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Topic:Homeostasis

Homeostasis in horses refers to the physiological processes that maintain internal stability within the equine body despite external environmental changes. This involves the regulation of various systems, including temperature control, pH balance, electrolyte levels, and fluid balance. Key components contributing to homeostasis in horses include the endocrine system, the nervous system, and the excretory system, each playing a role in adjusting bodily functions to sustain equilibrium. Disruptions in homeostasis can result from factors such as stress, illness, or environmental changes, impacting the horse's overall health and performance. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms, regulation, and implications of homeostatic processes in equine physiology.
Hysteresis and calcium set-point for the calcium parathyroid hormone relationship in healthy horses.
General and comparative endocrinology    February 28, 2003   Volume 130, Issue 3 279-288 doi: 10.1016/s0016-6480(02)00621-4
Toribio RE, Kohn CW, Sams RA, Capen CC, Rosol TJ.Abnormalities in calcium (Ca(2+)) homeostasis are reported in horses with several pathological conditions; however, there is little information on Ca(2+) regulation in horses. The objectives of the present study were to determine the Ca(2+) set-point in healthy horses, to determine whether the Ca(2+)/parathyroid hormone (PTH) response curves were characterized by hysteresis, and to determine if the order of experimentally induced hypocalcemia or hypercalcemia had an effect on PTH secretion. The Ca(2+) set-point and hysteresis were determined in 12 healthy horses by infusing Na(2)EDTA and calci...
Separate sites and mechanisms for placental transport of calcium, iron and glucose in the equine placenta.
Placenta    September 14, 2000   Volume 21, Issue 7 635-645 doi: 10.1053/plac.2000.0550
Wooding FB, Morgan G, Fowden AL, Allen WR.The placenta is the only channel for transport of nutrients to the conceptus and the fetal nutrient demands increase exponentially to term. The 9 kDa calcium binding protein (calbindin, 9CBP) and the iron binding protein uteroferrin (UF) are proving to be reliable markers for epithelia that mediate active transcellular calcium and iron transport and the glucose transporter proteins (GT1 and GT3) for glucose transport by facilitated diffusion. Light and electron microscope immunocytochemistry have been used on perfusion fixed resin embedded material to establish the distribution of 9CBP, UF, GT...
Oxygen-sensitive membrane transporters in vertebrate red cells.
The Journal of experimental biology    April 6, 2000   Volume 203, Issue Pt 9 1395-1407 doi: 10.1242/jeb.203.9.1395
Gibson JS, Cossins AR, Ellory JC.Oxygen is essential for all higher forms of animal life. It is required for oxidative phosphorylation, which forms the bulk of the energy supply of most animals. In many vertebrates, transport of O(2) from respiratory to other tissues, and of CO(2) in the opposite direction, involves red cells. These are highly specialised, adapted for their respiratory function. Intracellular haemoglobin, carbonic anhydrase and the membrane anion exchanger (AE1) increase the effective O(2)- and CO(2)-carrying capacity of red cells by approximately 100-fold. O(2) also has a pathological role. It is a very reac...
Physiology of body fluids in the horse.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 30, 1998   Volume 14, Issue 1 1-22 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30209-2
Johnson PJ.This article presents a brief overview of the physiology of homeostasis in the horse and discusses the units of measurement by which dissolved electrolytes are assessed. Differences in electrolyte composition between compartments of the body and the manner in which water is exchanged between them are reviewed. The mechanisms by which alterations in osmolality and effective circulating volume are detected and the physiological responses to those alterations are presented.
Acute effects of short-term feed deprivation and refeeding on circulating concentrations of metabolites, insulin-like growth factor I, insulin-like growth factor binding proteins, somatotropin, and thyroid hormones in adult geldings.
Journal of animal science    May 1, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 5 1351-1358 doi: 10.2527/1997.7551351x
Christensen RA, Malinowski K, Massenzio AM, Hafs HD, Scanes CG.Two studies were performed with Standardbred geldings 7 to 21 yr of age to determine the sequence of changes in blood plasma concentrations of some hormones and metabolites during feed deprivation for 48 h and for 12 h after refeeding. Plasma hormone and metabolite concentrations were determined with methods validated for horse plasma. Insulin-like growth factor binding proteins (IGFBP) were determined with radioligand analysis following SDS-PAGE electrophoresis. In both experiments, plasma concentrations of triiodothyronine and thyroxine decreased (P < .01) during feed deprivation and incr...
[Total Ca contents in blood cells and plasma of the irradiated animals].
Radiatsionnaia biologiia, radioecologiia    May 1, 1994   Volume 34, Issue 3 379-385 
Shevchenko AS, Konopleva IV, Tkachuk EKh.It was found that the total Ca content in erythrocytes from irradiated sheep and horses increased by 10-40% from 1st till 5th days after irradiation, the intracellular Mg content being unchanged. More than 2-fold increase in total Ca content in lymphocytes during first 15 days was revealed, while in platelets only a trend for a growth in acute period of radiation disease was detected. On the contrary, no reliable changes in total Ca content in plasma after irradiation were observed. This fact indicates that Ca accumulation in blood cells after whole-body irradiation is due to disturbance in in...
The role of sweat in maintaining the stimulation of effort homeostasis in horses.
Archivum veterinarium Polonicum    January 1, 1994   Volume 34, Issue 3-4 231-239 
Hejłasz Z, Nicpoń J, Czerw P.Sweat secretion was analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively in 20 horses after a 5 min. gallop at 450 m/min. The analysis revealed concentration of proteins 63.3 +/- 6.47 g/l, mainly albumins, a high level of sodium 254.43 +/- 62.84 mM/,l chloride 268.68 +/- 98.46 mM/l, potassium 98.95 +/- 49.62 mM/l and calcium 4.14 +/- 0.8 mM/l. A dependence was found between the protein concentration in serum and its quantity in sweat and between the level of potassium in sweat and its loss from the cells within a range 8.6 to 25.8 mM/l. The hypertonic horse sweat protects organism for excessive water los...
Breathing during exercise: demands, regulation, limitations.
Advances in experimental medicine and biology    January 1, 1988   Volume 227 257-276 doi: 10.1007/978-1-4684-5481-9_23
Forster HV, Pan LG.In humans alveolar ventilation (VA) is adjusted almost perfectly to the metabolic demands of mild and moderate exercise. For example, in exercise transitions and in the steady state, PaCO2 rarely deviates by more than 1 to 3 mmHg from the value at rest. This near-homeostasis contrasts to most other mammalian species; equines for example, demonstrate a progressive hypocapnia and alkalosis as exercise intensity is increased to moderate levels. In equines, the control systems seem programmed for a specific hyperventilation that contributes to maintenance of PaO2 homeostasis. Generally, during hea...
The concentrations of free Mg2+ and free Zn2+ in equine blood plasma.
The Journal of biological chemistry    August 15, 1987   Volume 262, Issue 23 11140-11148 
Magneson GR, Puvathingal JM, Ray WJ.The enzyme phosphoglucomutase can be used as a metal ion indicator to measure the concentrations of free Mg2+ and free Zn2+ in physiological fluids. In horse plasma, the concentration of free Mg2+ is close to 0.5 mM, whereas that of free Zn2+ is about 2 X 10(-10) M, although numerous physiological roles for Zn2+ have been postulated that would require free Zn2+ concentration orders of magnitude higher than this. A titration of plasma with Zn2+ shows that the fractional increase in free Zn2+ is essentially the same as the fractional increase in total exchangeable Zn2+, and the results are consi...
[Enterohepatic cycle of bile acids and erythrocyte survival].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1985   Volume 22, Issue 6 27-33 
Tsolov V, Tsolov A, Tsankov R.A comparative analysis is made of the correlation between the life of erythrocytes in various species of animals and some parameters of the gallbladder and its secretion. Due attention is paid to the presence of the bladder, its size, and the concentration and intensity of secretion as well as to the effect of the various bile components on the surface tension of water, the water solution of salts, and the erythrocyte membrane. It is believed that both the composition of bile and the structure of erythrocyte membrane are homeostatically determined. It has been found that the mechanism of aging...
Calcium and phosphorus homeostasis in horses.
The Journal of nutrition    January 1, 1974   Volume 104, Issue 1 18-27 doi: 10.1093/jn/104.1.18
Argenzio RA, Lowe JE, Hintz HF, Schryver HF.No abstract available