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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.
Instrumentation and techniques in equine fracture fixation.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 2 283-302 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30283-3
Auer JA, Watkins JP.In recent years fracture fixation in the horse has changed significantly. New devices, mainly adapted from the human field, have been successfully introduced into large animal surgery. Examples of such implants include the DCS/DHS implant system, the self-tapping screw, the cannulated screw, and the pinless external fixator. However, new devices have also been developed exclusively for equine fracture management, including the interlocking intramedullary nail and the external skeletal fixation device. With these devices the surgeon has more options for repairing fractures in horses. Neverthele...
Disposition of single-dose oral enrofloxacin in the horse.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    August 1, 1996   Volume 19, Issue 4 316-319 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1996.tb00057.x
Langston VC, Sedrish S, Boothe DM.No abstract available
Age and breed differences in thyroid hormones, insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and IGF binding proteins in female horses.
Journal of animal science    August 1, 1996   Volume 74, Issue 8 1936-1942 doi: 10.2527/1996.7481936x
Malinowski K, Christensen RA, Hafs HD, Scanes CG.A survey with horses was conducted to determine whether plasma concentrations of triiodothyronine (T3), thyroxine (T4), insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and IGF binding proteins (IGFBP) change as horses grow, mature sexually, and age. Jugular blood was sampled from Standardbred fillies and mares at ages 0, 1, 7, and 14 d, at 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, and 9 mo, and at 5 to 8 and 16 to 22 yr (n = 5 to 18). In a second survey, we measured the same variables in eight breeds of horses with markedly different adult body sizes, from Miniatures to Friesians. Plasma T3, T4, and IGF-I were determined by radioimm...
Three horses with neoplasia including growth in the guttural pouch.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    August 1, 1996   Volume 37, Issue 8 499-501 
Baptiste KE, Moll HD, Robertson JL.No abstract available
Equine dinucleotide repeat loci from LEX025 to LEX033.
Animal genetics    August 1, 1996   Volume 27, Issue 4 289-290 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1996.tb00500.x
Coogle L, Reid R, Bailey E.No abstract available
Control of an outbreak of salmonellosis caused by drug-resistant Salmonella anatum in horses at a veterinary hospital and measures to prevent future infections.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1996   Volume 209, Issue 3 629-631 
Hartmann FA, Callan RJ, McGuirk SM, West SE.Salmonella anatum was isolated from horses treated at a private veterinary clinic or at a university veterinary medical teaching hospital. All isolates were resistant to most commonly used antibiotics. Because of the severity of disease resulting from outbreaks of infections with drug-resistant strains of S anatum, an epidemiologic investigation was conducted. Enteric bacteria, including S anatum, that were resistant to most antibiotics were isolated from the private veterinary clinic environment. Salmonella anatum was not isolated from the university teaching hospital environment. To prevent ...
Workshop summary: equine parasitology.
Veterinary parasitology    August 1, 1996   Volume 64, Issue 1-2 163-166 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(96)00985-5
Klei TR.No abstract available
Equine rhinovirus serotypes 1 and 2: relationship to each other and to aphthoviruses and cardioviruses.
The Journal of general virology    August 1, 1996   Volume 77 ( Pt 8) 1719-1730 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-77-8-1719
Wutz G, Auer H, Nowotny N, Grosse B, Skern T, Kuechler E.Equine rhinoviruses (ERVs) are picornaviruses which cause a mild respiratory infection in horses. The illness resembles the common cold brought about by rhinoviruses in humans; however, the presence of a viraemia during ERV-1 infection, the occurrence of persistent infections and the physical properties are all more reminiscent of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV). cDNA cloning and sequencing of the genomes of ERV-1 and ERV-2 between the poly(C) and poly(A) tracts showed that the serotypes are heterogeneous. Nevertheless, the genomic architecture of both serotypes is most similar to that of ...
Instrumentation and techniques for treating orthopedic infections in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 2 303-335 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30284-5
Baxter GM.Orthopedic infections-those involving bones, joints, tendon sheaths, or bursae-are some of the most difficult problems for equine surgeons to treat successfully. Sources of the infection are usually hematogenous, traumatic, or iatrogenic and knowledge of the most likely causative bacteria is very useful in selecting the most appropriate antimicrobial(s) to either prevent or treat these infections in horses. This article discusses the clinical findings, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of orthopedic infections in horses. More recent treatment methods such as synovial drainage techniques (ar...
Tibial stress fractures in racing standardbreds: 13 cases (1989-1993).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1996   Volume 209, Issue 3 634-637 
Ruggles AJ, Moore RM, Bertone AL, Schneider RK, Bailey MQ.To determine clinical signs, radiographic and scintigraphic findings, and performance outcome of racing Standardbreds with tibial stress fractures. Methods: Retrospective case series. Methods: 13 racing Standardbreds with tibial stress fractures. Methods: Information concerning clinical signs, diagnostic evaluation, and recommendations was obtained by review of the medical records. Performance information before and after diagnosis of the fracture was collected from racing records, and follow-up information was obtained from the owners or trainers by use of a telephone questionnaire. Results: ...
Experimental pathological studies on mechanism of abortion caused by equine arteritis virus.
The Japanese journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1996   Volume 44, Issue 2 133-135 
Wada R.No abstract available
Osteonal structure in the equine third metacarpus.
Bone    August 1, 1996   Volume 19, Issue 2 165-171 doi: 10.1016/8756-3282(96)00167-6
Martin RB, Gibson VA, Stover SM, Gibeling JC, Griffin LV.In studying the flexural fatigue properties of the equine third metacarpal (cannon) bone, we previously found that the dorsal region was weaker monotonically, but more fatigue resistant, than the lateral region. Fatigue resistance was associated with fracture surfaces which demonstrated that secondary osteons had "pulled out" of the surrounding matrix; this never happened in lateral specimens. We therefore became interested in the osteonal structure of this bone, and began to study its birefringence patterns in circularly polarized light. We found that the predominant type of secondary osteon ...
[Wild horse or domesticated horse? Horse remains from the neolithic settlement in Pestenacker, Bavaria].
Tierarztliche Praxis    August 1, 1996   Volume 24, Issue 4 344-346 
Vagedes K.The bone finds from the neolithic settlement in Pestenacker (near Landsberg am Lech) date back to the second half of the 4th millennium BC (Altheim). Like in any other late neolithic horse bones, the question we have to deal with is whether they represent the remains of wild horse or early domestic horse, as we do not know for certain yet the date of the earliest domestic horses' occurrence in Middle Europe. The post pleistocene distribution of the wild horse is described. For a long time people thought that hardly any wild horses existed in post pleistocene Middle Europe any longer, due to th...
Instrumentation and techniques for carbon dioxide lasers in equine general surgery.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 2 397-414 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30288-2
Palmer SE.The carbon dioxide laser has become an important surgical instrument in human and veterinary medicine. The unique properties of this laser make it the instrument of choice for precise incision, coagulation, and vaporization of tissue at the body surface with minimal morbidity to the patient. This article describes the instrumentation and techniques used to perform a variety of equine general surgical procedures with the carbon dioxide laser. The benefits of surgery using the carbon dioxide laser include precise dissection with minimal trauma to adjacent tissues, good hemostasis, and the abilit...
Alterations in colonic arterial and venous plasma neuropeptide concentrations in horses during low-flow ischemia and reperfusion of the large colon.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 8 1200-1205 
Moore RM, Charalambous AC, Masty J.To measure colonic arterial (CA) and colonic venous (CV) plasma neuropeptide concentrations during low-flow ischemia and reperfusion of the large colon in horses. Methods: 10 adult horses. Methods: CA and CV plasma samples collected from anesthetized horses during experimentally induced low-flow colonic ischemia and reperfusion were assayed for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), and substance P (SP), using radioimmunoassays. In 6 anesthetized horses, colonic ischemia (20% of baseline (BL]) was maintained for 3 hours, then blood flow was restored an...
Effects of fusarium moniliforme isolates on tissue and serum sphingolipid concentrations in horses.
Veterinary and human toxicology    August 1, 1996   Volume 38, Issue 4 265-270 
Goel S, Schumacher J, Lenz SD, Kemppainen BW.Disruption in sphingolipid (SL) metabolism is a biomarker of exposure to fumonisins. The role of altered SL metabolism in the pathogenesis of fumonisin toxicoses is not understood. A 27-d feeding trial in horses compared the toxic effects of 3 strains of Fusarium moniliforme: RRC 415, cultured from corn in MS; AU 2/3, cultured from feed associated with clinical signs of duodenitis-proximal jejunitis (DPJ) in horses in AL; and MRC 826, cultured from corn in South Africa and shown to cause equine leukoencephalomalacia (ELEM). These were cultured on corn and diluted with clean corn and grain mixe...
Evidence for a single pedigree source of the hyperkalemic periodic paralysis susceptibility gene in quarter horses.
Animal genetics    August 1, 1996   Volume 27, Issue 4 279-281 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1996.tb00490.x
Bowling AT, Byrns G, Spier S.The pedigree origin of a base pair substitution in the horse muscle sodium channel gene that confers susceptibility to the muscle disease hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HYPP) was investigated with a set of 978 Quarter Horses. The horses were chosen at random, based on a collection of blood samples taken between 1989 and 1991 to meet parentage testing requirements, primarily but not exclusively from breeding stallions. The frequency of Quarter Horses positive for the base pair substitution, all heterozygotes, was 4.4%, which corresponds to an allelic frequency of 0.02. All horses positive for...
Four horse genomic fragments containing minisatellites detect highly polymorphic DNA fingerprints.
Animal genetics    August 1, 1996   Volume 27, Issue 4 286 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1996.tb00494.x
Anglana M, Vigoni MT, Giulotto E.No abstract available
Salmonellosis in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1996   Volume 209, Issue 3 558-560 
Murray MJ.No abstract available
Identification of Rhodococcus equi using the polymerase chain reaction.
Letters in applied microbiology    August 1, 1996   Volume 23, Issue 2 72-74 doi: 10.1111/j.1472-765x.1996.tb00033.x
Bell KS, Philp JC, Christofi N, Aw DW.Two regions in the gene coding for 16S rRNA in Rhodococcus equi were selected as species-specific primer sequences for the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PCR using these primers was tested against 10 strains of R. equi (including the type strain) and gave positive results for all but was negative for all other tested species of Rhodococcus; representatives of the most closely related genera and a number of other bacterial species. This method could therefore be used to identify this species which can infect the lungs or other organs of horses, pigs, humans and other animals.
Heterologous antisera and antivenins are essential biologicals: perspectives on a worldwide crisis.
Annals of internal medicine    August 1, 1996   Volume 125, Issue 3 233-236 doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-125-3-199608010-00012
Wilde H, Thipkong P, Sitprija V, Chaiyabutr N.Active immunization against infectious disease is important. However, much of our world faces poverty, social injustice, and warfare, all of which cause universal immunization to remain a distant dream. Agents that provide passive immunity thus remain essential biologicals. The most important of these are human or equine antisera against rabies, tetanus, diphtheria, and snake antivenins. Homologous products are either unavailable or unaffordable in places where they are needed the most. Less expensive heterologous (equine) antisera can be purified and are safe to use, but these antisera are al...
In vitro and in vivo effects of activated macrophage supernatant on distal limb wounds of ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 8 1220-1224 
Wilson DA, Adelstein EH, Keegan KG, Barrett BA, Kutz RR.To determine whether monokines produced by activated rabbit peritoneal macrophages can inhibit development of exuberant granulation tissue formation in distal limb wounds in ponies. Methods: Randomized block. Methods: 5 castrated male ponies, 2 to 6 years old and weighing 140 to 190 kg. Methods: In vitro activity of cell-free rabbit peritoneal macrophage supernatant was determined after incubation of fibroblasts from the flank and the distal portion of limbs of horses and ponies. Tritiated thymidine was then added, and after reincubation, radioactivity was measured. After creation of a 4-cm2, ...
[The plasma level of kanamycin after intravenous and intramuscular injections in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    August 1, 1996   Volume 24, Issue 4 368-372 
Klee S, Nürnberger MC, Keller H, Ungemach FR.A therapeutical dose of kanamycin was tested intravenously and intramuscularly in four normal standardbreds and plasma concentrations were measured over a 12 hour period. Plasma levels exceeded a minimum inhibitory concentration of 4 micrograms/ml within only 15 minutes for 8 hours both after i.v. and i.m. injection. Kanamycin revealed a mean plasma half life of 2.3 hours. Bioavailability of an intramuscular dose was about 76%. The pharmacokinetic parameters demonstrate the rapid onset of antibacterial plasma levels of the test compound. A dose regimen for horses of two times daily 5 mg/kg bod...
Advances in equine arthroscopy.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 2 261-281 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30282-1
Trotter GW, McIlwraith CW.Surgical procedures completed under arthroscopic guidance have become commonplace in many equine practices and have largely replaced surgery using arthrotomy incisions. With a limited amount of equipment, numerous diagnostic and surgical procedures can be completed. Surgeons need to become familiar with regional and intraarticular (intrasynovial) anatomy to ensure that proper surgical approaches are used, access to the lesion will be realized, and potential complications will be minimized. Specialized motorized instruments and surgical lasers are now available and may be useful in the treatmen...
Biochemical and antigenic relationships between porcine and equine isolates of Actinobacillus suis.
Veterinary microbiology    August 1, 1996   Volume 51, Issue 3-4 393-396 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(96)00040-5
Bada R, Mittal KR, Higgins R.A total of 50 Actinobacillus suis isolates were studied for their biochemical and antigenic characteristics. Of them, 40 isolates originated from different tissues of diseased pigs, and the other ten isolates were from horses with respiratory problems. There was no major biochemical difference among equine and porcine A. suis isolates. Results of tube agglutination tests showed that porcines isolates were antigenically homogeneous while equine isolates were heterogeneous.
Instrumentation and techniques for laparoscopic and thoracoscopic surgery in the horse.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 2 235-259 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30281-x
Hendrickson DA, Wilson DG.Equine surgery continues to benefit from advances in laparoscopic techniques. Descriptions of the normal anatomy of the standing horse and advances in instrumentation have improved our ability to perform laparoscopic surgery in both standing and dorsally recumbent horses. The common uses for laparoscopy are diagnostic laparoscopy, cryptorchidectomy, ovariectomy, and diagnostic thoracoscopy. Other reported uses include inguinal hernia repair, ruptured bladder repair, and ventral colopexy.
The modulus of elasticity of equine hoof wall: implications for the mechanical function of the hoof.
The Journal of experimental biology    August 1, 1996   Volume 199, Issue Pt 8 1829-1836 doi: 10.1242/jeb.199.8.1829
Douglas JE, Mittal C, Thomason JJ, Jofriet JC.During normal weight-bearing and locomotion, the equine hoof wall deforms in a consistent pattern; the proximal dorsal wall rotates caudo-ventrally about the distal dorsal border and there is latero-medial flaring posteriorly. The aim of this study is to examine whether there are regional differences in the modulus of elasticity of hoof wall material and whether such differences correlate with the pattern of deformation which occurs in vivo. The modulus of elasticity of equine hoof wall was determined in tension and compression for samples from six forefeet. Samples were tested at the mid-poin...
Analysis of spatial and temporal clustering of horses with Salmonella krefeld in an intensive care unit of a veterinary hospital.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1996   Volume 209, Issue 3 626-628 
Paré J, Carpenter TE, Thurmond MC.To determine whether clustering existed in the spatial or temporal distribution of horses that shed Salmonella krefeld in their feces during hospitalization. Methods: Retrospective analysis of medical records. Methods: 219 horses housed in the intensive care unit of a veterinary medical teaching hospital from October 1991 through May 1992. Methods: Bacteriologic culturing of fecal samples was used to identify horses shedding S krefeld. For affected horses, the scan statistic was used to analyze temporal clustering, and Knox's method was used to analyze temporal-spatial clustering. Results: 20 ...
Multiple gene expression in baculovirus system. Third generation vaccines for bluetongue disease and African horsesickness disease.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    July 23, 1996   Volume 791 318-332 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1996.tb53539.x
Roy P.No abstract available
An attempt to reproduce ‘mal seco’ in horses by feeding them Festuca argentina.
The Veterinary record    July 20, 1996   Volume 139, Issue 3 68-70 doi: 10.1136/vr.139.3.68
Uzal FA, Woodman MP, Giraudo CG, Robles CA, Doxey DL.'Mal seco' is an almost invariably fatal disease of horses in Argentina and Chile, which resembles grass sickness, a dysautonomia of horses in Europe. The aetiology of mal seco remains unknown. An attempt to reproduce the disease was made by feeding horses with Festuca argentina, a plant considered to be toxic to animals and which was consistently found in the diet of nine horses suffering from mal seco. Three horses were fed with F argentina ad libitum for 28 days. The plant was infected with an endophytic fungus, whose morphological characteristics were in agreement with descriptions of Acre...