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Topic:Foals

"Foals" encompasses a stage in the lifecycle of equines with distinct physiological and developmental characteristics. Foals are young horses, typically under one year of age, undergoing rapid growth and development. They require specific nutritional, health, and management practices to support their transition to adulthood. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the growth, development, health challenges, and management practices associated with foals and horses, providing insights into their care and welfare across different life stages.
Early development of cytotoxic T lymphocytes in neonatal foals following oral inoculation with Rhodococcus equi.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    March 21, 2011   Volume 141, Issue 3-4 312-316 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2011.03.015
Harris SP, Hines MT, Mealey RH, Alperin DC, Hines SA.Rhodococcus equi is an important respiratory pathogen of young foals for which a vaccine has long been sought. Two major impediments to effective vaccination are the functionally immature type I immune responses of neonatal foals and early exposure to the bacterium via the environment. Despite these obstacles, it appears that under specific circumstances foals can develop a protective immune response. In this study we investigated the protective mechanisms behind oral inoculation of foals with virulent R. equi bacteria. Two foals receiving an oral inoculum demonstrated accelerated development ...
Evaluation of the safety of vaccinating mares against equine viral arteritis during mid or late gestation or during the immediate postpartum period.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 16, 2011   Volume 238, Issue 6 741-750 doi: 10.2460/javma.238.6.741
Broaddus CC, Balasuriya UB, White JL, Timoney PJ, Funk RA, Holyoak GR.To determine whether it is safe to vaccinate pregnant or postpartum mares with a commercial modified-live virus vaccine against equine viral arteritis (EVA). Design-Randomized controlled study. Animals-73 mares and their foals. Methods: Mares were vaccinated during mid gestation, during late gestation, or 2 or 3 days after parturition with a commercial modified-live virus vaccine or were not vaccinated. Foaling outcomes were recorded, and serum, blood, milk, and nasopharyngeal samples were obtained. Results: All mares vaccinated during mid gestation foaled without any problems; 21 of 22 mares ...
Beta 2 toxigenic Clostridium perfringens type A colitis in a three-day-old foal. Hazlett MJ, Kircanski J, Slavic D, Prescott JF.Beta 2 (β2)-toxigenic Clostridium perfringens type A was recovered in large numbers from the intestine of a neonatal foal with colitis. The foal had been treated with gentamicin. Necropsy revealed marked distension of cecum and colon with watery, rust-colored homogeneous fluid and gastric infarction. Microscopic colonic lesions were superficial necrosis of 50% of the colonic mucosal surface and scattered 1-3-mm ulcers with subjacent neutrophilic infiltration and large Gram-positive bacilli in the necrotic mucosa. Beta-2 toxin was demonstrated in the lesions by immunohistochemical staining.
Disorders of calcium and phosphate metabolism in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    March 12, 2011   Volume 27, Issue 1 129-147 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2010.12.010
Toribio RE.Calcium and phosphate have structural and nonstructural functions, and their concentrations in the extracellular compartment are affected by the physiologic status of the animal as well as diseases. Important progress in understanding calcium and phosphorus metabolism in healthy and diseased horses and foals has been made in recent years. For example, several studies have confirmed that hypocalcemia is frequent in horses with gastrointestinal disease and that calcium endocrine dysregulation is associated with survival in foals. One critical point in the homeostasis of these minerals is their i...
Endocrinology of the equine neonate energy metabolism in health and critical illness.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    March 12, 2011   Volume 27, Issue 1 49-58 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2010.12.001
Barsnick RJ, Toribio RE.Hormonal control of energy metabolism plays an important role in the peripartum development and health of the equine neonate. The endocrine system is generally functional at birth, but the maturation of the endocrine system and the associated energy metabolism is delayed and continues during the postnatal period. The energy metabolism is susceptible to disturbances, especially when illness occurs. Hormones involved in energy metabolism have recently been studied in healthy and critically ill neonatal foals. Understanding these hormones in the equine neonate will support appropriate therapeutic...
Adrenocortical insufficiency in horses and foals.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    March 12, 2011   Volume 27, Issue 1 19-34 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2010.12.005
Hart KA, Barton MH.The adrenal cortices produce various steroid hormones that play vital roles in several physiologic processes. Although permanent adrenocortical insufficiency is rare in all species, emerging evidence in both human and equine medicine suggests that transient reversible adrenocortical dysfunction resulting in cortisol insufficiency frequently develops during critical illness. This syndrome is termed relative adrenal insufficiency (RAI) or critical illness-related corticosteroid insufficiency (CIRCI) and can contribute substantially to morbidity and mortality associated with the primary disease. ...
Endocrine dysregulation in critically ill foals and horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    March 12, 2011   Volume 27, Issue 1 35-47 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2010.12.011
Toribio RE.Critical illness challenges many endocrine homeostatic systems to overcome diseases, stress, and hostile conditions that threaten survival. Coordinated and consecutive responses by the autonomic nervous system, endocrine metabolic adaptations to mobilize and conserve energy and electrolytes, cardiovascular adjustments to maintain organ perfusion, and immunomodulation to overcome infections and inflammation are required. Because most admissions to equine intensive care units are related to horses with gastrointestinal disease and septic foals, most endocrine information during critical disease ...
Disorders of the equine thyroid gland.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    March 12, 2011   Volume 27, Issue 1 115-128 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2010.12.002
Breuhaus BA.Regulatory control of the thyroid gland in horses is similar to other species. Clinical signs of hypothyroidism in adult horses are minimal. Several drugs and physiologic and pathophysiological states can cause circulating thyroid hormone concentrations to be low without actual pathology of the thyroid gland. Thus, nonthyroidal factors must be ruled out before a diagnosis of hypothyroidism can be made. Thyroid hormone supplementation seems to be well tolerated, even in euthyroid horses. Neonatal foals have very high circulating thyroid hormone concentrations, and deficiencies result in signif...
Heart rate and heart rate variability in the pregnant mare and its foetus.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    March 8, 2011   Volume 46, Issue 6 990-993 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0531.2011.01772.x
Nagel C, Aurich J, Aurich C.Abortion and preterm birth of foals are major reasons for reproductive losses in the horse. Risk pregnancies require close supervision so that adequate treatment can be initiated in time. The aim of this study was to determine normal values in heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) of the pregnant mare compared to her foetus and to detect physiological changes during ongoing gestation. In mares, the RR interval decreased from 1480±29 ms on day 270 of pregnancy to 1190±58 ms on day 330 of pregnancy (p<0.05). In contrast, foetal RR interval increased during the same time period from ...
Sonographic characteristics of intraabdominal abscessation and lymphadenopathy attributable to Rhodococcus equi infections in foals. Reuss SM, Chaffin MK, Schmitz DG, Norman TE.The sonographic characteristics of intraabdominal abscesses in 11 foals and intraabdominal lymphadenitis in five foals with Rhodococcus equi infections are presented. Intraabdominal abscesses were usually present in the ventral abdomen adjacent to the ventral body wall, well-marginated, and contained a mixed or complex echo pattern. Lymphadenitis appeared as singular or multiple clusters of lymph nodes of mixed echogenicity adjacent to any portion of the gastrointestinal tract or body wall. Sonographic findings were supported by necropsy examinations, but sonographic measurements consistently ...
Effect of Propionibacterium acnes-containing immunostimulant on interferon-gamma (IFNγ) production in the neonatal foal.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    March 5, 2011   Volume 141, Issue 1-2 124-127 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2011.01.015
Sturgill TL, Strong D, Rashid C, Betancourt A, Horohov DW.Production of the Th1 cytokine interferon gamma (IFNγ) is associated with resistance to intracellular pathogens, including Rhodococcus equi. While neonatal foals are initially deficient in IFNγ production, expression of this cytokine increases throughout their first year of life. This is presumably the result of stimulation by environmental antigens including pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPS) signaling through toll-like receptors (TLR). This increased expression of IFNγ is likewise associated with an age-related resistance to R. equi infection. While immunostimulants containing...
Diagnosis of internal and external hydrocephalus in a warmblood foal using magnetic resonance imaging.
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    February 22, 2011   Volume 39, Issue 1 41-45 
Oey L, Müller JM, von Klopmann T, Jacobsen B, Beineke A, Feige K.No abstract available
Cutaneous asthenia in a Warmblood foal.
Australian veterinary journal    February 18, 2011   Volume 89, Issue 3 77-81 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2010.00683.x
Marshall VL, Secombe C, Nicholls PK.A 6-week-old Warmblood colt foal was presented for investigation of multiple haematoma formation in various locations, poor wound healing and abnormal scar formation. Based on the history and clinical presentation of hyperextensible skin with prolonged skin tenting, the foal was diagnosed with cutaneous asthenia and euthanased because of the poor prognosis. Histopathological and electron microscopic findings were inconclusive. This is the first case report of cutaneous asthenia in a Warmblood horse in Australia. Cutaneous asthenia is reviewed with particular reference to hereditary equine regi...
Early lesions of articular osteochondrosis in the distal femur of foals.
Veterinary pathology    February 14, 2011   Volume 48, Issue 6 1165-1175 doi: 10.1177/0300985811398250
Olstad K, Ytrehus B, Ekman S, Carlson CS, Dolvik NI.Failure of the cartilage canal blood supply to epiphyseal growth cartilage has been implicated in the pathogenesis of articular osteochondrosis in horses and other animal species. In a previous study of the developmental pattern of the blood supply in the tarsus of foals, early lesions of osteochondrosis were consistently found in regions where the cartilage canal vessels traversed the chondro-osseous junction. The developmental pattern of blood vessels has also been described in the distal femoral epiphysis; however, the group of foals examined in that study did not have lesions of osteochond...
Effects of racing on equine fertility.
Animal reproduction science    February 13, 2011   Volume 124, Issue 1-2 73-84 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2011.02.010
Sairanen J, Katila T, Virtala AM, Ojala M.Racing and fertility are connected with each other in many ways. Stress and increased body temperature induced by racing may have negative effects on fertility, but on the other hand, high quality nutrition and management of racing horses may have positive effects. Fertility may also be genetically associated with racing performance. The analysed data consisted of Finnish mating records of Standardbreds (n=33,679) and Finnhorses (n=32,731), from 1991 to 2005, and the harness racing records of both mares and stallions. Fertility was measured by foaling outcome, and racing performance was measur...
Repetitive stimulation of the common peroneal nerve as a diagnostic aid for botulism in foals.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    February 11, 2011   Volume 25, Issue 2 365-372 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2011.0682.x
Aleman M, Williams DC, Jorge NE, Magdesian KG, Brosnan RJ, Feary DJ, Hilton HG, Kozikowski TA, Higgins JK, Madigan JE, Lecouteur RA.Botulism is a potentially fatal paralytic disorder for which definitive diagnosis is difficult. Objective: To determine if repetitive stimulation of the common peroneal nerve will aid in the diagnosis of botulism in foals. Methods: Four control and 3 affected foals. Methods: Validation of the test in healthy foals for its comparison in foals with suspected botulism. Controls were anesthetized and affected foals were sedated to avoid risks of anesthesia. The common peroneal nerve was chosen for its superficial location and easy access. Stimulating electrodes were placed along the common peronea...
The equine neonatal intensive care laboratory: point-of-care testing.
Clinics in laboratory medicine    February 8, 2011   Volume 31, Issue 1 125-137 doi: 10.1016/j.cll.2010.11.001
Wilkins PA.Rapid evaluation and intervention is a requirement and a characteristic of patient management in neonatal intensive care units, and this applies for equine neonates also. Appropriate interventions are based on solid knowledge of age, maturity, and species-specific differences in reference ranges. Point-of-care (POC) testing devices speedup decision making regarding treatments and interventions. However, there are potential limitations of these devices when applied to age groups and species beyond those they were specifically developed for. This article discusses the age-specific differences in...
Outbreak of Abortions and Infertility in Thoroughbred Mares Associated with Waterborne Aeromonas hydrophila.
Indian journal of microbiology    February 4, 2011   Volume 51, Issue 2 212-216 doi: 10.1007/s12088-011-0088-3
Singh BR, Gulati BR, Virmani N, Chauhan M.At a thoroughbred equine breeding farm near Hissar (Haryana), three mares aborted in their seventh month of pregnancy. The vaginal swabs of all aborted mares, and stomach contents, heart blood, liver, spleen and placenta of aborted fetuses yielded pure culture of Aeromonas hydrophila. In addition, A. hydrophila was also isolated from the vaginal swabs of three repeat breeding mares and faecal sample of a diarrheic foal. The source of infection was possibly water supply as all the water samples collected from taps, mother tank and storage tank were found to be positive for A. hydrophila. The an...
Serum free cortisol fraction in healthy and septic neonatal foals.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    January 31, 2011   Volume 25, Issue 2 345-355 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2010.0667.x
Hart KA, Barton MH, Ferguson DC, Berghaus R, Slovis NM, Heusner GL, Hurley DJ.Relative cortisol insufficiency occurs in septic foals and impacts survival. Serum free (biologically available) cortisol concentration might be a better indicator of physiologic cortisol status than serum total cortisol concentration in foals. Objective: In septic foals, (1) low free cortisol concentration correlates with disease severity and survival and (2) predicts disease severity and outcome better than total cortisol concentration. Methods: Fifty-one septic foals; 11 healthy foals; 6 healthy horses. Methods: In this prospective clinical study, foals meeting criteria for sepsis at admiss...
The use of foal and studbook traits in the breeding programmes of Finnhorse and Standardbred trotters.
Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie    January 27, 2011   Volume 128, Issue 2 114-123 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0388.2010.00886.x
Suontama M, van der Werf JH, Juga J, Ojala M.Genetic correlations for body measurements and subjectively scored traits between foals and studbook horses were estimated using bivariate linear mixed models. Observations for nine foal and eleven studbook traits in Finnhorses on 6529 foals and 6596 studbook horses and in Standardbred trotters on 3069 foals and 2112 studbook horses were available from the Finnish horse breeding shows. The number of sires with progeny in both foal and studbook data was 203 in Finnhorse and 145 in Standardbred trotters. Estimates of heritability for body measurements in foals and studbook horses using univariat...
LC-MS/MS method for the simultaneous determination of clarithromycin, rifampicin and their main metabolites in horse plasma, epithelial lining fluid and broncho-alveolar cells.
Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis    January 22, 2011   Volume 55, Issue 1 194-201 doi: 10.1016/j.jpba.2011.01.019
Oswald S, Peters J, Venner M, Siegmund W.Clarithromycin (CLA) is a well established macrolide antibiotic which is frequently used in therapy of airway diseases in foals. It is extensively metabolized by CYP3A4 resulting in the antimicrobial active metabolite 14-hydroxyclarithromycin (OH-CLA). Rifampicin (RIF) is often comedicated to prevent resistance and augment therapy. RIF is a known inducer for metabolizing enzymes and transporter proteins. Therefore, comedication might bare the risks of pharmacokinetic drug interactions which were investigated in a clinical trial. As no adequate method to determine CLA, RIF and their main metabo...
Thoracic emphysematous lymphadenitis in a foal.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 19, 2011   Volume 145, Issue 1 77-79 doi: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2010.11.010
Mendoza FJ, Perez-Ecija RA, Estepa JC.Emphysema of lymph nodes is a rare finding that has been described in different anatomical locations and related to specific diseases in different animal species. Herein is described a foal with Rhodococcus equi infection that presented with emphysema and granulomatous inflammation of the bronchial and mediastinal lymph nodes. This is the first report of emphysematous lymphadenitis in a horse.
Immunocytochemical detection of Rhodococcus equi in tracheal washes of foals.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 15, 2011   Volume 145, Issue 1 6-11 doi: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2010.11.014
Sonmez K, Gurel A, Takai S.The aim of the present study was to develop an immunocytochemical procedure for the early detection and demonstration of Rhodococcus equi in smears of tracheal aspirates taken from live foals in field conditions. Tracheal wash samples were collected from thoroughbred foals, aged 1-5 months and located in studs around Bursa and Istanbul, Turkey. Some foals were suspected of having R. equi infection on the basis of clinical examination (n=56) and others were unaffected control animals (n=54). Serum samples were also collected from each foal for testing for the presence of R. equi-specific antibo...
Horse species symposium: a novel approach to monitoring pathogen progression during uterine and placental infection in the mare using bioluminescence imaging technology and lux-modified bacteria.
Journal of animal science    January 14, 2011   Volume 89, Issue 5 1541-1551 doi: 10.2527/jas.2010-3629
Ryan PL, Christiansen DL, Hopper RM, Walters FK, Moulton K, Curbelo J, Greene JM, Willard ST.Uterine and placental infections are the leading cause of abortion, stillbirth, and preterm delivery in the mare. Whereas uterine and placental infections in women have been studied extensively, a comprehensive examination of the pathogenic processes leading to this unsatisfactory pregnancy outcome in the mare has yet to be completed. Most information in the literature relating to late-term pregnancy loss in mares is based on retrospective studies of clinical cases submitted for necropsy. Here we report the development and application of a novel approach, whereby transgenically modified bacter...
Assessment of synovial fluid biomarkers in healthy foals and in foals with tarsocrural osteochondrosis.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    January 8, 2011   Volume 190, Issue 3 390-395 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2010.12.001
de Grauw JC, Donabédian M, van de Lest CH, Perona G, Robert C, Lepage O, Martin-Rosset W, van Weeren PR.Although alterations in biomarkers of cartilage turnover in synovial fluid (SF) have been demonstrated in horses with osteochondrosis (OC), there have been few investigations of such alterations in animals <1 year old. In this study tarsocrural SF samples from foals aged 18, 22 and 52 weeks of age were assessed for: (1) 'turnover' biomarkers of type II collagen (CPII and C2C) and proteoglycan (CS846 and glycosaminoglycans [GAG]); (2) matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity; (3) insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1; (4) transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1; (5) prostaglandin (PG) E(2...
Effects of inactivated parapoxvirus ovis on the cumulative incidence of pneumonia and cytokine secretion in foals on a farm with endemic infections caused by Rhodococcus equi.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    January 8, 2011   Volume 140, Issue 3-4 237-243 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2010.12.012
Sturgill TL, Giguère S, Franklin RP, Cohen ND, Hagen J, Kalyuzhny AE.The objectives of the present study were to determine if administration of inactivated parapoxvirus ovis (IPPVO) can decrease the cumulative incidence of pneumonia and increase the number of IFN-γ- and IL-4-secreting cells among foals. Fifty-nine foals were randomly assigned to 2 treatment groups (IPPVO or placebo) prior to birth. At 24-48 h of age, foals received 2 ml of either IPPVO or a placebo by intramuscular injection. Injections were repeated 24h and 8 days later. The number of IFN-γ- and IL-4-secreting cells was measured using a validated ELISPOT assay on blood mononuclear cells coll...
Mild exercise early in life produces changes in bone size and strength but not density in proximal phalangeal, third metacarpal and third carpal bones of foals.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    December 24, 2010   Volume 190, Issue 3 383-389 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2010.11.016
Firth EC, Rogers CW, van Weeren PR, Barneveld A, McIlwraith CW, Kawcak CE, Goodship AE, Smith RK.Exercise or lack of it in early life affects chondro-osseous development. Two groups of horses were used to investigate the effects of age and exercise regimen on bone parameters of diaphyseal, metaphyseal, epiphyseal and cuboidal bones of the distal limb of Thoroughbreds. One group had exercised only spontaneously from an early age at pasture (PASTEX group), while the other group of horses were exposed to a 30% greater workload through additional defined exercise (CONDEX). Longitudinal data from peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) were obtained from eight scan sites of the left...
Perosomus elumbis, cerebral aplasia, and spina bifida in an aborted thoroughbred foal.
Research in veterinary science    December 13, 2010   Volume 92, Issue 2 266-268 doi: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2010.11.009
Gerhauser I, Geburek F, Wohlsein P.Perosomus elumbis represents a rare congenital anomaly characterized by aplasia of the lumbosacral spinal cord and vertebrae. This anomaly is often associated with arthrogryposis and malformations of the urogenital and intestinal tract. This report describes the first case of perosomus elumbis in an aborted Thoroughbred foal associated with cerebral aplasia with meningocele, cranioschisis, spina bifida, a fused urogenital and intestinal tracts lined by a cutaneous mucosa without uterine glands, atresia ani, and arthrogryposis of the hind legs. Immunohistochemistry detected no abnormalities in ...
Biomarkers of brain injury in foals with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    December 8, 2010   Volume 25, Issue 1 132-137 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2010.0645.x
Ringger NC, Giguère S, Morresey PR, Yang C, Shaw G.Neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (NHIE) is a disease affecting newborn foals for which there is no antemortem diagnostic test. Objective: Ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase 1 (UCHL1) and the phosphorylated axonal forms of neurofilament H (pNF-H) are markers of brain injury in foals with NHIE. Methods: Thirty-three foals with a clinical diagnosis consistent with NHIE and 17 healthy foals. Methods: Retrospective study. Concentrations of UCHL1 and pNF-H in plasma were measured by ELISA. The performance of the assays for the diagnosis of NHIE was assessed by receiver operating characteristic c...
Use of pressor therapy in 34 hypotensive critically ill neonatal foals.
Australian veterinary journal    November 26, 2010   Volume 88, Issue 12 472-477 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2010.00652.x
Dickey EJ, McKenzie H, Johnson A, Furr MO.Arginine vasopressin (AVP) is used in human medicine in the management of vasodilatory shock and cardiac arrest, but it is not widely used in equine neonatal intensive care because of concerns about potential side effects and suboptimal efficacy. This retrospective study reports the clinical use of AVP and norepinephrine (NE) in foals with refractory hypotension. Objective: To report the cardiovascular responses and fluid balance in critically ill, hypotensive foals receiving either NE or AVP. Methods: The medical records of neonatal foals (<7 days of age) from 2000 to 2007 admitted to the ...
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