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Topic:Equine Research

Equine biomechanics involves the study of the mechanical principles that govern the movement and structure of horses. This field examines the anatomical and physiological aspects that contribute to locomotion, including gait patterns, joint function, and muscle dynamics. Researchers utilize advanced technologies such as motion capture and force plate analysis to assess the efficiency and performance of equine movement. Understanding biomechanics aids in optimizing training regimens, improving performance, and preventing injuries. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanics of equine movement, its applications in sports and rehabilitation, and its impact on overall equine health.
Validation of alternative models in genetic evaluation of racing performance in North Swedish and Norwegian cold-blooded trotters.
Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie    June 27, 2011   Volume 129, Issue 2 164-170 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0388.2011.00943.x
Olsen HF, Klemetsdal G, Odegård J, Arnason T.There have been several approaches to the estimation of breeding values of performance in trotters, and the objective of this study was to validate different alternatives for genetic evaluation of racing performance in the North Swedish and Norwegian cold-blooded trotters. The current bivariate approach with the traits racing status (RACE) and earnings (EARN) was compared with a threshold-linear animal model and the univariate alternative with the performance trait only. The models were compared based on cross-validation of standardized earnings, using mean-squared errors of prediction (MSEP) ...
Embryonic stem cells and iPS cells: sources and characteristics.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    June 16, 2011   Volume 27, Issue 2 233-242 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2011.04.003
Hackett CH, Fortier LA.The field of regenerative medicine research is rapidly expanding. One area of interest to equine researchers is the possibility of isolating or generating pluripotent cells, capable of producing differentiated cell types derived from all 3 primary germ layers. Reports of equine embryonic stem-like (ES) cell isolation can be found in the literature. Other groups are working to produce equine-induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. This article summarizes the essential features needed to characterize a cell type as pluripotent, specific challenges in using the horse as a model organism for pluripo...
Distances travelled by feral horses in ‘outback’ Australia.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 27, 2011   Issue 38 582-586 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00203.x
Hampson BA, de Laat MA, Mills PC, Pollitt CC.The distance travelled by Australian feral horses in an unrestricted environment has not previously been determined. It is important to investigate horse movement in wilderness environments to establish baseline data against which the movement of domestically managed horses and wild equids can be compared. Objective: To determine the travel dynamics of 2 groups of feral horses in unrestricted but different wilderness environments. Methods: Twelve feral horses living in 2 wilderness environments (2000 vs. 20,000 km(2)) in outback Australia were tracked for 6.5 consecutive days using custom desi...
Effect of a 120 km endurance race on plasma and muscular neutrophil elastase and myeloperoxidase concentrations in horses.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 27, 2011   Issue 38 275-279 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00269.x
Serteyn D, Sandersen C, Lejeune JP, de la Rebière de Pouyade G, Ceusters J, Mouithys-Mickalad A, Niesten A, Fraipont A, van Erck E, Goachet AG....Intense physical exercise can induce the degranulation of neutrophils leading to an increase in plasma concentration of the neutrophil marker enzymes myeloperoxidase (MPO) and elastase (ELT). These enzymes have pro-oxidative and pro-inflammatory properties and may play a role in the exercised-induced muscular damage. Objective: To measure MPO and ELT concentrations in plasma and muscles of endurance horses and to correlate them to the extent of exercise-induced muscular damage. Methods: Seven endurance horses qualified on 120 km races were tested in this study. Neutrophil count, serum creatine...
Effects of feed deprivation on Standardbred horses fed a forage-only diet and a 50:50 forage-oats diet.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    May 27, 2011   Issue 38 335-340 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00174.x
Connysson M, Essén-Gustavsson B, Lindberg JE, Jansson A.A higher forage allowance to athletic horses might be an alternative to increase health and the gut fluid reservoir. However, more forage might increase bodyweight (bwt) and could therefore be a limitation during competition. Objective: To investigate the effect of a forage-only diet (FD) compared to a 50:50 (dry matter basis) forage:oats diet (OD) on bwt, plasma protein concentration and some metabolic plasma parameters during 12 h of feed deprivation. Methods: Twelve adult Standardbred horses in training were used. The 2 diets were fed in 2 experimental periods of 3 weeks each in a crossover...
Evaluation of ACE, SP17, and FSHB as candidates for stallion fertility in Hanoverian warmblood horses.
Animal reproduction science    May 24, 2011   Volume 126, Issue 3-4 200-206 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2011.05.007
Giesecke K, Hamann H, Stock KF, Klewitz J, Martinsson G, Distl O, Sieme H.The research of fertility in humans and other mammals has strongly advanced in the recent years. The examination of molecular mechanisms influencing horse fertility is relatively recent. We chose the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), the sperm autoantigenic protein 17 (SP17) and the follicle stimulating hormone (FSHB) as candidates for determining stallion fertility and to analyze associations of intragenic single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), flanking microsatellites and candidate-gene linked haplotypes with the pregnancy rate per oestrus (PRO) in 179 Hanoverian stallions. Fertility tra...
A microsatellite analysis of five Colonial Spanish horse populations of the southeastern United States.
Animal genetics    May 23, 2011   Volume 43, Issue 1 53-62 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2011.02210.x
Conant EK, Juras R, Cothran EG.The domestic horse (Equus caballus) was re-introduced to the Americas by Spanish explorers. Although horses from other parts of Europe were subsequently introduced, some New World populations maintain characteristics ascribed to their Spanish heritage. The southeastern United States has a history of Spanish invasion and settlement, and this influence on local feral horse populations includes two feral-recaptured breeds: the Florida Cracker and the Marsh Tacky, both of which are classified as Colonial Spanish horses. The feral Banker horses found on islands off the coast of North Carolina, whic...
Adaptive molecular evolution of the Major Histocompatibility Complex genes, DRA and DQA, in the genus Equus.
BMC evolutionary biology    May 18, 2011   Volume 11 128 doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-128
Kamath PL, Getz WM.Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) genes are central to vertebrate immune response and are believed to be under balancing selection by pathogens. This hypothesis has been supported by observations of extremely high polymorphism, elevated nonsynonymous to synonymous base pair substitution rates and trans-species polymorphisms at these loci. In equids, the organization and variability of this gene family has been described, however the full extent of diversity and selection is unknown. As selection is not expected to act uniformly on a functional gene, maximum likelihood codon-based models o...
Asymmetry of behavioral responses to a human approach in young naive vs. trained horses.
Physiology & behavior    May 13, 2011   Volume 104, Issue 3 464-468 doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.05.009
Sankey C, Henry S, Clouard C, Richard-Yris MA, Hausberger M.The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of training experience on young horses (Equus caballus)' lateralized responses to an approaching human. The results show that the one year old untrained horses display asymmetrical responses to an approaching human, with more negative reactions (escapes, threats) when approached from the left side, while approaches towards the right shoulder elicited more positive behaviors. On the contrary, two years old trained horses reacted equally positively to approaches and contact on both sides. Our findings support those of previous studies investiga...
Equine behaviour and heart rate in temperament tests with or without rider or handler.
Physiology & behavior    May 13, 2011   Volume 104, Issue 3 454-463 doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.05.010
König von Borstel U, Euent S, Graf P, König S, Gauly M.The aim of the present study was to compare horses' heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (RMSSD, pNN50) and behaviour in the same temperament test when being ridden, led, and released free. Behavioural measurements included scores and linear measurements for reactivity (R), activity (A), time to calm down (T) and emotionality (E), recorded during the approach (1) and/or during confrontation with the stimulus (2). Sixty-five horses were each confronted 3 times (1 ridden, 1 led, 1 free running in balanced order) with 3 novel and/or sudden stimuli. Mixed model analysis indicated that leading r...
A cohort study of racing performance in Japanese Thoroughbred racehorses using genome information on ECA18.
Animal genetics    April 19, 2011   Volume 43, Issue 1 42-52 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2011.02201.x
Tozaki T, Hill EW, Hirota K, Kakoi H, Gawahara H, Miyake T, Sugita S, Hasegawa T, Ishida N, Nakano Y, Kurosawa M.Using 1710 Thoroughbred racehorses in Japan, a cohort study was performed to evaluate the influence of genotypes at four single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on equine chromosome 18 (ECA18), which were associated in a previous genome-wide association study for racing performance with lifetime earnings and performance rank. In males, both g.65809482T>C and g.65868604G>T were related to performance rank (P= 0.005). In females, g.65809482T>C (P = 1.76E-6), g.65868604G>T (P=6.81E-6) and g.66493737C>T (P=4.42E-5) were strongly related to performance rank and also to lifetime ...
The mathematical description of the body centre of mass 3D path in human and animal locomotion.
Journal of biomechanics    April 3, 2011   Volume 44, Issue 8 1471-1477 doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2011.03.014
Minetti AE, Cisotti C, Mian OS.Although the 3D trajectory of the body centre of mass during ambulation constitutes the 'locomotor signature' at different gaits and speeds for humans and other legged species, no quantitative method for its description has been proposed in the literature so far. By combining the mathematical discoveries of Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier (1768-1830, analysis of periodic events) and of Jules Antoine Lissajous (1822-1880, parametric equation for closed loops) we designed a method simultaneously capturing the spatial and dynamical features of that 3D trajectory. The motion analysis of walking and r...
Effects of equine grass sickness on sympathetic neurons in prevertebral and paravertebral ganglia.
Journal of comparative pathology    March 31, 2011   Volume 145, Issue 1 35-44 doi: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2010.11.003
Shotton HR, Lincoln J, McGorum BC.Acute equine grass sickness (EGS) is a fatal disease of horses that is thought to be due to ingestion of a neurotoxic agent causing extensive damage to autonomic neurons. The aim of this study was to compare the effects of EGS on neurons in two sympathetic ganglia, the paravertebral cranial cervical ganglion (CCG) and the prevertebral coeliac/cranial mesenteric ganglion (CG/CMG). Specimens from horses with EGS and controls were obtained post mortem and processed using single and double immunofluorescence labelling for PGP 9.5 and HuC/HuD (pan-neuronal markers), TUNEL and caspase 3 (markers for...
Enhanced IL-6 transcriptional response to adenosine receptor ligands in horses with lower airway inflammation.
Equine veterinary journal    March 15, 2011   Volume 44, Issue 1 81-87 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00350.x
Zhang L, Franchini M, Wehrli Eser M, Dip R.Accumulation of extracellular adenosine has been closely associated with human asthmatic responses. However, the relevance of adenosine signalling in equine airways has not previously been investigated. Objective: To determine the expression of adenosine receptors (AR) in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells and assess the reactivity of these cells to AR ligands ex vivo, employing IL-6 as readout of adenosinergic inflammatory signalling. Methods: Eight horses with varying degrees of lower airway inflammation and 10 healthy controls were analysed. Expression of AR-subtypes in each BAL sample was ...
Intrigued about equine modalities.
Journal of psychosocial nursing and mental health services    March 4, 2011   Volume 49, Issue 3 16 doi: 10.3928/02793695-20110208-97
Ashton L.No abstract available
Determination of angiotensin I-converting enzyme activity in equine blood: lack of agreement between methods of analysis.
Journal of veterinary science    March 4, 2011   Volume 12, Issue 1 21-25 doi: 10.4142/jvs.2011.12.1.21
Costa MF, Carmona AK, Alves MF, Ryan TM, Davies HM, Anderson GA, Slocombe RF.Angiotensin-I converting enzyme (ACE) is a key regulator of blood pressure, electrolytes and fluid homeostasis through conversion of angiotensin I into angiotensin II. Recently, a genetic polymorphism of the ACE gene, which accounts for 47% of the variation of ACE activity in blood, has been advocated as a biomarker of athletic aptitude. Different methods of analysis and determination of ACE activity in plasma have been used in human and equine research without a consensus of a "gold standard" method. Different methods have often been used interchangeably or cited as being comparable in the ex...
Particle mapping in stables at an American Thoroughbred racetrack.
Equine veterinary journal    March 4, 2011   Volume 43, Issue 5 599-607 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00331.x
Millerick-May ML, Karmaus W, Derksen FJ, Berthold B, Holcombe SJ, Robinson NE.Airway inflammation and mucus in the trachea are common in racehorses. Fine airborne particles can initiate and coarse particles can worsen airway inflammation in man and in animal models of airway disease. The regional and seasonal distribution of particles of different sizes has never been investigated in American racing stables. Objective: To determine the regional and seasonal concentration and number of airborne particles of different sizes in racing stables. Methods: Direct reading instruments were used to determine the mass concentration and numbers of particles 3 times daily (early mor...
Five novel KIT mutations in horses with white coat colour phenotypes.
Animal genetics    February 23, 2011   Volume 42, Issue 3 337-339 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2011.02173.x
Haase B, Rieder S, Tozaki T, Hasegawa T, Penedo MC, Jude R, Leeb T.No abstract available
Cardiac troponin I concentrations in ponies challenged with equine influenza virus.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    February 11, 2011   Volume 25, Issue 2 339-344 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2011.0680.x
Durando MM, Birks EK, Hussey SB, Lunn DP.Myocarditis is thought to occur secondary to equine influenza virus (EIV) infections in horses, but there is a lack of published evidence. Objective: We proposed that EIV challenge infection in ponies would cause myocardial damage, detectable by increases in plasma cardiac troponin I (cTnI) concentrations. Methods: Twenty-nine influenza-naïve yearling ponies: 23 were part of an influenza vaccine study (11 unvaccinated and 12 vaccinated), and were challenged with 10⁸ EID₅₀ EIV A/eq/Kentucky/91 6 months after vaccination. Six age-matched healthy and unvaccinated ponies concurrently housed...
Functional modelling of an equine bronchoalveolar lavage fluid proteome provides experimental confirmation and functional annotation of equine genome sequences.
Animal genetics    February 6, 2011   Volume 42, Issue 4 395-405 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2010.02158.x
Bright LA, Mujahid N, Nanduri B, McCarthy FM, Costa LR, Burgess SC, Swiderski CE.The equine genome sequence enables the use of high-throughput genomic technologies in equine research, but accurate identification of expressed gene products and interpreting their biological relevance require additional structural and functional genome annotation. Here, we employ the equine genome sequence to identify predicted and known proteins using proteomics and model these proteins into biological pathways, identifying 582 proteins in normal cell-free equine bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF). We improved structural and functional annotation by directly confirming the in vivo expressio...
Evaluation of gastric pressures as an indirect method for measurement of intraabdominal pressures in the horse.
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001)    January 11, 2011   Volume 21, Issue 1 29-35 doi: 10.1111/j.1476-4431.2010.00608.x
Munsterman AS, Hanson RR.To develop an indirect method for measurement of intraabdominal pressures in the standing horse using measurement of gastric pressures as a less invasive technique, and to compare this method with direct intraabdominal pressures obtained from the peritoneal cavity. Methods: Prospective, experimental study. Methods: University-based equine research facility. Methods: Ten healthy adult horses, 7 geldings and 3 mares. Methods: Gastric pressures were measured using a nasogastric tube with a U-tube manometry technique, while intraperitoneal pressures were measured with a peritoneal cannula. Measure...
Dynamics of activities of matrix metalloproteinases-9 and -2, and the tissue inhibitors of MMPs in fetal fluid compartments during gestation and at parturition in the mare.
Theriogenology    January 8, 2011   Volume 75, Issue 6 1130-1138 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.11.023
Oddsdóttir C, Riley SC, Leask R, Shaw DJ, Aurich C, Palm F, Fowden AL, Ricketts SW, Watson ED.During late gestation in the mare, rapid fetal growth is accompanied by considerable placental growth and further invasion of the endometrium by microvilli. This growth requires extensive remodeling of the extracellular matrix (ECM). In early pregnancy, we know that matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 and -2 are involved in the endometrial invasion during endometrial cup formation. The present study investigated whether MMPs are found in fetal fluids later in gestation and during parturition, and if there was a difference in their activities between normal and preterm delivery. Amniotic fluids we...
Infrared spectroscopy reveals both qualitative and quantitative differences in equine subchondral bone during maturation.
Journal of biomedical optics    January 5, 2011   Volume 15, Issue 6 067003 doi: 10.1117/1.3512177
Kobrina Y, Isaksson H, Sinisaari M, Rieppo L, Brama PA, van Weeren R, Helminen HJ, Jurvelin JS, Saarakkala S.The collagen phase in bone is known to undergo major changes during growth and maturation. The objective of this study is to clarify whether Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopy, coupled with cluster analysis, can detect quantitative and qualitative changes in the collagen matrix of subchondral bone in horses during maturation and growth. Equine subchondral bone samples (n = 29) from the proximal joint surface of the first phalanx are prepared from two sites subjected to different loading conditions. Three age groups are studied: newborn (0 days old), immature (5 to 11 months ol...
Understanding the equine cecum-colon ecosystem: current knowledge and future perspectives.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    January 1, 2011   Volume 5, Issue 1 48-56 doi: 10.1017/S1751731110001588
Santos AS, Rodrigues MA, Bessa RJ, Ferreira LM, Martin-Rosset W.Having evolved as a grazing animal, a horse's digestive physiology is characterized by rapid gastric transit, a rapid but intense enzymatic digestion along the small intestine, and a long and intense microbial fermentation in the large intestine. The process of understanding and describing feed degradation mechanisms in the equine digestive system in general, and in the hindgut ecosystem in particular, is essential. Regardless of its importance for the nutritional status of the host, the significance of the cecum-colon ecosystem has not yet been fully understood, and few reports have focused d...
Quantitative analysis of collagen fiber organization in injured tendons using Fourier transform-second harmonic generation imaging.
Optics express    December 18, 2010   Volume 18, Issue 24 24983-24993 doi: 10.1364/OE.18.024983
Sivaguru M, Durgam S, Ambekar R, Luedtke D, Fried G, Stewart A, Toussaint KC.Fourier transform-second harmonic generation (FT-SHG) imaging is used as a technique for evaluating collagenase-induced injury in horse tendons. The differences in collagen fiber organization between normal and injured tendon are quantified. Results indicate that the organization of collagen fibers is regularly oriented in normal tendons and randomly organized in injured tendons. This is further supported through the use of additional metrics, in particular, the number of dark (no/minimal signal) and isotropic (no preferred fiber orientation) regions in the images, and the ratio of forward-to-...
Morphometric and ultrastructural features of the mare oviduct epithelium during oestrus.
Theriogenology    December 15, 2010   Volume 75, Issue 4 671-678 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.10.007
Desantis S, Zizza S, Accogli G, Acone F, Rossi R, Resta L.Morphometric, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) investigations have displayed regional differences in the mare oviductal epithelium. The entire mucosa of the oviduct was lined with a pseudostratified epithelium, which consisted of two distinct cell types, ciliated and non-ciliated. Ciliated cells were predominant in the three different segments of the oviduct and their percentage increased from fimbriae to ampulla and significantly decreased in the isthmus. SEM revealed in the infundibulum finger-like mucosal folds, some of them interconnected, in th...
Hydrolyzed fish collagen induced chondrogenic differentiation of equine adipose tissue-derived stromal cells.
Histochemistry and cell biology    November 14, 2010   Volume 134, Issue 6 545-554 doi: 10.1007/s00418-010-0760-4
Raabe O, Reich C, Wenisch S, Hild A, Burg-Roderfeld M, Siebert HC, Arnhold S.Adipose-derived stromal cells (ADSCs) are multipotent cells which, in the presence of appropriate stimuli, can differentiate into various lineages such as the osteogenic, adipogenic and chondrogenic. In this study, we investigated the effect of transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-β1) in comparison to hydrolyzed fish collagen in terms of the chondrogenic differentiation potential of ADSCs. ADSCs were isolated from subcutaneous fat of horses by liposuction. Chondrogenesis was investigated using a pellet culture system. The differentiation medium was either supplemented with TGF-β1 (5 ng/ml)...
Effect of protein source on nitrogen balance and plasma amino acids in exercising horses.
Journal of animal science    November 12, 2010   Volume 89, Issue 3 729-735 doi: 10.2527/jas.2010-3081
Graham-Thiers PM, Bowen LK.Plasma AA in horses fed either an all-hay or a hay and grain diet in a traditional format have not been investigated. Eight horses were divided into 2 groups: a hay group fed only grass hay or a hay and a grain group (HG) fed in a crossover design for two 5-wk periods. After the first period, horses were fasted overnight, followed by feeding with blood sampling every hour for 6 h. A 4-d total fecal and urine collection to evaluate N balance followed. A 10-d washout period separated the 5-wk feeding periods, during which horses switched diets. The second period was also followed by fasting, fee...
Copper and zinc balance in exercising horses fed 2 forms of mineral supplements.
Journal of animal science    November 12, 2010   Volume 89, Issue 3 722-728 doi: 10.2527/jas.2010-2871
Wagner EL, Potter GD, Gibbs PG, Eller EM, Scott BD, Vogelsang MM, Walzem RL.Studies comparing the absorption and retention of various forms of trace minerals in horses have yielded mixed results. The objective of this study was to compare Cu and Zn absorption and retention in exercising horses where the mineral was supplemented in the sulfate or organic chelate form. Nine mature horses were used in a modified switchback design experiment consisting of seven 28-d periods. Horses were fed a diet consisting of 50% concentrate and 50% hay that was balanced to meet the energy, protein, Ca, and P requirements for horses performing moderate-intensity exercise. Horses were su...
The cosmopolitan maternal heritage of the Thoroughbred racehorse breed shows a significant contribution from British and Irish native mares.
Biology letters    October 6, 2010   Volume 7, Issue 2 316-320 doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.0800
Bower MA, Campana MG, Whitten M, Edwards CJ, Jones H, Barrett E, Cassidy R, Nisbet RE, Hill EW, Howe CJ, Binns M.The paternal origins of Thoroughbred racehorses trace back to a handful of Middle Eastern stallions, imported to the British Isles during the seventeenth century. Yet, few details of the foundation mares were recorded, in many cases not even their names (several different maternal lineages trace back to 'A Royal Mare'). This has fuelled intense speculation over their origins. We examined mitochondrial DNA from 1929 horses to determine the origin of Thoroughbred foundation mares. There is no evidence to support exclusive Arab maternal origins as some historical records have suggested, or a sign...
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