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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.
Studies on a new paste preparation of phenylbutazone.
The Veterinary record    June 25, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 26 602-607 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.26.602
Snow DH, Douglas TA.The absorption characteristics of a new paste preparation of phenylbutazone were studied in ponies and thoroughbreds. The results suggested that at a similar dose rate of 5 mg/kg greater bioavailability results from the paste than from a powder preparation. Delivery of an accurate dosage of the paste was not possible using the multidose applicator. Repeated administration of the paste preparation (5 mg/kg twice daily) indicated that it is more toxic to both ponies and thoroughbreds than a powder preparation. In addition to the toxic manifestations previously reported, a neutropenia developed d...
Biochemical and haematological effects of a revised dosage schedule of phenylbutazone in horses.
The Veterinary record    June 25, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 26 599-602 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.26.599
Taylor JB, Walland A, Lees P, Gerring EL, Maitho TE, Millar JD.Five pairs of matched horses were used to study the biochemical and haematological effects of a revised dosage schedule of phenylbutazone. One group of five horses received a phenylbutazone paste formulation daily for 12 days and a second group of five animals received a placebo preparation for a similar time. Some statistically significant differences were recorded from pretreatment levels in both groups of horses. These changes represented instability in baseline levels and could not be ascribed to phenylbutazone administration.
Ecology and catastrophic mortality in wild horses: implications for interpreting fossil assemblages.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    June 24, 1983   Volume 220, Issue 4604 1403-1404 doi: 10.1126/science.220.4604.1403
Berger J.The identities, sexes, and reproductive status of groups of wild horses (Equus caballus) living in the Great Basin Desert of North America were known prior to their deaths on ridgelines. Another group of very young horses died on a quagmire. Snow accumulation or drought was apparently responsible for the mass deaths. These data have implications for reconstructing some aspects of the social structure of fossil mammals on the basis of skewed sex or age ratios in bone assemblages.
Acute vitamin D3 toxicosis in horses: case reports and experimental studies of the comparative toxicity of vitamins D2 and D3.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1358-1369 
Harrington DD, Page EH.Acute vitamin D toxicosis was diagnosed in 2 horses fed a grain ration containing 1,102,311 IU of cholecalciferol (vitamin D3)/kg (500,000 IU/lb) for about 30 days. Horse 1 died acutely with extensive mineralization of cardiovascular and other soft tissues. Horse 2, which had severe clinical signs and clinicopathologic changes of toxicosis, was treated with nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs and recovered in about 6 months. In an experimental study, the toxicity of ergocalciferol (vitamin D2) and cholecalciferol was compared in 2 horses (No. 3 and 4) given the respective vitamins at a daily d...
An unusual fracture of the tibiotarsal bone in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1395-1396 
Sullins KE, Stashak TS.No abstract available
Secondary closure of infected abdominal incisions in cattle and horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1377-1379 
Tulleners EP, Donawick WJ.Infected abdominal incisions in 7 cattle and 3 horses were resutured with monofilamentous stainless steel retention sutures. After debridement of devitalized and infected tissue, wound edges were apposed with simple interrupted vertical (5 cattle, 3 horses) or horizontal (2 cattle) mattress sutures, placed through all layers of the body wall. Sutures were placed 2 to 3 cm apart over rubber tubing, 3 to 5 cm from wound edges. In 5 of the 10 operations, skin and subcutaneous tissue were left unsutured. The repaired wounds were supported with an encircling elastic roll bandage and sterile compres...
Mycoplasma felis as a cause of pleuritis in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1374-1376 
Ogilvie TH, Rosendal S, Blackwell TE, Rostkowski CM, Julian RJ, Ruhnke L.Mycoplasma felis was the only organism recovered from the thoracic cavity of a horse with pleuritis. Large numbers of mildly degenerative neutrophils were in the pleural fluid. The horse developed a serologic response to M felis and recovered during hospitalization. Experimentally, a pony was inoculated in the thoracic cavity with a pure culture of the M felis isolate suspended in the pony's serum. A control pony was inoculated with serum only. Within 48 hours, the principal pony developed fever, increased respiratory rate, pleural effusion, and signs of pain. A highly cellular exudate with no...
Gastroesophageal ulceration and candidiasis in foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1370-1373 
Gross TL, Mayhew IG.Gastroesophageal candidiasis in association with ulceration was diagnosed in 5 foals in which signs of colic had been nonresponsive to medical treatment. The ulceration was found in the stomach of all foals and in the esophagus of 1 foal. Candida colonized hyperkeratotic mucosa surrounding the ulcers, and the associated inflammation resulted in splitting of the mucosal epithelium. Loss of the superficial mucosa may have allowed invasion by bacteria, leading to ulceration.
Leiomyoma of the small intestine in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1398 
Hanes GE, Robertson JT.No abstract available
Activity of cefotaxime, a beta-lactam antibiotic, against the contagious equine metritis organism.
The Veterinary record    June 11, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 24 569-570 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.24.569
Timoney PJ, Shin SJ, Huntress C, Strickland KL.No abstract available
[Echography–a supplement to gynecological methods ovulation and pregnancy diagnosis in the horse].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    June 6, 1983   Volume 90, Issue 6 225-230 
Merkt H, Günzel AR, Abel W, Mattos R.No abstract available
Effect of ambient temperature upon the surface temperature of the equine limb.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1098-1101 
Palmer SE.Ten clinically healthy adult horses were examined with the portable infrared thermometer at ambient temperatures of 5, 15, and 25 C to evaluate the thermal response of limbs of the horse to variations of ambient temperature. Limb surface temperature varied in direct proportion to changes in the ambient temperature, with considerable variation occurring among individual horses, especially at the lower temperatures. Areas of proximal parts of the limbs were more resistant to temperature variation than were distal parts. Ambient temperature had a statistically significant, but clinically unimport...
Automatic noninvasive sphygmomanometry in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1230-1233 
Muir WW, Wade A, Grospitch B.Systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressures and heart rate were determined in 73 horses, using an indirect automatic oscillometric technique. Blood pressure and heart rate data obtained by sphygmomanometry were compared with similar data obtained from cannulation of the horses' facial or dorsal metatarsal arteries. Good correlation between direct (actual) and indirect (oscillometric) blood pressures and heart rate measurements were obtained when the heart rate was low, using high sensitivity setting. Cardiac arrhythmias or hypotension prevented oscillometric measurements from being ...
Pharmacokinetics of phenytoin (diphenylhydantoin) in horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 2 133-140 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1983.tb00390.x
Kowalczyk DF, Beech J.The pharmacokinetics of the anti-convulsant phenytoin were investigated in clinically healthy horses after oral (p.o.) and intravenous (i.v.) administration. A single dose of phenytoin (8.8 mg/kg body weight) was given i.v. as a bolus to nine horses and one horse received 13.2 mg/kg. A two-compartment open model was used to describe the disposition of phenytoin. Four of the horses that received an i.v. dose (three at 8.8 mg/kg and one at 13.2 mg/kg) were then given the same dose 3 days later by the oral route. Phenytoin achieved a peak concentration in serum within 1-4 h after p.o. administrat...
Diuretic effect of high-ceiling diuretics in ponies.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 2 157-158 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1983.tb00394.x
Frey HH.No abstract available
The pathogenicity in mice of respiratory, abortion and paresis isolates of equine herpesvirus-1.
Veterinary microbiology    June 1, 1983   Volume 8, Issue 3 301-305 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(83)90082-2
Patel JR, Edington N.Eleven isolates of equine herpesvirus-1 (subtype 1) all infected the brain following intracerebral inoculation of 2 d.o. mice. Most isolates were from cases of paresis, abortion or respiratory disease in the U.K., but established strains were also included. They divided into two subgroups. The 5 less pathogenic isolates were characterized by being restricted predominantly to the olfactory lobes. The 6 pathogenic isolates included the three known to cause equine paresis and were detected in neurones throughout the brain as well as giving rise to viraemia and infecting bronchial and renal epithe...
Complications associated with immunotherapy of equine phycomycosis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1227-1229 
Miller RI, Wold D, Lindsay WA, Beadle RE, McClure JJ, McClure JR, McCoy DJ.Five horses with pythiosis of the limbs were treated unsuccessfully by surgery or topical application of amphotericin B, or both. Follow-up immunotherapy resulted in 1 horse responding favorably. Three horses were cured of the fungal infection but developed osteitis or deep-seated laminitis, which necessitated their destruction. The remaining horse, which had severe anemia, died before the course of vaccination was completed.
Heritability and repeatability of speed for 2- and 3-year-old standardbred racehorses.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1983   Volume 56, Issue 6 1294-1305 doi: 10.2527/jas1983.5661294x
Tolley EA, Notter DR, Marlowe TJ.Repeatabilities (t) and heritabilities (h2) of racing time were estimated from data on 7,206 2- and 3-yr-old Standardbred pacers and trotters competing in 1-mile (1.6 km) charted races at six tracks between 1975 and 1978. A total of 38,487 records representing 2,387 sire progeny groups were divided into subsets by gait, age and track. Initially, the designation "class of race" was recognized as a subjective categorization that reflected nonrandom assignments of horses to races. After extensive investigation, we concluded that racing times should be adjusted by linear regression for the time of...
Surface receptors for IgG and complement on equine alveolar macrophages.
Inflammation    June 1, 1983   Volume 7, Issue 2 183-195 doi: 10.1007/BF00917822
Dyer RM, Leid RW.Isolated equine alveolar macrophages obtained by bronchopulmonary lavage of four live ponies demonstrated surface receptors for equine IgG, equine IgM, and complement-coated sheep red blood cells, but not equine IgM or complement-coated erythrocytes alone. In addition, demonstration of IgG receptors was found to depend on the level of erythrocyte sensitization and could not be demonstrated by red blood cell rosetting techniques at low levels of sensitization. Demonstration of receptors for equine complement by red cell rosetting techniques required the presence of both IgM antibody and serum d...
A coccidial sporocyst in equine urine.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1250-1251 
Reinemeyer CR, Jacobs RM, Spurlock GN.No abstract available
Studies with inactivated equine influenza vaccine. 2. Protection against experimental infection with influenza virus A/equine/Newmarket/79 (H3N8).
The Journal of hygiene    June 1, 1983   Volume 90, Issue 3 385-395 doi: 10.1017/s0022172400029016
Mumford J, Wood JM, Scott AM, Folkers C, Schild GC.Forty ponies immunized with inactivated virus vaccine containing A/equine/Miami/63 (H3N8) virus and six unvaccinated, seronegative ponies were experimentally challenged with a representative of recent equine H3N8 virus isolates, A/equine/Newmarket/79. All unvaccinated ponies became infected as judged by virus excretion, febrile responses and antibody responses, but only two of the vaccinated ponies were fully protected. Pre-challenge antibody levels to A/Newmarket/79 virus detected by single radial haemolysis (SRH) correlated well with the degree of clinical protection but the levels required ...
[Application of a new latex test for indirect pregnancy diagnosis in mares].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    June 1, 1983   Volume 96, Issue 6 192-194 
Bostedt H, Hirschhäuser R, Blanco C, Toth T.No abstract available
[Study of conformational changes in alcohol dehydrogenase during its interaction with silochrome adsorbent by the EPR spectroscopy method].
Biokhimiia (Moscow, Russia)    June 1, 1983   Volume 48, Issue 6 970-974 
Kharakhonycheva NV, Likhtenshteĭn GI, Shkileva EA, Adamenkova MD.The possible use of EPR spectroscopy (spin labelling) for the study of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase with a silochrome adsorbent is discussed. The rotatory diffusion of nitroxyl labels chemically linked to the enzyme was studied with reference to the time of the enzyme incubation with the adsorbent and the degree of its accumulation on the adsorbent surface. The mobility of nitroxyl radicals attached to the protein globules was shown to increase with time. It was concluded that the conformation of the enzyme molecules changes during their interaction with the adsorbent.
Response to saline solution of normally fed horses and horses dehydrated by fasting.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 964-968 
Carlson GP, Rumbaugh GE.No abstract available
Fatty acid composition of serum lipids in fasting ponies.
Lipids    June 1, 1983   Volume 18, Issue 6 397-401 doi: 10.1007/BF02535424
Bauer JE, Ransone WD.Alterations in the fatty acid distribution of total lipid extracts and 4 of the major lipid subclasses of serum in ponies fasted overnight and for 4 and 7 days were determined. Although increases in 16:0, 16:1, and 18:3 omega 3 were observed, decreased amounts of 18:0 and 18:2 omega 6 combined to cause no significant change in the saturated to unsaturated fatty acid ratio in the total extracts. Phospholipid became somewhat preferentially enriched in saturated fatty acids due to a decrease in 18:1, although this response was variable. The free fatty acid and triglyceride fractions both showed i...
Studies with inactivated equine influenza vaccine. 1. Serological responses of ponies to graded doses of vaccine.
The Journal of hygiene    June 1, 1983   Volume 90, Issue 3 371-384 doi: 10.1017/s0022172400029004
Wood JM, Mumford J, Folkers C, Scott AM, Schild GC.Serological responses to three bivalent aqueous equine influenza vaccines of different potency and an adjuvanted bivalent vaccine containing inactivated A/equine/Prague/56 (H7N7) and A/equine/Miami/63 (H3N8) viruses, were examined in seronegative ponies. Potencies of the vaccines, measured by single-radial-diffusion tests, ranged from 4 to 56 micrograms of haemagglutinin (HA) antigen activity/virus strain per dose. Serological responses to vaccination were examined by haemagglutination-inhibition (HI) and single-radial-haemolysis (SRH) tests. Four weeks after a primary dose, HI responses to bo...
Reticulum cell sarcoma in a mare.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1983   Volume 60, Issue 6 189-191 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1983.tb05963.x
Gay CC, Richards WP.No abstract available
Transmural coronary vasodilator reserve and flow distribution during severe exercise in ponies.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    June 1, 1983   Volume 54, Issue 6 1641-1652 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1983.54.6.1641
Parks CM, Manohar M.Transmural distribution of myocardial blood flow and coronary vasodilator reserve (15-microns-diam radionuclide-labeled microspheres) was studied in 11 adult, healthy ponies at rest and during moderate and severe exercise performed on a treadmill (heart rate 56 +/- 4, 154 +/- 3, and 225 +/- 7 beats . min-1, respectively.). Exercise resulted in a marked increase in cardiac output, mean aortic pressure, right ventricular (RV) systolic and end-diastolic pressure, left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic pressure, and the maximum rate of rise of LV pressure LV (dP/dtmax). Accompanying these changes was...
Oxfendazole treatment of horses.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1983   Volume 60, Issue 6 193-194 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1983.tb05966.x
Guinan JJ.No abstract available
Chemiluminescence response of equine alveolar macrophages during stimulation with latex beads, or IgG-opsonized sheep red blood cells.
Inflammation    June 1, 1983   Volume 7, Issue 2 169-182 doi: 10.1007/BF00917821
Dyer RM, Leid RW.Isolated equine alveolar macrophages were shown to generate a luminol-dependent light response when challenged with a phagocytic stimulus. The chemiluminescent response was not detected with luminol prepared at 1.0 x 10(-5) or 1.0 x 10(-4) molar concentrations, but was readily quantitated when used at a 1.0 x 10(-3) molar concentration. Challenge of the alveolar macrophages with latex particles or with equine IgG-coated sheep red blood cells elicited the luminol-dependent light response, whereas unchallenged equine alveolar macrophages or those challenged with unopsonized erythrocytes failed t...