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Topic:Horses

"Horses" is a broad topic that encompasses various aspects of equine biology, behavior, and management. This category includes studies on the anatomy, physiology, and genetics of horses, as well as their behavior, nutrition, and care. Research in this area may also cover the historical and cultural significance of horses, their roles in agriculture, sport, and therapy, and the challenges associated with their conservation and welfare. The page aggregates peer-reviewed research articles and scholarly studies that explore the multifaceted relationships between humans and horses, examining both scientific and socio-economic perspectives.
Mycoplasma felis as a cause of pleuritis in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1374-1376 
Ogilvie TH, Rosendal S, Blackwell TE, Rostkowski CM, Julian RJ, Ruhnke L.Mycoplasma felis was the only organism recovered from the thoracic cavity of a horse with pleuritis. Large numbers of mildly degenerative neutrophils were in the pleural fluid. The horse developed a serologic response to M felis and recovered during hospitalization. Experimentally, a pony was inoculated in the thoracic cavity with a pure culture of the M felis isolate suspended in the pony's serum. A control pony was inoculated with serum only. Within 48 hours, the principal pony developed fever, increased respiratory rate, pleural effusion, and signs of pain. A highly cellular exudate with no...
Leiomyoma of the small intestine in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 12 1398 
Hanes GE, Robertson JT.No abstract available
Activity of cefotaxime, a beta-lactam antibiotic, against the contagious equine metritis organism.
The Veterinary record    June 11, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 24 569-570 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.24.569
Timoney PJ, Shin SJ, Huntress C, Strickland KL.No abstract available
Diuretic effect of high-ceiling diuretics in ponies.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 2 157-158 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1983.tb00394.x
Frey HH.No abstract available
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...
Surface receptors for IgG and complement on equine alveolar macrophages.
Inflammation    June 1, 1983   Volume 7, Issue 2 183-195 doi: 10.1007/BF00917822
Dyer RM, Leid RW.Isolated equine alveolar macrophages obtained by bronchopulmonary lavage of four live ponies demonstrated surface receptors for equine IgG, equine IgM, and complement-coated sheep red blood cells, but not equine IgM or complement-coated erythrocytes alone. In addition, demonstration of IgG receptors was found to depend on the level of erythrocyte sensitization and could not be demonstrated by red blood cell rosetting techniques at low levels of sensitization. Demonstration of receptors for equine complement by red cell rosetting techniques required the presence of both IgM antibody and serum d...
Study of equine histoplasmosis farciminosi and characterization of Histoplasma farciminosum.
Sabouraudia    June 1, 1983   Volume 21, Issue 2 121-127 doi: 10.1080/00362178385380191
Gabal MA, Hassan FK, Siad AA, Karim KA.A detailed clinical and mycological study of horse infections with Histoplasma farciminosum was conducted for the first time in the Middle East. The disease seems to prevail in endemic form in the region. In all of the cases studied the infection involved only the cutaneous lymphatics and skin tissue with extension to the regional draining lymph glands. The disease seems to impose serious economic impact in the infected areas. Full description and thorough characterization of both the mycelial form and the yeast phase of the causative fungus were made.
Complications associated with immunotherapy of equine phycomycosis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1227-1229 
Miller RI, Wold D, Lindsay WA, Beadle RE, McClure JJ, McClure JR, McCoy DJ.Five horses with pythiosis of the limbs were treated unsuccessfully by surgery or topical application of amphotericin B, or both. Follow-up immunotherapy resulted in 1 horse responding favorably. Three horses were cured of the fungal infection but developed osteitis or deep-seated laminitis, which necessitated their destruction. The remaining horse, which had severe anemia, died before the course of vaccination was completed.
Pharmacokinetics of phenytoin (diphenylhydantoin) in horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 2 133-140 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1983.tb00390.x
Kowalczyk DF, Beech J.The pharmacokinetics of the anti-convulsant phenytoin were investigated in clinically healthy horses after oral (p.o.) and intravenous (i.v.) administration. A single dose of phenytoin (8.8 mg/kg body weight) was given i.v. as a bolus to nine horses and one horse received 13.2 mg/kg. A two-compartment open model was used to describe the disposition of phenytoin. Four of the horses that received an i.v. dose (three at 8.8 mg/kg and one at 13.2 mg/kg) were then given the same dose 3 days later by the oral route. Phenytoin achieved a peak concentration in serum within 1-4 h after p.o. administrat...
Automatic noninvasive sphygmomanometry in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1230-1233 
Muir WW, Wade A, Grospitch B.Systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressures and heart rate were determined in 73 horses, using an indirect automatic oscillometric technique. Blood pressure and heart rate data obtained by sphygmomanometry were compared with similar data obtained from cannulation of the horses' facial or dorsal metatarsal arteries. Good correlation between direct (actual) and indirect (oscillometric) blood pressures and heart rate measurements were obtained when the heart rate was low, using high sensitivity setting. Cardiac arrhythmias or hypotension prevented oscillometric measurements from being ...
A coccidial sporocyst in equine urine.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1250-1251 
Reinemeyer CR, Jacobs RM, Spurlock GN.No abstract available
Response to saline solution of normally fed horses and horses dehydrated by fasting.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 964-968 
Carlson GP, Rumbaugh GE.No abstract available
Studies with inactivated equine influenza vaccine. 1. Serological responses of ponies to graded doses of vaccine.
The Journal of hygiene    June 1, 1983   Volume 90, Issue 3 371-384 doi: 10.1017/s0022172400029004
Wood JM, Mumford J, Folkers C, Scott AM, Schild GC.Serological responses to three bivalent aqueous equine influenza vaccines of different potency and an adjuvanted bivalent vaccine containing inactivated A/equine/Prague/56 (H7N7) and A/equine/Miami/63 (H3N8) viruses, were examined in seronegative ponies. Potencies of the vaccines, measured by single-radial-diffusion tests, ranged from 4 to 56 micrograms of haemagglutinin (HA) antigen activity/virus strain per dose. Serological responses to vaccination were examined by haemagglutination-inhibition (HI) and single-radial-haemolysis (SRH) tests. Four weeks after a primary dose, HI responses to bo...
Reticulum cell sarcoma in a mare.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1983   Volume 60, Issue 6 189-191 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1983.tb05963.x
Gay CC, Richards WP.No abstract available
Oxfendazole treatment of horses.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1983   Volume 60, Issue 6 193-194 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1983.tb05966.x
Guinan JJ.No abstract available
Controlled tests with fenbendazole in equids: special interest on activity of multiple doses against natural infections of migrating stages of strongyles.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1058-1063 
Lyons ET, Drudge JH, Tolliver SC.No abstract available
Studies on the physiopathology of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the horse. VIII. Mean modal vectors of the P wave and the QRS complex.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 50, Issue 2 119-124 
Littlejohn A, Button C, Bowles F.Mean modal vectors of P1, P2 and QRS were determined in the 3 planes of a semi-orthogonal EKG lead system in 17 horses and ponies with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and in 17 clinically normal horses and ponies. Subjects were paired so that the heart rates of each pair were not dissimilar by more than 2 cycles per minute. Probably significant differences were observed between the mean angles of P1 vectors in the transverse and sagittal planes (T plane, normal = 324 degrees +/- 24,6 degrees, COPD = 342 degrees +/- 21,0 degrees, t = 2,0, P less than 0,05; S plane, normal = 331 deg...
Study on the immune response and serological diagnosis of equine histoplasmosis (epizootic lymphangitis).
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    June 1, 1983   Volume 30, Issue 5 317-321 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1983.tb01850.x
Gabal MA, Khalifa K.No abstract available
Experimental infection of horses with Trypanosoma evansi. I. Parasitological and clinical results.
Annales de la Societe belge de medecine tropicale    June 1, 1983   Volume 63, Issue 2 127-135 
Hörchner F, Schönefeld A, Wüst B.No abstract available
Measurement of tracheal mucous transport rate in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1165-1166 
Nelson R, Hampe DW.Tracheal mucous transport rates were measured in 12 nonanesthetized horses after an intratracheal injection of 99mtechnetium-sulfur colloid. The transport rate of the subsequent bolus of radioactivity was determined, using a portable scaler rate meter fitted with a high-energy gamma-scintillation probe. A gamma-scintillation camera was used to verify bolus form and movement in 1 horse. The mean tracheal mucous transport rate was 1.66 +/- 0.24 cm/min.
A survey on neoplasia in domestic species over a 40-year period from 1935 to 1974 in the Republic of South Africa. IV. Tumours occurring in Equidae.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 50, Issue 2 91-96 
Bastianello SS.A survey was carried out on the neoplasms of horses, donkeys and mules which are recorded in the registration files of the Section of Pathology of the Veterinary Research Institute, Onderstepoort, in the Republic of South Africa, over a 40-year period from 1935 to 1974. A total of 378 tumours are recorded, 339 of which were in horses, 32 in mules and 7 in donkeys. Sarcoids (38%), squamous cell carcinomas (23,5%), fibromas (8,2%), melanomas (8,0%), papillomas (4,5%), fibrosarcomas (3,4%) and lymphosarcomas (3,0%) accounted for 88,6% of the total. Of the 58 sarcoids for which the site or origin ...
Aggregation of equine platelets by PAF (platelet-activating factor).
Inflammation    June 1, 1983   Volume 7, Issue 2 197-203 doi: 10.1007/BF00917823
Suquet CM, Leid RW.Platelet-activating factor (PAF), a lipid released as a result of immediate allergic reactions from basophils and mast cells as well as by a variety of other cell types and stimuli, is one of the most potent platelet agonists and hypotensive agents known. Equine platelets stimulated over a wide range of PAF concentrations aggregated in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Maximum aggregation was observed at concentrations of PAF as low as 3.58 x 10(-14) M with platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and 3.58 x 10(-16) M with washed platelets. Furthermore, the aggregation observed did not appear to be breed-d...
Cervical intervertebral disc protrusion in two horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 1, 1983   Volume 24, Issue 6 188-191 
Foss RR, Genetzky RM, Riedesel EA, Graham C.Two horses with ataxia of all four limbs were found to have cervical intervertebral disc protrusion. Severe pelvic limb ataxia, proprioceptive deficits and spasticity were present in both horses with similar but less severe signs in the thoracic limbs. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis was within normal limits. Metrizamide myelography allowed definitive diagnosis in one case when a compression of the spinal cord was demonstrated at the level of the second intervertebral space. In the second case, an intervertebral disc protrusion between cervical vertebrae 6 and 7 was found at necropsy. Fiber degen...
Evaluation of clinical and luteolytic effects of a novel prostaglandin analogue in normal and problem mares.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1983   Volume 60, Issue 6 180-183 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1983.tb05958.x
Howey WP, Jochle W, Barnes WJ.Alfaprostal (K 11941), a novel prostaglandin F2 alpha analogue was clinically tested in 24 dioestrous mares, 40 anoestrous mares and 31 postpartum mares, all being given 2 or 3 mg intramuscularly. Blood samples were taken for the determination of plasma progesterone levels and the objective confirmation of luteolytic drug effects. Two hundred and thirty-six mares at the same location were used for comparisons of the rates of pregnancy, early embryonic loss and foaling. Alfaprostol was found to act as a potent luteolytic agent with good oestrus induction, follicular development and normal conce...
Clinical evaluation of ivermectin against migrating worm larvae in horses.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    June 1, 1983   Volume 30, Issue 5 349-355 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1983.tb01855.x
Nuytten J, Muylle E, van den Hende C, Oyaert W, Vlaminck K, de Keersmaeker F.No abstract available
Efficacy of ivermectin against Onchocerca cervicalis microfilarial dermatitis in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1102-1105 
Herd RP, Donham JC.Forty horses having microfilariae of Onchocerca cervicalis in association with dermatitis, alopecia, and pruritus on the ventral midline were given a single IM injection of 0.2 mg of ivermectin/kg of body weight (June to August 1981). Microfilarial counts in the 40 horses ranged from 18 to 42,446 microfilariae/skin snip on the day of treatment, and histopathologic examination of these skin sections indicated a chronic eosinophilic dermatitis. Numerous microfilariae were in the dermis, but there was no consistent relationship between the presence of microfilariae and the severity of the inflamm...
Fractures of the central and third tarsal bones in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1234-1238 
Tulamo RM, Bramlage LR, Gabel AA.The case histories and follow-up data for 11 horses with slab fractures of the central or 3rd tarsal bones were examined for information pertaining to the diagnosis, which was difficult to identify, treatment, which was proven ineffective, and the prognosis, which was shown to be poor for return to racing. The purpose of the study was to define the results that could be obtained by nonoperative methods, in an attempt to determine whether surgical treatment was advisable. Nine of the horses were Standardbreds and 2 were Thoroughbreds; all horses were 2 to 4 years old and were being exercised at...
Immunosuppression associated with lymphosarcoma in two horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1239-1241 
Dopson LC, Reed SM, Roth JA, Perryman LE, Hitchcock P.No abstract available
Influence of acepromazine maleate on the equine haematocrit.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 2 121-126 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1983.tb00388.x
Parry BW, Anderson GA.The effect of acepromazine maleate (ACP) on the equine venous haematocrit and total plasma protein concentration was studied in six clinically normal horses. Total plasma protein concentration was not appreciably influenced by ACP. However, the haematocrit decreased with the duration, but not the degree, of the decrease being dose-related. Mean haematocrit values returned to control levels by 12 h after 0.05 mg ACP/kg body weight and 21 h after 0.15 mg ACP/kg body weight.
Epidemiological and immunological studies of sweet itch in horses in Israel.
The Veterinary record    May 28, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 22 521-524 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.22.521
Braverman Y, Ungar-Waron H, Frith K, Adler H, Danieli Y, Baker KP, Quinn PJ.A survey of sweet itch in horses in Israel based on a questionnaire to owners reported that 158 of 723 horses (21.8 per cent) had sweet itch lesions. The results indicated that the likelihood of a horse acquiring sweet itch decreased with increasing altitude but no definite association with rainfall zones was evident. Variation in the density of the horse population, however, obscured these observations. In the population surveyed, stallions were more sensitive than mares and pale horses appeared to be less sensitive than dark ones, but the sample size of this latter group was much smaller. In...