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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.
Datura contamination of hay as the suspected cause of an extensive outbreak of impaction colic in horses.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    August 20, 2005   Volume 76, Issue 2 107-112 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v76i2.407
Naudé TW, Gerber R, Smith RJ, Botha CJ.Datura poisoning of horses is extensively reviewed. An outbreak of intractable impaction colic affecting 18 of 83 horses was stopped by withdrawing dried tef hay contaminated with young Datura plants. The dried, botanically identified Datura stramonium and D. ferox contained respectively 0.15% mass/mass (m/m) hyoscyamine as well as 0.16% m/m hyoscine (scopolamine) and only hyoscine at a concentration of 0.11% m/m. Immature, unidentifiable plants resembling D. stramonium, contained 0.14% m/m and 0.12% m/m of the 2 respective tropane alkaloids. The outbreak was characterised by protracted and re...
Tracheal perforation managed by temporary tracheostomy in a horse.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    August 20, 2005   Volume 76, Issue 2 113-115 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v76i2.408
Saulez MN, Slovis NM, Louden AT.Tracheal trauma with resultant rupture is uncommonly reported in veterinary literature. We report the case of a 16-year-old Thoroughbred gelding that sustained a 1 cm longitudinal perforation of the dorsal tracheal membrane in the proximal cervical region. The horse subsequently developed dyspnoea due to acute upper respiratory obstruction secondary to severe emphysema of the guttural pouches. A temporary tracheostomy caudal to the site of tracheal perforation was performed under local anaesthesia. This procedure helped relieve the upper airway obstruction and aided resolution of the injury by...
Mechanical horseback riding improves insulin sensitivity in elder diabetic patients.
Diabetes research and clinical practice    August 18, 2005   Volume 71, Issue 2 124-130 doi: 10.1016/j.diabres.2005.06.012
Kubota M, Nagasaki M, Tokudome M, Shinomiya Y, Ozawa T, Sato Y.The present study was undertaken to analyze the acute and chronic effects of exercise on insulin sensitivity in elder diabetic patients using a horseback riding therapeutic equipment (Joba). The acute effects of exercise were examined by means of a single session of Joba riding that lasted for 30 min. The average glucose infusion rates (GIR) before and during exercise were regarded as an index of the insulin action in peripheral tissues by the euglycemic clamp. The chronic effects of exercise were studied by training the elder diabetic patients for 12 weeks using the Joba apparatus. The insuli...
Antibodies and PMBC from EIAV infected carrier horses recognize gp45 and p26 synthetic peptides.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    August 18, 2005   Volume 108, Issue 3-4 335-343 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2005.06.007
Soutullo A, García MI, Bailat A, Racca A, Tonarelli G, Malan Borel I.Equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) is a lentivirus causing a persistent infection in horses characterized by recurrent febrile episodes and high levels of viremia associated with a novel antigenic strain of the virus. The virus contains two envelope glycoproteins, gp90 and gp45, and four internal proteins, p26, p15, p11 and p9. Considering that the most infected horses are able to restrict EIAV replication to very low levels and that gp45 and p26 contain highly conserved epitopes among lentiviruses, it would be necessary to identify those conserved epitopes stimulating cellular and humoral ...
Comparative morphological study on the tongue and lingual papillae of horses (Perissodactyla) and selected ruminantia (Artiodactyla).
Italian journal of anatomy and embryology = Archivio italiano di anatomia ed embriologia    August 17, 2005   Volume 110, Issue 2 Suppl 1 55-63 
Kobayashi K, Jackowiak H, Frackowiak H, Yoshimura K, Kumakura M, Kobayashi K.A common characteristic of horses, Rocky Mountain goats, and cattle is that they all have a well developed lingual prominence on the dorsal surface of the posterior area of the tongue. Foliate papillae were found in the horse studied but not in the goat or in cattle. The horse filiform papillae had a long and slender external form with a thin and slender CTC, while in the goat and cattle the external form consisted of a large thick main process and the CTC consisted of a bundle of numerous rod-shaped protrusions. The special papilla found on the lingual prominence resembled larger filiform-lik...
Reticulocyte changes after experimental anemia and erythropoietin treatment of horses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    August 17, 2005   Volume 99, Issue 3 915-921 doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00438.2005
Cooper C, Sears W, Bienzle D.Availability of recombinant human erythropoietin (EPO) has facilitated use to enhance red blood cell production, and therefore aerobic performance, in human and equine athletes. Recombinant human EPO promotes growth and differentiation of equine erythroid precursor cells, but in some horses repeat administration induces immune interference with endogenous EPO resulting in fatal anemia. Although blood reticulocyte parameters acquire unique changes in humans treated with EPO, with manual enumeration methods, horses were not considered to release reticulocytes from the bone marrow into circulatio...
Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Stallion Reproduction, Hannover, Germany, October 2005.
Animal reproduction science    August 17, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 1-321 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2005.07.006
No abstract available
Carpal collateral ligament desmopathy in three horses.
The Veterinary record    August 16, 2005   Volume 157, Issue 7 197-201 doi: 10.1136/vr.157.7.197
Desmaizières LM, Cauvin ER.The radiographic and ultrasonographic findings in three horses with severe damage to the collateral ligaments of the carpus, associated with degenerative joint disease, are described. The horses remained lame despite prolonged rest and medical management, primarily because of the progression of the joint disease. Ultrasonography was found to be an accurate method for diagnosing the injury to the ligaments and is recommended as part of a routine examination in suspected carpal injuries.
IgA Fc receptors in cattle and horses.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    August 16, 2005   Volume 108, Issue 1-2 139-143 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2005.07.008
Morton HC.The biological role of IgA depends, at least partly, on the interaction with specific receptors (FcalphaRs) on the surface of leukocytes. The human FcalphaR, CD89, was the first IgA Fc receptor to be identified, and binding of IgA-coated particles to CD89 triggers numerous cellular effector functions including phagocytosis, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC), and release of inflammatory mediators. Recently, CD89 orthologs have been identified in a number of other species, including cows and horses. This brief review will summarize our current knowledge regarding the structure...
Temporal regulation of cytokine mRNA expression in equine recurrent airway obstruction.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    August 16, 2005   Volume 108, Issue 1-2 237-245 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2005.07.013
Horohov DW, Beadle RE, Mouch S, Pourciau SS.Acute and chronic inflammation of the airway remains an important health problem for equids. "Heaves" or recurrent airway obstruction (RAO) remains one of the most commonly diagnosed conditions affecting the lung of older horses in Europe and the United States. The typical clinical signs of RAO include non-productive coughing, serous nasal discharge, labored expiratory effort, and flaring of the nostrils. Auscultation of the lungs of the affected horse often reveals abnormal respiratory sounds, described as crackles and wheezes, throughout the area of the lung field. These clinical signs occur...
Phylogenetic relationships of Sarcocystis neurona of horses and opossums to other cyst-forming coccidia deduced from SSU rRNA gene sequences.
Parasitology research    August 16, 2005   Volume 97, Issue 5 345-357 doi: 10.1007/s00436-005-1396-5
Elsheikha HM, Lacher DW, Mansfield LS.Phylogenetic analyses based on sequences of the nuclear-encoded small subunit rRNA (ssurRNA) gene were performed to examine the origin, phylogeny, and biogeographic relationships of Sarcocystis neurona isolates from opossums and horses from the State of Michigan, USA, in relation to other cyst-forming coccidia. A total of 31 taxa representing all recognized subfamilies and genera of Sarcocystidae were included in the analyses with clonal isolates of two opossum and two horse S. neurona. Phylogenies obtained by the four tree-building methods were consistent with the classical taxonomy based on ...
Amides as cryoprotectants for freezing stallion semen: a review.
Animal reproduction science    August 16, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 105-113 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2005.07.001
Alvarenga MA, Papa FO, Landim-Alvarenga FC, Medeiros AS.Stallion semen cryopreservation, despite its impact on the horse industry, is not an established technology. During the last years, a number of modifications have been proposed to the freezing process, however, a large population of stallions still have poor semen quality and fertility after frozen-thawed. Glycerol toxicity could be a reason for the variation on stallion sperm freezability. There are limited publications concerning the use of alternative cryoprotectants for equine sperm. Glycerol is contraceptive for some species and other cryoprotectors, such as amides, have been show to be a...
[The issue of continuity in ancient horse medicine: the treatment of diseases of the extremities described in the Kităb al-furŭsĭya wa-l-baytara by Muhammad ibn Ya’qŭb ibn ahĭ Hizăm al-Huttulĭ].
Sudhoffs Archiv    August 13, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1 58-95 
Weidenhöfer V, Martin H, Peters J.Since the late 9th century, scientific literature in Arabian language, based on the translation and compilation of works of the Classical, Persian and Indian culture considerably increased. This also applies to the field of veterinary medicine, as is illustrated by a number of hippological and hippiatric treatises. Affinities between texts on horse medicine in Antiquity and in Arabian literature have been mentioned by philologists, but the degree of dependence on classical texts could not be verified due to the lack of translations of the Arabian texts. In this respect, the oldest available te...
Hemangiosarcoma in 11 young horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    August 13, 2005   Volume 19, Issue 4 564-570 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2005)19[564:hiyh]2.0.co;2
Johns I, Stephen JO, Del Piero F, Richardson DW, Wilkins PA.Hemangiosarcoma is a rare neoplasm of horses and hemangiosarcoma in young horses might behave differently than in mature horses. The purpose of this study was to identify the characteristics of hemangiosarcoma occurring in horses < or = 3 years of age. Medical records from 1982 to 2004 were searched for horses < or = 3 years of age with a histopathologic diagnosis of hemangiosarcoma. Eleven records were identified. Thoroughbred and Thoroughbred crosses predominated. Age ranged from 9 days to 3 years. All horses presented with cutaneous or leg swellings or joint effusion. Physical examina...
Accuracy of indirect measurement of blood pressure in neonatal foals.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    August 13, 2005   Volume 19, Issue 4 571-576 
Giguère S, Knowles HA, Valverde A, Bucki E, Young L.The objectives of this study were to assess, in anesthetized neonatal foals, the accuracy of 2 automated indirect oscillometric monitors for measurement of mean arterial pressure (MAP), to determine the optimal site of cuff placement for MAP monitoring, and to determine the relationship between arterial blood pressure and cardiac output. Ten neonatal foals were anesthetized and instrumented with a catheter in the metatarsal artery for direct MAP monitoring and measurement of cardiac output by lithium dilution. Concurrent MAP measurements were obtained with Cardell and Dinamap oscillometric mon...
Biochemical markers of cardiac injury in normal, surviving septic, or nonsurviving septic neonatal foals.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    August 13, 2005   Volume 19, Issue 4 577-580 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2005)19[577:bmocii]2.0.co;2
Slack JA, McGuirk SM, Erb HN, Lien L, Coombs D, Semrad SD, Riseberg A, Marques F, Darien B, Fallon L, Burns P, Murakami MA, Apple FS, Peek SF.The cardiac biomarkers cardiac troponin T (cTnT) and I (cTnI) and the cardiac isoenzyme of creatine kinase (CKMB) are used extensively in human medicine to diagnose and provide valuable prognostic information in patients with ischemic, traumatic, and septic myocardial injury. We designed a study to establish normal values for these markers in healthy, neonatal foals and to compare them with values obtained from septic neonates in a referral hospital population. The 25th, 50th, 75th, and 95th percentiles for cTnI and CKMB in the healthy-foal population were 0.08, 0.14, 0.25, 0.49 ng/mL and 1.4,...
Insulin-like growth factors and recurrent hypoglycemia associated with renal cell carcinoma in a horse.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    August 13, 2005   Volume 19, Issue 4 613-616 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2005)19[613:igfarh]2.0.co;2
Swain JM, Pirie RS, Hudson NP, Else RW, Evans H, McGorum BC.No abstract available
International Equine Gene Mapping Workshop Report: a comprehensive linkage map constructed with data from new markers and by merging four mapping resources.
Cytogenetic and genome research    August 12, 2005   Volume 111, Issue 1 5-15 doi: 10.1159/000085664
Penedo MC, Millon LV, Bernoco D, Bailey E, Binns M, Cholewinski G, Ellis N, Flynn J, Gralak B, Guthrie A, Hasegawa T, Lindgren G, Lyons LA, Røed KH....A comprehensive male linkage map was generated by adding 359 new, informative microsatellites to the International Equine Gene Map half-sibling reference families and by combining genotype data from three independent mapping resources: a full sibling family created at the Animal Health Trust in Newmarket, United Kingdom, eight half-sibling families from Sweden and two half-sibling families from the University of California, Davis. Because the combined data were derived primarily from half-sibling families, only autosomal markers were analyzed. The map was constructed from a total of 766 marker...
Structure of equine 2′-5’oligoadenylate synthetase (OAS) gene family and FISH mapping of OAS genes to ECA8p15–>p14 and BTA17q24–>q25.
Cytogenetic and genome research    August 12, 2005   Volume 111, Issue 1 51-56 doi: 10.1159/000085670
Perelygin AA, Lear TL, Zharkikh AA, Brinton MA.Mammalian 2'-5' oligoadenylate (2-5A) synthetases are important mediators of the antiviral activity of interferons. Both human and mouse 2-5A synthetase gene families encode four forms of enzymes: small, medium, large and ubiquitin-like. In this study, the structures of four equine OAS genes were determined using DNA sequences derived from fifteen cDNA and four BAC clones. Composition of the equine OAS gene family is more similar to that of the human OAS family than the mouse Oas family. Two OAS-containing bovine BAC clones were identified in GenBank. Both equine and bovine BAC clones were phy...
Equine FISH mapping of 36 genes known to locate on human chromosome ends.
Cytogenetic and genome research    August 12, 2005   Volume 111, Issue 1 46-50 doi: 10.1159/000085669
Perrocheau M, Boutreux V, Chadi-Taourit S, Di Meo GP, Perucatti A, Incarnato D, Cribiu EP, Guérin G, Iannuzzi L.The INRA and the CHORI-241 horse BAC libraries were screened by hybridization with DNA probes and/or directly by PCR with primers designed in consensus sequences of genes localized at the end of each human chromosome. BAC clones were retrieved and 36 could be FISH mapped after the expected gene was confirmed in each BAC by sequencing. Our results show that 16 BACs can be considered to be at telomeric or centromeric positions in the horse and 15 were found at the boundary of actually defined conserved segments even-though often located within conserved syntenic fragments between horse and human...
Analysis of yearly changes in levels of antibodies to Japanese encephalitis virus nonstructural 1 protein in racehorses in central Japan shows high levels of natural virus activity still exist.
Vaccine    August 11, 2005   Volume 24, Issue 4 516-524 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.07.083
Konishi E, Shoda M, Kondo T.Recent reductions in numbers of human and equine Japanese encephalitis (JE) cases in Japan have seen calls to end JE vaccination. Here, we analyzed yearly variations of natural JE virus activity, using sera collected serially in 1998-2003 from racehorses residing in Ibaraki and Shiga prefectures, both located in central Japan. A total of 208 sera from 24 individuals in Ibaraki and 259 from 27 in Shiga were examined for antibodies to JE virus nonstructural 1 (NS1) protein, a marker of natural infection. The natural infection rate in epizootic seasons, which was determined by a significant incre...
Microvascularization and angiogenic activity of equine corpora lutea throughout the estrous cycle.
Domestic animal endocrinology    August 10, 2005   Volume 30, Issue 4 247-259 doi: 10.1016/j.domaniend.2005.07.007
Ferreira-Dias G, Bravo PP, Mateus L, Redmer DA, Medeiros JA.Corpus luteum growth and endocrine function are closely dependent on the formation of new capillaries. The objectives of this study were to evaluate (i) tissue growth and microvascular development in the equine cyclic luteal structures; (ii) in vitro angiogenic activity of luteal tissues in response to luteotrophic (LH, PGE(2)) and luteolytic (PGF(2alpha)) hormones and (iii) to relate data to luteal endocrinological function. Our results show that microvascular density was increased in the early and mid luteal phase, followed by a fall in the late luteal phase and a further decrease in the cor...
Equine blastocyst development after intracytoplasmic injection of sperm subjected to two freeze-thaw cycles.
Theriogenology    August 10, 2005   Volume 65, Issue 4 808-819 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.04.035
Choi YH, Love CC, Varner DD, Hinrichs K.This study was conducted to evaluate the effects of thawing, division into aliquots and refreezing on fertilizing capacity (ability to support embryo development after intracytoplasmic sperm injection; ICSI) of frozen stallion semen. Frozen semen from a fertile stallion was thawed, diluted 1:100 with freezing extender, and refrozen (2F treatment). Control semen was frozen only once. In vitro matured equine oocytes were injected with: (1) motile control spermatozoa; (2) motile 2F spermatozoa; (3) non-motile 2F spermatozoa; or (4) non-motile 2F spermatozoa, followed by injection of sperm extract...
The use of a systemic prime/mucosal boost strategy with an equine influenza ISCOM vaccine to induce protective immunity in horses.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    August 10, 2005   Volume 108, Issue 3-4 345-355 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2005.06.009
Crouch CF, Daly J, Henley W, Hannant D, Wilkins J, Francis MJ.In horses, natural infection confers long lasting protective immunity characterised by mucosal IgA and humoral IgGa and IgGb responses. In order to investigate the potential of locally administered vaccine to induce a protective IgA response, responses generated by vaccination with an immunostimulating complex (ISCOM)-based vaccine for equine influenza (EQUIP F) containing A/eq/Newmarket/77 (H7N7), A/eq/Borlänge/91 (H3N8) and A/eq/Kentucky/98 (H3N8) using a systemic prime/mucosal boost strategy were studied. Seven ponies in the vaccine group received EQUIP F vaccine intranasally 6 weeks after...
The use of impulse oscillometry for separate analysis of inspiratory and expiratory impedance parameters in horses: effects of sedation with xylazine.
Research in veterinary science    August 10, 2005   Volume 80, Issue 2 201-208 doi: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2005.06.005
Klein C, Smith HJ, Reinhold P.To improve the outcome of parameters measured by the impulse oscillometry system (IOS) in horses by separate assessment of inspiratory and expiratory impedance spectra in the frequency range between 1 and 10 Hz. As basis for further studies, the influence of sedation with xylazine on respiratory impedance was also investigated. Methods: (i) The respiratory impedance of 11 horses was measured using IOS before and 6 min after sedation (xylazine; 0.6 mg/kg b.w.). (ii) The time course of impedance parameters in a period of 24 min after administration of xylazine was evaluated in 12 horses at regul...
Biochemical and biomechanical properties of lesion and adjacent articular cartilage after chondral defect repair in an equine model.
The American journal of sports medicine    August 10, 2005   Volume 33, Issue 11 1647-1653 doi: 10.1177/0363546505275487
Strauss EJ, Goodrich LR, Chen CT, Hidaka C, Nixon AJ.Chondral defects may lead to degradative changes in the surrounding cartilage, predisposing patients to developing osteoarthritis. Objective: To quantify changes in the biomechanical and biochemical properties of the articular cartilage adjacent to chondral defects after experimental defect repair. Methods: Controlled laboratory study. Methods: Specimens were harvested from tissue within (lesion), immediately adjacent to, and at a distance from (remote area) a full-thickness cartilage defect 8 months after cartilage repair with genetically modified chondrocytes expressing insulin-like growth f...
Japanese encephalitis in a racing thoroughbred gelding in Hong Kong.
The Veterinary record    August 9, 2005   Volume 157, Issue 6 168-173 doi: 10.1136/vr.157.6.168
Lam KH, Ellis TM, Williams DT, Lunt RA, Daniels PW, Watkins KL, Riggs CM.A horse in Hong Kong that had been vaccinated against Japanese encephalitis suffered a pyrexic episode that culminated in a hyperexcitable state and self-inflicted trauma. Japanese encephalitis was diagnosed on the basis of clinical, pathological and serological observations, and confirmed by the detection of genomic sequences of the virus in spinal cord tissue. Phylogenetic analyses of E gene and NS5-3'UTR sequences revealed divergent clustering of these segments with previously described genotypes, suggesting the possibility that the horse might have been infected with a recombinant between ...
A non-invasive method of tendon force measurement.
Journal of biomechanics    August 9, 2005   Volume 38, Issue 10 2124-2129 doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2004.09.012
Pourcelot P, Defontaine M, Ravary B, Lemâtre M, Crevier-Denoix N.The ability to measure the forces exerted in vivo on tendons and, consequently, the forces produced by muscles on tendons, offers a unique opportunity to investigate questions in disciplines as varied as physiology, biomechanics, orthopaedics and neuroscience. Until now, tendon loads could be assessed directly only by means of invasive sensors implanted within or attached to these collagenous structures. This study shows that the forces acting on tendons can be measured, in a non-invasive way, from the analysis of the propagation of an acoustic wave. Using the equine superficial digital flexor...
Virulence-associated protein-specific serum immunoglobulin G-isotype expression in young foals protected against Rhodococcus equi pneumonia by oral immunization with virulent R. equi.
Vaccine    August 9, 2005   Volume 23, Issue 50 5760-5767 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.07.050
Hooper-McGrevy KE, Wilkie BN, Prescott JF.The purpose of this study was to determine whether foals immunized orally from 2 days of age with virulent Rhodococcus equi developed a protective pulmonary immune response and to characterise the antibody response of the immunized foals to the virulence-associated proteins (Vaps) of the bacterium. Two groups of foals were used. One (n=4) was given live R. equi ATCC 33701 orally at 2, 7, and 14 days of age. The second group comprised three non-immunized foals age-matched to the vaccinates. At 3 weeks of age, 1 week after the final immunization, both groups were challenged intrabronchially with...
A comparison of the effects of equine luteinizing hormone (eLH), equine growth hormone (eGH) and human recombinant insulin-like growth factor (hrIGF-I) on steroid production in cultured equine Leydig cells during sexual maturation.
Animal reproduction science    August 9, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 7-19 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2005.06.014
Hess MF, Roser JF.There are several hormones and local testicular factors involved in the initiation and control of steroidogenesis and spermatogenesis during puberty. GH and its mediator, IGF-I, increase substantially during puberty, and in addition to LH, these growth-promoting hormones can have direct effects upon testicular function. The objective of this work was to investigate the effects of eLH, eGH and hrIGF-I upon Leydig cells derived from testes of colts and stallions representing different stages of development. Testes were obtained from 48 light horse colts and stallions at the time of routine castr...