazone preparation in the horse.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1993   Volume 16, Issue 4 494-500 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1993.tb00216.x
Landuyt J, Delbeke FT, Debackere M.The plasma concentrations of phenylbutazone (PBZ) and its major metabolites, oxyphenbutazone (OPBZ) and gamma-OH-phenylbutazone (OHPBZ) were determined for up to 72 h in six horses, following intravenous (i.v.) and intramuscular (i.m.) administration of 4 g phenylbutazone, 20 ml Phenylarthrite Ventoquinol (Vetoquinol Spécialités Pharmaceutiques Vétérinaires, Magny-Vernois, 70200 Lure, France). After i.v. dosing the plasma disposition was best described by a two-compartment open model. The hydroxylated metabolites OPBZ and OHPBZ were present in detectable concentrations for 72 h and 48 h, r...
Determination of alclofenac in equine plasma and urine by high-performance liquid chromatography.
Journal of chromatography    November 24, 1993   Volume 621, Issue 2 209-214 doi: 10.1016/0378-4347(93)80097-n
Delbeke FT, Landuyt J, Debackere M.A high-performance liquid chromatographic method to measure plasma and urinary alclofenac levels in equine biofluids is described. Isolation of the drug from plasma is achieved using liquid-liquid extraction with diethyl ether. Reversed-phase C18 solid phase extraction is used for the extraction of free and conjugated alclofenac from urine. The reproducibility and accuracy of the method were well within acceptable limits over the concentration ranges 0-10 and 0-20 micrograms/ml, respectively, for plasma and urine. Starting with 2 ml of plasma, a concentration of 0.1 microgram/ml could easily b...
The Horserace Betting Levy Board’s code of practice for equine viral arteritis for the 1994 breeding season.
The Veterinary record    November 20, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 21 512-514 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.21.512
The Horserace Betting Levy Board formulates codes of practice for the control of contagious equine metritis and other equine bacterial venereal diseases, and equine viral arteritis and equid herpesvirus 1. This year's codes have just been published and the code of practice for EVA, reproduced below, has been substantially amended following the recent outbreak in the UK. The code is intended for use by veterinary surgeons and breeders of thoroughbred and non-thoroughbred horses. The HBLB states that its recommendations represent the minimum measures necessary to monitor for the presence of equi...
The outbreak of equine influenza (H3N8) in the United Kingdom in 1989: diagnostic use of an antigen capture ELISA.
The Veterinary record    November 20, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 21 515-519 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.21.515
Livesay GJ, O'Neill T, Hannant D, Yadav MP, Mumford JA.In July 1989 influenza A/equine-2 (H3N8) was isolated from a nasopharyngeal swab taken from a non-thoroughbred horse exhibiting acute clinical respiratory disease. This was the first isolation of equine influenza virus in the United Kingdom since 1981. Subsequent investigations of acute respiratory disease in horses indicated that the infection was dispersed throughout the UK. However, unlike the previous epidemic of 1979, the first horses from which the virus was isolated had been vaccinated. This outbreak of influenza provided an opportunity to evaluate an antigen capture ELISA, directed aga...
Deficit of inhibitory glycine receptors in spinal cord from Peruvian Pasos: evidence for an equine form of inherited myoclonus.
Brain research    November 19, 1993   Volume 628, Issue 1-2 263-270 doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(93)90963-n
Gundlach AL, Kortz G, Burazin TC, Madigan J, Higgins RJ.Inherited myoclonus in Poll Hereford calves and spasticity in the spastic mouse (spa/spa) are characterized by myoclonic jerks of the skeletal musculature which occur spontaneously and in response to sensory stimuli, symptoms resembling those in subconvulsive strychnine poisoning. The primary, biochemical defect in these myoclonic animals is a deficit of inhibitory glycine receptors in the central nervous system. We now report the occurrence of similar stimulus-induced myoclonus in individual, pure-bred Peruvian Paso horses and an associated, specific deficiency in the density of [3H]strychnin...
What is your diagnosis? Penetrating foreign body in a horse causing delayed wound healing and a chronic draining tract.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1993   Volume 203, Issue 10 1401-1402 
Mueller PO, Watson E, Allen D.No abstract available
An improved method for the scintigraphic detection of acute bone damage to the equine pelvis by probe point counting.
The Veterinary record    November 13, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 20 490-495 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.20.490
Pilsworth RC, Holmes MA, Shepherd M.A fracture of the pelvis in a horse can be detected scintigraphically by probe point counting. However, the pelvis is covered by a large and variable muscle mass, and is close to the urinary bladder, both of which can introduce errors. This paper describes an improved technique which uses a larger set of sampling points and analyses the data with a small computer to construct a three dimensional graph of the gamma-ray output across the pelvis, thus helping to improve the interpretation of the data. The scintigraphic plot from a normal horse, three cases of fracture (confirmed by radiography, u...
Equine pharmaceutical products.
The Veterinary record    November 13, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 20 508 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.20.508-b
Renton CP.No abstract available