Analyze Diet

Topic:Human Health

The relationship between human health and horses encompasses various aspects of interaction, including therapeutic, occupational, and zoonotic elements. Equine-assisted therapy is utilized in some therapeutic settings to support mental and physical health in humans, leveraging the horse's role in facilitating emotional and physical rehabilitation. Occupational health considerations arise for individuals working with horses, addressing potential risks such as injuries and allergic reactions. Additionally, zoonotic diseases, which can be transmitted between horses and humans, are an area of concern for public health, necessitating research into prevention and control measures. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the multifaceted connections between human health and horses, focusing on therapeutic applications, occupational health, and zoonotic disease dynamics.
Proceedings: The oxygen affinity of horse and human myoglobins.
The Journal of physiology    June 1, 1975   Volume 248, Issue 1 32P-33P 
Boulton FE, Holly JM.No abstract available
Sequelae of Venezuelan equine encephalitis in humans: a four year follow-up.
International journal of epidemiology    June 1, 1975   Volume 4, Issue 2 131-140 doi: 10.1093/ije/4.2.131
León CA.The purpose of this study was the identification of possible sequelae of the infection of human individuals with Virus of Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis (VEE). Special emphasis was laid on exploring neurological, psychological and behavioural aspects and particularly on the search for a possible association of the disease with epileptic phenomena, brain damage and/or mental deficiency. A four-year period of observation was conducted on a sample of children from El Carmelo (Colombia) where an epidemic of VEE took place in 1967. A group of seven children who presented the encephalitic type of th...
[Prevention of tetanus in man and animal following injury].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    June 1, 1975   Volume 29, Issue 3 469-481 
Radvila P.The effect of heterologous and homologous antitoxin is the same if an equal amount of antitoxin is present in the organism. In man there are no circulating antibodies in the blood after the first injection of the toxoid because there is no natural immunity against the tetanus antigen. After the second injection, man develops the same immunity as animals. Large antitoxin doses protect people for a longer period than small doses. Normally 3,000 I. U. of the heterologous antitoxin protects people for 2 to 3 weeks. In man and sheep 2 ml of the adsorbed vaccine produces an earlier and longer-lastin...
[The cologne riding course for the blind. Original information on a didactic-methodical approach (author’s transl)].
Die Rehabilitation    February 1, 1975   Volume 14, Issue 1 29-34 
Dordel HJ.Since November 1973 a riding course has been carried out with six blind adults. Due to the instructional methods the participants were able to ride independently, without an attendant, after only 30 hours. The effects of riding on the blind encompass coordination training and development of muscle strength. Furthermore, riding has a pronounced influence on the circulatory system. This attractive reaction activity provides the person who, as a result of his specific handicapping condition is limited in both the spatial and social fields, with an expansion of his living space and sphere of exper...
Riding accidents.
Acta orthopaedica Scandinavica    January 1, 1973   Volume 44, Issue 6 597-603 doi: 10.3109/17453677308989097
Danielsson LG, Westlin NE.No abstract available
Human “barkers”.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1972   Volume 4, Issue 3 128-134 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1972.tb03893.x
Dunn PM.No abstract available
Biochemical and electrophoretic studies of -galactosidase in normal man, in patients with Fabry’s disease, and in Equidae.
American journal of human genetics    May 1, 1972   Volume 24, Issue 3 237-249 
Beutler E, Kuhl W.No abstract available
Observations of equines, humans and domestic and wild vertebrates during the 1969 equine epizootic and epidemic of Venezuelan encephalitis in Guatemala.
American journal of epidemiology    March 1, 1972   Volume 95, Issue 3 255-266 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a121393
Scherer WF, Ordonez JV, Jahrling PB, Pancake BA, Dickerman RW.No abstract available
Pseudomonas infections in man and animals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 15, 1971   Volume 159, Issue 4 416 
Lusis PI, Soltys MA.No abstract available
Influence of chemical modifications of the reactive SH groups on the proton binding behaviour of human and horse hemoglobin.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    June 29, 1971   Volume 236, Issue 3 777-779 doi: 10.1016/0005-2795(71)90262-5
Janssen LH, de Bruin SH, van OS GA.No abstract available
Double-blind trial of equine antitoxin and human immune globulin in tetanus neonatorum.
Lancet (London, England)    June 5, 1971   Volume 1, Issue 7710 1146-1149 doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(71)91659-x
McCracken GH, Dowell DL, Marshall FN.No abstract available
Mosquitoes of British Honduras, with some comments on malaria, and on arbovirus antibodies in man and equines.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene    January 1, 1971   Volume 65, Issue 6 742-762 doi: 10.1016/0035-9203(71)90089-7
Bertram DS.No abstract available
The effects of trace elements on human and animal health.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1970   Volume 157, Issue 11 1800-1808 
Selby LA, Marienfeld CJ, Pierce JO.No abstract available
A comparison of idiopathic laryngeal paralysis in man and horse.
The Journal of laryngology and otology    August 1, 1970   Volume 84, Issue 8 819-835 doi: 10.1017/s0022215100072571
Cook WR.No abstract available
[Cadmium toxicity in man and experimental animals].
Orvosi hetilap    May 17, 1970   Volume 111, Issue 20 1165-1167 
Kendrey G, Roe F.No abstract available
N-Terminal sequences of equine and human immunoglobulin heavy chains.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    February 17, 1970   Volume 200, Issue 2 258-266 doi: 10.1016/0005-2795(70)90169-8
Montgomery PC, Bello AC, Rockey JH.N-terminal tetrapeptides from heavy chains of equine γGab- and γT-globulins, and of human γG and γA myeloma proteins and a γM macroglobulin, have been studied. The equine and human heavy chains lacked free α-amino-terminal groups. After mild alkaline hydrolysis, glutamic acid was identified as the terminal amino acid by reaction with dimethylaminonaphthalenesulfonyl chloride, tentatively identifying pyrrolid-2-one-5-carboxylic acid (PCA) as the unreactive terminal residue of each heavy chain. Peptides lacking a free α-amino group were isolated from subtilisin and pronase digests of the ...
A comparison of fingerprints of tryptic digests of human, horse and rat apoferritins.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology    February 1, 1970   Volume 32, Issue 3 451-458 doi: 10.1016/0010-406x(70)90462-7
Richter GW, Moppert GA, Lee JC.1. Fingerprints of tryptic digests of apoferritins from a human liver, horse spleens and ACI rat livers were made by means of electrophoresis and chromatography on microcrystalline cellulose, and were compared. 2. All tryptic peptides also present in apoferritins from the human liver and the horse spleens were also present in apoferritin from the rat livers. 3. In the digests of horse and of rat apoferritin there was a peptide that was not present in the digests of human apoferritin. Another peptide was obtained from human and from rat apoferritin, but not from horse apoferritin. 4. T...
[pH-dependency of circular dichroism of human and cattle hemoglobin and horse myoglobin].
Acta biologica et medica Germanica    January 1, 1970   Volume 24, Issue 1 25-32 
Ruckpaul K, Grill H, Jung F.No abstract available
Reactivities to horse anti-lymphocyte globulin. I. Induction of immunologic tolerance in man.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1970   Volume 39, Issue 2-3 113-120 doi: 10.1159/000230340
Gewurz H, Moberg A, Simmons R, Pollara B, Soll R, Najarian S.No abstract available
Comparison of the resistance of human and horse ferrihemoglobin ligand derivatives to acid denaturation.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    December 23, 1969   Volume 194, Issue 2 364-375 doi: 10.1016/0005-2795(69)90097-x
Molday RS, Steinhardt J.No abstract available
Induction of tolerance in man to horse-IgG.
Lancet (London, England)    November 22, 1969   Volume 2, Issue 7630 1141-1142 doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(69)90744-2
Brendel W, Land W, Hopf U, Seifert J.No abstract available
Measurement of ligand-induced conformational changes in hemoglobin by circular dichroism.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    May 1, 1969   Volume 63, Issue 1 205-212 doi: 10.1073/pnas.63.1.205
Simon SR, Cantor CR.The UV circular-dichroism spectra of human and horse hemoglobins have been determined at various degrees of partial saturation with oxygen. Spectra of the two native hemoglobins were compared with spectra of the corresponding proteins modified with a reagent known to eliminate the conformational rearrangement normally associated with cooperativity. Such comparison indicates that one region, around 260 mmu, is sensitive chiefly to the state of the hemes; changes in another region, around 285 mmu, may be correlated with the conformational transformation linked to cooperative interactions. All ci...
[Obtaining a highly purified horse antiserum to human growth hormone].
Biulleten' eksperimental'noi biologii i meditsiny    March 1, 1969   Volume 67, Issue 3 120-123 
Lazarev AF.No abstract available
[Histochemical studies on the secretion of human and mammalian urethral glands].
Acta histochemica    January 1, 1969   Volume 33, Issue 2 331-346 
Halbhuber KJ.No abstract available
[Studies of the incidence of Leptospira infections in man and animals in Oltenia].
Microbiologia, parazitologia, epidemiologia    January 1, 1969   Volume 14, Issue 1 65-70 
Bîrzu I, Marţian I, Sborover S.No abstract available
L-Asparaginase activity in human and animal sera.
Nature    February 24, 1968   Volume 217, Issue 5130 758-759 doi: 10.1038/217758a0
Lee MB, Bridges JM.No abstract available
Serum sickness. Evidence in man of antigen-antibody complexes and free light chains in the circulation during the acute reaction.
Annals of internal medicine    September 1, 1967   Volume 67, Issue 3 596-602 doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-67-3-596
Vaughan JH, Barnett EV, Leadley PJ.No abstract available
A comparison of the resistance of human and horse ferrihemoglobin to acid denaturation.
The Journal of biological chemistry    March 25, 1967   Volume 242, Issue 6 1294-1301 
Steinhardt J, Hiremath CB.Many of the stability characteristics of horse ferrihemo-globin (Hb+) in acid solutions, such as pH dependence and susceptibility to stabilization by iron ligands, are shared by human ferrihemoglobin, but striking differences between the two proteins exist. The most noticeable is the much greater rate of denaturation of the human protein at all pH values. Other differences include a shift to higher pH in the equi-librium between native and acid-denatured forms, differ-ences in the temperature at which the temperature effect on the equilibrium-pH curve reverses, a complete absence in human Hb+ ...
Regulation of methaemoglobinaemia in horse and human erythrocytes.
The Australian journal of experimental biology and medical science    February 1, 1967   Volume 45, Issue 1 77-88 doi: 10.1038/icb.1967.4
Robin H, Harley JD.No abstract available
The psychology of the pet owner.
The Journal of small animal practice    August 1, 1966   Volume 7, Issue 8 517-521 doi: 10.1111/j.1748-5827.1966.tb04480.x
Leigh D.No abstract available