Analyze Diet

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.
Response of horses to sweet, salty, sour and bitter solutions.
Journal of animal science    July 1, 1978   Volume 47, Issue 1 51-55 doi: 10.2527/jas1978.47151x
Randall RP, Schurg WA, Church DC.The two-choice preference test was used to characterize the test reactions of five immature horses to sweet, salty, sour and bitter tasting solutions. Sucrose was preferred ('>60% of total fluid as test solution) to tap water by the foals at concentrations ranging from 1.25 to 10 g/100 ml. Concentrations above and below this range result- ed in indifference (40 to 60% of fluid consumed as test solution). The horses were indifferent to NaCI until a concentration of.63 g/100 ml was reached. At this level the mean response changed to rejection (<40% of total fluid as test solution). F...
Blood and tissue content of the iso-enzymes of lactate dehydrogenase in the thoroughbred.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1978   Volume 25, Issue 1 118-119 
Littlejohn A, Blackmore DJ.The occasions, position and relative concentration of LDH iso-enzymes in the blood tissues of the thoroughbred horse were determined. Locomotor muscles possess a high concentration of LDH 5 whereas non-locomotor muscles have a low concentration of this iso-enzyme.
Development of the venous drainage of the equine hypophysis cerebri.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    June 1, 1978   Volume 7, Issue 2 120-128 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1978.tb00662.x
Vitums A.No abstract available
Road founder.
Modern veterinary practice    May 1, 1978   Volume 59, Issue 5 391-392 
Rooney JR.No abstract available
A non-phosphate-buffered physiological saline for in vitro electrophysiological studies on the mammalian neuromuscular junction [proceedings].
The Journal of physiology    May 1, 1978   Volume 278 8P-9P 
Rees D.No abstract available
Some biochemical and clinical aspects of corpora lutea and follicles in mares.
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    April 15, 1978   Volume 103, Issue 8 422-434 
Nitschelm D, van der Horst CJ.No abstract available
A study of the hearing ability of horses.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 2 82-84 
Odberg FO.The ability of 10 horses to hear frequencies between 14 and 25 Kc/s was tested. The horses appeared to perceive ultrasounds by showing either fright reactions or Pryer reflexes to all of the 12 frequencies. The highest frequencies were heard less by older animals, and elicited more reactions in geldings than in mares.
Additional recommendations for the control of contagious equine metritis 1977.
The Veterinary record    February 25, 1978   Volume 102, Issue 8 161 doi: 10.1136/vr.102.8.161
David JS, Frank CJ, Powell DG.No abstract available
Mixed lymphocyte culture responses in combined immunodeficiency of horses.
Transplantation    February 1, 1978   Volume 25, Issue 2 50-52 doi: 10.1097/00007890-197802000-00002
Perryman LE, McGuire TC.Combined immunodeficiency in horses is a genetic disorder in which there is a defect in the production of committed B and T lymphocytes. In this study, peripheral blood mononuclear leukocytes from foals with combined immunodeficiency were examined for their capacity to stimulate and respond in one-way mixed lymphocyte cultures. Irradiated cells from combined immunodeficient foals were uniformly capable of stimulating cells from unrelated horses. However, none were able to respond to allogeneic stimulation. Examination of cells from known carrier horses revealed no difference in capacity to sti...
Horse pancreatic colipase: isolation by a detergent method and amino terminal sequence of the polypeptide chain.
Biochimie    January 1, 1978   Volume 60, Issue 1 103-107 doi: 10.1016/s0300-9084(78)80207-7
Julien R, Rathelot J, Canioni P, Sarda L, Gregoire J, Rochat H.No abstract available
Phylogeny of the neurophysins: complete amino acid sequence of horse MSEL-neurophysin.
FEBS letters    August 15, 1977   Volume 80, Issue 2 374-376 doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(77)80479-1
Chauvet MT, Codogno P, Chauvet J, Acher R.No abstract available
Effect of diet on cecal pH and feeding behavior of horses.
Journal of animal science    July 1, 1977   Volume 45, Issue 1 87-93 doi: 10.2527/jas1977.45187x
Willard JG, Willard JC, Wolfram SA, Baker JP.Three cecal-fistulated horses were used in a 3 × 3 latin square experiment to determine the influence of diet and of cecal infusions of Na2C03 on cecal fermentation and feeding behavior. The three treatments were hay, concentrate and concentrate plus hourly infusions of Na2CO3. Cecal fluid samples and cecal pH readings were taken at zero through 11 hr following feeding at the end of each experimental period, and animal activity was measured by the use of a movie camera set to take 5 sec of film every 5 minutes. Cecal pH was significantly lower at 4, 5 and 6 hr following feeding for the horses...
The effect of training and detraining on muscle composition in the horse.
The Journal of physiology    July 1, 1977   Volume 269, Issue 1 33-51 doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1977.sp011891
Guy PS, Snow DH.1. Percutaneous needle biopsies were obtained from six limb muscles in six horses before and during a training programme of 10 or 15 weeks designed to involve both aerobic and anaerobic work. In a subsequent detraining period, biopsies were also taken after 5 and 10 weeks. 2. Samples were analysed biochemically for enzyme activity of lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), creatine phosphokinase (CPK), aldolase (ALD), citrate synthase (CS), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and for glycogen content. Fibre typing was carried out histochemically before and 10 weeks after c...
Guanidination of horse methemoglobin.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    February 1, 1977   Volume 179, Issue 1 322-327 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(77)90117-5
Sakura JD, Rupley JA.Reaction of horse methemoglobin with O-methylisourea at pH 10.2 results in 95% conversion of lysine residues to homoarginine. Analysis of the chymotryptic peptides showed that no single ϵ-amino group was unreactive. Guanidination decreases the dependence of the sedimentation coefficient on hydrogen ion concentration in the range of pH 8 to 11 and did not affect the dependence on protein concentration at pH 7. These results support the conclusion that the lysine side chains involved in subunit contacts have sufficient freedom to accommodate the small changes in bulk and geometry associated wit...
Amino acid composition of casein isolated from the milks of different species.
Canadian journal of zoology    January 1, 1977   Volume 55, Issue 1 231-236 doi: 10.1139/z77-026
Lauer BH, Baker BE.Casein was isolated from the milks of the following species: cow, horse, pig, reindeer, caribou, moose, harp seal, musk-ox, polar bear, dall sheep, and fin whale. The caseins were subjected to acid hydrolysis, the resultant amino acids were converted to their n-butyl-N-trifluoroacetyl esters, and the amino acid composition of the caseins was determined by gas chromatographic analysis of these esters. Notable among the results was the close similarity, with respect to amino acid composition, of reindeer and caribou caseins. The results of the amino acid analyses of the other caseins are present...
Studies on cytochrome c. XIV. Synthesis of the protected heptadecapeptide (sequence 88-104) of horse heart cytochrome c.
International journal of peptide and protein research    January 1, 1977   Volume 10, Issue 2 95-101 
Borin G, Filippi B, Cavaggion F, Marchiori F.A solution synthesis is described of the partially protected N alpha-benzyloxycarbonylheptadecapeptide Z-Lys (Tfa)-Thr-Glu-Arg-Glu-Asp-Leu-Ile-Ala-Tyr-Leu-Lys (Tfa)-Lys (Tfa)-Ala-Thr-Asn-Glu (OBu t)-OBu t corresponding to sequence 88-104 of horse heart cytochrome c. The synthesis is achieved through the preparation of two subunits H1 (sequence 88-96) and H2 (sequence 97-104) and their linkage by an azide coupling step.
[Cochliatoxum periachtum Gassovsky, 1919, entodinimorphic Ciliate of the horse digestive tract].
La Cellule    January 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 1-2 5-25 
Meuleman A, Latteur B.The topography of Cochliatoxum periachtum is studied. The cuticle is very thick. The digestive, nuclear and excretory systems are located in the ectoplasm, they are not surrounded by the mesoplasm. The endoplasm is very large, it contains vegetable inclusions. By the features of its topography, this species is similar to some species belonging to the Family Ophryoscolescidae and, especially, to Eudiplodinium giganteum.
The activity of some nucleolytic enzymes in semen and in the secretion of the male reproductive tract.
Andrologia    January 1, 1977   Volume 9, Issue 1 15-22 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0272.1977.tb01252.x
Mennella MR, Jones MR.The activity of 5'-nucleotidase (EC 1.3.5), cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 2.1.4.17), non-specific phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.1) and ribonuclease (EC 1.7.7.16)has been investigated in the seminal plasma of whole semen and in the secretions of the seminal vesicle, prostate and epididymis of the bull, boar, ram, stallion, jackass, rabbit and man. Bull seminal plasma showed the highest activity for 5'-nucleotidase, cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and ribonuclease; in contrast, stallion and jackass semen were very poor in these enzymes. Ram, rabbit and boar seminal plasma showed inte...
Ventilatory control in peripheral chemoreceptor-denervated ponies during chronic hypoxemia.
Journal of applied physiology    December 1, 1976   Volume 41, Issue 6 878-885 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1976.41.6.878
Forster HV, Bisgard GE, Rasmussen B, Orr JA, Buss DD, Manohar M.The present study was designed to provide further insight into the role of the carotid and aortic chemoreceptors in ventilatory (VE) acclimatization during sojourn at altitude. Measurements were made: 1) on 10 ponies near sea level (SL, 740 Torr) under normal conditions, 2) on 6 of these at SL following chemoreceptor denervation (CD), and 3) subsequently on all 10 during 4 days of hypobaric hypoxia (PaO2 = 40-47 Torr). CD resulteo in hypoventilation at SL (deltaPaCO2 = d8 Torr, P less than 0.05), and it prevented hyperventilation normally observed with injection of NaCN and acute exposure to h...
Oldest horse brains: more advanced than previously realized.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    November 5, 1976   Volume 194, Issue 4265 626-627 doi: 10.1126/science.790567
Radinsky L.Previous interpretations of early horse brains were based on an incorrectly identified fossil endocast, now believed to be from a condylarth. Newly prepared endocasts of Hyracotherium, the oldest horse and one of the earliest perissodactyls, reveal a relatively larger brain, with a more expanded neocortex, than existed in the condylarth ancestors of perissodactyls. Fifty million years ago, horse brains had suprasylvian, ectolateral, and lateral sulci, but the frontal lobe was undeveloped.
Horse, ass, and mule chromosomes.
The Journal of heredity    November 1, 1976   Volume 67, Issue 6 361-367 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108753
Eldridge F, Blazak WF.Karyotypes of the horse with 64 chromosomes, the ass with 62 chromosomes, and the mule with 63 chromosomes are presented. The chromosome complements of each species and their mule hybrid are analyzed and compared.
Amino-acid sequence of equine renal metallothionein-1B.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    October 1, 1976   Volume 73, Issue 10 3413-3417 doi: 10.1073/pnas.73.10.3413
Kojima Y, Berger C, Vallee BL, Kägi JH.The amino-acid sequence of a metallothionein is reported. Metallothionein is a widely distributed, extremely cysteine-rich, low-molecular-weight protein containing large amounts of cadmium and/or zinc. Metallothionein-1B is one of the two prinicipal variants occurring in equine kidney cortex. The single-chain protein contains 61 amino acids and has the composition Cys20 Ser8Lys7Arg1Ala7Gly5Val3Asp2Asn1-Glu1Gln2Pro2Thr1Met1(Cd + Zn)7. Its amino-terminal residue is N-acetylmethionine. The sequence shows distinct clustering of the twenty cysteinyl residues into seven groups separated by stretches...
Titration behavior of individual tyrosine residues of myoglobins from sperm whale, horse, and red kangaroo.
The Journal of biological chemistry    September 10, 1976   Volume 251, Issue 17 5187-5194 
Wilbur DJ, Allerhand A.The titration behavior of individual tyrosine residues of myoglobins has been studied by observing the pH dependence of the chemical shifts of Czeta and Cgamma of these residues in natural abundance of 13C Fourier transform NMR spectra (at 15.18 MHz, in 20-mm sample tubes, at 37 degrees) of cyanoferrimyoglobins from sperm whale, horse, and red kangaroo. A comparison of the pH dependence of the spectra of the three proteins yielded specific assignments for the resonance of Tyr-151 (sperm whale) and Tyr-103 (sperm whale and horse). Selective proton decoupling yielded specific assignments for Cze...
Prostaglandins in the mare.
The Veterinary record    August 21, 1976   Volume 99, Issue 8 153-154 doi: 10.1136/vr.99.8.153
No abstract available
Kinetics of the hydrolysis of synthetic substrates by horse urinary kallikrein and trypsin.
General pharmacology    August 1, 1976   Volume 7, Issue 2-3 167-171 doi: 10.1016/0306-3623(76)90056-2
Sampaio MU, Galembeck F, Paiva AC, Prado ES.The kinetic constants for horse urinary kallikrein and trypsin hydrolysis of BAEE, TAME, bradykinin methyl ester and bradykinyl-Ser-Val-Gin-Val-Ser were determined. The values of the ratio kcat/Km show that (1) kallikrein is catalytically less efficient than trypsin for all the substrates (2) the three esters are equally good substrates for trypsin while horse urinary kallikrein is 100-fold more effective on bradykinin methyl ester than on the other substrates (3) for both enzymes the ester of bradykinin is a better substrate than the tetradecapeptide.
Selective scar revision & elective incision techniques applicable to the legs of horses. Part 3–Application of combined fusiform excision and W-plasty surgical techniques in scar revision on the upper hind legs.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    July 1, 1976   Volume 71, Issue 7 941-945 
Kirk MD.No abstract available
Crystalline 3-phospho-d-glycerate kinase from horse muscle.
Biochemistry    June 29, 1976   Volume 15, Issue 13 2899-2901 
Johnson PE, Maister SG, Knowles JR.Phosphoglycerate kinase has been isolated in crystalline form from horse muscle. A convenient isolation procedure is described that yields homogeneous enzyme of specific activity 700 units/mg (30 degrees C). The enzyme is monomeric, and has a molecular weight 47 000. Of the eight cysteine residues in the protein, two react rapidly with Nbs21 with the concomitant loss of the catalytic activity. Since the isolation of phosphoglycerate kinase from yeast (Bücher, 1955) there have been several reports of purification methods yielding enzyme approaching molecular homogeneity, from rabbit muscle (Be...
Letter: Kinetics of reduction of horse-heart ferricytochrome c by catechol.
Journal of the American Chemical Society    June 23, 1976   Volume 98, Issue 13 4023-4024 doi: 10.1021/ja00429a061
Toppen DL.No abstract available
[Preliminary studies on the luteolytic factors in semen of stallions].
Medycyna weterynaryjna    June 1, 1976   Volume 32, Issue 6 337-339 
Bielański W, Okólski A, Tischner M.No abstract available
Proceedings: Potassium content and turnover of lymphocytes and granulocytes isolated from human and from horse blood.
The Journal of physiology    March 1, 1976   Volume 256, Issue 1 4P 
Baker DJ, Trist DG, Weatherall M.No abstract available
1 82 83 84 85 86 90