Analyze Diet

Topic:Histology

Histology in horses involves the microscopic examination of tissues to understand their structure and function. This field of study provides insights into the cellular composition and architecture of equine tissues, aiding in the diagnosis of diseases and the assessment of tissue health. Histological analysis is used to identify pathological changes, such as inflammation, neoplasia, or degenerative conditions, by examining tissue samples obtained through biopsies or necropsies. Common tissues studied in equine histology include skin, muscle, bone, and internal organs. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore histological techniques, findings, and their applications in equine veterinary medicine.
Muscular changes in Venezuelan wild horses naturally infected with Trypanosoma evansi.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 1, 1994   Volume 110, Issue 1 79-89 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(08)80272-1
Quiñones Mateu ME, Finol HJ, Sucre LE, Torres SH.Skeletal muscle biopsy specimens were taken from 10 male horses naturally infected with Trypanosoma evansi and from 10 uninfected males. An indirect fluorescent antibody test was used to provide a rapid and reliable indication of infection. Histological, histochemical and transmission electron microscopical techniques were used to examine skeletal muscle. The ultrastructural features in muscle fibres were those usually seen in autoimmune disease, namely fibre and capillary necrosis and mononuclear cell infiltration, consisting of macrophages. Changes in fibre-type percentages did not occur in ...
Fibre type distribution, capillarization and enzymatic profile of locomotor and nonlocomotor muscles of horses and steers.
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1994   Volume 151, Issue 2 97-106 doi: 10.1159/000147649
Karlström K, Essén-Gustavsson B, Lindholm A.Samples were taken at slaughter from heart and both locomotor and nonlocomotor muscles from animals of similar body weight but adapted to different levels of activity: three horses and three steers. All samples were analyzed biochemically to measure the activity of key metabolic enzymes. The skeletal muscles were analyzed histochemically for fibre type composition, fibre area and capillary supply. The general pattern of differences in fibre type composition and metabolic profile between muscle groups was similar in both horses and steers. The hearts of both species had high citrate synthase (C...
Histochemical and morphometric study of the cricoarytenoideus lateralis muscle in the horse.
Histology and histopathology    January 1, 1994   Volume 9, Issue 1 141-148 
López-Plana C, Sautet JY, Ruberte J, Sabaté D.Histochemical and morphometric parameters of the cricoarytenoideus lateralis muscle of the horse are presented. Using myosin ATPase staining after acid preincubation, 3 fibre types (I, IIA and IIC) were identified. Using NADH-TR staining, type I fibres showed high oxidative capacity, whereas type II fibres had high or low oxidative capacity. The type I to type II ratio was of 35:65. This ratio remained constant in the age range examined. Statistically significant (p < 0.01) differences were found in values for fibre size between groups of horses weighing more than 500 kg and less than 400 k...
Failure of calcium channel blockade to prevent intra-abdominal adhesions in ponies.
Veterinary surgery : VS    November 1, 1993   Volume 22, Issue 6 496-500 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1993.tb00427.x
Baxter GM, Jackman BR, Eades SC, Tyler DE.Intra-abdominal adhesions were created by localized serosal trauma in 11 adult ponies at three locations on the small intestine. Six ponies received verapamil hydrochloride (0.2 mg/kg) subcutaneously every eight hours for three days, and five ponies received an equal volume of saline solution at the same intervals. The investigators were not informed which treatments the ponies received. Systolic, diastolic, and mean carotid arterial pressures and heart rates were measured six hours before surgery, and then 0.5, 1, 1.5, and 8 hours after the first treatment on each day for three days. One pony...
Muscular pathology in equine laryngeal neuropathy.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 510-513 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03002.x
Lopez-Plana C, Sautet JY, Ruberte J.Three adductor muscles of the larynx, the cricoarytenoideus lateralis (CAL), the arytenoideus transversus (AT) and the ventricularis (Ve), from 36 horses were examined histologically. The neurogenic changes seen in each muscle were evaluated qualitatively. In addition, in 6 horses with clinical and subclinical signs of neurogenic atrophy, measurements of muscle fibre area were performed. Neurogenic changes observed in the Ve were less than in CAL and AT. Measurements of muscle fibre area also demonstrated that CAL and AT showed a wider range of pathological changes than did Ve. The results sho...
Sensory receptors in the equine foot.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 11 1840-1844 
Bowker RM, Brewer AM, Vex KB, Guida LA, Linder KE, Sonea IM, Stinson AW.Two types of sensory receptors were located in the equine foot, using anatomic techniques. Histologic examination of stained hoof sections revealed lamellated corpuscles in the hoof dermis, which had many of the morphologic characteristics of Pacinian corpuscles. These sensory receptors were restricted to the palmar (caudal) aspects of the solar dermis of the heel. A second type of receptor was detected by use of immunocytochemistry, indicating apparently naked nerve endings containing the neuropeptide calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivity in skin, solar dermal tubules, and the...
Ultrasonographically detected changes in equine superficial digital flexor tendons during the first months of race training.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 11 1797-1802 
Gillis CL, Meagher DM, Pool RR, Stover SM, Craychee TJ, Willits N.The forelimb superficial digital flexor (SDF) tendons of 6 Thoroughbreds were examined clinically and ultrasonographically during the first 4 months of race training. Sonograms were interpreted clinically and by use of computer-aided analysis. Tendon tissue from all horses was examined histologically at the end of the study. Computer-aided analysis of sonograms of the SDF tendons revealed trends toward an increase in mean cross-sectional area and a decrease in mean echogenicity over time with training. An inverse relation was found between increase in cross-sectional area and decrease in mean ...
Age-related characteristics of gastric squamous epithelial mucosa in foals.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 6 514-517 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb03003.x
Murray MJ, Mahaffey EA.Specimens of grossly normal gastric stratified squamous epithelial mucosa adjacent to the margo plicatus on the right side and along the greater curvature were obtained from 7 foetuses, 10 term foals and 12 foals 2-35 days old. Gastric squamous epithelium from the foetuses changed markedly during gestation. At 150-270 days, the epithelium was 8-10 cells thick, with a single layer of basal cells. Epithelial cells were polyhedral and had abundant clear or slightly stained cytoplasm. In the 300-day foetus the basal layer was thicker, epithelial cells were polyhedral, and there was a flattened 1 c...
Ethmoid adenocarcinoma perforating the cribriform plate in the horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1993   Volume 83, Issue 4 283-289 
Zaruby JF, Livesey MA, Percy DH.This clinical report describes an 8-year-old Thoroughbred mare that was presented for evaluation of a chronic, unilateral nasal discharge. Findings on physical examination, radiology, and video-endoscopy supported a clinical diagnosis of ethmoidal hematoma. After surgical ablation of the mass a defect was detected in the cribriform plate. At necropsy a 1.5 cm aperture was identified in the left cribriform plate allowing direct communication between the fundus of the nasal cavity and the cranium. Histology of the mass identified tissue consistent with an adenocarcinoma. History of profuse epist...
Quantitative analysis of morphological modifications of day 6.5 horse embryos after cryopreservation: differential effects on inner cell mass and trophoblast cells.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    September 1, 1993   Volume 99, Issue 1 15-23 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0990015
Bruyas JF, Bézard J, Lagneaux D, Palmer E.Sixteen embryos were recovered nonsurgically at day 6.5 after induced ovulation from Welsh pony mares and were evaluated for cellular changes that occur because of exposure to the cryoprotectant with or without the freeze and thaw process. Day 6.5 horse embryos were either (i) frozen and thawed using glycerol as cryoprotectant (n = 6), (ii) given only the glycerol treatment (n = 5), or (iii) washed in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) the same number of times as in the glycerol treatment (n = 5). After treatments, embryos were incubated in Minimum Essential Medium (MEM), supplemented with BSA, g...
Effects of exercise and polysulfated glycosaminoglycan on the development of osteoarthritis in equine carpal joints with osteochondral defects.
Veterinary surgery : VS    September 1, 1993   Volume 22, Issue 5 330-342 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1993.tb00409.x
Todhunter RJ, Freeman KP, Yeager AE, Lust G.This study assessed the effects of postoperative exercise and intra-articular polysulfated glycosaminoglycan (PSGAG) on the repair of osteochondral defects in the carpal joints of ponies. Eighteen ponies with normal carpi had osteochondral defects (mean dimensions 2.4 cm x 0.9 cm) created arthroscopically on the dorsal aspect of the distal articular surface of the radial carpal bone. The ponies were randomized (while balancing for age [range, 2 to 15 years; median, 5.0 years]) to two groups--nine ponies were exercised and nine were stall confined. Beginning at surgery, six ponies in each group...
Intramuscular distribution of fibre types in the gluteus medius of the horse: a histochemical analysis.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    September 1, 1993   Volume 22, Issue 3 233-240 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1993.tb00361.x
López-Rivero JL, Diz AM, Monterde JG, Agüera E.The results from a recent study by Bruce and Schurg (1990) indicate that the gluteus medius (Gm) of the horse is a complex muscle subdivided by an internal tendinous sheet into two regions (dorsal and ventral) which may subserve different functions. In the present study, both regions were found to contain a similar proportion of histochemically-determined muscle fibre types. Fibre type composition did not generally vary over the length of the muscle at the same relative depth. In contrast, there was a significant tendency for the percentage of type I fibres to increase gradually in accordance ...
Effects of hylan on amphotericin-induced carpal lameness in equids.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 9 1527-1534 
Peloso JG, Stick JA, Caron JP, Peloso PM, Soutas-Little RW.In this double-blind study, the effectiveness of and dose response to intra-articular administration of modified hyaluronan (hylan) was determined in an equine carpal lameness model over a 23-day period, using a computerized three-dimensional motion analysis system, synovial fluid variables, and synovial histologic examination. In 24 clinically sound horses, baseline motion data was acquired from horses trotting at 4 m/s on a high-speed treadmill. Then, to induce lameness, 25 mg of amphotericin B in 5 ml of sterile water was injected into the left middle carpal joint of each horse every other ...
Morphogenesis of compound melanosomes in melanoma cells of a gray horse.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 4 677-680 doi: 10.1292/jvms.55.677
Ohmuro K, Okada K, Satoh A, Murakami K, Satake S, Asahina M, Numakunai S, Ohshima K.A thoroughbred horse, gelding, gray color, aged 19 years old had cutaneous melanomas from the root to the middle of the tail, and throughout the connective tissues of the whole body. Histologically, the tumors were diagnosed as mature melanotic melanomas characteristically deposited with abundant melanin pigment. Examined with an electron microscope, melanosomes were electron opaque without internal structure (stage IV), or as mature granular and lamellar types. Most of them were fused with each other, and formed compound melanosomes, which was similar to internal melanin aggregates in shape. ...
Diagnosis of grass sickness by ileal biopsy.
The Veterinary record    July 3, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 1 7-10 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.1.7
Scholes SF, Vaillant C, Peacock P, Edwards GB, Kelly DF.Ileal biopsies were obtained from 18 horses with grass sickness, 15 horses with other alimentary disease and three horses without gastrointestinal disease. Samples of small intestine were also obtained from nine cases of obstruction due to small intestinal strangulation. Histological examination revealed that severe enteric neuropathy in the absence of other significant morphological changes was confined to the horses with grass sickness.
Hepatic lobe torsion as a cause of colic in a horse.
Veterinary surgery : VS    July 1, 1993   Volume 22, Issue 4 301-304 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1993.tb00403.x
Turner TA, Brown CA, Wilson JH, Roth L, Rosenstein DS, Schweizer CM, Woodaman KA.A 14-year-old Arabian gelding was examined for colic. An exploratory celiotomy was subsequently performed and the left lobe of the liver was found to be twisted. The lobe was resected using a TA-90 surgical stapling instrument. Histologic examination of the resected liver indicated portal vein and sinusoid dilation and congestion with blood. There were focal areas of necrosis and bacterial cocci and rods throughout the section. The histologic findings were consistent with hepatic lobe torsion. After surgery, the horse was treated with broad spectrum antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, hepari...
Characterisation of osseous bodies of the distal phalanx of foals.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 4 285-292 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02965.x
Kaneps AJ, O'Brien TR, Redden RF, Stover SM, Pool RR.The distal phalanx and metacarpal physis of both forelimbs of 32 Thoroughbred foals 3-32 weeks of age were radiographed to identify those limbs with osseous bodies at a palmar process (PP) of the distal phalanx. Osseous bodies (ossicles) were identified radiographically in 19% of the foals. Sixteen of the 32 foals were selected for microradiographic and histological evaluation: 6 foals with radiographic evidence of ossicles and 10 foals without. Fourteen ossicles of the PP were observed radiographically. Ossicles were either a triangular bone fragment at the palmar aspect of the distal angle o...
Polycystic hepatic disease, thoracic granular cell tumor and secondary hypertrophic osteopathy in a horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1993   Volume 83, Issue 3 227-235 
Godber LM, Brown CM, Mullaney TP.A 13-year-old American Saddlebred mare was presented with a 4-day history of anorexia. Physical examination revealed increased inspiratory effort and bony enlargement of the distal limbs. Radiographs indicated a thoracic mass and periosteal proliferations on the distal limbs consistent with hypertrophic osteopathy. Gastric endoscopy revealed distal esophageal and gastric ulceration, and functional pyloric stenosis. Abdominal ultrasonographic examination revealed multiple large, cystic structures associated with the liver. A percutaneous biopsy indicated the thoracic mass to be a granular cell ...
Enteric neuropathy in horses with grass sickness.
The Veterinary record    June 26, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 26 647-651 doi: 10.1136/vr.132.26.647
Scholes SF, Vaillant C, Peacock P, Edwards GB, Kelly DF.The degeneration of enteric neurones has been recorded in grass sickness, but the distribution of the lesions in the gut and their possible relationship with the severity of the clinical signs has not been established. Samples obtained from 11 anatomically defined sites along the gastrointestinal tract of eight control horses without gastrointestinal disease, five horses with acute grass sickness and three horses with chronic grass sickness were examined histologically. The organisation of the enteric ganglia was similar to that in other large mammalian species. Minor exceptions included the p...
Besnoitiosis in a horse.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    June 1, 1993   Volume 64, Issue 2 92-95 
van Heerden J, Els HJ, Raubenheimer EJ, Williams JH.Besnoitiosis was confirmed in a pony which presented with inspiratory dyspnoea, scleroderma and ventral oedema. Numerous cysts were visible in the sclerae. Histological examination of the skin confirmed the presence of numerous cysts. The parasite could not be transmitted by subcutaneous injection of homogenised skin from the infected horse to rabbits and a horse. Ultrastructural morphology of the crescent-shaped bradyzoites was not compatable with Besnoitia besnoiti or B. jellisoni and it is proposed that the infection was caused by B. bennetti.
[A horse with grass sickness].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    June 1, 1993   Volume 118, Issue 11 365-366 
Leendertse IP.A three year old warm-blood gelding with severe colic was referred to a veterinary clinic. The history revealed that the horse was found early in the morning with severe colic, and laying in the pasture. On arrival the clinical examination showed a complete wet horse with a pulse rate of 92/min, a respiratory rate of 24/min., a pcv of 0.50 L.L.-1, a T. of 38.0 degrees C, and no gastric reflux. Rectal examination revealed a sticky rectal mucous membrane and a colonic impaction together with displacement of the large colon. A diagnostic laparotomy showed an impaction as is seen in horses with Gr...
Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma in a stallion.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    June 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 3 465-467 doi: 10.1292/jvms.55.465
Fukunaga K, Ninomiya M, Oohara Y, Kusunose K, Okamura Y, Nagasaki H, Ishino S, Kadota K.Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma found in a 6-year-old Anglo-Arabian stallion was investigated histologically, immunohistochemically and ultrastructurally. The animal showed a large mediastinal mass and generalized lymph node involvement. The neoplastic cells were in various differentiation stages of small lymphocyte, centrocyte, centroblast, immunoblast and plasma cell. Some neoplastic cells showed positive cytoplasmic reactivity for mu and lambda chains. There were well developed rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and Golgi complexes in plasmacytoid cells, and slightly developed RER or a few long s...
Morphologic characterization of castor oil-induced colitis in ponies.
Veterinary pathology    May 1, 1993   Volume 30, Issue 3 248-255 doi: 10.1177/030098589303000305
Johnson CM, Cullen JM, Roberts MC.Ten ponies (160-250 kg, ages 17 months to 20 years) developed severe diarrhea within 24 hours of castor oil administration (2.5 ml/kg orally). The diarrhea was most severe between 24 and 48 hours post-dosing and subsided by 72 hours. Ponies were euthanatized at 24, 48, and 72 hours post-dosing and intestine was evaluated histologically and ultrastructurally. Twenty-four hours after dosing, the mucosa of the cecum and ventral colon had extensive superficial epithelial erosion and neutrophil infiltration. In the ileum, the epithelium of villous tips was separated from the lamina propria. Scannin...
Focal gingival hyperplasia in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1993   Volume 202, Issue 8 1287-1288 
Handy LH, Peyton LC, Calderwood-Mays MB, Ackerman N.A diagnosis of gingival hyperplasia in a 22-year-old Quarter Horse gelding was confirmed by histologic examination. Clinical signs included difficulty eating hay, and a large, intraoral soft tissue mass measuring 13 x 8 x 4.5 cm. The mass was located in the mucosa on the lingual aspect of the caudal left portion of the mandible, ventral to the base of the tongue, and covered the second and third lower molars, extending rostrally along the buccal mucosa to the premolars. The left maxillary second and third molars were overgrown with sharp edges. Lateral radiography of the mandible revealed abse...
Mechanical implications of collagen fibre orientation in cortical bone of the equine radius.
Anatomy and embryology    March 1, 1993   Volume 187, Issue 3 239-248 doi: 10.1007/BF00195761
Riggs CM, Vaughan LC, Evans GP, Lanyon LE, Boyde A.Mechanical test specimens were prepared from the cranial and caudal cortices of radii from eight horses. These were subjected to destructive tests in either tension or compression. The ultimate stress, elastic modulus and energy absorbed to failure were calculated in either mode of loading. Analysis was performed on the specimens following mechanical testing to determine their density, mineral content, mineral density distribution and histological type. A novel technique was applied to sections from each specimen to quantify the predominant collagen fibre orientation of the bone near the plane...
Lectin histochemistry of glycoconjugates in horse salivary glands.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    March 1, 1993   Volume 22, Issue 1 83-90 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1993.tb00344.x
Gargiulo AM, Pedini V, Ceccarelli P.The glycoconjugate content of major horse salivary glands was investigated by means of horseradish peroxidase-conjugated lectins. Qualitative differences were observed in the terminal sugar residues of secretory glycoproteins and glycoconjugates linked to the apical surface of excretory duct epithelial cells. Mucous acinar cells in mandibular and sublingual glands contained oligosaccharides with D-galactose, alpha- and beta-N-acetylgalactosamine, N-acetylglucosamine and fucose residues, whereas mandibular, sublingual and parotid serous cells contained only oligosaccharides with terminal alpha-...
Histologic and immunohistochemical studies of granular cell tumors in seven dogs, three cats, one horse, and one bird.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1993   Volume 30, Issue 2 176-185 doi: 10.1177/030098589303000211
Patnaik AK.In a retrospective study, granular cell tumors in six dogs (Nos. 1-6), three cats (Nos. 1-3), one horse (No. 1), and one cockatiel (Nymphicus hollandicus) (No. 1) and a meningioma with a granular cell component in one dog (No. 7) were examined histologically and immunohistochemically. These tumors were identified by histologic examination of surgical biopsy specimens, except in the horse, in which the tumor was an incidental finding at necropsy. These diagnoses were initially made by more than one pathologist. Five of the six granular cell tumors in the dogs were in the oral cavity; one of the...
Pathological lesions associated with Anoplocephala perfoliata at the ileo-caecal junction of horses.
The Veterinary record    February 20, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 8 179-182 doi: 10.1136/vr.132.8.179
Pearson GR, Davies LW, White AL, O'Brien JK.The intestinal tracts of 20 horses, killed at a local abattoir and of unknown age, sex and previous clinical history were examined for the presence of Anoplocephala perfoliata attached to the ileo-caecal junction. Four horses had no tape-worms, nine had one to 20 tapeworms attached to the mucosa and seven had more than 100 attached to the mucosa. The histological changes of thickening, ulceration and eosinophil infiltration of the mucosa at the ileo-caecal junction were more severe when more than 100 parasites were present.
Use of esophagoscopy in the diagnosis of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 15, 1993   Volume 202, Issue 4 617-618 
Campbell-Beggs CL, Kiper ML, MacAllister C, Henry G, Roszel JF.Esophagoscopy allowed visualization and biopsy of a lesion within a diverticulum of the esophagus in an adult horse. Although the biopsy specimen obtained was small, diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma was possible from histologic examination of the esophageal tissue sample retrieved by use of endoscopy.
Infiltrative lipoma in a quarter horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1993   Volume 83, Issue 1 57-60 
Lepage OM, Laverty S, Drolet R, Lavoie JP.A case of infiltrative lipoma in the left flank of a yearling Quarter Horse is described. Rectal palpation, percutaneous ultrasonographic examination, the marbled appearance and poor delineation from surrounding tissues strongly suggested an infiltrative lipoma. This was confirmed by histological examination. Infiltrative lipomas should be included in the differential diagnosis of soft masses located in equine muscle.
1 36 37 38 39 40 52