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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.
Evaluation of sulbactam plus ampicillin for treatment of experimentally induced Klebsiella pneumoniae lung infection in foals.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 6 1059-1067 
Hoffman AM, Viel L, Muckle CA, Yager JS, Staempfli HR.Efficacy of sulbactam, a beta-lactamase inhibitor, in combination with ampicillin, was evaluated for treatment of experimentally induced pneumonia caused by beta-lactam-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae. Infection was experimentally induced in 18 healthy weanling foals that were randomly allocated to 3 treatment groups: sulbactam plus ampicillin (S/A, 3.3 and 6.6 mg/kg of body weight, respectively), ampicillin (6.6 mg/kg), or vehicle only. Foals were treated daily for 7 days; the observer was unaware of treatment status. Compared with ampicillin and vehicle, treatment with S/A resulted in a stat...
[Use of the Reflotron system for the determination of creatine kinase (CK) in the blood of swine, sheep, cattle, horses and dogs].
Tierarztliche Praxis    June 1, 1992   Volume 20, Issue 3 326-331 
Bickhardt K, Carstensen CA.The Reflotron-CK test was evaluated with blood samples of healthy and diseased pigs, sheep, cattle, horses and dogs in relation to the standard CK-NAC test (UV-method). The precision within the series on the day of blood sampling was better than VK = 7.5% (coefficient of variation) with both methods. The day to day precision was estimated by using deep frozen plasma and was in the same order of magnitude with the Reflotron-CK and the UV-method (CV less than 10%). While fresh whole blood of sheep, cattle, horses and dogs respectively should be applied directly onto the dry reagent carrier with ...
A soluble recombinant fusion protein of the transmembrane envelope protein of equine infectious anaemia virus for ELISA.
Veterinary microbiology    June 1, 1992   Volume 31, Issue 2-3 127-137 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(92)90071-z
Thomas LM, Huntington PJ, Mead LJ, Wingate DL, Rogerson BA, Lew AM.The use of the bacterial expression vector, pGex, to produce an abundant, soluble fusion protein of gp45 from equine infectious anaemia virus is described. Purification of the recombinant protein was achieved by one step affinity chromatography on immobilized glutathione using competitive elution so no harsh conditions were required. This provides a readily available antigen that is defined, plentiful and cheap. Yields of 3.5 mg of purified soluble protein/litre of bacterial culture were obtained. This antigen was found to be suitable for ELISA. Background reactivity to either the glutathione-...
Necropsies of eight horses infected with Strongylus equinus and Strongylus edentatus.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    June 1, 1992   Volume 63, Issue 2 66-69 
Petty DP, Lange AL, Verster A, Hattingh J.Ponies (n = 8) approximately 18 months old, were infected with 20,000 to 30,000 infective larvae of Strongylus equinus with less than 10% contamination with Strongylus edentatus larvae and necropsied 7 months post-infection. Lesions were present in the omentum, liver, pancreas, ventral colon, caecum and occasionally in the lungs. There were numerous intraabdominal adhesions and severe multiple granulomatous omentitis. Pancreatic damage, which characterises S. equinus, was exceptionally mild and was manifested mainly by slight periductular infiltration of eosinophils. Granulomas associated with...
Short-term effect of aldosterone on Na-Cl transport across equine colon.
The American journal of physiology    June 1, 1992   Volume 262, Issue 6 Pt 2 R939-R946 doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.1992.262.6.R939
Clarke LL, Roberts MC, Grubb BR, Argenzio RA.In ponies fed concentrated (pelleted) meals, postprandial increases of plasma aldosterone have been temporally associated with a decrease in colonic fluid volume that parallels the conclusion of postfeeding fermentation. To determine the significance of short-term increases of plasma aldosterone on the rate of colonic Na absorption, in vitro transport studies were conducted on the mucosae of three morphologically distinct colonic segments (i.e., ventral, dorsal, and small colons) from ponies infused with a high physiological concentration of aldosterone for an 8-h period. In control ponies, ba...
Morphologic and biochemical study of sternal cartilage autografts for resurfacing induced osteochondral defects in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 6 1038-1047 
Vachon AM, McIlwraith CW, Powers BE, McFadden PR, Amiel D.Using biodegradable pins, sternal cartilage autografts were fixed into osteochondral defects of the distal radial carpal bone in ten 2 to 3-year-old horses. The defects measured 1 cm2 at the surface and were 4 mm deep. Control osteochondral defects of contralateral carpi were not grafted. After confinement for 7 weeks, horses were walked 1 hour daily on a walker for an additional 9 weeks. Horses were euthanatized at 16 weeks. Half of the repair tissue was processed for histologic and histochemical (H&E and safranin-O fast green) examinations. The other half was used for the following bioch...
Effect of inhalation anaesthetics on total respiratory resistance in conscious ponies.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1992   Volume 15, Issue 2 174-179 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1992.tb01004.x
Hall LW, Young SS.Total respiratory resistance was measured rapidly and non-invasively in 6 conscious ponies before and after they inhaled approximately 25% of the minimal anaesthetic concentration (0.25 MAC) of either enflurane, halothane, or isoflurane, over a 10 min period. The forced random noise (FRN) method was used to measure the impedance over the frequency range of 5 to 40 Hz and its real part, the resistance, was extracted from these impedance measurements. At the concentrations used, halothane appeared to have no effect on the total respiratory resistance; enflurane and isoflurane seemed to increase ...
Dietary selenate versus selenite for cattle, sheep, and horses.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1992   Volume 70, Issue 6 1965-1970 doi: 10.2527/1992.7061965x
Podoll KL, Bernard JB, Ullrey DE, DeBar SR, Ku PK, Magee WT.Food and Drug Administration regulations currently permit addition of .3 mg of Se per kilogram of diet for chickens, turkeys, ducks, swine, sheep, and cattle. However, field reports indicate that this level may not be adequate for ruminants in all situations. Because sodium selenite is the most common supplemental form and is known to be readily absorbed to particles or reduced to insoluble elemental Se or selenides in acid, anaerobic environments, studies were conducted with dairy cattle, sheep, and horses fed sodium selenate to determine whether Se from this source was more bioavailable than...
[The clinical case. Cystoid (type A) in the medial condyle of the bony femur on both sides].
Tierarztliche Praxis    June 1, 1992   Volume 20, Issue 3 242-334 
Zöttl B.No abstract available
Effects of xylazine on ventilation in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 6 916-920 
Lavoie JP, Pascoe JR, Kurpershoek CJ.The effects of 3 commonly used dosages (0.3, 0.5, and 1.1 mg/kg of body weight, IV) of xylazine on ventilatory function were evaluated in 6 Thoroughbred geldings. Altered respiratory patterns developed with all doses of xylazine, and horses had apneic periods lasting 7 to 70 seconds at the 1.1 mg/kg dosage. Respiratory rate, minute volume, and partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood (PaO2) decreased significantly (P less than 0.001) with time after administration of xylazine, but significant differences were not detected among dosages. After an initial insignificant decrease at 1 minute a...
Equine infectious anemia virus gene expression: characterization of the RNA splicing pattern and the protein products encoded by open reading frames S1 and S2.
Journal of virology    June 1, 1992   Volume 66, Issue 6 3455-3465 doi: 10.1128/JVI.66.6.3455-3465.1992
Schiltz RL, Shih DS, Rasty S, Montelaro RC, Rushlow KE.The utilization of predicted splice donor and acceptor sites in generating equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) transcripts in fetal donkey dermal cells (FDD) was examined. A single splice donor site identified immediately upstream of the gag coding region joins the viral leader sequence to all downstream exons of spliced EIAV transcripts. The predominant 3.5-kb transcript synthesized in EIAV-infected FDD cells appears to be generated by a single splicing event which links the leader sequence to the first of two functional splice acceptor sites near the 5' end of the S1 open reading frame (OR...
[Selenium, an essential and toxic element. Latin American data].
Archivos latinoamericanos de nutricion    June 1, 1992   Volume 42, Issue 2 90-93 
Jaffé W.After a brief discussion of some of the aspects of importance, sources, deficiencies and excesses of selenium the great differences of ingestion between different countries are mentioned. Breast fed children from an area in Venezuela ingest 10 times the amount compared with children from Finland. Among sesame seed samples from 20 different countries used as Se indicators, the highest and the lowest values were found in those of Latin-American origin. With very few exceptions the highest and the lowest urinary and serum Se levels reported in the literature came from this region. The performance...
Equine haptoglobin: isolation, characterization, and the effects of ageing, delivery and inflammation on its serum concentration.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    June 1, 1992   Volume 54, Issue 3 435-442 doi: 10.1292/jvms.54.435
Taira T, Fujinaga T, Okumura M, Yamashita K, Tsunoda N, Mizuno S.Haptoglobin (Hp) was isolated from equine serum by ammonium sulphate precipitation, anion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. Equine Hp which migrated to the alpha 2-globulin region in electrophoresis, contained 2 fractions with molecular weights (NW) of 108,000 and 105,000, and each fraction consisting of 2 subunits. Quantitative measurement of Hp in equine serum was performed by the single radial immunodiffusion method using anti-equine Hp serum. In clinically normal horses, the highest concentration of serum Hp was found in newborn foals and a high value was maintained until 12 mont...
Immunotherapy of periocular squamous cell carcinoma with metastasis in a pony.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1992   Volume 200, Issue 11 1678-1681 
McCalla TL, Moore CP, Collier LL.A 5-year-old Pony of America mare was referred for evaluation of inflamed upper and lower right eyelids. Squamous cell carcinoma of the eyelids and ulcerative keratitis secondary to self-trauma were diagnosed. Initial treatment of the eyelid neoplasia with 2 applications of cryotherapy failed to resolve the lesions, and immunotherapy with bacillus of Calmette-Guerin (BCG) was instituted. Multiple injections of BCG over a 17-week period resulted in progressive shrinkage of the tumor mass, but regional metastasis to the ipsilateral submandibular lymph node occurred. Six months later, ocular neop...
Four forearm flexor muscles of the horse, Equus caballus: anatomy and histochemistry.
Journal of morphology    June 1, 1992   Volume 212, Issue 3 269-280 doi: 10.1002/jmor.1052120306
Hermanson JW, Cobb MA.Two of the forearm flexors of the horse, the superficial and deep digital flexor muscles, are critical to support the digital and fetlock joints, exhibit differing insertions, and are passively supported by the proximal and distal check ligaments, respectively. These two muscles differ in histochemical composition and architecture. The differences are correlated with the different stress levels transmitted through their tendons, and the different frequencies of clinical breakdown that have been reported. Both muscles contain type I and type IIa fibers. A few type IIb fibers occurred in the dee...
Bronchial circulation during prolonged exercise in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 6 925-929 
Manohar M, Duren SE, Sikkes BP, Day J, Baker JP.Tracheal, bronchial, and renal flow were studied in 8 healthy ponies at rest and during exercise performed on a treadmill at a speed setting of 20.8 km/h and 7% grade (incline) for 30 minutes. Blood flow was determined with 15-microns-diameter radionuclide-labeled microspheres that were injected into the left ventricle when the ponies were at rest, and at 5, 15, and 26 minutes of exertion. Heart rate and mean aortic pressure increased from resting values (40 +/- 2 beats/min and 124 +/- 3 mm of Hg, respectively) to 152 +/- 8 beats/min and 133 +/- 4 mm of Hg at 5 minutes of exercise, to 169 +/- ...
The role of procaine in adverse reactions to procaine penicillin in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1992   Volume 69, Issue 6 129-133 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1992.tb07480.x
Chapman CB, Courage P, Nielsen IL, Sitaram BR, Huntington PJ.Procaine penicillin is a commonly used antibiotic in equine medicine but its use is associated with a substantial incidence of adverse reactions. Soluble procaine concentrations were determined by HPLC in several commercially available procaine penicillin preparations, including some that were involved in adverse reactions. The mean (+/- SEM) soluble procaine concentrations in the veterinary preparations was 20.18 +/- 5.07 mg/ml, which was higher than the concentration in the only procaine penicillin preparation for use in humans in Australia of 7.3 mg/ml. Heating the veterinary procaine penic...
Immunohistochemical observations on pneumonic lesions caused by Rhodococcus equi in foals.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    June 1, 1992   Volume 54, Issue 3 509-515 doi: 10.1292/jvms.54.509
Ishino S, Kumagai K, Kuniyoshi S, Nakazawa M, Matsuda I, Oka M.An immunohistochemical analysis of Rhodococcus equi-induced pneumonia in 10 foals was performed by biotin-streptavidin system. The detection of R. equi was more sensitive in immuno-stain using anti-R. equi serum than in Gram's stain. This bacteria also reacted to anti-BCG serum. Lysozyme and alpha 1-antitrypsin were detectable in macrophages. A particularly intense staining was observed in association with intracellular bacteria. Though a degree of reaction for alpha 1-antichymotrypsin was very low in comparison with lysozyme and alpha 1-antitrypsin, it was also demonstrated in macrophages ing...
The production of equine monoclonal immunoglobulins by horse-mouse heterohybridomas.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    June 1, 1992   Volume 33, Issue 1-2 129-143 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(92)90040-w
Richards CM, Aucken HA, Tucker EM, Hannant D, Mumford JA, Powell JR.Studies were carried out to determine the optimum conditions for the production of equine monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). Lymphocytes from ponies immunised with influenza A equine 2 virus, isolate A/Equine/Newmarket/79 (H3N8) were fused with mouse myeloma (NSO) cells and with horse-mouse heterohybridomas made aminopterin-sensitive by selective growth in 8-azaguanine. Although all fusions initially resulted in heterohybridoma colonies that secreted equine immunoglobulin, many of these were unable to maintain secretion for longer than a few weeks. Increasing the time between immunisation and the b...
Microvascular circulation of the descending colon in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 6 1001-1006 
Dart AJ, Snyder JR, Harmon FA.The microvascular circulation of the descending colon was studied in 5 adult horses, using microangiography and light microscopy combined with gross studies and scanning electron microscopy of vascular replicas. After heparinization, horses were euthanatized, and 3 segments of the descending colon and its mesentery containing 1 vascular arcade were removed from each horse. The fecal balls were gently massaged from the lumen, and the blood was flushed free of the circulation with isotonic NaCl. In 5 segments, the vascular system was injected with a modified radiopaque medium and evaluated radio...
[Diagnosis and therapy of tendinitis exemplified by the athletic horse].
Sportverletzung Sportschaden : Organ der Gesellschaft fur Orthopadisch-Traumatologische Sportmedizin    June 1, 1992   Volume 6, Issue 2 77-88 doi: 10.1055/s-2007-993531
Rapp HJ, Becker M, Heisse K, Stechele M.This paper reviews the literature and describes our experiences in the diagnosis and treatment of tendinitis in horses. Ultrasonography provides a sensitive tool to diagnose tendinitis and quantitate the degree of damage to the tendon; as well as provide differential diagnoses such as peritendinitis. The principles in therapy of acute tendinitis are: Immediate reduced exercise or rest, physical therapy to reduce inflammation and administration of local and systemic antiinflammatory drugs. The goal is restoration of the tensile strength of the tendon without peritendinous granulation tissue and...
Mammary adenocarcinoma in four mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1992   Volume 200, Issue 11 1675-1677 
Seahorn TL, Hall G, Brumbaugh GW, Honnas CM, Lovering SL, Snyder JR.Mammary gland adenocarcinoma in 4 horses was characterized by firm swelling of the gland and serosanguineous discharge from the teat orifice. Two of the mares had ulcerative lesions of the mammary gland. Palpation of the affected gland typically elicited signs of pain. Diagnosis was assisted by cytologic evaluation of the fluid discharge, but definitive diagnosis was based on histologic examination. Treatment included mastectomy and lymphadenectomy.
Tracheal obstruction from tracheal collapse associated with pneumonia in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1992   Volume 200, Issue 11 1698-1700 
Fenger CK, Kohn CW.A 20-month-old Quarter Horse stallion was admitted for evaluation of labored breathing, honking cough, and bilateral epistaxis that were caused by pneumonia and collapsed trachea. A transtracheal aspiration revealed highly cellular, serosanguineous fluid. Radiography revealed a patchy alveolar pattern and a narrowed tracheal lumen. Endoscopy confirmed narrowing of the tracheal lumen. Streptococcus zooepidemicus was isolated on culture of the transtracheal aspirate. The horse responded to penicillin treatment, and the tracheal collapse improved endoscopically after 4 days, with complete recover...
Role of the eosinophil in serum-mediated adherence of equine leukocytes to infective larvae of Strongylus vulgaris.
The Journal of parasitology    June 1, 1992   Volume 78, Issue 3 477-484 
Klei TR, Chapman MR, Dennis VA.The adherence of equine leukocytes to Strongylus vulgaris infective larvae (L3) in the presence of normal and immune sera was examined in vitro. Immune sera promoted adherence of buffy coat cells from ponies with S. vulgaris-induced eosinophilia (eosinophilic ponies) to S. vulgaris L3. However, eosinophils in the buffy coat cells were the predominant adherent cell type. Studies using leukocyte populations enriched for eosinophils, neutrophils, and mononuclear cells from eosinophilic ponies support the observations using buffy coat cells that eosinophils were the main effector cells. Adherent e...
[Two rare lens abnormalities in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    June 1, 1992   Volume 20, Issue 3 282-286 
Gerhards H, Werry H, Deegen E, Köstlin RG.Coloboma and ectopia of the crystalline lens are rarely encountered or diagnosed congenital defects of the equine eye. The clinical and ophthalmoscopic features of a congenital coloboma of the lens in a 3 year old Hanoverian stallion and of an ectopic lens in a 6-month old Hanoverian filly are described and depicted. In the stallion, the lens coloboma was associated with a partial coloboma of the zonules, and in the filly, the ectopic lens was small and spherical (microphakia, spherophakia) and associated with syneresis of and small floaters in the vitreous. Although it cannot be excluded that...
[Weak viability syndrome in newborn foals. Retrospective studies of the etiological clarification and chance for recovery].
Tierarztliche Praxis    June 1, 1992   Volume 20, Issue 3 287-291 
Sobiraj A, Warko G, Lehmann B, Bostedt H.This review of therapeutic results involved 115 foals with delayed viability syndrome (DVS). The foals were up to four days old. It could be shown that prognosis quoad vitam depended very much on the severity of illness, which could be determined primarily by the foals' ability to stand (SA) and secondly by the presence of the suckling reflex (SR). Those foals that were (still) able to stand--while the suckling reflex was/was not present (anymore) (SA+, SR+; SA+, SR-)--had good prospects of recovery regardless of the causal disease. The chances for survival were significantly poorer if the foa...
An unusual complication of strangles in a pony.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 1, 1992   Volume 33, Issue 6 400-401 
Bell RJ, Smart ME.No abstract available
Measurement of serum myoglobin concentrations in horses by immunodiffusion.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 6 957-960 
Holmgren N, Valberg S.Quantitative immunodiffusion in one dimension was performed in 6-mm Duran tubes containing a 1% Nobel agar solution and various dilutions of antisera. A series of dilutions of pure myoglobin in equine sera as well as plasma from horses with rhabdomyolysis were tested. Standard curves were prepared of the migration distance of the formed precipitate from the meniscus of the gel after 3, 6, 12, and 24 hours. The clearest line of precipitate was formed with a 1:20 dilution of antisera in agar. Standard curves were nonlinear and plasma myoglobin could be detected at 2 micrograms of myoglobin/ml or...
Viscosity and rheologic properties of blood from clinically normal horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 6 966-970 
Andrews FM, Korenek NL, Sanders WL, Hamlin RL.Blood viscosity (BV) was measured in 32 healthy horses at 6 spindle speeds (60, 30, 12, 6, 3, and 1.5 rpm) and for PCV of 40%, using a digital rotational cone and plate microviscometer. Also, in 7 of 32 horses, BV was measured 3 times each, for 3 PCV values (20, 40, and 60%), and at each spindle speed to determine effect of PCV on BV and machine and among-horse variations. Total plasma protein and fibrinogen concentrations were measured in all horses, using a standard refractometer and heat precipitation, respectively. In 7 of 32 horses, quantitative fibrinogen concentration was measured, usin...
A comparison of the sedative effects of three alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonists (romifidine, detomidine and xylazine) in the horse.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1992   Volume 15, Issue 2 194-201 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1992.tb01007.x
England GC, Clarke KW, Goossens L.The sedative effects of a new alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonist, romifidine, were compared with those of xylazine and detomidine. Five horses were treated with two doses of romifidine (40 micrograms/kg body weight and 80 micrograms/kg body weight), two doses of detomidine (10 micrograms/kg body weight and 20 micrograms/kg body weight) and one dose of xylazine (1 mg/kg body weight) given by intravenous injection using a Latin-square design. The dose of 80 micrograms/kg romifidine appeared equipotent to 1 mg/kg xylazine and 20 micrograms/kg detomidine, although at these doses both xylazine and detomi...