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Topic:Equine Science

Equine Science encompasses the study of horses and their management, health, and performance. This field integrates various scientific disciplines such as biology, genetics, nutrition, physiology, and veterinary medicine to understand and improve the well-being and capabilities of horses. Areas of focus include equine anatomy, reproduction, behavior, and disease prevention. Research in equine science aims to enhance horse care, optimize training and performance, and address health challenges. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the diverse aspects of equine science, providing insights into the latest advancements and methodologies in the field.
Left ventricular function and haemodynamics in ponies during exercise and recovery.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 39-44 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02087.x
Rugh KS, Garner HE, Miramonti JR, Hatfield DG.Myocardial and haemodynamic responses to strenuous treadmill exercise were monitored with chronically implanted instrumentation in seven physically untrained ponies. In two other ponies, haemodynamics were monitored using a conventional catheter technique. During exercise (mean +/- sem heart rate = 203 +/- 3 beats/min), left ventricular peak systolic ahd end-diastolic blood pressure significantly increased from 125 +/- 2 to 208 +/- 6 mmHg and from 29 +/- 1 to 58 +/- 3 mmHg, respectively (P less than 0.05). Peak positive first derivative of left ventricular pressure (dP/dt) was also increased s...
Maternal immunological recognition of pregnancy in equids.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1989   Volume 37 69-78 
Antczak DF, Allen WR.There is little evidence for maternal immunological recognition of pregnancy in most species with the striking exception of the members of the genus Equus. Almost all mares make strong cytotoxic antibody responses to paternally inherited fetal antigens by Day 60 of gestation. Most of these responses are directed against antigens of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC), which constitutes the primary immunogenetic barrier to successful organ transplantation. The source of fetal MHC antigens in the pregnant mare appears to be the specialized trophoblast cells of the chorionic girdle region ...
The continuum of events leading to maternal recognition of pregnancy in mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1989   Volume 37 101-107 
Sharp DC, McDowell KJ, Weithenauer J, Thatcher WW.Endometria from pregnant mares are able to produce PGF in vitro, but when co-incubated with conceptus membranes the amount and rate of PGF production is considerably reduced. To estimate the molecular weight of conceptus factors that inhibited PGF production, Day-14 conceptus membranes were placed inside bags constructed of dialysis tubing and co-incubated with endometria from Day-14 pregnant mares. PGF production was significantly reduced when membranes were in bags with molecular weight exclusion limits of 12,000, 6000, and 3500, but not of 1000, suggesting that conceptus PGF-inhibitory fact...
Work of breathing in exercising ponies.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1989   Volume 46, Issue 1 49-53 
Art T, Lekeux P.This paper attempts to evaluate the changes in the mechanical work of breathing induced by the increase of ventilation in ponies exercising on a treadmill. Airflow, tidal volume (VT) and oesophageal pressure were simultaneously recorded in eight ponies (four to six years old and weighing 258 +/- 11 kg) before, during and after standardised exercise. Respiratory frequency, VT and minute volume (Ve) for each phase of the experimental protocol were calculated from the collected data. The pressure-volume diagrams were traced and the work per cycle (Wrm) was estimated by measuring the area enclosed...
An hypothesis on the etio-pathogenesis of equine inflammatory joint disease.
Veterinary clinical pathology    January 1, 1989   Volume 18, Issue 1 21-26 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-165x.1989.tb00508.x
Auer DE.The role of oxygen-derived free radicals is considered critical to the etio-pathogenesis of equine inflammatory joint disease. In vivo, the superoxide radical in the joint may be derived either from activated polymorphonuclear leukocytes or from an ischemia/reperfusion cycle. In the presence of ferrous iron, it may generate the highly reactive hydroxyl radical (OH *). Predisposing factors may include synovitis, exercise-induced ischemia and minor traumatic injury to the joints. Unlike other inflammatory mediators, oxygen-derived free radicals may damage tissue directly and these reactive speci...
A technique for assessing hoof function in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 17-22 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02083.x
Colles CM.This paper describes the application of foil strain gauges to the hoof wall, and the use of measuring equipment to monitor weightbearing and changes in hoof shape in shod and unshod horses. It concludes that the systems can detect hoof movement and that results are reproducible. It is also concluded that the use of a conventional nailed on iron shoe restricts flexion and spreading of the hoof wall at the ground surface, but has little effect on the degree of expansion of the heels of the foot.
Immunization of equines with phospholipase A2 protects against the lethal effects of Crotalus durissus terrificus venom. Dos-Santos MC, Yamaguchi IK, Caricatti CP, Higashi HG, Dias-da-Silva W.Equines (2 horses and 2 donkeys) immunized with whole Crotalus durissus terrificus venom or its phospholipase A2 component either presented an increased survival time determined 3 days after challenge or were totally resistant to a challenging lethal dose of 200 mg crude venom 270 days after the initial immunization or 90 days after the last booster injection. The resistance was demonstrable on the basis of a good correlation with antibody titers determined by the ELISA method but not with the flocculation and neutralization assays. Since phospholipase A2 is essentially nontoxic, it can be use...
Effects of season and lower ambient temperature on the structure of the sweat glands in anhidrotic horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 59-65 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02090.x
Jenkinson DM, Loney C, Elder HY, Montgomery I, Mason DK.Histological studies of the sweat glands of anhidrotic horses in the Hong Kong summer and under conditions of reduced thermal stress, both natural and controlled, were undertaken to determine if glandular regeneration occurs. Clinical data were collected for comparison with the histological results in each instance. Horses were assigned to one of three categories on the basis of the resulting change in the number of thin glandular profiles in a cooler environment. Group 1, which was classed as normal, had a low initial value, which was maintained. Group 2, typical of mild and moderately affect...
Enzymatic deacylations of esterified saccharides–III. Comparison of de-esterifications by serum esterases from different sources.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1989   Volume 92, Issue 4 681-684 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(89)90249-6
Tomić S, Sesartić L, Tomasić J.1. 14C-labelled methyl 2,6-di-O-pivaloyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (1) was used as a substrate for esterases from rabbit, guinea pig, mouse, donkey, pig, horse, sheep and human sera. 2. Stepwise de-esterification of the diester substrate 1 occurred with rabbit, guinea pig and mouse serum. Data on time-course experiments and kinetic data are reported. 3. The use of donkey, pig, horse, sheep and human serum led to the migration of the 2-O-pivaloyl group in substrate 1 to the position 4- in the sugar molecule, followed by stepwise de-esterifications of both 1 and the newly formed methyl 4,6-di-O-pi...
Simulation of quadrupedal locomotion using a rigid body model.
Journal of biomechanics    January 1, 1989   Volume 22, Issue 1 33-41 doi: 10.1016/0021-9290(89)90182-6
van den Bogert AJ, Schamhardt HC, Crowe A.Locomotion of the horse is simulated using a mathematical model based on rigid body dynamics. A general method to generate the equations of motion for a two-dimensional rigid body model with an arbitrary number of hinge joints is presented and a numerical solution method, restricted to tree-structured models, is described. Joint movements originating from muscular forces or moments are simulated, but the method also allows that parts of the model follow strictly the pattern of kinematic data. Moment-generators with first-order linear feedback were used as a rotational muscle-equivalent. Ground...
The effect of detomidine hydrochloride on the electrical activity of uterus in pregnant mares.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1989   Volume 30, Issue 3 307-311 doi: 10.1186/BF03548036
Jedruch J, Gajewski Z, Kuussaari J.The effect of detomidine on the electrical activity of the uterus was studied during the last trimester of pregnancy in 6 mares. The effect was observed in 3-5 min after the i.m. injection and it lasted for 50-70 min. 20 and 40 micrograms/kg b.w. doses of detomidine decreased the myometrial electrical activity, whereas 60 micrograms/kg dose did not have any effect on the activity. The results suggested that 20, 40 and 60 micrograms/kg b.w. doses of detomidine can be administered to mares during the last trimester of pregnancy without the risk of abortion induced by increased uterine electrical...
Radiographic measurement from the lateromedial projection of the equine foot with navicular disease.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1989   Volume 46, Issue 1 15-21 
Verschooten F, Roels J, Lampo P, Desmet P, De Moor A, Picavet T.Radiographic measurements from the lateromedial projection of the equine foot were compared in three groups of horses. Group 1 consisted of 143 normal horses, group 2 were 60 horses with clinical navicular disease and group 3 were 161 horses with clinical and radiographic navicular disease. Several measurements tended to be larger in group 3 than group 1. An enlargement of the navicular bone was observed in proximodistal and dorsopalmar directions. Partial enlargement of the pedal bone was observed in groups 2 and 3. Few differences were observed between age classes. All horses aged four years...
Fat cell size in various body region. A statistical analysis in Equus caballus.
Anatomischer Anzeiger    January 1, 1989   Volume 169, Issue 5 351-366 
Bianchi M.In 13 horses from both sexes, between 5 months and 18 years of age, in good nutritional state, statistical evaluations of fat cell sizes were performed in 16 body regions. From direct and indirect measurements referred to the cell diameter and cell number in equivalent areas, carried out on sections from paraffin embedded material and on preparations of dissociated whole cells, it emerged that the adipose cells of the subserous fat of the abdominal floor are consistently the largest, whereas those of the orbital fat body and supraorbital fossa are the smallest. In the other regions the cells h...
Use of high-speed cinematography and computer generated gait diagrams for the study of equine hindlimb kinematics.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 48-58 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02089.x
Kobluk CN, Schnurr D, Horney FD, Sumner-Smith G, Willoughby RA, Dekleer V, Hearn TC.High-speed cinematography with computer aided analysis was used to study equine hindlimb kinematics. Eight horses were filmed at the trot or the pace. Filming was done from the side (lateral) and the back (caudal). Parameters measured from the lateral filming included the heights of the tuber coxae and tailhead, protraction and retraction of the hoof and angular changes of the tarsus and stifle. Abduction and adduction of the limb and tarsal height changes were measured from the caudal filming. The maximum and minimum values plus the standard deviations and coefficients of variations are prese...
Alterations in the cell cycle characteristics of granulosa cells during the periovulatory period: evidence of ovarian and oviductal influences.
The Journal of experimental zoology    January 1, 1989   Volume 249, Issue 1 105-110 doi: 10.1002/jez.1402490118
Schuetz AW, Whittingham DG, Legg RF.Granulosa cells at different stages of differentiation were collected from ovarian follicles and oviducts during the periovulatory period, and their nuclear DNA content was monitored by flow cytometry to establish their cell cycle characteristics (G0 + G1, S, G2 + M). The proportion of cells in the three phases of the cell cycle varied in characteristics patterns depending upon the time they were collected, before or following ovulation. Granulosa (cumulus) cells recovered from ovulated oocytes were mitotically inactive as shown by the large proportion of cells with a 2C amount of DNA and the ...
Surgical treatment of sand colic in equids: 48 cases (1978-1985).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1988   Volume 193, Issue 12 1560-1564 
Specht TE, Colahan PT.Medical records of 48 equids (47 horses, 1 pony) with surgical sand colic were reviewed. The diagnosis of sand colic was made if a sand impaction(s) was palpated during exploratory abdominal surgery or if a large quantity of sand was found during colotomy. Most equids did not experience a previous episode of sand diarrhea or sand colic. Clinical findings and results of clinicopathologic determinations were not diagnostic. Rectal palpation findings in 40 of 46 horses were compatible with large-colon and/or cecal distention. Impactions were palpable per rectum in only 7 horses, but emergency abd...
Screening, confirmation and quantification of boldenone sulfate in equine urine after administration of boldenone undecylenate (Equipoise).
Journal of chromatography    December 9, 1988   Volume 433 9-21 doi: 10.1016/s0378-4347(00)80580-0
Weidolf LO, Chichila TM, Henion JD.Methods for screening by thin-layer chromatography, quantification by high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection and confirmation by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry of boldenone sulfate in equine urine after administration of boldenone undecylenate (Equipoise) are presented. Sample work-up was done with C18 liquid-solid extraction followed by solvolytic cleavage of the sulfate ester. Confirmatory evidence of boldenone sulfate in equine urine was obtained from 2 h to 42 days following a therapeutic intramuscular dose of Equipoise. The use of 19-nortestosterone sulfat...
Twig removal.
The Veterinary record    December 3, 1988   Volume 123, Issue 23 608 
Ordidge RM.No abstract available
Evolution of tooth structure in the Equoidea.
The Journal of Nihon University School of Dentistry    December 1, 1988   Volume 30, Issue 4 287-296 doi: 10.2334/josnusd1959.30.287
Kozawa Y, Mishima H, Sakae T.During the evolution of the Equoidea, the histological structures of the teeth have become more complex as the molars have become hypsodont in form. The straight Hunter-Schreger bands of Hiracotherium have evolved into a more complex pattern in Equus. The enamel prisms changed from an arched form (about 5μm in diameter) with an alternating pattern in Hiracotherium to an oval form (about 2 μm width) arranged in straight rows in Equus. In Equus the rows of prisms are separated by interprismatic sheets. This pattern may have increased the architectural strength of the enamel, and is related to ...
Comparison of sensory nerve conduction velocities in horses versus ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2138-2142 
Blythe LL, Engel HN, Rowe KE.Normal sensory nerve conduction velocity (SNCV) values in 8 ponies and 8 horses were compared by use of a percutaneous signal-averaging technique. Nerve fibers evaluated included those in the medial and lateral palmar and plantar digital nerves. Mean SNCV values were significantly slower (P less than 0.0002) for horses, compared with those values for ponies. Animal height and nerve segment length were inversely related to SNCV consistently. The SNCV values were affected by surface skin temperature by a factor of approximately 1.2 m/s change for 1 degree C change in temperatures from 35 C. The ...
Horse owners and their use of veterinary services.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1988   Volume 193, Issue 11 1362-1363 
Troutman CM.No abstract available
Single injection inulin/PAH method for the determination of renal clearances in adult horses and ponies.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 4 409-412 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1988.tb00203.x
Brewer BD, Clement SF, Lotz WS, Gronwall R.No abstract available
Do the cardiac glands exist? 4. The horse.
Okajimas folia anatomica Japonica    December 1, 1988   Volume 65, Issue 5 245-253 doi: 10.2535/ofaj1936.65.5_245
Imai M, Shibata T, Moriguchi K.No abstract available
The use of enzyme profiles in the training and racing of horses: a review.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    December 1, 1988   Volume 59, Issue 4 213-214 
Gummow B, Reyers F.The effects of age, training, racing and endurance riding on serum enzyme profiles in the horse are reviewed and discussed.
Microvasculature of the foal metacarpus.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    December 1, 1988   Volume 17, Issue 4 343-348 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1988.tb00572.x
Marais J, Stilson AE.No abstract available
Transcervical collection of equine conceptuses between 10 and 16 days after ovulation.
Theriogenology    December 1, 1988   Volume 30, Issue 6 1139-1148 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(88)90289-0
Sirois J, Betteridge KJ.To recover intact Day-10.5 to Day-16.5 equine conceptuses (Day 0 = ovulation), a rigid catheter was used for 131 collections from donor mares diagnosed pregnant by ultrasonography. A total of 139 conceptuses were recovered, comprising 124 singletons, six pairs of twins and one set of triplets. Of these, 120 (86%) were intact after the collection, 14 (10%) had collapsed, and in five cases (4%), collapsed trophoblastic membranes were surrounded by an intact capsule. The recovery rate of intact conceptuses ranged from 99% on Days 10.5 to 12.5 to 40% on Day 16.5. More uterine flushes per recovery ...
Communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2161-2164 
Ford TS, Ross MW, Orsini PG.To study communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints of the horse, 50 forelimbs were obtained from fresh cadaver specimens. Blue latex solution (20 +/- 2.5 ml) was injected into the middle carpal joint, and the specimens were frozen in extension. Frozen specimens were cut into 1-cm sagittal sections from the middle of the radius to the middle of the metacarpus. The communications between the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints and the presence, length, and position of the distopalmar outpouchings of the carpometacarpal joint were recorded. The middle carp...
Prokinetic effects of cisapride, naloxone and parasympathetic stimulation at the equine ileo-caeco-colonic junction.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 4 322-329 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1988.tb00191.x
Ruckebusch Y, Roger T.The electromyogram of the terminal ileum, the caecum and the proximal right ventral colon was recorded in fasted conscious ponies receiving intravenously equiactive doses of pilocarpine (0.05 mg/kg) and carbachol (0.01 mg/kg) as acetylcholine analogues; cisapride (0.1 mg/kg) and metoclopramide (2 mg/kg) facilitating acetylcholine release from myenteric neurones and naloxone (0.05 mg/kg) as an antagonist of the endogenous inhibitory opioid system. Both cisapride and naloxone induced typical migrating spike bursts in the colon associated with contractions of caecal body and caecal base. Both pil...
Susceptibility of cats to infection with Ehrlichia risticii, causative agent of equine monocytic ehrlichiosis.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2096-2100 
Dawson JE, Abeygunawardena I, Holland CJ, Buese MM, Ristic M.Eight adult cats were inoculated IV (n = 6) or SC (n = 2) with Ehrlichia risticii-infected P388D1 (continuous murine macrophage) cells or with E risticii released from P388D1 cells. Three additional cats were inoculated with organism-free P388D1 cultured monocytes, and 1 cat, which served as a medium control was inoculated with balanced salt solution. Clinical signs of illness were observed in the IV inoculated cats from which E risticii was isolated. One cat developed intermittent diarrhea between postinoculation days (PID) 8 and 18, and the other cat developed lymphadenopathy, acute depressi...
Mitochondrial size and shape in equine skeletal muscle: a three-dimensional reconstruction study.
The Anatomical record    December 1, 1988   Volume 222, Issue 4 333-339 doi: 10.1002/ar.1092220405
Kayar SR, Hoppeler H, Mermod L, Weibel ER.Individual mitochondria were reconstructed from ultrathin serial sections of selected muscle fibers in the M. semitendinosus of a horse, over a length of nearly two sarcomeres. Mitochondria were found to be highly variable, with size and complexity of single mitochondria increasing with the fractional part of a fiber occupied by mitochondria. In fibers with a mitochondrial volume density of less than 4%, corresponding to the mitochondrial content of fast-twitch glycolytic fibers, mitochondria were generally rather simple cylindrical shapes, oriented parallel to the myofibrils. In fibers with a...