Analyze Diet

Topic:Heat Stress

Heat stress in horses refers to the physiological and metabolic challenges that occur when horses are exposed to elevated environmental temperatures and humidity levels. Horses regulate their body temperature through sweating and respiration, but excessive heat can overwhelm these mechanisms, leading to heat stress. This condition can affect various bodily functions, including cardiovascular, respiratory, and muscular systems. Signs of heat stress in horses include increased respiratory rate, elevated heart rate, dehydration, and lethargy. Prolonged exposure can lead to more severe issues such as heat exhaustion or heat stroke. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms of heat stress, its effects on equine physiology, and strategies for prevention and management in different environmental conditions.
The effect of heat-inactivation on agglutinating antibody titers to Leptospira interrogans. Knudtson WU, Fetters M.No abstract available
Heat production and its clinical implications in neonates.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 2 69-72 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04213.x
Ousey JC.No abstract available
The effects of thermally induced activity in vivo upon the levels of sodium, chlorine and potassium in the epithelia of the equine sweat gland.
The Journal of experimental biology    May 1, 1988   Volume 136 489-494 doi: 10.1242/jeb.136.1.489
Wilson SM, Elder HY, Jenkinson DM, McWilliams SA.No abstract available
Effects of altered ambient temperature on metabolic rate during CO2 inhalation.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    May 1, 1985   Volume 58, Issue 5 1592-1596 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1985.58.5.1592
Kaminski RP, Forster HV, Bisgard GE, Pan LG, Dorsey SM, Barber BJ.The purpose of this study was to determine if the changes in O2 consumption (VO2) during CO2 inhalation could in part be due to stimulation of thermogenesis for homeothermy. Twelve ponies were exposed for 30-min periods to inspired CO2 (PIco2) levels of less than 0.7, 14, 28, and 42 Torr during the winter at 5 (neutral) and 23 degrees C ambient temperatures (TA) and during the summer at 21 (neutral TA), 30, and 12 degrees C. Elevating TA in both seasons resulted in an increased pulmonary ventilation (VE) and breathing frequency (f) (P less than 0.01) but no significant increase in VO2 (P great...
Feeding and drinking behavior of mares and foals with free access to pasture and water.
Journal of animal science    April 1, 1985   Volume 60, Issue 4 883-889 doi: 10.2527/jas1985.604883x
Crowell-Davis SL, Houpt KA, Carnevale J.The feeding and drinking behavior of 11 mares and 15 foals living on pasture with free access to water was recorded during 2,340 15-min focal samples taken over 2 yr. Lactating mares on pasture spent about 70% of the day feeding. Foals began feeding on their first day of life. As they grew older, they spent progressively more time feeding, but still spent only 47 +/- 6% of the time feeding by 21 wk of age. Foals fed primarily during the early morning and evening. While grass formed the major proportion of the diet of both foals and mares, they also ate clay, humus, feces, bark, leaves and twig...
[Use of prostaglandin F2 alpha analogs in the mare: I. Alfaprostol for ovulation induction during heat. II. Tiaprost for heat induction following neglected foal heat].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 6, 1983   Volume 90, Issue 10 386-388 
Arbeiter K, Arbeiter E.No abstract available
Equine anhidrosis: a review of pathophysiologic mechanisms.
Veterinary research communications    September 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 4 249-264 doi: 10.1007/BF02214921
Warner A, Mayhew IG.Anhidrosis is loss of the ability to sweat. The problem is seen in horses kept in a hot humid climate, and it may cause severe impairment of thermoregulation in the equine athlete. British Thoroughbreds imported to her tropical colonies are the earliest recorded cases, and since then the syndrome has come to be described as one of Thoroughbreds, usually performance athletes, undergoing acclimatization to heat and humidity. A recent epidemiologic study of cases in Florida has shown, however, that many different breeds, and long time inhabitants of a hot climate, may be affected. Equine sweat gl...
Composition of sweat of the horse during prolonged epinephrine (adrenaline) infusion, heat exposure, and exercise.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 8 1571-1577 
Kerr MG, Snow DH.Temporal changes in sweat composition were studied in 4 horses during epinephrine (adrenaline) infusion (0.13 to 0.31 micrograms/kg/min for 3 hours), heat exposure (41 C, [33 C wet bulb] for 5 to 6 hours), and exercise (16 to 18 km/hr for 58 to 80 km). Four ponies also were studied during heat exposure. Sweat produced by each of the stimuli was hypertonic for Na+, K+, and Cl-. These electrolyte concentrations remained constant during the central period of the experiments, with changes occurring near the beginning and toward the end. The Na+ was significantly higher and K+ significantly lower i...
Effect of ambient temperature upon the surface temperature of the equine limb.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1098-1101 
Palmer SE.Ten clinically healthy adult horses were examined with the portable infrared thermometer at ambient temperatures of 5, 15, and 25 C to evaluate the thermal response of limbs of the horse to variations of ambient temperature. Limb surface temperature varied in direct proportion to changes in the ambient temperature, with considerable variation occurring among individual horses, especially at the lower temperatures. Areas of proximal parts of the limbs were more resistant to temperature variation than were distal parts. Ambient temperature had a statistically significant, but clinically unimport...
Summertime plasma catecholamine concentrations in healthy and anhidrotic horses in Louisiana.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 8 1446-1448 
Beadle RE, Norwood GL, Brencick VA.No abstract available
The conformational transition of horse heart porphyrin c.
The Journal of biological chemistry    April 10, 1982   Volume 257, Issue 7 3864-3868 
Brems DN, Liu YC, Stellwagen E.The heme iron of horse heart cytochrome c was selectively removed using anhydrous HF. The product, porphyrin c, exhibits the viscosity, far ultraviolet circular dichroic, and fluorescence properties characteristic for native cytochrome c. However, porphyrin c is more susceptible to denaturation by guanidine hydrochloride and by heat than is the parent cytochrome. All of the conformational parameters of porphyrin c exhibit a common reversible transition centered at 0.95 m guanidine hydrochloride at 23 degrees C and pH 7.0. Guanidine denatured porphyrin c refolds in two kinetic phases having tim...
Urinary production in the healthy horse and in horses deprived of feed and water.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 4 735-737 
Rumbaugh GE, Carlson GP, Harrold D.Total daily 24-hour urinary output was obtained from 11 healthy horses fed alfalfa hay with free access to salt during periods of high environmental temperatures. Daily urinary volume averaged 15.6 L, with mean specific gravity of 1.028, osmolality of 1,040 mOsm/kg, and urinary flow rate of 1.24 ml/kg/hr. Total 24-hour sample collections of urine were also obtained from horses held without access to feed or water for periods of 24, 48, and 72 hours during high environmental temperatures. Average urine production under these conditions was 6.3 L during the 1st day; 3.2 L, the 2nd day; and 3.0 L...
Equine anhidrosis: a survey of affected horses in Florida.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 1982   Volume 180, Issue 6 627-629 
Warner AE, Mayhew IG.No abstract available
Sweating in the intact horse and isolated perfused horse skin.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. C: Comparative pharmacology    January 1, 1982   Volume 73, Issue 2 259-264 doi: 10.1016/0306-4492(82)90118-6
Johnson KG, Creed KE.1. In intact horses, heat-induced sweating occurred initially as pulses, then as a continuous, synchronously fluctuating discharge. 2. I.V. adrenaline (Adr) induced sweating immediately; isoprenaline (Isop) elicited sweating after a delay; and phenylephrine (PhE) had no sudorific effect. 3. In isolated perfused skin, PhE induced an immediate small sweat discharge, Isop a slower sustained output and Adr a biphasic discharge. alpha- and beta-adrenergic antagonists blocked the first and second phases, respectively, of Adr-induced sweating. 4. The observed sweating patterns are consistent with ind...
Anhidrosis in a thoroughbred.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    May 1, 1981   Volume 76, Issue 5 730-732 
Peter JE, Boge P, Morris PG, Gordon BJ.No abstract available
Effects of limited denaturation by heat on the dynamic conformation of equine immunoglobulin M antibody and on interaction with antigen and complement.
Biochemistry    January 6, 1981   Volume 20, Issue 1 192-198 doi: 10.1021/bi00504a032
Siegel RC, Cathou RE.No abstract available
Characterization of equine alkaline phosphatase isoenzymes based on their electrophoretic mobility by polyacrylamide gel disc electrophoresis.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 12 2076-2081 
Dumas MB, Spano JS.Alkaline phosphatase isoenzymes of equine tissues, peritoneal fluid, and serum were characterized by their electrophoretic mobilities, using polyacrylamide gel disc electrophoresis. The alkaline phosphatase isoenzymes in liver, kidney, spleen, small intestine, placenta, bone, small colon, and large colon tissue samples were extracted and separated by electrophoresis. The resulting isoenzyme mobilities and spectrophotometric scans were evaluated for their tissue specificity and for their possible use in determining the tissue contribution of alkaline phosphatase to serum and peritoneal fluid. T...
Physiologic alterations in the horse produced by food and water deprivation during periods of high environmental temperatures.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 7 982-985 
Carlson GP, Rumbaugh GE, Harrold D.Eight normal horses were held without access to food or water for 72 hours during a period of high environmental temperatures. During this period, the horses had an average weight loss of 51.6 kg (10.7% of body weight). Highly significant (P less than 0.001) decreases in extracellular fluid volume (18.6 L) and plasma volume (5 L) were observed during this period as compared with base-line values. Plasma protein, sodium, chloride, and osmolality progressively increased in response to the dehydration, whereas packed cell volume, plasma potassium, calcium, magnesium, and phosphate were not signif...
Insensitivity of the ferritin iron core to heat treatment.
Experientia    March 15, 1979   Volume 35, Issue 3 300-301 doi: 10.1007/BF01964311
Bertrand ML, Harris DC.To test whether the reactivity of ferritin iron is affected by the heat treatment used in ferritin isolation, we prepared ferritin from the same horse spleen with or without heating. Both samples exhibited similar reactivity upon reduction or chelation of iron.
Calcium metabolism, body composition, and sweat losses of exercised horses.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 2 245-248 
Schryver HF, Hintz HF, Lowe JE.The effect of exercise on the pathways of metabolism of 40Ca and 47Ca was studied in 4 yearling Standardbred horses in 4 consecutive treatment periods: (1) no exercise, (2) trotting 16 km/day, (3) trotting 10 km/day, and (4) no exercise. Metabolic balance studies and studies of 47Ca kinetics were conducted during the final week of each month-long treatment period. The urinary excretion of 40Ca and 47Ca decreased 50% to 75% during the exercise periods. Retention of 47Ca increased during the exercise periods, but the retention of dietary Ca (40Ca) did not change. The efficiency of Ca absorption ...
Stability of horse muscle acylphosphatase to heat and to urea.
Physiological chemistry and physics    January 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 2 153-162 
Berti A, Stefani M, Camici G, Manao G, Ramponi G.The thermal stability of horse muscle acylphosphatase was investigated by measuring the inactivation constants at various pH and temperature values, and by differential spectra technique. This enzyme has high thermal stability in an acidic environment but is inactivated in an alkaline medium. It was found that the enzyme can be protected against such inactivation at pH 8.0 by increasing its concentration and the ionic strength of the solution. The effect of high urea concentrations on stability was also measured. It was found that spectral changes at 230 nm are related to urea inactivation of ...
Physiologic responses of the horse to a hot, arid environment.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 7 1041-1043 
Honstein RN, Monty DE.Field investigations were conducted under natural environmental conditions to determine the physiologic responses of rested, hydrated horses (Equus caballus) to the very hot, dry weather characteristic of the summer season in southern Arizona. The emphasis of the investigation was placed on those thermoregulatory mechanisms which are involved in the maintenance of homoiothermy. Rectal temperature of the horses studied remained relatively stable throughout the day, during both cool and hot weather seasons. However, when horses were exposed to hot summer temperatures, rectal temperature (heat st...
Effects of environmental and other stressors on blood hormone patterns in lactating animals.
Journal of dairy science    September 1, 1976   Volume 59, Issue 9 1603-1617 doi: 10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(76)84413-X
Johnson HD, Vanjonack WJ.Recent data on various environmental stressors and blood hormone patterns are presented for lactating cattle. Known stressor effects of such factors as environmental temperature, air pollution, and noise on the plasma thyroxine, growth hormone, cortisol, prolactin, progesterone, luteinzing hormone, epinephrine, and norepinephrine of lactating cattle are discussed. Information on stressor effects is lacking on glucagon, insulin, vasopressin, calcitonin, oxytocin, thyrotrophic hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, melatonin, parathyroid hormone, and estrogens in the lactating cow. The importanc...
[Preparative isolation of alpha 2-macroglobulin, transferrin, albumin and study of their nonspecific gamma-inhibitory activity].
Voprosy virusologii    July 1, 1976   Issue 4 461-464 
Saiatov MKh, Beĭsembaeva RU.Profiles of distribution of non-specific gamma-inhibitors of influenza A2/Victoria/35/72 in donkey and horse sera were established by gel chromatography in Sephadex G-200. High and low molecular inhibitors were found in 19S and 4S serum fractions. Highly purified preparations of a2-macroglobulin, transferrine and albumin were isolated by a combination of methods of salt precipitation, gel chromatography on Sephadex G-100, G-200 and ion exchange on DEAE-Sephadex A-50. Heating sera resulted in a considerable increase of the antiviral activity of a2-macroglobulin and transferrine and a reduction ...
[Comparative morphological studies on the vascular systems of testes in cattle, swine, horse and dog under functional conditions].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    January 1, 1976   Volume 30, Issue 5 669-685 
Heinze W, Ptak W.The metacrylate and latex corrosion techniques were used to establish that the vascular system of testes is based on one coherent principle in common domestic mammals. The cone-shaped Plexus pampiniformis consists of numerous venous rami, between 0.25 mm and 1.0 mm in thickness and forming a dense vascular network, which practically encase the spiral-shaped A. spermatica interna (cooling coil principle). The testicular veins and arteries in the Tunica albuginea constitute a somewhat voluminous layer of vessels for dissipation of heat, with rami branching off radially into the testicular parenc...
Physiologic responses to exercise of irradiated and nonirradiated Shetland ponies: a five-year study.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 5 645-652 
Brown DG.Physiologic responses of irradiated and nonirradiated Shetland Ponies to controlled exercise were measured over a period of 5 years. The 5-year test began when the ponies were 3 years old and 5 months after they were exposed to 650 R of 60-Co gamma radiation. Significant differences in heart rates, respiratory rates, and rectal temperatures were demonstrated between irradiated and nonirradiated ponies when subjected to exercise and high ambient temperatures. Inthe irradiated group, heart rates were usually slower, especially during recovery immediately after exercise, and respiratory rates and...
The evolution of thermoregulatory sweating in man and animals.
International journal of biometeorology    December 1, 1971   Volume 15, Issue 2 263-267 doi: 10.1007/BF01803909
Robertshaw D.No abstract available
Heat-labile factor necessary for hemagglutination-inhibition testing of horse sera.
Applied microbiology    May 1, 1971   Volume 21, Issue 5 860-861 doi: 10.1128/am.21.5.860-861.1971
DeMeio JL, DeSanctis AN.Normal and immune sera were obtained from horses immunized with either aqueous, alum, or adjuvant bivalent vaccines containing Milford equine 2 virus. Upon heating at 56 C for 30 min, a factor, required for hemagglutination-inhibition but not complement fixation or neutralization testing, was destroyed. This factor which is present in normal sera does not appear to be complement.
Thermal stability of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase and its complexes.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    April 1, 1971   Volume 143, Issue 2 354-358 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(71)90221-9
Theorell H, Tatemoto K.No abstract available
[Heat inactivation of viruses. IV. Factors determining the dynamics and rate of inactivation of the Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus].
Voprosy virusologii    March 1, 1971   Volume 16, Issue 2 143-150 
Novokhatskiĭ AS, Ershov FI.No abstract available