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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.
[Assessment of selenium status in relation to the supplementation of selenium enriched mineral licks and mineral feeds in equines in Thuringia].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    December 4, 2020   Volume 48, Issue 6 398-405 doi: 10.1055/a-1274-9045
Langner K, Hörügel U, Donat K, Vervuert I.Screening of commercial mineral feeds and mineral licks on the German market containing selenium (Se) in relation to the Se status in equines in Thuringia with different forms of Se supplementation. Methods: Commercially available Se-containing minerals for horses identified by an online research were evaluated for their Se concentration, Se source, flavour carrier and recommended dosage according to the manufacturer's labelling. Furthermore, serum Se status in 8 equine farms was regularly monitored over the period of one year. The sampled horses either received no Se supplement or Se was supp...
Single-cell RNA sequencing of equine mesenchymal stromal cells from primary donor-matched tissue sources reveals functional heterogeneity in immune modulation and cell motility.
Stem cell research & therapy    December 4, 2020   Volume 11, Issue 1 524 doi: 10.1186/s13287-020-02043-5
Harman RM, Patel RS, Fan JC, Park JE, Rosenberg BR, Van de Walle GR.The efficacy of mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) therapy is thought to depend on the intrinsic heterogeneity of MSC cultures isolated from different tissue sources as well as individual MSCs isolated from the same tissue source, neither of which is well understood. To study this, we used MSC cultures isolated from horses. The horse is recognized as a physiologically relevant large animal model appropriate for translational MSC studies. Moreover, due to its large size the horse allows for the simultaneous collection of adequate samples from multiple tissues of the same animal, and thus, for the u...
Retrospective Evaluation of Fluoxetine Hydrochloride Use in Horses: 95 Cases (2010-2019).
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 4, 2020   Volume 97 103340 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2020.103340
Fontenot RL, Mochal-King CA, Sprinkle SB, Wills RW, Calder CD.This study aimed to describe the clinical use of oral fluoxetine hydrochloride administration in horses using a retrospective medical records analysis and to determine owner perception of efficacy via a standardized questionnaire. The records of ninety-five horses for which fluoxetine had been prescribed by the equine service of a veterinary teaching hospital from November 2010 and February 2019 were identified, and data were collected from the medical records. A standardized questionnaire was used to obtain data from owners regarding length of administration, ease of administration, adverse e...
Gentamicin plasma concentrations in hospitalized horses and retrospective minimal inhibitory concentrations of gram-negative equine pathogens.
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001)    December 4, 2020   Volume 31, Issue 3 323-330 doi: 10.1111/vec.13035
Schoster A, Amsler M, Kirchgaessner C, Saleh L, Schwarzwald C, Schmitt S.The optimal dosage regimen of gentamicin in horses is still under investigation. The objectives of this study were to determine gentamicin plasma concentrations in hospitalized horses treated with 10 mg/kg gentamicin (IV, q 24 h) and to determine whether a plasma concentration to minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) ratio of 10:1 is reached for equine pathogens using this dose. Methods: Prospective clinical observational study; retrospective study on MICs of 131 gram-negative bacteria isolated from horses (2012-2015). Methods: University teaching hospital. Methods: Ninety-eight horses >...
Different Approach to Horses-The Use of Equid Remains in the Early Middle Ages on the Example of Ostrów Tumski in Wroclaw.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 4, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 12 2294 doi: 10.3390/ani10122294
Jaworski K, Pankiewicz A, Chrószcz A, Poradowski D.The following article concerns the functional use of horse bones in the early Middle Ages (mainly in the period from the mid of the 10th to the 12th/13th century). The authors try to explain how such remains were used and how common it was. It is also discussed whether the special role of the horse in medieval societies somehow restricted its post-mortem usage, or perhaps there was no difference between the skeletal remains of horses and other species in this regard. For this purpose, statistical calculations on the use of the bones of various mammals were made. Only the remains of the species...
A novel approach for obtaining 12-lead electrocardiograms in horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    December 4, 2020   Volume 35, Issue 1 521-531 doi: 10.1111/jvim.15980
Hesselkilde EM, Isaksen JL, Petersen BV, Carstensen H, Jespersen T, Pehrson S, Kanters JK, Buhl R.In equine medicine, 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECGs) rarely are used, which may in part be a result of shortcomings in the existing guidelines for obtaining 12-lead ECGs in horses. The guidelines recommend placing the limb leads on the extremities, which is inappropriate because the ventricular mean electrical axis is then perpendicular to the limb leads, leading to large variations in ECG configuration even among healthy horses. From an electrophysiological point of view, the leads instead should be parallel to the electrical axis to minimize variability. Objective: Develop an improved metho...
Dynamic Change of Free Serum L-carnitine Concentration in Relation to Age, Sex, and Exercise in Anglo-Arabian Thoroughbred Horses.
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 4, 2020   Volume 97 103343 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2020.103343
Arfuso F, Giannetto C, Giudice E, Fazio F, Piccione G.The physiological role of L-carnitine in equine species is worthy of investigation; however, the systemic content of free L-carnitine and its dynamic change in growing foals as well as in exercising horses are still poorly investigated. In this study, the influence of age and exercise on free serum L-carnitine levels was evaluated in equine species. Ten foals were monitored from 6 up to 18 months of age (group 1), whereas 60 horses were divided in six groups in accordance with their age: group 2, 2-year-old; group 3, 3-year-old; group 4, 4-year-old; group 5, 5-year-old; group 6, 6-year-old; g...
Determination of the pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic cut-off values of marbofloxacin in horses to support the establishment of a clinical breakpoint for antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
Equine veterinary journal    December 4, 2020   Volume 53, Issue 5 1047-1055 doi: 10.1111/evj.13385
Bousquet-Mélou A, Schneider M, El Garch F, Broussou DC, Ferran AA, Lallemand EA, Triboulloy C, Damborg P, Toutain PL.Marbofloxacin (MBX), a fluoroquinolone (FQ), is considered as a critical antibiotic requiring antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) for prudent use. No clinical breakpoint (CBP) currently exists to interpret the results of such tests in horses. Objective: To compute PK/PD cut-offs (PK/PDCO ) that is one of the three minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) considered establishing a CBP for antimicrobial susceptibility test interpretation. Methods: A meta-analysis conducted by combining five sets of previously published pharmacokinetic data, obtained in clinical and nonclinical settings. M...
Lack of Association Between Barometric Pressure and Incidence of Colic in Equine Academic Ambulatory Practice.
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 4, 2020   Volume 97 103342 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2020.103342
Cianci J, Boyle AG, Stefanovski D, Biddle AS.Anecdotal accounts correlate equine colic onset to changing weather conditions; however, atmospheric effects on colic have not been studied extensively. We hypothesized that changes in barometric pressure would increase the likelihood of a colic diagnosis compared with other noncolic sick events. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to look for associations between colic diagnosis and barometric pressure. The University of Pennsylvania Field Service electronic medical records were searched by identifiable examination type via billing procedure codes collecting 3,108 emergent and...
Pulmonary Embolism: Putting the Horse Back in Front of the Cart.
Journal of vascular and interventional radiology : JVIR    December 4, 2020   Volume 32, Issue 3 477-478 doi: 10.1016/j.jvir.2020.09.010
Vedantham S.No abstract available
Evaluating digestibility and toxicity of native warm-season grasses for equines.
Translational animal science    December 3, 2020   Volume 5, Issue 1 txaa224 doi: 10.1093/tas/txaa224
Ghajar SM, McKenzie H, Fike J, McIntosh B, Tracy BF.Introduced cool-season grasses are dominant in Virginia's grasslands, but their high digestible energy and nonstructural carbohydrate (NSC) levels pose a risk for horses prone to obesity and laminitis. Native warm-season grasses (NWSGs) have lower digestible energy and NSC levels that may be more suitable for horses susceptible to laminitis. Although NWSGs have desirable characteristics, they are novel forages for horses. Little is known about NWSG intake or potential toxicity to horses or how grazing by horses may affect NWSG swards. The overall objectives of this research were to 1) assess v...
Gastrointestinal Strongyles Egg Excretion in Relation to Age, Gender, and Management of Horses in Italy.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 3, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 12 2283 doi: 10.3390/ani10122283
Scala A, Tamponi C, Sanna G, Predieri G, Dessì G, Sedda G, Buono F, Cappai MG, Veneziano V, Varcasia A.Current equine helminth control strategies play a key role in strongyle epidemiology and anthelmintic resistance and have led to the recommendation for new treatment plans, which include diagnostic and efficacy surveillance. Assessing the equine strongyle distribution patterns would thus be useful and this study describes the strongyle prevalence in the equine population in Italy through coprological analysis and coproculture. In addition, individual data on each animal were collected in order to identify risk factors associated with strongyle egg shedding. Of the total number of stables inves...
Age over 25 years, but not plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone con-cen-tration above the seasonally adjusted reference range is predictive for radio-graphically assessed changes of chronic laminitis in elderly horses.
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    December 3, 2020   Volume 162, Issue 12 781-785 doi: 10.17236/sat00283
Christen G, Precht C, van der Kolk J, Fouché N, Gerber V.Endocrinopathic laminitis occurs as a consequence of hormonal derangements like pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction (PPID). The objective of the present study was to assess the occurrence of radiographic changes associated with chronic laminitis in elderly, clinically sound horses. Fifty-one horses were included in the study. Horses were assigned to different age groups, in groups according to their BCS and CNS as well as to groups with different ACTH concentrations in order to assess their risk of chronic laminitis (reported as odds ratios (OR) and confidence intervals (CI)). Horses assigne...
Mitochondrial D-loop sequence variation and maternal lineage in the endangered Cleveland Bay horse.
PloS one    December 3, 2020   Volume 15, Issue 12 e0243247 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0243247
Dell AC, Curry MC, Yarnell KM, Starbuck GR, Wilson PB.Genetic diversity and maternal ancestry line relationships amongst a sample of 96 Cleveland Bay horses were investigated using a 479bp length of mitochondrial D-loop sequence. The analysis yielded at total of 11 haplotypes with 27 variable positions, all of which have been described in previous equine mitochondrial DNA d-loop studies. Four main haplotype clusters were present in the Cleveland Bay breed describing 89% of the total sample. This suggests that only four principal maternal ancestry lines exist in the present-day global Cleveland Bay population. Comparison of these sequences with ot...
Clinical assessment and grading of back pain in horses.
Journal of veterinary science    December 3, 2020   Volume 21, Issue 6 e82 doi: 10.4142/jvs.2020.21.e82
Mayaki AM, Abdul Razak IS, Adzahan NM, Mazlan M, Rasedee A.The clinical presentation of horses with back pain (BP) vary considerably with most horse's willingness to take part in athletic or riding purpose becoming impossible. However, there are some clinical features that are directly responsible for the loss or failure of performance. Objective: To investigate the clinical features of the thoracolumbar region associated with BP in horses and to use some of the clinical features to classify equine BP. Methods: Twenty-four horses comprised of 14 with BP and 10 apparently healthy horses were assessed for clinical abnormality that best differentiate BP ...
Changes in circulating concentrations of testosterone and estrone sulfate after human chorionic gonadotropin administration and subsequent to castration of 2-year-old stallions.
Animal reproduction science    December 3, 2020   Volume 225 106670 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2020.106670
Esteller-Vico A, Ball BA, Bridges JW, Hughes SE, Squires EL, Troedsson MHT.Reproductive steroids testosterone (T) and estrone sulfate (E1S) are used as diagnostic markers for cryptorchidism in horses. The human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) stimulation test is used as a diagnostic aid because administration of this hormone results in greater incremental differences in circulating steroid concentrations. Thoughts regarding optimal sampling times following hCG administration, however, are inconsistent. Additionally, determination of half-life of these steroids is important in postsurgical samples to confirm complete removal of testicular tissue. Objectives of this study...
Immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia and thrombocytopenia in 25 adult equids: 1997-2016.
Equine veterinary journal    December 3, 2020   Volume 53, Issue 5 964-971 doi: 10.1111/evj.13384
Easton-Jones CA, Estell KE, Magdesian KG.Information concerning clinical presentation, conditions associated with immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia (IMHA) and thrombocytopenia (IMTP) and outcome in equids is lacking. Previous case reports suggest that immune-mediated disease and neoplasia are associated. Objective: Characterise the clinical presentation, clinicopathologic data, underlying conditions, treatment and outcome of IMHA and IMTP cases in equids. We hypothesise that IMHA with concurrent thrombocytopenia occurs more often than IMHA or IMTP alone, and that neoplasia is commonly associated with these immune diseases and cases ...
Is the French SIRE equine information system a good basis for surveillance and epidemiological research? Quality assessment using two surveys.
Research in veterinary science    December 3, 2020   Volume 134 96-101 doi: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2020.12.001
Farchati H, Merlin A, Saussac M, Dornier X, Dhollande M, Garon D, Tapprest J, Sala C.Accurate demographic knowledge of the equine population is needed to assess and model equine health events. France is one of the few European countries with an operational centralized database (SIRE) recording individual data on all declared equines living in France and on their owners and keepers. Our study aimed to assess SIRE database quality concerning the updating of information by equine owners and keepers with a view to its improvement and use in surveillance and research. Two online surveys were conducted with the participation of 6244 registered keepers and 13,869 owners. Results show...
Heart rate variability analysis in horses for the diagnosis of arrhythmias.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    December 3, 2020   Volume 268 105590 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2020.105590
Mitchell KJ, Schwarzwald CC.Heart rate variability (HRV) analysis has been performed on ECG-derived data sets for more than 170 years but is currently undergoing a rapid evolution, thanks to the expansion of the human and veterinary medical technology sector. Traditional HRV analysis was initially performed to identify changes in vago-sympathetic balance, while the most recent focus has expanded to include the use of complex computer algorithms, neural networks and machine learning technology to identify cardiac arrhythmias, particularly atrial fibrillation (AF). Some of these techniques have recently been translated for...
Evaluation of new leptospiral antigens for the diagnosis of equine leptospirosis: An approach using pan-genomic analysis, reverse vaccinology and antigenic selection.
Equine veterinary journal    December 3, 2020   Volume 53, Issue 5 1025-1035 doi: 10.1111/evj.13380
Zilch TJ, Lee JJ, Bressan GC, McDonough SP, Mohammed HO, Divers TJ, Chang YF.The current gold standard diagnostic test for leptospirosis is the microscopic agglutination test (MAT), which has many drawbacks; therefore, the development of a better and easier serological test for leptospirosis is needed. Objective: To apply reverse vaccinology (RV) and antigenic selection on the assortment of leptospiral targets and evaluate their potential for use as reagents for the diagnosis of equine leptospirosis. Methods: Cross-sectional study. Methods: The antigenic selection parameters were: proteins with antigenicity score ≥0.5 (VaxiJen), at least one B cell epitope and size b...
Adverse Effect of Antibiotics Administration on Horse Health: An Overview.
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 2, 2020   Volume 97 103339 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2020.103339
Khusro A, Aarti C, Buendía-Rodriguez G, Arasu MV, Al-Dhabi NA, Barbabosa-Pliego A.Antibiotics-based therapy plays a paramount role in equine medicine because of their potential pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics properties. Conventional antibiotics show bacteriostatic and bactericidal properties by interfering bacterial cell wall and protein synthesis as well as inhibiting RNA polymerase, DNase 1, and DNA gyrase. Antibiotics are extensively used not only for the treatment of varied bacterial infections but also the prevention of postoperative and secondary infections. Surprisingly, antibiotics such as sulfonamides or trimethoprim/sulfonamide combinations, benzylpenicilli...
Effect of multiple head positions on intraocular pressure in healthy, anesthetized horses during hoisting.
Veterinary ophthalmology    December 2, 2020   Volume 24, Issue 1 71-79 doi: 10.1111/vop.12849
Alling CR, Cremer J, Liu CC, Lewin AC, Camacho-Luna P, Carter RT.To evaluate changes in intraocular pressure (IOP) with variable head position in healthy, anesthetized horses in hoisted inversion and to assess the influence of various cofactors (age, sex, body weight, body condition score, and neck length) on IOP changes during hoisting. Methods: Seventeen healthy adult horses without significant ocular abnormalities. Methods: Subjects were administered intravenous xylazine/butorphanol premedication and ketamine/midazolam induction with xylazine/ketamine boluses for anesthetic maintenance. While hoisted, IOP was measured in triplicate for each eye via rebou...
Prevalence and risk factors of gastrointestinal nematode infestation of horses, donkeys and mules in tropical, dry and temperate regions in Mexico.
Parasitology international    December 2, 2020   Volume 81 102265 doi: 10.1016/j.parint.2020.102265
Villa-Mancera A, Aldeco-Pérez M, Molina-Mendoza P, Hernández-Guzmán K, Figueroa-Castillo JA, Reynoso-Palomar A.The aims of this study were to determine the prevalence of gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) in horses, donkeys and mules and its associations with age, sex and climatic factors (derived from satellite data) to identify the potential risk factors of different climate regions in four Mexican states. From May 2017 to April 2018, a total of 560 farm owners or managers answered the questionnaire, and the data were used to establish three Köppen climate classes (tropical, dry, temperate). The overall prevalence of GIN parasites in equines was 77.9% (436 out of 560). The highest percentage of GIN wa...
The Use of Percutaneous Thermal Sensing Microchips for Body Temperature Measurements in Horses Prior to, during and after Treadmill Exercise.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 2, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 12 2274 doi: 10.3390/ani10122274
Kang H, Zsoldos RR, Woldeyohannes SM, Gaughan JB, Sole Guitart A.Accurately measuring body temperature in horses will improve the management of horses suffering from or being at risk of developing postrace exertional heat illness. PTSM has the potential for measuring body temperature accurately, safely, rapidly, and noninvasively. This study was undertaken to investigate the relation between the core body temperature and PTSM temperatures prior to, during, and immediately after exercise. The microchips were implanted into the nuchal ligament, the right splenius, gluteal, and pectoral muscles, and these locations were then compared with the central venous te...
Derivation of Intermediate Pluripotent Stem Cells Amenable to Primordial Germ Cell Specification.
Cell stem cell    December 2, 2020   Volume 28, Issue 3 550-567.e12 doi: 10.1016/j.stem.2020.11.003
Yu L, Wei Y, Sun HX, Mahdi AK, Pinzon Arteaga CA, Sakurai M, Schmitz DA, Zheng C, Ballard ED, Li J, Tanaka N, Kohara A, Okamura D, Mutto AA, Gu Y....Dynamic pluripotent stem cell (PSC) states are in vitro adaptations of pluripotency continuum in vivo. Previous studies have generated a number of PSCs with distinct properties. To date, however, no known PSCs have demonstrated dual competency for chimera formation and direct responsiveness to primordial germ cell (PGC) specification, a unique functional feature of formative pluripotency. Here, by modulating fibroblast growth factor (FGF), transforming growth factor β (TGF-β), and WNT pathways, we derived PSCs from mice, horses, and humans (designated as XPSCs) that are permissive for dire...
Hendra virus: to vaccinate or not to vaccinate? What is the alternative?
Australian veterinary journal    December 2, 2020   Volume 98, Issue 12 575-577 doi: 10.1111/avj.13028
Gilkerson JR.No abstract available
A 25-year retrospective study of Chlamydia psittaci in association with equine reproductive loss in Australia.
Journal of medical microbiology    December 2, 2020   Volume 70, Issue 2 001284 doi: 10.1099/jmm.0.001284
Akter R, Sansom FM, El-Hage CM, Gilkerson JR, Legione AR, Devlin JM. is primarily a pathogen of birds but can also cause disease in other species. Equine reproductive loss caused by has recently been identified in Australia where cases of human disease were also reported in individuals exposed to foetal membranes from an ill neonatal foal in New South Wales. The prevalence of in association with equine reproductive over time and in different regions of Australia is not known. This study was conducted to detect in equine abortion cases in Australia using archived samples spanning 25 years. We tested for in 600 equine abortion cases reported in Australia ...
Levels of communication: The talking horse experiments.
Science in context    December 1, 2020   Volume 33, Issue 4 473-490 doi: 10.1017/S0269889721000156
Gethmann D.In the early twentieth century, counting and speaking horses, like the famous Clever Hans or the "Horses of Elberfeld," became widely debated subjects in experimental psychology. The idea was to determine whether their learning success was only a fraud, or if it might open up a new chapter in "animal psychology" - or even belong to the realm of parapsychology and telepathy. When their tricks were discovered, the teachers of the animals were marked as charlatans. Both the attempts to detect charlatans and the efforts to avoid this accusation during the talking horse experiments proceeded using ...
Quantitative assessment of left ventricular volume and function by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography, ultrasound velocity dilution, and gated magnetic resonance imaging in healthy foals.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 2020   Volume 81, Issue 12 930-939 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.81.12.930
Fries RC, Clark-Price SC, Kadotani S, Stack JP, Schaeffer DJ, Lascola KM.To compare measurements of left ventricular volume and function derived from 2-D transthoracic echocardiography (2DE), transesophageal echocardiography (TEE), and the ultrasound velocity dilution cardiac output method (UDCO) with those derived from cardiac MRI (cMRI) in healthy neonatal foals. Methods: 6 healthy 1-week-old Standardbred foals. Methods: Foals were anesthetized and underwent 2DE, TEE, and cMRI; UDCO was performed simultaneously with 2DE. Images acquired by 2DE included the right parasternal 4-chamber (R4CH), left apical 4- and 2-chamber (biplane), and right parasternal short-axis...
The Accuracy of Serum Amyloid A in Determining Early Inflammation in Horses After Long-Distance Transportation by Air.
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 1, 2020   Volume 97 103337 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2020.103337
Oertly M, Gerber V, Anhold H, Chan DS, Pusterla N.Transportation of sporthorses increases their susceptibility to infectious diseases. Before, caretakers relied on rectal temperature together with their clinical impression to detect travel-associated infections. This study's aim was to assess and compare serum amyloid A (SAA) to rectal temperature as an indicator of early inflammation in sporthorses after air transportation. One hundred and twenty-two Warmblood horses were followed during the Longines Global Champions Tour 2016 to three destinations where the horses flew to compete. Clinical health checks and SAA measurements were performed b...