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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.
Equine antihapten antibody. The subunits and fragments of anti-beta-lactoside antibody.
The Journal of experimental medicine    February 1, 1967   Volume 125, Issue 2 249-275 doi: 10.1084/jem.125.2.249
Rockey JH.Eight antigenically unique immunoglobulins have been identified in purified equine anti-p-azophenyl-beta-lactoside (Lac) antibody isolated from a single horse. The Fc fragments of the gammaGa-, gammaGb-, gammaGc-, and -gammaA-globulins have been shown to possess unique antigenic determinants. Common gammaG- and gammaA-Fc fragment antigenic determinants, which were absent from the 10Sgamma(1)- and gammaM-globulins, have also been observed. All antibody populations share two antigenically distinct light (B, L) chain variants. The association of anti-Lac antibody with the hapten p-(p-dimethylamin...
Preparation of specific, potent antilymphocyte serum in the horse using dog thymocytes.
Surgical forum    January 1, 1967   Volume 18 227-229 
Braf ZF, Smellie WA, Williams GM, Hume DM.No abstract available
On blood volume and working capacity in horses. Studies of methodology and physiological and pathological variations.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1967   9-189 
Persson S.No abstract available
Comparative histochemical distribution of “leucine amino-peptidase” in the placenta and foetal membranes.
Histochemie. Histochemistry. Histochimie    January 1, 1967   Volume 10, Issue 3 272-277 doi: 10.1007/BF00304875
Christie GA.No abstract available
The changes in the blood colloids after continuous pretreatment with horse serum and their relationship to the subsequent calciphylactic reaction.
Experimental medicine and surgery    January 1, 1967   Volume 25, Issue 1 86-104 
Vasků J, Wiedermann D, Urbánek E, Tomecek J, Cídl K.No abstract available
Studies on factor V in animals.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 1, 1967   Volume 77, Issue 1 13-20 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(67)80002-1
Irfan M.Studies have been made on the effect of storage and temperature on factor V in animals and a method for its assay is described. There was a decrease of the factor with age in oxalated plasma of cattle, horses, sheep, dogs, rabbits and one elephant. This deterioration was very rapid in plasma kept at 37C. as compared with that stored at 4C. Rabbit plasma had the highest concentration of factor V followed by dogs, horses, cattle and sheep. Mixing various dilutions of aged plasma kept at 4C. wlth fresh plasma would enable the percentage prothrombin activity to be determined for the assay of facto...
Döhle bodies in neutrophils of a horse.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1967   Volume 8, Issue 3 211-216 doi: 10.1186/BF03547827
Friis NF, Bech J.Döhle bodies were observed in a horse suffering from a chronic pleurisy. The bodies were demonstrated in about 80 % of the neutro-phils in blood smears prepared during an acute flare-up of the disease. One to 4 bodies were found in each cell, situated in the periphery of the cytoplasm. The size of the bodies was 1–3 μ and the shape rodlike or oval. They stained blue with M-G-G. Blood smears were examined from 50 horses suffering from various diseases, but Döhle bodies could not be demonstrated in any of these cases. Döhle-Körperchen wurden bei einem Pferd mit chronischer Pleuritis beoba...
[Demonstration of dermatophytes in dermatologically healthy horses]. Böhm KH.No abstract available
Attempts to demonstrate 3-beta- and 17-beta-hydroxy-steroid dehydrogenases histochemically in the testes of the stallion, boar, ram and bull.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    December 1, 1966   Volume 12, Issue 3 551-560 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0120551
Hay MF, Deane HW.No abstract available
Changes in the activity of proteolytic enzymes and transaminases (G.O.T., G.P.T.) in horse leucocytes during hyperimmunization.
Archives roumaines de pathologie experimentales et de microbiologie    December 1, 1966   Volume 25, Issue 4 971-978 
Ségli G, Toma E, Oprişan R.No abstract available
A method for determining total and differential WBC counts of equine uterine fluid. (A preliminary report).
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    November 1, 1966   Volume 61, Issue 11 1087-1091 
Tobler EE, Miller DE.No abstract available
The use of bovine ear cartilage in speeding open-wound healing in the horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    October 1, 1966   Volume 61, Issue 10 961-962 
Roberts D.No abstract available
Studies on pathological lesions due to Strongylus vulgaris infection in an Indian pony.
The Indian veterinary journal    October 1, 1966   Volume 43, Issue 10 865-867 
Deorani VP.No abstract available
Persistence and parthenogentic cleavage of tubal ova in the mare.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1966   Volume 33, Issue 1 195-232 
van Niekerk CH, Gerneke WH.No abstract available
[Contributions on tuberculosis diagnosis in horses. II. Hematologic studies].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    June 1, 1966   Volume 20, Issue 3 477-487 
Richter W.No abstract available
[Observations on the process of ovulation in a mare with fistula of the ovary].
Veterinariia    February 1, 1966   Volume 43, Issue 2 99-101 
Kliuev VV, Rombe SM.No abstract available
Administration of the antimetabolite 6AN (6-aminonicotinamide) to horses.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1966   Volume 56, Issue 1 123-128 
Mettler FA, Smith HM.No abstract available
Opsonizing properties of horse sera. 3. The role of the specific and nonspecific factors stimulating phagocytosis of Salmonella typhimurium in horse sera.
Archivum immunologiae et therapiae experimentalis    January 1, 1966   Volume 14, Issue 1 25-31 
Grzybek-Hryncewicz K, Ladosz J, Kubis K, Slopek S.No abstract available
Experimental transmission of Echinococcus from horses to foxes.
Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology    December 1, 1965   Volume 59, Issue 4 457-462 doi: 10.1080/00034983.1965.11686332
Howkins AB, Gemmell MA, Smyth JD.No abstract available
The reaction of organophosphorus compounds with hydrolytic enzymes. The inhibition of horse liver aliesterase.
Biochemical pharmacology    December 1, 1965   Volume 14, Issue 12 1727-1738 doi: 10.1016/0006-2952(65)90262-5
Ooms AJ, Breebaart-Hansen JC.No abstract available
Cell and Solution Velocity Constants for the Reaction CO + Hb –> COHb at Different Temperatures in Mammals with Different Red Cell Sizes.
The Journal of general physiology    November 1, 1965   Volume 49, Issue 2 199-220 doi: 10.1085/jgp.49.2.199
Holland RA.Using a double beam stopped-flow apparatus, measurements were made of the velocity constant of the reaction CO + Hb --> COHb in solution and in the red cells of human beings, rabbits, horses, and goats. The solution constant (l') at 37 degrees C for human beings was 362 mM(-1) sec.(-1); in other species l' was somewhat lower. Two rabbits, despite having apparently identical hemoglobins had significantly different values for l'. The energy of activation (E) of l' was between 8 and 11 kcal/mole in all cases. The cell reaction constant (l'(c)) at 37 degrees was between 61 and 73 mM(-1) sec.(-1...
Colicine K: VI. The Immune Response of Horses to a Colicinogenic Strain of Escherichia Coli.
The Journal of experimental medicine    October 31, 1965   Volume 122, Issue 5 891-903 doi: 10.1084/jem.122.5.891
Goebel WF, Staub AM.1. The immunization of horses with the colicinogenic bacillus E. coli K235 L + O(m) stimulates antibodies which precipitate and neutralize colicine K and neutralize the heterologous colicine I as well. 2. Unlike rabbits, horses evoke predpitating antibodies for the sialic acid-containing polysaccharide colominic acid.
[Immunogenesis and nonspecific natural resistance factors. IV. On changes in the lysozyme content of the blood serum of horses after hyperimmunization].
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    October 1, 1965   Volume 42, Issue 10 19-21 
Pletsityĭ DF, Shaganov LN.No abstract available
[Clinical general reaction to local roentgen irradiation in horses and cattle].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    July 1, 1965   Volume 11, Issue 5 427-444 
Bolz W.No abstract available
Action of Pregnant Mare Serum on the Production of Testosterone In Vivo and In Vitro.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    April 1, 1965   Volume 9 233-241 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0090233
EIK-NES KB, HALL PF.No abstract available
Occurrence of cholinesterase isoenzymes in horse serum.
Nature    March 13, 1965   Volume 205, Issue 976 1110-1111 doi: 10.1038/2051110a0
Reiner E, Seuferth W, Hardegg W.No abstract available
A Practitioner’s Experience with Equine Gastrointestinal Disturbances.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    March 1, 1965   Volume 60 221-222 
ANDERSON EN.No abstract available
SOME ANTIGENIC CHARACTERISTICS AND IMMUNOLOGIC REACTIONS OF HORSE SPLEEN FERRITIN. PATTERSON R, SUSZKO IM, PRUZANSKY JJ.No abstract available
Preliminary Studies on Experimental Hyperbilirubinemia and Hepatic Coma in the Horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1965   Volume 55 110-120 
CORNELIUS CE, GAZMURI G, GRONWALL R, RHODE EA.No abstract available
[On the mechanism of inhibition by choline of acetylcholine hydrolysis by horse serum cholinesterase].
Biokhimiia (Moscow, Russia)    January 1, 1965   Volume 30, Issue 1 137-140 
Brestkin AP, Ivanova LA, Svechnikova VV.No abstract available