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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.
Relationship of serum total calcium to serum albumin in dogs, cats, horses and cattle.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 1, 1993   Volume 34, Issue 6 360-364 
Bienzle D, Jacobs RM, Lumsden JH.A retrospective study was performed in order to assess the relationship between serum calcium and serum albumin concentrations in domestic animals. Results of 9041 canine, 1564 feline, 2917 equine, and 613 bovine serum samples from hospitalized patients were examined by regression analysis. Subpopulations of cases with concurrent elevations in creatinine or that were less than six months of age were evaluated separately. Statistically significant linear relationships between calcium and albumin concentrations were established for each species (p <0.05). The coefficients of determination (r(...
Equine influenza virus from the 1991 Swedish epizootic shows major genetic and antigenic divergence from the prototype virus.
Virus research    June 1, 1993   Volume 28, Issue 3 263-272 doi: 10.1016/0168-1702(93)90026-j
Oxburgh L, Berg M, Klingeborn B, Emmoth E, Linné T.The antigenic properties of H3N8 equine influenza virus from the Swedish epizootic of 1991 differ from those of A/eq 2/Fontainebleau/79 (representative of the Swedish vaccine strain) in hemagglutination inhibition tests. The amino acid sequence of the hemagglutinin (HA) of an isolate from the 1991 outbreak was deduced from the nucleotide sequence and comparison was made to the A/eq 2/Fontainebleau/79 strain. Twenty-three amino acid substitutions were found, 10 mapping onto areas of the HA known to bind antibodies in human H3 influenza viruses. The amino acid changes together with the serologic...
The bronchial tree and lobular division of the horse lung.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    June 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 3 435-438 doi: 10.1292/jvms.55.435
Nakakuki S.The lungs of five horses were examined. At present, in veterinary anatomy, the horse lung is divided into the cranial and caudal lobes by the cardiac notch on either side. In addition to these lobes, in the right lung, the accessory lobe is present. However, from the viewpoint of the bronchial ramifications, the horse lung can be divided into the cranial, middle, caudal and accessory lobes bilaterally. The horse lung has four bronchiole systems on either side, dorsal, lateral, ventral and medial. The cranial lobe is formed by the first bronchiole of the dorsal bronchiole system. The middle lob...
Dung dispersal and grazing area following treatment of horses with a single dose of ivermectin.
Veterinary parasitology    June 1, 1993   Volume 48, Issue 1-4 229-240 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(93)90158-j
Herd RP, Stinner BR, Purrington FF.Environmental consequences of treating horses with recommended dosages of ivermectin paste were studied in two controlled experiments with 29 horses in Ohio. In 1988, dung dispersal rates were measured by changes in dry weight over time of 48 copromes (300 g) formed from feces taken from four treatment and four control horses 3 days post ivermectin treatment. There was delayed dispersal of copromes from horses treated with ivermectin in June, resulting in significantly heavier ivermectin copromes compared with those of control horses by September. There was no difference in ivermectin or contr...
Control strategies for ruminant and equine parasites to counter resistance, encystment, and ecotoxicity in the USA.
Veterinary parasitology    June 1, 1993   Volume 48, Issue 1-4 327-336 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(93)90166-k
Herd RP.The need for improved parasite control strategies to conserve anthelmintic efficacy and to avoid drug-related problems are addressed. Recent surveys have revealed a trend for sole dependence on ivermectin by livestock owners in the USA, with little regard for epidemiologic-based strategies, or the annual rotation of unrelated anthelmintic groups. Innovative parasite control strategies for cattle, sheep, and horses in northern USA are presented. The importance of closer monitoring and more rational use of anthelmintics is stressed.
Immunocytochemical localization of some turkey pituitary hormones using antisera to human hormones.
Poultry science    June 1, 1993   Volume 72, Issue 6 1127-1131 doi: 10.3382/ps.0721127
Bakst M, Hadick S, Proudman J, Maruyama K.This study was conducted to determine the crossreactivity of antisera to human prolactin (PRL), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and growth hormone (GH) to turkey pituicytes. In addition, crossreactivities of the above antisera and antiserum to turkey GH to pituicytes of turkey, cat, rabbit, horse, owl monkey, and human were evaluated. Results of the immunocytochemical localizations showed that with one exception antisera to human hormones were positive for each species tested. Turkey pituicytes failed to crossreact with antiserum to human GH. Likewise, antiserum to turkey GH failed to cros...
[A horse with grass sickness].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    June 1, 1993   Volume 118, Issue 11 365-366 
Leendertse IP.A three year old warm-blood gelding with severe colic was referred to a veterinary clinic. The history revealed that the horse was found early in the morning with severe colic, and laying in the pasture. On arrival the clinical examination showed a complete wet horse with a pulse rate of 92/min, a respiratory rate of 24/min., a pcv of 0.50 L.L.-1, a T. of 38.0 degrees C, and no gastric reflux. Rectal examination revealed a sticky rectal mucous membrane and a colonic impaction together with displacement of the large colon. A diagnostic laparotomy showed an impaction as is seen in horses with Gr...
Serological evidence of equine arteritis virus in donkeys in South Africa.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1993   Volume 60, Issue 2 155-158 
Paweska JT, Barnard BJ.This paper reports the first serological evidence of exposure of donkeys to equine arteritis virus. Seven hundred and thirty-four serum samples collected between 1989 and 1992 from donkeys in different areas of South Africa were examined for the presence of antibodies against this virus by a microneutralization test. Seventeen percent of serum samples tested positive. The distribution of seropositive animals varied from none in the western Cape Province and the Transvaal Highveld to 30% in the northern Transvaal. The country-wide distribution of serologically positive donkeys suggests a longst...
Leukoencephalomalacia in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1993   Volume 70, Issue 6 225-226 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1993.tb03310.x
Christley RM, Begg AP, Hutchins DR, Hodgson DR, Bryden WL.No abstract available
Surgical correction of an equine deviated anterior maxilla.
Oral surgery, oral medicine, and oral pathology    June 1, 1993   Volume 75, Issue 6 684-687 doi: 10.1016/0030-4220(93)90422-z
McKellar GM, Collins AP.The surgical correction of midfacial deformities of the horse have rarely been undertaken. This article describes the successful management of a submucous cleft of the maxilla in a young colt. Details of the operative and perioperative medical and surgical management are described. The horse, now 5 years of age, has sired eight normal progeny.
Pharmacokinetics and metabolism of avermectins in livestock.
Veterinary parasitology    June 1, 1993   Volume 48, Issue 1-4 45-57 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(93)90143-b
Steel JW.The kinetics of avermectin disposition and metabolism in ruminant livestock and horses are reviewed with particular emphasis on the influence of route of administration and formulation on persistence of residues in tissues and excretion in faeces. Because information is not publicly available on other compounds in this class currently under development (e.g. moxidectin, doramectin), ivermectin only is considered. The biological half-life of ivermectin in plasma is similar in cattle and sheep but because of a larger volume of distribution, plasma clearance is more rapid in sheep. However, injec...
Developmental regulation of insulin like growth factor II expression in the horse.
Cell biology international    June 1, 1993   Volume 17, Issue 6 603-607 doi: 10.1006/cbir.1993.1105
Joujou-Sisic K, Granérus M, Wetterling H, Wikström K, Engström W, Jeffcott L, Schofield PN, Welin A.The expression of the insulin like growth factor (IGF) II gene has been examined in the developing equine fetus. It was found that IGF II transcripts were present in abundant quantities in third trimester embryonic and extraembryonic tissues as for example the placenta. The expression of the IGF II gene was high in the fetal liver where two prominent transcripts--4.6 and 4.1--kB were produced. However, these transcripts could not be traced in the adult liver. Instead we found two different transcripts with the sizes of 4.0 and 2.9 kB in the adult liver. These findings taken together with the d...
What is your diagnosis? Incomplete lateral condylar fracture of the third metacarpal bone (MC3) and evidence of soft tissue swelling.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1993   Volume 202, Issue 11 1883-1884 
Gerros TC.No abstract available
Factors affecting ACTH release from perifused equine anterior pituitary cells.
The Journal of endocrinology    June 1, 1993   Volume 137, Issue 3 391-401 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1370391
Evans MJ, Marshall AG, Kitson NE, Summers K, Donald RA.The multifactorial control of ACTH is well established. We wished to establish and characterize an in-vitro perifusion system, using equine anterior pituitary cells and physiological concentrations of secretagogues, to investigate factors which affect the dynamics of ACTH secretion. Anterior pituitary tissue was divided for dispersion into cells with collagenase, trypsin or dispase, or by mechanical dispersion. After dispersal followed by 18-h incubation, cells were perifused and the ACTH response to 10-min pulses of arginine vasopressin (AVP; 100 nmol/l), corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH...
DNA sequence analysis of serologically detected ELA class II haplotypes at the equine DQ beta locus.
Animal genetics    June 1, 1993   Volume 24, Issue 3 187-190 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1993.tb00285.x
Szalai G, Bailey E, Gerber H, Lazary S.The genetic diversity at the ELA DQ beta locus was investigated using polymerase chain reaction and DNA sequencing. Based upon serological methods 16 class II homozygous animals were selected and their genomic DNA was used. A DQ beta gene from an equine cDNA library was also sequenced. Our methodology and the similarity between the genomic and the cDNA sequences suggest that the studied locus is expressed on equine lymphocytes. In the predicted amino acid sequence the most extensive variation is located at residues 56-60. The pattern of these five amino acids is strongly correlated to the sero...
Placental and plasma cystine aminopeptidase in pregnant animals.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    June 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 3 479-480 doi: 10.1292/jvms.55.479
Ikenaga H, Mizuta Y, Ono K, Sawazaki T, Suzuki N, Tomoda I.The placental and plasma cystine aminopeptidase (CAP) in pregnant animals was examined on stability after the treatment with L-methionine, ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA) and heat. Inhibitory effects of these treatments on enzyme activities were different among CAPs from the animal species, however, significant correlation in those effects between placental and plasma CAPs was observed. These results suggested that plasma CAP might reflect placental CAP and seemed to be available for estimating maternal gestational conditions.
Structural relaxation and nonexponential kinetics of CO-binding to horse myoglobin. Multiple flash photolysis experiments.
Biophysical journal    June 1, 1993   Volume 64, Issue 6 1833-1842 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(93)81554-6
Post F, Doster W, Karvounis G, Settles M.The geminate recombination kinetics of CO-myoglobin strongly deviates from single exponential behavior in contrast to what is expected for unimolecular reactions (1). At low temperatures, this result was attributed to slowly exchanging conformational states which differ substantially in barrier height for ligand binding. Above 160 K the kinetics apparently slow down with temperature increase. Agmon and Hopfield (2) explain this result in terms of structural relaxation perpendicular to the reaction coordinate, which enhances the activation energy. In their model, structural relaxation homogeniz...
The cDNA sequence of horse transferrin.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    May 28, 1993   Volume 1173, Issue 2 230-232 doi: 10.1016/0167-4781(93)90186-h
Carpenter MA, Broad TE.The cDNA sequence of horse transferrin was determined by sequencing clones isolated from a horse liver cDNA library and clones obtained by PCR. The 2305 bp horse transferrin cDNA sequence included part of the 5' untranslated region and extended to the poly(A) tail. It had 80% sequence identity with the human transferrin cDNA, and encoded a protein of 706 residues, including a signal sequence of 19 amino acids. The horse transferrin sequence had the duplicated structure and conserved iron binding and cysteine residues which are characteristic of the transferrin family.
Timing of equine flu vaccination.
The Veterinary record    May 22, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 21 539 doi: 10.1136/vr.132.21.539-b
Muirhead FS.No abstract available
An outbreak of strangles in young ponies.
The Veterinary record    May 22, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 21 528-531 doi: 10.1136/vr.132.21.528
Dalgleish R, Love S, Pirie HM, Pirie M, Taylor DJ, Wright NG.A natural outbreak of strangles occurred in a group of 19 young experimental ponies. The disease was diagnosed in 11 of them within two days of their arrival at Glasgow University veterinary school and five others developed clinical signs within a further four days, a morbidity rate of 84 per cent. All of the affected ponies had typical signs of strangles including dullness, anorexia, pyrexia, regional lymphadenitis, occasionally with rupture of the lymph node, conjunctivitis and a mucopurulent nasal discharge. Nine of the affected ponies were destroyed during the clinical phase of the disease...
Injury to the superficial flexor tendon.
The Veterinary record    May 22, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 21 539 doi: 10.1136/vr.132.21.539
Frank C.No abstract available
More on self-mutilative behavior in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 15, 1993   Volume 202, Issue 10 1545-1546 
McDonnell SM.No abstract available
Factors affecting the clinical outcome of injuries to the superficial digital flexor tendon in National Hunt and point-to-point racehorses.
The Veterinary record    May 8, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 19 476-479 doi: 10.1136/vr.132.19.476
Marr CM, Love S, Boyd JS, McKellar Q.Ultrasonographic examination was used to define the severity of injuries to the superficial digital flexor tendon in 73 National Hunt or point-to-point racehorses and the factors influencing the outcome of the cases were examined. Thirty-four of the horses (46 per cent) returned to work with an average time out of training of 13.5 months. The rate of recurrence of the injury was 35 per cent. The severity of the lesions was related to the outcome; all the mildly affected horses returned to work, with 63 per cent of them racing and an average time out of training of 10.2 months; 50 per cent of t...
Responses of ponies to equid herpesvirus-1 ISCOM vaccination and challenge with virus of the homologous strain.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 3 299-305 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(93)90126-z
Hannant D, Jessett DM, O'Neill T, Dolby CA, Cook RF, Mumford JA.An experimental (ISCOM) vaccine previously shown to protect hamsters from lethal challenge with equid herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1), was tested in horses. Vaccination with EHV-1 ISCOMs induced serum antibodies to the major virus glycoproteins gp10, 13, 14, 17, 18 and 21/22a, whereas antibody responses to gp2 were weak or absent. High levels of virus neutralising antibody of long duration were induced, but did not prevent challenge infection with virus of the homologous strain. However, in the vaccinated ponies there was a significant reduction in clinical signs, nasal virus excretion and cell associat...
Clinical effects of detomidine with or without atropine used for arthrocentesis in horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    May 1, 1993   Volume 34, Issue 5 296-300 
Jones DL.The effectiveness of detomidine with or without atropine sulfate premedication in producing sedation and analgesia for arthrocentesis was studied in 12 horses. The effects were evaluated by monitoring heart and respiratory rates, borborygmi, distance from the lower lip to the floor, systolic blood pressure, and response to needle insertion. Either atropine or saline (as a placebo) was administered immediately prior to detomidine. All drugs were administered intravenously. Measurements were taken prior to drug injection and at 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, 60, 120, 180 and 240 minutes posti...
[3H]ouabain binding in skeletal muscle from horses with hyperkalemic periodic paralysis.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 5 783-787 
Pickar JG, Spier SJ, Harrold D, Carlsen RC.Ouabain, a cardiac glycoside, binds to the Na(+)-K(+)-adenosine triphosphatase (Na+ pump) and prevents active transport of Na+ and K+ across cell membranes. We used [3H]ouabain to quantify the number and affinity of Na+ pumps in skeletal muscle from Quarter Horses with the muscular disorder hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HYPP). [3H]Ouabain-binding properties of gluteal muscle from clinically normal and affected horses were used to determine whether altered Na+ pump number or affinity could contribute to the pathologic features of muscle in affected horses. Foals and adult horses with HYPP we...
Implantation of a programmable atrioventricular pacemaker in a donkey with complete atrioventricular block and syncope.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 3 248-251 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02955.x
Pibarot P, Vrins A, Salmon Y, Difruscia R.No abstract available
Hypercoagulable state associated with a deficiency of protein C in a thoroughbred colt.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    May 1, 1993   Volume 7, Issue 3 190-193 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1993.tb03185.x
Edens LM, Morris DD, Prasse KW, Anver MR.Protein C is a vitamin K-dependent serine protease with anticoagulant and profibrinolytic activity which is synthesized in the liver. Decreased protein C activity was detected in a Thoroughbred colt with clinical and histopathologic evidence of recurrent venous thrombosis. Although protein C activity was reduced, protein C antigen concentration was normal. Consumptive coagulopathies produce a decrease in both the functional and antigenic concentrations of protein C, thus a defect in protein C synthesis was suspected. Inhibition of gamma-carboxylation secondary to vitamin K antagonism results i...
A liquid chromatographic procedure for the analysis of yohimbine in equine serum and urine.
Journal of analytical toxicology    May 1, 1993   Volume 17, Issue 3 178-181 doi: 10.1093/jat/17.3.178
Reimer G, Suarez A, Chui YC.A standardbred mare was dosed with 40 mg yohimbine intravenously. Serum and urine samples were collected and analyzed for yohimbine using solvent extraction and reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorescence detection. Maximum yohimbine concentrations of 45 and 18 ng/mL were observed in serum and urine samples, respectively. Elimination was rapid, with half-lives of approximately 20 and 53 min observed for serum and urine, respectively. The presence of yohimbine in these samples was confirmed by liquid chromatography/mass spectroscopy (LC/MS/MS).
Are tapeworms associated with equine colic? A case control study.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 3 224-226 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02948.x
Proudman CJ, Edwards GB.Faeces samples from 116 horses with colic and 115 non-colic cases were assayed by a centrifugation/floatation method for the presence of tapeworm eggs. Analysis of these data failed to demonstrate an association between tapeworm infection and colic of all types. The data were further analysed according to anatomical site of the lesion causing colic. The risk of ileocaecal colic was increased in the presence of tapeworms. Age, breed and sex were evaluated as possible confounding factors but had no association with the incidence of colic. This study suggests an association between tapeworms and ...