Analyze Diet

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.
Masking of acid-binding groups in native horse carbonylhemoglobin.
The Journal of biological chemistry    May 1, 1951   Volume 190, Issue 1 197-210 
STEINHARDT J, ZAISER EM.No abstract available
[Indication for enterocentesis in the horse].
Berliner tierarztliche Wochenschrift    January 1, 1951   Volume 1 9-11 
MULLER LF.No abstract available
[Serum of anti-proteinic horses. Quantitative determination of the effect of duration of intravenous immunization on the precipitating power of the serum].
Comptes rendus des seances de la Societe de biologie et de ses filiales    December 1, 1950   Volume 144, Issue 23-24 1639-1642 
PEREZ JJ, MAZUREK C.No abstract available
[Agglutination titers and opsonin index following yatren autovaccine in horses with suppurative processes].
Casopis ceskoslovenskych veterinaru    June 1, 1950   Volume 5, Issue 12 265-273 
JAHODA V.No abstract available
[New research on the vegetative innervation of the seminal vesicles of the horse].
Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale    April 1, 1950   Volume 26, Issue 4 552-554 
PANSINI A.No abstract available
[Laparotomy in Equidae].
Recueil de medecine veterinaire    March 1, 1950   Volume 126, Issue 3 129-150 
MARCENAC N.No abstract available
[Langerhans’ islands in the horse, with special reference to cell type].
Zeitschrift fur Zellforschung und mikroskopische Anatomie (Vienna, Austria : 1948)    January 1, 1950   Volume 35, Issue 3-4 229-239 
WOLTER JR.No abstract available
[Oxygen decomposition of cellulose by the intestinal bacteria of the horse].
Medycyna doswiadczalna i mikrobiologia    January 1, 1950   Volume 2, Issue 2 132-133 
KAKOLOWNA H.No abstract available
Immuno-chemical studies on blood groups; the preparation of blood group A and B substances and an inactive substance from individual horse stomachs and of blood group B substance from human saliva.
The Journal of experimental medicine    January 1, 1950   Volume 91, Issue 1 105-114 doi: 10.1084/jem.91.1.105
BAER H, KABAT EA, KNAUB V.Blood group substances have been isolated from the saliva of human beings of blood group B and from the linings of individual horse stomachs. The properties of the human B substances are similar to those of hog and human blood group substances previously isolated. The horse substances showed lower hexosamine and reducing sugar and higher total and non-hexosamine nitrogen than do the materials from the other species. Materials isolated from individual horse stomachs possess either A or B activity or both. Certain stomachs yielded products of identical analytical composition but with neither blo...
Dosage of caronamide required for inhibition of renal tubular excretion of penicillin in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1949   Volume 10, Issue 35 154-157 
DOLL ER, WALLACE ME, NEWTON AC.No abstract available
The eosinophil cell; studies in horse and camel.
Lancet (London, England)    September 18, 1948   Volume 2, Issue 6525 451 
DURAN-JORDA F.This research article investigates the significance of eosinophil cells in horses and camels, focusing on the large granules found in these cells and their similarities to smaller red blood cells. […]
[About medus formations (detached whiners) in bull and stallion sperm and their diagnostic importance]. BLOM E.No abstract available
[On the Histology Of Lung Changes In Vallée’s Disease; Infectious Anemia With the Horses].
Experientia    February 15, 1948   Volume 4, Issue 2 76 doi: 10.1007/BF02155995
STECK W, HAUSER H.No abstract available
Torsion of the small colon in the horse corrected by surgical interference.
The Veterinary record    August 30, 1947   Volume 59, Issue 33 427 
McNAUGHT TT, McCREA MR.No abstract available
Treatment of equine colic by intravenous injections of novocaine.
The Journal of the Royal Army Veterinary Corps    August 1, 1947   Volume 18, Issue 4 128-130 
BRION A.No abstract available
Antiproteins in Horse Sera: III. Antibodies to Rabbit Serum Albumin and Their Reaction with Antigen.
The Journal of experimental medicine    July 31, 1947   Volume 86, Issue 2 83-94 doi: 10.1084/jem.86.2.83
Treffers HP, Heidelberger M, Freund J.1. Two horses were injected subcutaneously with alum-precipitated rabbit serum albumin. 2. The resulting antibody resembled diphtheria antitoxin and anti-egg albumin in the horse in giving a sharp zone of flocculation with antigen, in being water-soluble, in reactivity toward an anti-antibody rabbit serum, and in its electrophoretic properties. 3. The effect of continued immunization, and of variation in volume and temperature on the reactivity of the antibody are discussed. 4. Intravenous injection of the same antigen into horses did not give rise to detectable amounts of antibody of the same...
[Intracutaneous Rubbing in Horses with Devitol].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    July 1, 1947   Volume 34, Issue 7 381-383 
HUTSCHENREITER C.No abstract available
[By gleaning in medical-surgical pathology (equine and bovine)].
Bulletin de l'Academie veterinaire de France    July 1, 1946   Volume 19, Issue 7 216-225 
PRIOUZEAU .No abstract available
[Influence of bloodletting on the decrease in tan immunity in horses].
Bulletin de l'Academie de medecine    January 1, 1946   Volume 130, Issue 34-35 583 
LEMETAYER E, NICOL L.No abstract available
[Immunochemical research on anthrax; quantitative study of the precipitation observed with certain extracts of B. anthracis and an anthrax serum from horses].
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur    January 1, 1945   Volume 71, Issue 11-12 385-393 
GRABAR P, STAUB AM.No abstract available
COMPARATIVE STUDIES ON THE VIRUSES OF VESICULAR STOMATITIS AND EQUINE ENCEPHALOMYELITIS (1).
The Journal of experimental medicine    January 31, 1934   Volume 59, Issue 2 159-171 doi: 10.1084/jem.59.2.159
Olitsky PK, Cox HR, Syverton JT.We have studied certain properties, additional to those previously described (3), of the virus of vesicular stomatitis of horses, and of the characteristic biological reactions of the virus of equine encephalomyelitis. It has been found that the virus of stomatitis, ordinarily dermotropic, can acquire neurotropism and the neurotropic encephalomyelitis virus can, in turn, be rendered dermotropic in its action. The neurotropism in both instances is associated with definite, although not pronounced, viscerotropism. Both viruses can bring about a similar infection in the white mouse, rat, guinea p...
The Transmission of Periodic Ophthalmia of Horses by Means of a Filterable Agent.
The Journal of experimental medicine    September 30, 1930   Volume 52, Issue 4 637-648 doi: 10.1084/jem.52.4.637
Woods AC, Chesney AM.A filterable agent has been obtained from the humors and tissues of the eyes of horses suffering from active periodic ophthalmia. The intra-vitreous injection of this filtrate produced in normal horses the same clinical and pathological picture observed in the natural disease. This filtrate injected into rabbits produced a different clinical picture, but the essential pathological lesions closely resembled those found in horses. After passage of the filterable agent through six generations of rabbits, it again produced the clinical and pathological picture of the natural disease when injected ...
The Occurrence of Degraded Pneumococci in Vivo.
The Journal of experimental medicine    April 30, 1927   Volume 45, Issue 5 807-814 doi: 10.1084/jem.45.5.807
Reimann HA.It is conceivable that a change from the virulent, non-phagocytable S form of Pneumococcus to the avirulent phagocytable R form may take place in pneumococcus disease, but the experiments here reported do not settle the question whether or not this is an important factor in determining the outcome in natural infection. It has been shown experimentally that the degradation from the S form to the R form actually does take place in cultures of Pneumococcus growing in agar subcutaneously embedded in guinea pigs, in agar enclosed in vials subcutaneously embedded in rabbits, and spontaneously in the...
A Note on the Production of Antipneumococcus Sera.
The Journal of experimental medicine    May 1, 1917   Volume 25, Issue 5 629-632 doi: 10.1084/jem.25.5.629
Wadsworth AB, Kirkbride MB.Horses immunized to Type I pneumococci developed serum, 0.1 cc. of which protected against 0.5 cc. of a virulent culture, 0.000001 cc. of which killed mice in less than 40 hours. Protective tests of serum from horses immunized to Type II organisms varied, 0.1 cc. protecting, however, in certain instances against 0.1 and 0.01 cc. of virulent homologous culture. Types I and II sera obtained in our experiments with culture sediment and whole culture did not vary markedly for a given type and corresponded closely in their protective titer with samples of sera received from The Rockefeller Institut...
The Hypodermic Use of Morphine in the Colic of Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and surgery    October 1, 1882   Volume 3, Issue 4 314 
No abstract available
Worm in the Eye:-A Contribution to Equine Surgery.
The Indian medical gazette    September 1, 1866   Volume 1, Issue 9 257-258 
Beatson WB.No abstract available
Equine pectinate ligament descemetization is associated with age.
   March 18, 2026  
No abstract available
Hysteroscopic insemination of small numbers of spermatozoa at the uterotubal junction of preovulatory mares.
   March 18, 2026  
Mares were inseminated with motile spermatozoa suspended in 30-150 microliters Tyrode's medium directly onto the uterotubal papilla at the anterior tip of the uterine horn, ipsilateral to the ovary containing a dominant preovulatory follicle of > or = 35 mm in diameter, by means of a fine gamete intrafallopian transfer (GIFT) catheter passed through the working channel of a strobed light videoendoscope. Insemination of 10, 8, 25, 14, 11 and 10 mares with, respectively, 10.0, 5.0, 1.0, 0.5, 0.1 or 0.001 x 10(6) motile spermatozoa resulted in conception rates of, respectively, 60, 75, 64, 29,...
Modified technique for the repair of third-degree rectovaginal lacerations in mares.
   March 18, 2026  
Eight mares with third-degree rectovestibular lacerations were treated by a two-stage surgical technique. The rectovestibular shelf was corrected with three parallel 'circular' continuous suture rows distributed along the longitudinal axis of the vagina, and the perineal body was reconstructed with three divergent simple continuous rows. Primary healing of the first-stage surgery occurred in all the mares. Seven of the mares completed the two-stage surgery and primary healing occurred in all of them. One of them returned to endurance racing competition and one was lost to follow-up. The other ...
L-carnitine added to post-thawed semen acts as an antioxidant and a stimulator of equine sperm metabolism.
   March 18, 2026  
The objective of this study was to enhance the in vitro sperm quality and in vivo fertility of frozen-thawed equine semen by the addition of l-carnitine (LC) to post-thawed semen. Different concentrations of LC were added to thawed samples to obtain four treatments control and 0.5, 1 and 2 mM LC. In the in vitro experiments, sperm motility and kinematics, membrane integrity and intracellular calcium ion concentration ([Ca ] ) were investigated, and the antioxidant bioactivity of LC was assessed by measuring hydrogen peroxide and nitrite concentrations (NO ). The fertility rate was assessed v...