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Topic:In Vivo

In vivo studies involving horses refer to research conducted within living organisms to understand various biological processes, disease mechanisms, and therapeutic interventions in equine species. These studies provide insights into the physiological and pathological responses of horses under natural conditions. In vivo research encompasses a range of investigations, including pharmacokinetics, disease modeling, and the evaluation of treatment efficacy. It often involves the use of controlled environments to simulate real-life scenarios while observing the effects of specific variables on equine health. This page gathers peer-reviewed research articles and scholarly studies that explore the methodologies, findings, and implications of in vivo research in horses, contributing to the advancement of equine science and veterinary medicine.
Contagious equine metritis: distribution of organisms in experimental infection of mares.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 7 1197-1202 
Acland HM, Allen PZ, Kenney RM.After contagious equine metritis bacteria were inoculated into the uterus of mares, genital tract tissues were examined for presence of the organism by bacteriologic cultural technique and an indirect immunofluorescent staining technique. Up to 14 days after mares were inoculated, the organism was frequently in the lumen of the uterus and in the cervix and, less frequently, in the vagina, vestibule, clitoral fossa, clitoral sinus, and uterine tubes. After 21 to 116 days, the organism was occasionally found on the ovarian surface, in the uterine tubes, uterus, cervix, and vagina and more freque...
The pathology of experimental Corynebacterium equi infection in foals following intragastric challenge.
Veterinary pathology    July 1, 1983   Volume 20, Issue 4 450-459 doi: 10.1177/030098588302000408
Johnson JA, Prescott JF, Markham RJ.The intragastric inoculation of a suspension of Corynebacterium equi on five consecutive days induced severe ulcerative colitis, typhlitis, and lymphadenitis of colonic and cecal nodes in two ponies necropsied three weeks after infection. No gross lesions were observed in two ponies necropsied ten days after infection. A single inoculum of equivalent size failed to induce gross lesions in four ponies killed at ten or 20 days after infection. Microscopic lesions consistent with early C. equi infection of Peyer's patches were seen in two of the ponies killed ten days after infection. Only one sm...
Experimental studies of drug-induced impaction colic in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 3 222-228 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01772.x
Roberts MC, Seawright AA.Colic was induced in horses and ponies following topical or intravenous (iv) administration of amitraz, a formamidine acaricide. The condition was characterised by rapid cessation of intestinal sounds, stasis, extensive impaction and tympany throughout the large colon. Three animals that were necropsied had a faecalith obstructing the proximal small colon aboral to marked colonic impaction. A reproducible and reversible impaction colic syndrome could be induced by an iv injection of 1 mg amitraz/kg body weight in solvent. There were immediate central nervous system and intestinal signs. Large ...
Controlled tests with fenbendazole in equids: special interest on activity of multiple doses against natural infections of migrating stages of strongyles.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1058-1063 
Lyons ET, Drudge JH, Tolliver SC.No abstract available
Measurement of tracheal mucous transport rate in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1165-1166 
Nelson R, Hampe DW.Tracheal mucous transport rates were measured in 12 nonanesthetized horses after an intratracheal injection of 99mtechnetium-sulfur colloid. The transport rate of the subsequent bolus of radioactivity was determined, using a portable scaler rate meter fitted with a high-energy gamma-scintillation probe. A gamma-scintillation camera was used to verify bolus form and movement in 1 horse. The mean tracheal mucous transport rate was 1.66 +/- 0.24 cm/min.
Surface receptors for IgG and complement on equine alveolar macrophages.
Inflammation    June 1, 1983   Volume 7, Issue 2 183-195 doi: 10.1007/BF00917822
Dyer RM, Leid RW.Isolated equine alveolar macrophages obtained by bronchopulmonary lavage of four live ponies demonstrated surface receptors for equine IgG, equine IgM, and complement-coated sheep red blood cells, but not equine IgM or complement-coated erythrocytes alone. In addition, demonstration of IgG receptors was found to depend on the level of erythrocyte sensitization and could not be demonstrated by red blood cell rosetting techniques at low levels of sensitization. Demonstration of receptors for equine complement by red cell rosetting techniques required the presence of both IgM antibody and serum d...
Evaluation of mebendazole used concurrently with piperazine monohydrochloride in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 10 1102-1104 
DiPietro JA, Paul A, Todd KS.Forty horses from a herd known to have benzimidazole-resistant small strongyles were treated with mebendazole (8.8 mg/kg) or combinations of mebendazole and piperazine monohydrochloride (25, 40, or 55 mg of piperazine base/kg). Pretreatment and 7-day posttreatment fecal examinations were done. Fecal cultures and strongyle egg per gram (epg) counts, and in vitro testing for benzimidazole resistance were performed. Results of fecal examinations prior to treatment were similar in all horses, and results of testing were positive for benzimidazole resistance. Horses treated with mebendazole and pip...
Localization of the second calcium ion binding site in porcine and equine phospholipase A2.
Biochemistry    May 10, 1983   Volume 22, Issue 10 2470-2478 doi: 10.1021/bi00279a025
Donné-Op den Kelder GM, de Haas GH, Egmond MR.At alkaline pH porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 is known to bind two Ca2+ ions per protein molecule. One Ca2+ ion is strongly bound to the active site and is essential for enzyme activity. A second Ca2+ ion binds more weakly to the protein and improves the affinity of the enzyme for lipid-water interfaces severalfold at high pH values. A group having a pK around 6 controls enzyme binding to lipid-water interfaces in the absence of Ca2+. By use of proton titration techniques this group is now identified to be a carboxylate having an abnormally high pK. Its pK shifts to a value around 4.5 in ...
Abdominal abscess associated with Parascaris equorum infection in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 9 991-992 
DiPietro JA, Boero M, Ely RW.No abstract available
External scintigraphy in evaluating delivery techniques of sodium cromolyn-[99mTc] diethylenetriaminepentacetic acid aerosol in the lungs of the horse.
Journal of pharmaceutical sciences    May 1, 1983   Volume 72, Issue 5 580-581 doi: 10.1002/jps.2600720532
Theodorakis MC, Hillidge CJ, Allhands RA.No abstract available
Effect of spasmolytic analgesic drugs on the motility patterns of the equine small intestine.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1983   Volume 34, Issue 3 334-339 
Davies JV, Gerring EL.The effect of acepromazine, Buscopan (Crown Chemicals), pethidine and methadone was evaluated in ponies prepared with Thiry-Vella (T-V) loops. Motility was assessed by electrophysiological means (bipolar electrodes and strain gauge transducers) and by the passage through the T-V loop of a fluid test meal. Results were obtained from 26 experiments in three ponies and compared with six control experiments, in which saline had been administered to the same ponies. Each pony acted as its own control in each experiment and pre and post treatment values for slow wave frequency, spiking activity, del...
Experimental and clinical investigations of the use of carbon fiber sutures in equine tendon repair.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 9 956-966 
Brown MP, Pool RR.Braided carbon fiber sutures were used to repair surgically transected or lacerated digital flexor tendons of 20 mature horses (10 experimental and 10 clinical cases). In addition, 4 experimental horses had tenectomies that were not surgically repaired; these served as controls for the horses with carbon-implanted tendons. Six of the 10 clinically affected horses were returned to their intended use; 2 were euthanatized because of complications and 2 were still recuperating. The experimental horses were euthanatized at 12 days and 1, 2, 4, 8, and 12 months. Tendon scars were structurally and fu...
Electromechanical activity of the equine small intestine and its correlation with transit of fluid through Thiry-Vella loops.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1983   Volume 34, Issue 3 327-333 
Davies JV, Gerring EL.Motility patterns in the equine small intestine were investigated in eight ponies. Muscular activity was assessed by means of extramural strain gauge transducers, bi-polar electrodes and in three of the animals, fitted with Thiry-Vella loops, the transit of fluid. Circular muscle contractions were preceded by spiking superimposed on the slow wave and fluid transit in the loops correlated with both these events.
Antibody responses of ponies to initial and challenge infections of Strongylus vulgaris.
Veterinary parasitology    May 1, 1983   Volume 12, Issue 2 187-198 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(83)90007-9
Klei TR, Chapman MR, Torbert BJ, McClure JR.An indirect fluorescent antibody assay (IFA) was developed using Strongylus vulgaris third stage larvae (L3) as antigens. Observations using the IFA indicate that a species-specific antibody response to S. vulgaris L3 develops in S. vulgaris-infected ponies and that some surface L3 antigens are shared by adult worms. Sequential antibody levels against S. vulgaris were measured in strongyle-naive and in immune ponies following initial and challenge infections using the IFA and an indirect hemagglutination assay (IHA). Antibody levels measured by IFA increased faster following initial infections...
Extrinsic and intrinsic veins of the equine hoof wall.
Journal of anatomy    May 1, 1983   Volume 136, Issue Pt 3 543-560 
Mishra PC, Leach DH.The extrinsic and intrinsic venous drainage of the equine hoof have previously been poorly described. There is also an absence of information about the venous organisation of both primary and secondary dermal lamellae of the hoof wall. The purpose of this study was to describe the normal venous pattern of the horse hoof, especially that associated with the dermal lamellae of the wall. The venous organisation of 46 pairs of hooves from clinically healthy horses was studied using standard plastic vascular corrosion casts and histological sections. A consistent pattern of venous organisation was ...
Synovial aldehyde groups in equine joint disease.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 2 168-169 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01747.x
Maldonado R, Garces H, Auba J, Horvath A.No abstract available
Alterations in the equine herpesvirus 1 genome after in vitro and in vivo virus passage.
Infection and immunity    April 1, 1983   Volume 40, Issue 1 436-439 doi: 10.1128/iai.40.1.436-439.1983
Allen GP, Yeargan MR, Bryans JT.The effect of in vitro and in vivo serial virus passage on the genetic stability of equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) was investigated by restriction endonuclease analysis of the viral DNA. DNAs of EHV-1 isolates at different passage levels in cultured cells or in Syrian hamsters were compared by electrophoresis of the DNA cleavage fragments produced by restriction endonuclease digestion. No changes were observed in the restriction profile of the DNAs of EHV-1 strains after 100 sequential passages in cultured equine cells. However, serial passage of the virus in hamsters or in cells of non-equine o...
A study on the possible role of chymotrypsin in the aetiology of equine chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    April 1, 1983   Volume 4, Issue 3 387-395 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(83)90048-x
Thomson JR, McPherson EA, Lawson GH, Wooding P, Brown R.The chymotrypsin activity of seven batches of Micropolyspora faeni and of five batches of Aspergillus fumigatus culture extracts, prepared for inhalation challenge in horses, was assayed and was found to range between 0.29 and 1.45 units/mg protein and 0.02 and 0.20 units/mg protein respectively. Horses affected with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) were challenged with two batches of each antigen which had different chymotrypsin activities and no significant correlations were found between the degree of response to challenge and the chymotrypsin activity of the antigens. Inhalatio...
Fixation and orientation of the early equine conceptus.
Theriogenology    April 1, 1983   Volume 19, Issue 4 613-623 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(83)90181-4
Ginther OJ.Fixation and orientation of the conceptus within the uterine lumen of 40 barren mares were examined by ultrasound daily on days 11-21 and at three-day intervals thereafter until day 48. The growth curve of the in situ conceptus had a distinct plateau between days 17-24, as determined by measurements of the width and area of conceptuses on the ultrasound images. The vesicle expanded at an average daily rate of 3-4 mm before the plateau and 2-3 mm after the plateau. Dramatic changes occurred in the shape of conceptus. The predominant shapes were approximately as follows: days 11-16, spherical; d...
Experimental Streptococcus equi infection in the horse: correlation with in vivo and in vitro immune responses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 4 529-534 
Nara PL, Krakowka S, Powers TE, Garg RC.Fourteen young outbred horses, divided into 2 groups on the basis of 18- or 24-hour skin-test reactions to Streptococcus equi, were inoculated nasopharyngeally with virulent S equi. Animals (n = 6, group I) with evidence of previous exposure to S equi (positive dermal response and existing serum antibodies), with one exception, developed minimal or no signs of disease after inoculation. In contrast, S equi skin-test negative and seronegative horses (n = 8, group II) developed predictable and severe clinical signs of infection after their inoculation, including shedding of the organism from nas...
Experimental infections of horses with Legionella pneumophila.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 4 662-668 
Cho SN, Collins MT, Reif JS, McChesney AE.Attempts to infect horses with Legionella pneumophila were undertaken to determine pathogenicity and to evaluate the possibility that horses serve as a reservoir for the organism. A previous study showed that the prevalence of antibodies to L pneumophila in the equine population exceeded 30% of over 600 sera examined. Horses were infected experimentally with the Philadelphia 1 or Bloomington 2 strain of L pneumophila IV or by aerosolization. Signs of clinical illness were restricted to a transient febrile response. A transient decrease in circulating lymphocytes occurred 2 days after inoculati...
Thyroid-stimulating hormone: response test in healthy horses, and effect of phenylbutazone on equine thyroid hormones.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 3 503-507 
Morris DD, Garcia M.Adult horses showed a mild diurnal variation in equine plasma thyroxine (T4) concentrations, but not triiodothyronine (T3). Plasma T4 concentrations tended to be higher between 5 PM and 8 PM than at 8 AM. Increases in plasma T4 and T3 were similar in adult healthy horses given 5, 10, or 20 IU of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). The T4 peaked at approximately twice (2.0 +/- 0.4 times) as high as the base line at 6 to 12 hours after the TSH was given. The greatest change from base line T3 occurred at 1 to 3 hours after the TSH was given, but the magnitude of increase was widely variable (4.36 ...
The pharmacokinetics, plasma protein binding and time response relationships of 2-amino-5-phenyl-2-oxazolin-4-one (pemoline) in the horse.
Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals    March 1, 1983   Volume 11, Issue 2 120-125 
Igwe OJ, Blake JW.The disposition kinetics of pemoline after iv and oral administration of 2.4 mg/kg of the drug were studied. The elimination half-life was 39.4 hr. The mean volume of distribution was 1.5 liters/kg indicating extensive tissue distribution and sequestration for an amphoteric drug. Plasma protein binding determined by in vitro equilibrium dialysis was concentration dependent. The mean binding capacity was found to be 0.80 mu-mol/g, an apparent dissociation constant of 3.73 X 10(-5) molar, and a total plasma protein concentration of 64.7 g/liter. The mean systemic availability by oral administrat...
Effect of intranasal oxygen administration on arterial blood gas and acid base parameters in spontaneously delivered, term induced and induced premature foals.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1983   Volume 34, Issue 2 159-162 
Rose RJ, Hodgson DR, Leadon DP, Rossdale PD.The effect of intranasal administration of oxygen at a flow rate of 10 litres per minute for 10 minutes, was studied in a total of 19 foals (thoroughbred and pony) aged between 0.5 and 12 hours. Arterial blood samples were collected before and after oxygen administration for the determination of paO2, paCO2, pHa and base excess. The foals were divided into three groups: five spontaneously delivered thoroughbred and pony foals (group 1), seven term induced thoroughbred foals (group 2) and seven induced premature pony foals (group 3). To examine the effect of duration of oxygen administration on...
The genetic control of antibody formation.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    March 1, 1983   Volume 4, Issue 1-2 3-42 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(83)90055-7
Seide RK, Kehoe JM.Studies of the molecular biology of lymphoid cells have markedly increased our understanding of how millions of different antibodies can be synthesized by a single animal. To date, the most detailed understanding has been achieved for the mouse, primarily because of the relatively greater experimental availability of this species. These studies, as well as those involving other species, have shown that the complete genes for antibody polypeptide chains are assembled from disparate genetic elements which are originally widely separated in the genome. The assembly process itself, together with t...
Diagnosis of cardiac lesions by contrast echocardiography.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 15, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 4 396-402 
Bonagura JD, Pipers FS.Contrast M-mode echocardiography was utilized to study animals with congenital and acquired cardiac defects. Contrast was produced through the rapid injection of isotonic NaCl solution, the patient's blood, or indocyanine green dye into the circulation. Peripheral vein and intracardiac injections of contrast material were used to document ventricular septal defect, tetralogy of Fallot, atrial septal defect, and mitral valve regurgitation. The technique was safe and useful for both small and large animals.
Effects of intragastric loads of xylose, sodium chloride and corn oil on feeding behavior of ponies.
Journal of animal science    February 1, 1983   Volume 56, Issue 2 302-308 doi: 10.2527/jas1983.562302x
Ralston SL, Baile CA.This series of experiments was designed to investigate gastrointestinal (GI) stimuli that contribute to the normal control of feed intake in ponies. Osmotic stimuli were tested using intragastric (IG) infusion of .83 osmolar solutions of xylose (250 g) and NaCl (48 g) vs 2-liter water controls. Treatments were given 15 min before ponies were allowed ad libitum access to pelleted feed after a 4-h fast. Both hyperosmotic solutions delayed onset of the first meal (xylose: 72 ± 32 min, P<.05; NaCl: 71 ± 40 min, P<.1), resulting in an immediate reduction (P<.01) in feed intake. No effects were ob...
[Pathology of Strongylus (Delafondia) infection in the horse–a review].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    February 1, 1983   Volume 96, Issue 2 37-43 
Burkhardt E.No abstract available
Ticarcillin administration to the equine: Intrauterine and intramuscular.
Theriogenology    February 1, 1983   Volume 19, Issue 2 169-179 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(83)90003-1
Threlfall WR, Keefe TJ.Serum levels of ticarcillin disodium, a semi-synthetic penicillin (Beecham Laboratories, Bristol, Tennessee, 37620), were measured at various time intervals up to and including 24 h after intrauterine and intramuscular administration in adult female horses. Three separate studies were conducted in Part I: in the first and second studies, serum levels were measured after intrauterine administration of 1 and 3 g of ticarcillin, respectively, and in the third study, levels were measured after intramuscular administration of 6 g of ticarcillin. In Part II, serum levels of ticarcillin were measured...
Studies on the strongyle egg output of horses after treatment with oxfendazole (Synanthic vet. Syntex).
Nordisk veterinaermedicin    February 1, 1983   Volume 35, Issue 2 69-73 
Nilsson O, Klingborn B.The effect of oxfendazole (Synanthic vet. Syntex) on the strongyle egg output of naturally infected horses was evaluated. It was demonstrated that the compound, administered orally as an 18,5% paste or as 6,48% pellets mixed in feed (46.3 grams per 300 kg bodyweight) at a dose-rate of 10 mg per kg bodyweight, markedly reduced the strongyle egg output over a 10 week period. As this period to egg reappearance is considerably longer than for most other anthelmintics at recommended dose levels, oxfendazole may be considered a valuable compound for the control of strongylosis in horses.