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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.
[Comparative electrophoretic study of the molecular forms of alkaline phosphatase in the leukocytes of agricultural animals].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1977   Volume 14, Issue 3 100-104 
Goranov Kh.The alkaline phosphatase enzyme, isolated by Morton's method from leukocytes of sheep, goats, and pigs gave after agarose elctrophoresis two isoenzyme fractions moving to the positive pole at the sites of the alpha 1- and alpha 2-globulins of the blood serum. In bovine leukocytes, besides these two fractions there was a third one that moved more slowly in the zone of the beta-globulins. In horses the alkaline phosphatase of leukocytes produced a wide band within the zones of the beta-globulins and the albumins. It was established that the proportion between the individual isoenzyme fractions o...
Strain differences in Echinococcus granulosus, with special reference to the status of equine hydatidosis in the United Kingdom.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene    January 1, 1977   Volume 71, Issue 2 93-100 doi: 10.1016/0035-9203(77)90069-4
Smyth JD.The genetics of speciation in the genus Echinococcus are briefly discussed. As the organism is a hermaphrodite and multiplies asexually in the larval stage, the genetic mechanism for the ready production of new strains is inherent in the life-cycle. Some biological, biochemical and nutritional differences between the horse and sheep strains are examined. The sheep strain may be grown to sexual maturity, in vitro, in a diphasic system; the horse strain fails to grow in such a system. Differences have also been demonstrated between the soluble proteins of the two strains. The sheep strain is inf...
[Studies on the effects of intravenous administration of glucose, fructose, invertose and sorbitol on various blood constituents of blood plasma (monosaccharides, insulin, lactate, pyruvate and free fatty acids as well as glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase) in the horse].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    January 1, 1977   Volume 31, Issue 5 701-718 
Kouider S, Kolb FE, Müller I, Pfüller C, Schneider J.Horses were examined for the behaviour of various blood constituents prior to and following infusions of solutions of glucose, fructose, invertose, and sorbitol. Infusion of 0.5 g/kg live weight glucose to six horses was followed by half-life variation between eleven and 23 minutes. Subsequent infusion of invertose to the same animals usually caused prolongation of glucose half-life. Half-life values were between 17 and 33 minutes for fructose and between 21 and 80 minutes for glucose. Infusion of 0.5 g/kg live weight fructose to two horses was followed by half-life values between 17 and 18 mi...
Combined immunodeficiency in foals in Arabian breeding: evaluation of mode of inheritance and estimation of prevalence of affected foals and carrier mares and stallions.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1977   Volume 170, Issue 1 31-33 
Poppie MJ, McGuire TC.Combined immunodeficiency (CID), a defect in both B- and T-lymphocytes, was found to occur in 2.3% of 257 foals of Arabian breeding. All affected foals died by 5 months of age. The belief that CID is transmitted as an autosomal recessive genetic defect was supported by results from matings of dams and sires that had previously produced affected foals. Based on a prevalence of 2.3%, the proportion of carriers of the CID trait among the adult population surveyed was estimated to be 25.7%. Recent descriptions of other immunologic defects in foals emphasized the need for careful differential diagn...
[International standardization of the interpretation of the gel immunodiffusion reaction for the diagnosis of equine infectious anemia].
Journal of biological standardization    January 1, 1977   Volume 5, Issue 4 297-306 doi: 10.1016/s0092-1157(77)80015-2
Toma B.No abstract available
Experimental studies of neurotoxic activity in blood fractions from acute cases of grass sickness.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1977   Volume 22, Issue 1 1-4 
Gilmour JS, Mould DL.Plasma, serum and cells were prepared from blood taken from acute cases of grass sickness, and plasma was fractionated by gel filtration and salt precipatation. These preparations were all tested for neurotoxic activity by injection into ponies. Plasma and serum were found to produce the neurohistological changes seen in grass sickness, as was a plasma protein fraction of molecular weight 30,000 or greater. Activity was retained following storage at--75 degrees C for 15 months. Plasma given orally to a pony produced no detectable effect, nor was activity demonstrated following the injection of...
Coughing in horses–an historical aspect.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1977   Volume 9, Issue 1 37-39 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1977.tb03972.x
Hall SA.A brief historical review is given of the incidence and types of respiratory disease that occurred in Britain in the 18th and 19th centuries. The significance of poor stabling and overcrowding in the causation and spread of coughing is emphasised and its dramatic reduction by simple methods of hygiene and ventilation.
[Etiology of leptospirosis in animals].
Veterinariia    January 1, 1977   Issue 1 61-66 
Matveeva AA, Sakharova PU, Shabran EK, Dragomir AV, Nekipelova GA.No abstract available
Prevalence and pathogenicity of Anoplocephala perfoliata in a horse population in South Auckland.
New Zealand veterinary journal    January 1, 1977   Volume 25, Issue 1-2 27-28 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1977.34343
Bain SA, Kelly JD.No abstract available
[Unusual use of a “trash bag” as a breathing inhibitor during examination of the respiratory tract in horses and cattle].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1977   Volume 5, Issue 3 349-350 
Sturm F.No abstract available
[Injuries caused by horses and their effects on maxillofacial regions analysis of cases in nordwestdeutsche kieferklinik from 1970 – 1975 (author’s transl)].
Unfallheilkunde    January 1, 1977   Volume 80, Issue 1 27-30 
Blümel J, Pfeifer G.No abstract available
An unusual case history from the past.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    January 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 1 102-103 
Stevenson JC.No abstract available
Rupture of the diaphragm in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1977   Volume 9, Issue 1 32-36 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1977.tb03971.x
Pearson H, Pinsent PJ, Polley LR, Waterman A.Four cases of fatal diaphragmatic rupture in the horse are described. In 2 cases there was no history of injury but the other 2 animals had sustained recent thoracic trauma. Three of the horses had signs of colic and bowel obstruction complicated, in 2 cases, by respiratory embarrassment; the fourth died rapidly, presumably of shock. Previously published cases are reviewed and the causes, clinical effects, diagnosis and treatment of the disorder are discussed.
Epidemiological features of the mycotoxicoses.
Annales de la nutrition et de l'alimentation    January 1, 1977   Volume 31, Issue 4-6 957-975 
Akkmeteli MA.Although mycotoxicoses attract more and more attention, the epidemiology of these diseases is still not adequately studied. The author devotes his study to certain diseases. In addition to the diseases whose mycotoxic nature is in no doubt, he conditionally includes certain diseases whose mycotoxic causation needs further proof. The author has assigned stachybotryotoxicosis and alimentary toxic aleukia or fusariotoxicosis to the first category and endemic nephropathy and primary liver-cell carcinoma to the second. His intention in adopting this approach is to establish the common features and ...
A method of ether anaesthesia in ponies.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1977   Volume 9, Issue 1 12-15 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1977.tb03962.x
A method of inhalation anaesthesia using diethyl ether, following induction with thiopentone, is described in ponies. The high concentrations of ether needed to maintain anaesthesia were obtained by using a Marrett head in circle vaporizer. This methods would only be used in ponies, since the diameter of the tubing is too small for use on larger horses.
Cardiovascular effects of exercise and training in horses.
Advances in veterinary science and comparative medicine    January 1, 1977   Volume 21 173-205 
von Engelhardt W.No abstract available
Equine infectious anemia (EIA)–1977 status report for the United states. Knowles RC.No abstract available
Digestive tract problems in horses.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1977   Volume 58, Issue 1 76-82 
No abstract available
[Granulation tumor in the horse following barbed wire injury. X-ray therapy].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1977   Volume 5, Issue 2 219-221 
Schmitt HG.No abstract available
EIA research.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1977   Volume 58, Issue 1 58-64 
No abstract available
Secular trends of annual morbidities of animal infectious diseases.
National Institute of Animal Health quarterly    January 1, 1977   Volume 17, Issue 4 179-183 
Takizawa T, Ito T.Supposing two mathematical models, additive and multiplicative, the authors estimated the secular trends of annual morbidities (1949 approximately 1975) of twelve infectious diseases of domestic animals. For each diseases ten different trend curves were fitted. It was found that five regression equations, namely, those for bovine trichomoniasis, bovine tuberculosis, equine infectious anemia, pullorum disease in chickens, and foulbrood, gave the coefficient of determination of 97.9, 92.7, 91.0, 93.5, and 85.2%, respectively. Four of them were multiplicative, and the remaining one for equine inf...
Indirect measurement of blood pressure in animals.
Advances in veterinary science and comparative medicine    January 1, 1977   Volume 21 1-18 
Hahn AW, Garner HE.No abstract available
[Determination of pressure strength and coefficient of elasticity of the 3d metacarpus and metatarsus in foals].
Veterinarni medicina    January 1, 1977   Volume 22, Issue 1 33-42 
Dusek J.No abstract available
[The fluorescence angiogram of the normal ocular fundus in the dog and horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1977   Volume 5, Issue 3 343-347 
Walde I.No abstract available
Electron microscopic studies on equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV). Brief report.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1977   Volume 55, Issue 4 335-340 doi: 10.1007/BF01315055
Weiland F, Matheka HD, Coggins L, Hatner D.Morphological studies of EIAV reveal knobs on the surface of the particles, conically and tubularly shaped cores, budding particles with dense crescents directly underlying the plasma membrane, and distinct intracytoplasmic structures in infected cells.
[Outbreak of equine influenza by a new strain of Myxovirus type 2. II. Epizootiology].
Archives de l'Institut Pasteur d'Algerie. Institut Pasteur d'Algerie    January 1, 1977   Volume 52 111-118 
Benmansour A, Benelmouffok A, Bouguermouh A.During an epizootic of equine acute respiratory disease in Algeria, a strain of equine influenza virus was isolated. Sera examination by hemagglutinin inhibition test and complement fixation test confirmed the etiology of the disease. The first and second outbreak of the disease remained localised. The third outbreak spread within few months to all parts of the country. Horses vaccinated with a commercial equine influenza vaccine remained healthy.
A comparative study of experimental and spontaneous emphysema.
Journal of toxicology and environmental health    January 1, 1977   Volume 2, Issue 3 589-604 doi: 10.1080/15287397709529460
Port CD, Ketels KV, Coffin DL, Kane P.Normal lung architecture of the rat, mouse, hamster, horse, and human was compared to that of emphysematous lungs from the same species by utilizing a light microscope and a scanning electron microscope (SEM). The results obtained by SEM examination of normal and emphysematous lungs corresponded to those obtained with the light microscope. However, the SEM provided a view of alveoli and airway morphology not obtainable with the light microscope. Because of the variability in pore size and number of pores per alveolus, a pore-to-alveolus ratio was determined with the SEM on the normal lungs of ...
Effects of fluoride on livestock. Sutie JW.Animals normally ingest small amounts of fluorides in their diet with no adverse effect. An increased ingestion of fluoride can be harmful to animals, and grazing animals can be damaged by the consumption of high-fluoride vegetation. Cattle have been the species most commonly affected, and the symptoms of excessive fluoride ingestion in that species include; lesions in the developing dentition, skeletal lesions, lameness, chemical evidence of tissue fluoride ingestion in that species include: lesions in the developing take and decrease in production. The level of fluoride which can be tolerate...
Comparative studies on the gastric glycopeptide in eleven animal species.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1977   Volume 58, Issue 2 163-165 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(77)90103-1
Masuda H, Shichijo S, Takeuchi M.1. Glycopeptides in the stomachs of eleven mammalian species, including human, rabbit, horse, cow, pig, goat, sheep, dog, cat, guinea pig and rat were assayed by determining the carbohydrate content of materials which remained after proteolysis. 2. The glycopeptide content was higher in the mucosa than in the muscular layer including serosa, especially in the porcine stomach and the fourth stomachs of the ruminants than in the stomachs of any other animals. 3. The glycopeptide, which was stained with both alcian blue and PAS, was absent or sparingly present in the mucosae of the human, rabbit,...
[Method of performing helmintholarvoscopy].
Veterinariia    January 1, 1977   Issue 1 74-75 
Machul'skiĭ SN, Shabaev VA, Fomina MI.No abstract available