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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.
Development of intraosseous infusion of the distal phalanx to access the foot lamellar circulation in the standing, conscious horse.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    June 21, 2009   Volume 183, Issue 3 273-277 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2009.05.008
Nourian AR, Mills PC, Pollitt CC.Intraosseous (i.o.) infusion of the distal phalanx (IOIDP) as a delivery route targeting hoof lamellar tissue of standing, conscious horses was evaluated. Following sedation and regional nerve blockade in six Standardbred horses, a microdialysis (MD) probe was implanted into the hoof lamellar tissue of one forelimb. A purpose designed cannulated bone screw was introduced into the body of the distal phalanx, approximately 6 cm from the MD probe. Gentamicin solution (25 mg/mL) was infused at 20 microL/min through the bone screw for 2 h without the application of a tourniquet. MD and blood sample...
Neuropathogenic and non-neuropathogenic genotypes of Equid Herpesvirus type 1 in Argentina.
Veterinary microbiology    June 21, 2009   Volume 139, Issue 3-4 361-364 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2009.06.025
Vissani MA, Becerra ML, Olguín Perglione C, Tordoya MS, Miño S, Barrandeguy M.Infection with Equid Herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) leads to respiratory disease, abortion, and neurological disorders in horses. Molecular epidemiology studies have demonstrated that a single nucleotide polymorphism (A(2254)/G(2254)) in the genome region of the open reading frame 30 (ORF30), which results in an amino acid variation (N(752)/D(752)) of the EHV-1 DNA polymerase, is significantly associated with the neuropathogenic potential of naturally occurring strains. In order to estimate the prevalence of the EHV-1 neuropathogenic genotype in our country, we analyzed the ORF30 genome region of ...
Interspecies transmission of equine influenza virus (H3N8) to dogs by close contact with experimentally infected horses.
Veterinary microbiology    June 21, 2009   Volume 139, Issue 3-4 351-355 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2009.06.015
Yamanaka T, Nemoto M, Tsujimura K, Kondo T, Matsumura T.In horse populations, influenza A virus subtype H3N8 (equine influenza virus, EIV) is a very important pathogen that leads to acute respiratory disease. Recently, EIV has emerged in dogs, and has become widespread among the canine population in the United States. The interspecies transmission route had thus far remained unclear. Here, we tested whether the interspecies transmission of EIV to dogs could occur as a result of close contact with experimentally EIV-infected horses. Three pairs consisting of an EIV-infected horse and a healthy dog were kept together in individual stalls for 15 conse...
[Encephalopathy and Alzheimer type II astrocytes in a post laparotomy recumbent horse].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    June 20, 2009   Volume 116, Issue 6 227-232 
Hof K, Shibly S, Berger S.A 13-year-old Standardbred gelding was referred for evaluation of continuous abdominal pain. Rectal examination revealed a dislocated large colon (Dislocatio coli ad dextram). The horse showed muscle fasciculations and appeared lethargic. It was sent to surgery because of persistent colic. In transit the gelding showed an unstable walk and immediately prior to surgery a wide-based stance in the hindlimbs. Laparotomy revealed a retroflexion of the large colon and a secundary mesenterial volvulus. After surgery the horse remained recumbent. Due to the comatose state and poor prognosis the geldin...
Effect of blood lactate-guided conditioning of horses with exercises of differing durations and intensities on heart rate and biochemical blood variables.
Journal of animal science    June 19, 2009   Volume 87, Issue 10 3211-3217 doi: 10.2527/jas.2009-2001
Lindner A, Mosen H, Kissenbeck S, Fuhrmann H, Sallmann HP.The velocity at which blood lactate concentration ([LA]) of 4 mmol/L is reached (v(4)) is widely used to determine fitness, but there are few published data on using [LA] as a guide for the exercise speed for training in horses. In this study, the effect of 3 conditioning programs with [LA] guided exercise speeds on v(4), v(200) (speed at a heart rate of 200 beats/min), blood [LA], plasma FFA ([FFA]), and alanine concentrations ([alanine]), before and after exercise, as well as heart rate during exercise, of horses was examined. Six 2-yr-old Haflinger stallions underwent an initial treadmill-b...
What is your diagnosis? Pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 17, 2009   Volume 234, Issue 12 1533-1534 doi: 10.2460/javma.234.12.1533
Mochal CA, Brinkman EL, Linford RL, Brashier MK, Rashmir-Raven AM.No abstract available
NMR and computational studies of stereoisomeric equine estrogen-derived DNA cytidine adducts in oligonucleotide duplexes: opposite orientations of diastereomeric forms.
Biochemistry    June 17, 2009   Volume 48, Issue 30 7098-7109 doi: 10.1021/bi9006429
Zhang N, Ding S, Kolbanovskiy A, Shastry A, Kuzmin VA, Bolton JL, Patel DJ, Broyde S, Geacintov NE.The equine estrogens equilin (EQ) and equilenin (EN) are the active components in the widely prescribed hormone replacement therapy formulation Premarin. Metabolic activation of EQ and EN generates the catechol 4-hydroxyequilenin (4-OHEN) that autoxidizes to the reactive o-quinone form in aerated aqueous solutions. The o-quinones react predominantly with C, and to a lesser extent with A and G, to form premutagenic cyclic covalent DNA adducts in vitro and in vivo. To obtain insights into the structural properties of these biologically important DNA lesions, we have synthesized site-specifically...
Human facial discrimination in horses: can they tell us apart?
Animal cognition    June 17, 2009   Volume 13, Issue 1 51-61 doi: 10.1007/s10071-009-0244-x
Stone SM.The human-horse relationship has a long evolutionary history. Horses continue to play a pivotal role in the lives of humans and it is common for humans to think their horses recognize them by face. If a horse can distinguish his/her human companion from other humans, then evolution has supplied the horse with a very adaptive cognitive ability. The current study used operant conditioning trials to examine whether horses could discriminate photographed human faces and transfer this facial recognition ability a novel setting. The results indicated the horses (a) learned to discriminate photograph...
[‘Emerging vector-borne diseases’ in the horse].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    June 16, 2009   Volume 134, Issue 10 439-447 
Sloet van Oldruitenborgh-Oosterbaan MM, Goehring LS, Koopmans MP, van Rijn PA, van Maanen C.No abstract available
Lineage 2 west nile virus as cause of fatal neurologic disease in horses, South Africa.
Emerging infectious diseases    June 16, 2009   Volume 15, Issue 6 877-884 doi: 10.3201/eid1506.081515
Venter M, Human S, Zaayman D, Gerdes GH, Williams J, Steyl J, Leman PA, Paweska JT, Setzkorn H, Rous G, Murray S, Parker R, Donnellan C, Swanepoel R.Serologic evidence suggests that West Nile virus (WNV) is widely distributed in horses in southern Africa. However, because few neurologic cases have been reported, endemic lineage 2 strains were postulated to be nonpathogenic in horses. Recent evidence suggests that highly neuroinvasive lineage 2 strains exist in humans and mice. To determine whether neurologic cases are being missed in South Africa, we tested 80 serum or brain specimens from horses with unexplained fever (n = 48) and/or neurologic signs (n = 32) for WNV. From March 2007 through June 2008, using reverse transcription-PCR (RT-...
Clinical evaluation of ketamine and lidocaine intravenous infusions to reduce isoflurane requirements in horses under general anaesthesia.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    June 16, 2009   Volume 35, Issue 4 297-305 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2007.00391.x
Enderle AK, Levionnois OL, Kuhn M, Schatzmann U.To compare isoflurane alone or in combination with systemic ketamine and lidocaine for general anaesthesia in horses. Methods: Prospective, randomized, blinded clinical trial. Methods: Forty horses (ASA I-III) undergoing elective surgery. Methods: Horses were assigned to receive isoflurane anaesthesia alone (ISO) or with ketamine and lidocaine (LKI). After receiving romifidine, diazepam, and ketamine, the isoflurane end-tidal concentration was set at 1.3% and subsequently adjusted by the anaesthetist (unaware of treatments) to maintain a light plane of surgical anaesthesia. Animals in the LKI ...
Thermotolerance and multidrug resistance in bacteria isolated from equids and their environment.
The Veterinary record    June 16, 2009   Volume 164, Issue 24 746-750 doi: 10.1136/vr.164.24.746
Singh BR.Sixty-nine vaginal swabs and 138 rectal swabs collected from 195 equids were analysed for the presence of thermotolerant bacteria, that is, bacteria surviving at 60+/-0.1 degrees C for one hour. Thermotolerant Escherichia coli, Enterobacter species, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Proteus species and Pseudomonas species were isolated from 41, 16, nine, three and three of the 138 rectal swabs, respectively; seven of the E coli and two of the Enterobacter species isolates survived pasteurisation at 63.8+/-0.1 degrees C for 30 minutes. All except three E coli, two Enterobacter species and one Proteus spec...
The uterine environment modulates trophectodermal POU5F1 levels in equine blastocysts.
Reproduction (Cambridge, England)    June 12, 2009   Volume 138, Issue 3 589-599 doi: 10.1530/REP-08-0394
Choi YH, Harding HD, Hartman DL, Obermiller AD, Kurosaka S, McLaughlin KJ, Hinrichs K.The reported patterns of trophectodermal expression of POU5F1 protein in blastocysts vary among species, and are possibly related to the differences in placental growth and function. This study investigated the pattern of embryonic POU5F1 expression in the horse, a species with delayed placental formation. Immature equine oocytes expressed POU5F1 protein in the cytoplasm and nucleus. Staining for POU5F1 protein in in vitro-produced (IVP) embryos decreased to day 5 of culture, then the nuclear staining increased to day 7. IVP day-7 to -11 blastocysts showed POU5F1 staining in nuclei throughout ...
Cue use by foals (Equus caballus) in a discrimination learning task.
Animal cognition    June 12, 2009   Volume 13, Issue 1 63-74 doi: 10.1007/s10071-009-0245-9
Hothersall B, Gale EV, Harris P, Nicol CJ.Discrimination learning studies suggest that horses learn more easily using spatial than visible object-specific (OS) cues. However, spatial cues have generally confounded intra-array, distal and/or egocentric spatial information. It is also unclear whether conflicting cues compete for association or are redundantly encoded, and furthermore, the influence of prior experiences or training has not been quantified so far. We examined the effect of cue modality on unweaned foals' performance in a discrimination learning task. After a pilot study confirmed that horses could perform the required OS ...
Use of contrast-enhanced computed tomography to assess angiogenesis in deep digital flexor tendonopathy in a horse. Puchalski SM, Galuppo LD, Drew CP, Wisner ER.We compared contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) and high field magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in a horse with deep digital flexor tendonopathy. Lesions in the distal extremity were documented grossly and histopathologically. In contrast-enhanced CT, the deep digital flexor tendon lesions were markedly contrast enhancing with evidence of angiogenesis in the core and dorsal border lesions. The lesion morphology was clearly delineated on MR imaging, but without contrast media angiogenesis cannot be identified. Gross examination, histopathologic examination, and CD31 immunohistochemistry c...
Traumatic perforation of the trachea in two horses caused by orotracheal intubation.
The Veterinary record    June 9, 2009   Volume 164, Issue 23 719-722 doi: 10.1136/vr.164.23.719
Saulez MN, Dzikiti B, Voigt A.Two of 348 horses that underwent gastrointestinal surgery under general anaesthesia developed perforations in their tracheas caused by the endotracheal tube. In one case the damage was probably caused when the horse was being moved from the induction room for surgery and excessive traction was exerted on the tube when the anaesthetic machine was moved too far ahead of the horse. The trachea of the other horse may have been damaged when it was intubated.
Use of serial laminar tissue collection via biopsy in conscious healthy horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 6, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 6 697-702 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.6.697
Hanly BK, Stokes AM, Bell AM, Johnson JR, Keowen ML, Paulsen DB, Sod GA, Moore RM.To determine the feasibility of performing serial laminar and skin biopsies on sedated horses and whether sampling affected adjacent tissues. Methods: 6 horses. Methods: Laminar tissues were harvested via biopsy through the hoof wall from healthy conscious horses via sedation and regional anesthesia. Eight specimens were collected at 4 time points during 24 hours from a single foot. Laminar biopsy specimens were harvested with a 6-mm-diameter biopsy punch after burring through the horny corium to the stratum medium. Skin biopsy specimens were collected from an area proximal to the coronary ban...
Evaluation of marked rise in fecal egg output after bithionol administration to horse and its application as a diagnostic marker for equine Anoplocephala perfoliata infection.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    June 6, 2009   Volume 71, Issue 5 617-620 doi: 10.1292/jvms.71.617
Sanada Y, Senba H, Mochizuki R, Arakaki H, Gotoh T, Fukumoto S, Nagahata H.To establish a reliable diagnostic measure for equine Anoplocephala perfoliata infection, the impact of deworming was examined in 12 Thoroughbreds to which bithionol (5-10 mg/kg body weight) was administered and feces were examined by the modified Wisconsin method using sucrose solution. One day after the administration, cestode eggs were detected in previously fecal egg-negative 3 horses and increased in the other 9 horses. The optimum time for post-deworming egg detection was examined in following horses: 17 mares were administered bithionol and 10 mares were used as controls. The fecal egg ...
Effect of a tart cherry juice blend on exercise-induced muscle damage in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 6, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 6 758-763 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.6.758
Ducharme NG, Fortier LA, Kraus MS, Hobo S, Mohammed HO, McHugh MP, Hackett RP, Soderholm LV, Mitchell LM.To evaluate whether administering a tart cherry juice blend (TCJB) prior to exercise would reduce skeletal and cardiac muscle damage by decreasing the inflammatory and oxidative stress response to exercise in horses. Methods: 6 horses. Methods: Horses were randomly allocated into 2 groups in a crossover study with a 2-week washout period and orally administered either TCJB or a placebo solution (1.42 L, twice daily) in a double-masked protocol for 2 weeks prior to a stepwise incremental exercise protocol. Horses were tested for serum activities of creatine kinase and aspartate aminotransferase...
In vitro evaluation of differences in phase 1 metabolism of ketamine and other analgesics among humans, horses, and dogs.
American journal of veterinary research    June 6, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 6 777-786 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.6.777
Capponi L, Schmitz A, Thormann W, Theurillat R, Mevissen M.To investigate cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes involved in metabolism of racemic and S-ketamine in various species and to evaluate metabolic interactions of other analgesics with ketamine. Methods: Human, equine, and canine liver microsomes. Methods: An analgesic was concurrently incubated with luminogenic substrates specific for CYP 3A4 or CYP 2C9 and liver microsomes. The luminescence signal was detected and compared with the signal for negative control samples. Ketamine and norketamine enantiomers were determined by use of capillary electrophoresis. Results: A concentration-dependent decrease...
Effect of gastric ulceration on physiologic responses to exercise in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 6, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 6 787-795 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.6.787
Nieto JE, Snyder JR, Vatistas NJ, Jones JH.To develop a protocol to induce and maintain gastric ulceration in horses and to determine whether gastric ulceration affects physiologic indices of performance during high-speed treadmill exercise. Methods: 20 healthy Thoroughbreds. Methods: Each horse was acclimatized to treadmill exercise during a 2-week period. Subsequently, baseline data were collected (day 0) and each horse began an incrementally increasing exercise training program (days 1 through 56). Beginning on day 14, horses were administered omeprazole (4 mg/kg, PO, q 24 h until day 56) or no drug (10 horses/group) and underwent a...
Effect of bandaging on second intention healing of wounds of the distal limb in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    June 6, 2009   Volume 87, Issue 6 215-218 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2009.00428.x
Dart AJ, Perkins NR, Dart CM, Jeffcott LB, Canfield P.To evaluate the effect of a non-occlusive dressing incorporated in a 3-layer bandage on second intention healing of wounds of the distal portion of the limb. Methods: Untreated wounds in 33 adult horses used in four studies using the same wound-healing model conducted over 5 years. Methods: Standardised, full-thickness wounds were made in the skin overlying the dorsomedial aspect of the mid-metacarpus; 17 horses were bandaged with a non-occlusive dressing covered by gauze-coated cotton wool that was compressed with adhesive tape; 16 horses were left unbandaged. Wounds were photographed weekly ...
Three cases of osteoma and an osseous fibroma of the paranasal sinuses of horses in South Africa.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    June 6, 2009   Volume 79, Issue 4 185-193 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v79i4.271
Cilliers I, Williams J, Carstens A, Duncan NM.Four horses were presented to the Onderstepoort Veterinary Academic Hospital with histories of facial asymmetry, nasal discharge or obstruction of normal nasal passage airflow. Radiographic examination of the maxillary sinuses of 2 cases revealed well circumscribed, unilateral, mineralised masses; the other 2 cases showed less mineralisation. The masses were accessed for further investigation by surgically created frontonasal bone flaps or trephination of the maxillary sinuses. Diagnosis of osteoma was confirmed histopathologically in 3 of the cases and of ossifying fibroma in the 4th. Two hor...
Evaluation of anesthesia recovery quality after low-dose racemic or S-ketamine infusions during anesthesia with isoflurane in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    June 6, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 6 710-718 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.6.710
Larenza MP, Ringer SK, Kutter AP, Conrot A, Theurillat R, Kummer M, Thormann W, Bettschart-Wolfensberger R.To compare anesthesia recovery quality after racemic (R-/S-) or S-ketamine infusions during isoflurane anesthesia in horses. Methods: 10 horses undergoing arthroscopy. Methods: After administration of xylazine for sedation, horses (n = 5/group) received R-/S-ketamine (2.2 mg/kg) or S-ketamine (1.1 mg/kg), IV, for anesthesia induction. Anesthesia was maintained with isoflurane in oxygen and R-/S-ketamine (1 mg/kg/h) or S-ketamine (0.5 mg/kg/h). Heart rate, invasive mean arterial pressure, and end-tidal isoflurane concentration were recorded before and during surgical stimulation. Arterial blood...
Auricular chondrosis in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    June 6, 2009   Volume 87, Issue 6 219-221 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2009.00427.x
Bowers JR, Slocombe RF.A 4-year-old crossbred, Welsh Mountain Pony gelding was presented with multiple, thick, round, raised, 3 to 8 mm diameter nodular lesions on the medial aspects of both ears. The nodules did not involve the epidermis and were observed to develop over several months. Punch biopsies were taken and histopathological examination returned a diagnosis of auricular chondrosis. Neither auricular chondrosis nor auricular chondritis has been reported in horses, although it has been recorded in cats, dogs, laboratory animals and humans.
Role of the hypoglossal nerve in equine nasopharyngeal stability.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    June 4, 2009   Volume 107, Issue 2 471-477 doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.91177.2008
Cheetham J, Pigott JH, Hermanson JW, Campoy L, Soderholm LV, Thorson LM, Ducharme NG.The equine upper airway is highly adapted to provide the extremely high oxygen demand associated with strenuous aerobic exercise in this species. The tongue musculature, innervated by the hypoglossal nerve, plays an important role in airway stability in humans who also have a highly adapted upper airway to allow speech. The role of the hypoglossal nerve in stabilizing the equine upper airway has not been established. Isolated tongues from eight mature horses were dissected to determine the distal anatomy and branching of the equine hypoglossal nerve. Using this information, a peripheral nerve ...
Overtrained horses alter their resting pulsatile growth hormone secretion.
American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology    June 3, 2009   Volume 297, Issue 2 R403-R411 doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.90778.2008
de Graaf-Roelfsema E, Veldhuis PP, Keizer HA, van Ginneken MM, van Dam KG, Johnson ML, Barneveld A, Menheere PP, van Breda E, Wijnberg ID....The influence of intensified and reduced training on nocturnal growth hormone (GH) secretion and elimination dynamics was studied in young (1.5 yr) Standardbred geldings to detect potential markers indicative for early overtraining. Ten horses trained on a treadmill for 32 wk in age-, breed-, and gender-matched fixed pairs. Training was divided into four phases (4, 18, 6, and 4 wk, respectively): 1) habituation to high-speed treadmill trotting, 2) normal training, in which speed and duration of training sessions were gradually increased, 3) in this phase, the horses were divided into 2 groups:...
Fine mapping a quantitative trait locus on horse chromosome 2 associated with radiological signs of navicular disease in Hanoverian warmblood horses.
Animal genetics    June 3, 2009   Volume 40, Issue 6 955-957 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2009.01923.x
Lopes MS, Diesterbeck U, da Câmara Machado A, Distl O.Navicular disease or podotrochlosis is one of the main causes of progressive forelimb lameness in warmblood horses. The objective of this study was to refine a quantitative trait locus on horse chromosome 2 for radiological alterations in the contour of the navicular bone (RAC) in Hanoverian warmblood horses. Genotyping was performed in 192 Hanoverian warmblood horses from 17 paternal half-sib groups. The marker set was extended to 58 informative microsatellites including nine newly developed microsatellites. QTL for RAC could be delineated at 32.50-43.13 Mb and a further new QTL for RAC could...
Progesterone responses to intravenous and intrauterine infusions of prostaglandin F2alpha in mares.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    June 3, 2009   Volume 21, Issue 5 688-695 doi: 10.1071/RD09019
Ginther OJ, Siddiqui MA, Beg MA.The hypotheses were tested that prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF) travels from the uterus to the ovaries via a systemic route in mares, as opposed to a local route in ruminants, and that one pulse of PGF produces only partial luteolysis. Intravenous (i.v.) and intrauterine (i.u.) infusions of PGF were performed 8 days after ovulation at a constant rate for 2 h. Plasma concentrations of PGF were assessed by assay of 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2alpha (PGFM). Total doses administered were as follows: 0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.5 and 1.0 mg, i.v., PGF and 0 and 0.5 mg, i.u., PGF (n=4 mares per group). In addition, P...
The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor is expressed in the cumulus-oocyte complex in mammals and modulates oocyte meiotic maturation.
Reproduction (Cambridge, England)    June 3, 2009   Volume 138, Issue 3 439-452 doi: 10.1530/REP-09-0078
De Santis T, Casavola V, Reshkin SJ, Guerra L, Ambruosi B, Fiandanese N, Dalbies-Tran R, Goudet G, Dell'Aquila ME.The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CASR) plays an important role in cells involved in calcium (Ca2+) homeostasis by directly sensing changes in the extracellular Ca2+ ion concentration. We previously reported the localization and quantitative expression of CASR protein in human oocytes. In this study, we examined the expression and the functional role of CASR during oocyte meiotic maturation in a large mammal animal model, the horse. As in humans, CASR protein was found to be expressed in equine oocytes and cumulus cells. Western-blot analysis revealed a single 130 kDa band in denuded...