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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.
[Intra-articular comminuted fractures in the articulus talocruralis in horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    August 15, 1975   Volume 88, Issue 16 309-317 
Schebitz H, Dämmrich K, Waibl H.No abstract available
Binding of hexachlorobenzene to erythrocytes: species variation.
Life sciences    August 15, 1975   Volume 17, Issue 4 545-549 doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(75)90088-0
Yang RS, Coulston F, Golberg L.No abstract available
The influence of amino acid substitutions on the conformational energy of cytochrome c.
Biochemistry    August 12, 1975   Volume 14, Issue 16 3518-3526 doi: 10.1021/bi00687a002
Warme PK.Conformational energies have been evaluated for each of the staggered side-chain conformations associated with the 261 amino acid substitutions known to occur among 60 eucaryotic species. At least 86% of these substitutions can be sterically accommodated (one at a time) within the structure of horse-heart cytochrome c resulting from conformational energy refinement. Simultaneous incorporation of all pertinent amino acid substitutions found in eight representative species into the refined horse-heart structure is also shown to be sterically possible, with few exceptions. In two cases (Pekin duc...
Conformational energy refinement of horse-heart ferricytochrome c.
Biochemistry    August 12, 1975   Volume 14, Issue 16 3509-3517 doi: 10.1021/bi00687a001
Warme PK, Scheraga HA.The reported X-ray structure of horse-heart ferricytochrome c has been refined by conformational energy calculations, using a three-stage computational procedure. In stage I, the atomic positions are adjusted to conform to idealized bond lengths and bond angles characteristic of small amino acid derivatives, while yet remaining as close as possible to the X-ray coordinates. In stage II, atomic overlaps are eliminated by adjusting the backbone and side-chain dihedral angles to minimize the nonbonded energy, hydrogen-bonded energy, and rotational energy contributions. In the final stage of refin...
[Possibilities and limits of planned parasite control in the horse].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    August 5, 1975   Volume 82, Issue 8 328-333 
Stoye M.No abstract available
[Epidemic situation of “infectious anemia of horses”].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    August 5, 1975   Volume 82, Issue 8 301-306 
Zettl K, Primus K.No abstract available
The effect of excess dietary iodine on pregnant mares and foals.
The Veterinary record    August 2, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 05 93-95 doi: 10.1136/vr.97.5.93
Drew B, Barber WP, Williams DG.On a thoroughbred stud four foals were born with greatly enlarged thyroids and leg weakness. Two foals died within 18 hours of birth, the others subsequently recovered. An enlarged thyroid was also evident in one of the resident mares. The thyroids from the dead foals were hyperplastic. Feed analyses showed that the mares had an iodine intake of about 83 mg daily, 8-8 ppm of the dietary dry matter, due almost entirely to the high iodine content of a proprietary compound horse nut which had been fed at the daily rate of 12 lb per head. It was concluded from the histology of the thyroids, the hi...
Letter: Uterine prolapse in the mare.
The Veterinary record    August 2, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 05 99-100 doi: 10.1136/vr.97.5.99
Marshall FJ.No abstract available
Positive end-expiratory pressure in anaesthetized spontaneously breathing horses.
British journal of anaesthesia    August 1, 1975   Volume 47, Issue 8 819-824 doi: 10.1093/bja/47.8.819
Hall LW, Trim CM.Horses breathing spontaneously under halothane anaesthesia were subjected to expiratory resistance by the introduction of a water-trap into the expiratory limb of a circle absorber. Resistances of 10 and 20 cm H2O produced no significant increase in PaO2 (P greater than 0.05) during halothane/air and halothane/oxygen anaesthesia. The imposition of resistance was associated with an increase in PaCO2 and a significant increase in mixed venous PCO2. In three animals subjected to 20 cm H2O resistance under halothane/air anaesthesia, the cardiac output was reduced (P less than 0.01). It was conclud...
Hemodynamic studies in conscious domestic ponies.
The Journal of surgical research    August 1, 1975   Volume 19, Issue 2 107-113 doi: 10.1016/0022-4804(75)90114-6
Amend JF, Garner HE, Rosborough JP, Hoff HE.No abstract available
Experiments with limited feeding of horses under field conditions.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    August 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 6 445-462 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1975.tb01452.x
Bengtsson SG.No abstract available
[Ultrastructural and enzyme studies on trained and untrained horse muscles].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    August 1, 1975   Volume 117, Issue 8 453-457 
Straub R, Howald H, Gerber H, Diehl M, Pauli B.No abstract available
Equine ringworm by Trichophyton verrucosum.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    August 1, 1975   Volume 37, Issue 4 407-411 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.37.407
Ichijo S, Konishi T, Takatori K.No abstract available
Excitation of the ventricular epicardium in the horse.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    August 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 6 463-473 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1975.tb01453.x
Muylle E, Oyaert W.Summary Epicardial potential measurements were made in 21 horses. Unipolar and bipolar electrograms were recorded from numerous sites on both the right and left ventricular surface. Unlike the situation in man and dog, the earliest epicardial breakthrough of excitation was present in two areas on the left ventricular surface. Activation of the largest parts of the ventricular surfaces occurred in a very short period of time. No fronts of activation could be demonstrated. Only in some basal parts isochrones could be drawn: the extreme basal areas were the last to be depolarised. A possibl...
Equine carpal fractures (a case report).
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    August 1, 1975   Volume 70, Issue 8 963-965 
Brown MP, Meagher DM.No abstract available
Atrial activation pathways and the P wave in the horse.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    August 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 6 474-484 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1975.tb01454.x
Muylle E, Oyaert W.No abstract available
The medical hazards of horse-riding.
The Practitioner    August 1, 1975   Volume 215, Issue 1286 197-200 
Goulden RP.No abstract available
[Arterial repair after mechanical injury by migrating fourth-stage larvae of Strongylus vulgaris in the horse (a light and electron microscopic study) (author’s transl)].
Beitrage zur Pathologie    August 1, 1975   Volume 155, Issue 4 357-378 
Pauli B, Althaus S, Von Tscharner C.Migrating fourth-stage larvae of Strongylus vulgaris, a parasite of equines, damage the intima of the anterior mesenteric artery and its larger branches and induce thrombus formation on the injured sites. As the time of larval passage through each of these branches has been exactly determined in earlier experiments, the aim of the present studies is to contribute to a more complete understanding of repair mechanisms in the process of time after thrombotic vascular injuries. Methods: five foals were separated individually to specially cleaned stables and given anthelmintic treatment till the ag...
Glucose utilization and contribution to milk components in lactating ponies.
Journal of animal science    August 1, 1975   Volume 41, Issue 2 568-571 doi: 10.2527/jas1975.412568x
Anwer MS, Gronwall R, Chapman TE, Klentz RD.No abstract available
Strongylus vulgaris-the horse killer.
Modern veterinary practice    August 1, 1975   Volume 56, Issue 8 569-572 
Kester WO.No abstract available
Studies on the epidemiology of Strongylus vulgaris infection of the horse.
International journal for parasitology    August 1, 1975   Volume 5, Issue 4 423-426 doi: 10.1016/0020-7519(75)90008-9
Ogbourne CP.Studies on the epidemiology of Strongylus vulgaris infection of the horse. International Journalfor Parasitology 5: 423426. Observations are reported on the size and age structure of Stronglyus vulguris populations recovered from the anterior mesenteric artery and its main branches of horses slaughtered at regular intervals throughout a year. Marked seasonal variations were found in the mean monthly numbers of worms present. During spring/early summer the numbers were relatively low and a large proportion of the arteries had no worms in them at all. Thereafter, the arterial worm burdens q...
Critical and controlled tests of the antiparasitic activity of liquid and paste formulations of trichlorfon in the horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    August 1, 1975   Volume 70, Issue 8 975-978 
Drudge JH, Lyons ET, Tolliver SC.No abstract available
Control of estrus with prostaglandin F2alpha in mares: minimal effective dose and stage of estrous cycle.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 08 1145-1147 
Oxender WD, Noden PA, Bolenbaugh DL, Hafs HD.To determine the minimal effective dose of prostagiandin (PGF2alpha; tromethamine salt) given subcutaneously (SC), mares of mixed breeding (400 kg av body weight) were given 2-, 3-, 5-, and 10-mg doses from 7 to 9 days after ovulation. In some but not all mares given doses of 2 and 3 mg of PGF2alpha, luteolysis occurred, but doses of 5 or 10 mg of PGF2alpha were luteolytic in all mares. The 10-mg dose of PGF2alpha did not cause luteolysis in mares 1 day after ovulation, and caused luteolysis in only 2 of 5 mares on day 3 after ovulation. The same dose of PGF2alpha, however, caused luteolysis i...
Letter: Infertility in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    August 1, 1975   Volume 51, Issue 8 404 
Butterfield RM.No abstract available
Luteolytic factor in stallion semen.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    August 1, 1975   Volume 44, Issue 2 297-299 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0440297
Wodzicka-Tomaszewska M, Okólski A, Bielański A, Bielański W.No abstract available
Atrioventricular dissociation with synchronous diaphragmatic flutter in a horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    August 1, 1975   Volume 70, Issue 8 967-974 
White NA, White SL.No abstract available
Vascular responses in the equine digit.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 08 1249-1253 
Robinson NE, Dabney JM, Weidner WJ, Jones GA, Scott JB.The digital circulation was isolated in 12 ponies under pentobarbital anesthesia. Blood flow was either controlled by a pump or measured under natural perfusion. The responses to rapid changes and stoppages of blood flow indicated no evidence of autoregulation or reactive hyperemia. Local administration of acetylcholine, histamine, and prostaglandins E1 and E2 decreased prevenous resistance, whereas epinephrine and serotonin caused prevenous constriction. Large doses of epinephrine and serotonin decreased venous caliber. The effects of prostaglandins A1 and F2alpha were variable. The equine di...
Scanning electron microscopy of the bovine, equine, porcine, and caprine uterine tube (oviduct).
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 08 1069-1075 
Stalheim OH, Gallagher JE, Deyoe BL.The luminal surface topography of bovine, equine, porcine, and caprine uterine tubes was studied by scanning electron microscopy. The main types of epithelial cells were secretory and ciliated. Both types were more active during estrus. Cilia were observed in both the infundibular and the ampular parts of the uterine tube, but ciliated cells were more numerous than secretory cells on the surface of the fimbriae. Sperm were observed in the ampulla of the uterine tube of the cow 2 hours after artificial insemination.
Papers and articles measurement of central venous pressure in horses.
The Veterinary record    July 26, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 4 66-69 doi: 10.1136/vr.97.4.66
Hall LW, Nigam JM.Central venous pressure measurements were made in 74 horses and ponies free from clinical evidence of cardiopulmonary disease. Using the sternal manubrium as the zero reference point, the mean value obtained was 12 cm H2O (S.D. +/- 6). There was a significant correlation with body weight (r=0.6, p less than 0.001) but there was none with age, sex, breed or type. During halothane anaesthesia, using the same reference point, the mean value was 24.5 cm H2O (S.D. +/- 6) in 28 animals in right lateral recumbency, 29 cm H2O (S.D. +/- 8) in 17 animals in left lateral recumbency and -6 cm H20 (S.D. +/...
Letter: Uterine prolapse in the mare.
The Veterinary record    July 26, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 4 80 doi: 10.1136/vr.97.4.80
Donaldson R, Kernohan R.No abstract available