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Topic:Infection

Infections in horses encompass a range of diseases caused by various pathogens, including bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. These infections can affect different systems within the horse, such as the respiratory, gastrointestinal, and integumentary systems, leading to a variety of clinical signs depending on the pathogen and the severity of the infection. Common infectious diseases in horses include equine influenza, strangles, and equine herpesvirus. Diagnosis often involves clinical examination, laboratory testing, and sometimes imaging, to identify the causative agent and assess the extent of the disease. Treatment strategies may include antimicrobial therapy, supportive care, and preventive measures such as vaccination and biosecurity practices. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of infectious diseases in equine populations.
Evaluation of pyrantel pamoate against strongyles in horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    October 1, 1975   Volume 16, Issue 10 310-312 
Slocombe JO, Smart J.No abstract available
The transfer of passive immunity to the foal and its relation to immune status after birth.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 727-733 
Jeffcott LB.The mechanism of transfer of maternal immunity to the foal is reviewed. Maximal efficiency of macromolecular absorption by specialized cells of the small intestine exists soon after birth. The absorptive cells are progressively replaced by more mature-looking cells incapable of taking up large molecules and the rate of absorption is reduced in a linear decline and ceases completely within 24 hr. Passive antibody levels fall rapidly in the first 4 weeks of life to less than half their original values and have usually completely disappeared by 6 months of age. The foal shows immunological compet...
Experimentally-induced Streptococcus equi infection in horses with resultant guttural pouch empyema.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    October 1, 1975   Volume 70, Issue 10 1194-1199 
Knight AP, Voss JL, McChesney AE, Bigbee HG.No abstract available
The gnotobiotic foal in the study of infectious diseases.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 743-746 
Trexler PC, Thomson GR.A method of rearing germ-free gnotobiotic foals is described. To date, four foals have been infected with rhinopneumonitis and the only clinical signs of infection have been a transient fever and leukopaenia; no detailed results are, as yet, available.
Bacteriostatic activity of the mare uterus: a progress report on immunoglobulins.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 357-358 
Kenney RM, Kahleel SA.No abstract available
Babesiosis in the newborn foal.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 725-726 
Erbsloh JK.A short account is given of babesiosis (equine biliary fever) caused by the tick-borne protozoan Babesia equi and B. caballi, endemic in the Cape Province of South Africa. The clinical picture, diagnosis and treatment are described. In the absence of any prophylactic measures, prognosis is poor; control of the parasites in the tick-infested areas is essential.
Carbohydrate oxidation and antibody function in equine anti-diphtheria immunoglobulin T.
Immunochemistry    October 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 10 795-800 doi: 10.1016/0019-2791(75)90142-1
Buchowicz I, Zakrzewski K.No abstract available
Coital exanthema in stallions.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 147-150 
Pascoe RR, Bagust TJ.Equine coital exanthema can be produced experimentally in stallions by inoculation with an equine herpesvirus (strain 65/61) and be transmitted during coitus with an infected mare. Serological responses to this infection include the production of complement-fixing and serum-neutralizing antibodies which reach maximum levels 14 to 21 days after infection. Complement-fixing antibodies decline rapidly and are usually not detectable by 60 days after infection, whereas serum-neutralizing antibody activity is maintained for at least 1 year. This disparity provides a useful method for the diagnosis o...
Clinical management of equine ovarian neoplasms.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 331-334 
Clark TL.The rarity of equine ovarian neoplasms is attested to by the lack of reports in the literature. However, sixteen cases have been diagnosed at the Iowa State University Veterinary Hospital in the last 3 years and, of these, the granulosa-cell tumour was the most common. A study of the clinical and subsequent histories of these and other mares reveals some common findings as to age, breed, reproductive status, clinical signs, and post-surgical reproductive capability.
Immunoglobulins produced by the antigenized equine fetus.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 735-738 
Morgan DO, Bryans JT, Mock RE.The foal is born without detectable antibody and except for small amounts of IgM is devoid of immunoglobulins. Intrafetal administration of either Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus (VEE-TC83) or ovine erythrocytes elicited IgGa, IgGb and a trace of IgG(T). The fetal blood VEE-TC83 neutralization titre was higher than the neutralization titre elicited by the same preparation in older horses.
Experimental studies on equine herpesvirus type 1 infections.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 611-615 
Burrows R, Goodridge D.The EHV-1 viruses of fetal origin grew better and had a wider tissue culture host range than those isolated from horses with respiratory diseases. Comparisons of a fetal isolate (F/304) and a respiratory disease isolate (R/NM-3) in partly immune horses showed that the F/304 virus infected horses more readily, grew better in the nasopharynx, was more likely to cause abortion, and was excreted to a greater extent into the environment.
Control of microflora in stallion semen with a semen extender.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 139-142 
Burns SJ, Simpson RB, Snell JR.Sterile equipment was used to collect ten ejaculates from each of ten normal stallions and quantitative and qualitative bacterial counts were made within 15 min after collection. The mean bacterial population in undiluted semen was found to be 573,000 +/- 374,000 organisms/ml. The bacterial content of semen diluted with two parts sterile physiological saline, or with two parts of a cream-gelatin extender, was measured within 15 min after collection and again after 2 hr at 25 degrees C. The number of bacteria was slightly increased in the saline after 2 hr, but 1 93% and 99% reduction occurred ...
Morphology and pathology of the equine umbilical cord.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 599-603 
Whitwell KE.A brief description is given of the morphology of the umbilical cord and some variations encountered. In 95% of normal Thoroughbred foals the cord measures less than 84 cm. Factors which govern cord length are not known. Seven pathological conditions involving the umbilical cord are described. Increased length is the most common abnormality and predisposes to three potentially lethal conditions, strangulation of the cord around the fetus, excessive torsion, and allantochorionic necrosis at the cervical pole.
Infection of the horse fetus.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 605-610 
Platt H.Many infections of the equine placenta and fetus result from ascending spread along the cervical canal. Most abortions due to infection occur during the later stages of pregnancy and the possible effects of intrauterine infection on the developing fetus and young foal are discussed.
[Production of antirickettsial sera by immunizing horses. II. Obtaining and testing an immune serum to D. sibericus].
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    October 1, 1975   Issue 10 27-31 
Barban PS, Gol'din RB, Misenzhnikov AV, Prusakova ZM, Pantiukhina AN.The authors present the results of immunization of horses-producers with a commercial antigen and the yolk culture of the living R. sibericus (strain K1) for the purpose of obtaining specific immune sera for many purposes. It was shown that the original combined scheme of immunization and reimmunization of horses, successfully approved in the preparation of immune sera to Rickettsia prowazeki also proved to be highly effective for obtaining the antisera to R. sibericus. Sera obtained after the primary immunization of horses could be successfully used as diagnostic sera, but they were of no use...
Identification of multiple equine infectious anemia antigens by immunodiffusion reactions.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    October 1, 1975   Volume 39, Issue 4 411-415 
Malmquist WA, Becvar CS.Equine infectious anemia (EIA) cell antigens prepared from infected equine spleen, equine leukocyte cultures or a persistently infected equine dermis cell line contained at least two serologically reacting components. For convenience one component was designated as soluble antigen (SA) and the other as cell-associated antigen (CAA). The SA appeared as a single component when it was prepared from EIA virus precipitated from infectious tissue culture fluid with polyethylene glycol and ether treated but it was mixed with CAA when the source was infected cells. Cytolytic or mechanical disruption o...
Endometritis, a common cause of infertility in mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 353-356 
Varadin M.Infertility, resulting from failure to conceive during the preceding breeding season, was caused by various forms of endometritis in forty-four mares of Highland and Arabian breeds in Yugoslavia. Chronic mucopurulent and latent catarrhal endometritis occurred most frequently. Douching of the uterus on alternate days for 9 days with warm and cold sterile salt solutions (ranging from 7% to 1% w/v) in the early autumn resulted in conception in 47-7% of mares at an average of 15-2 days after the onset of treatment, and another 36-7% becoming pregnant in the following spring. Mating at the wrong st...
Diarrhoea in horses associated with ulceration of the colon and caecum resulting from S vulgaris larval migration.
The Veterinary record    September 20, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 12 221-225 doi: 10.1136/vr.97.12.221
Greatorex JC.The clinical manifestations of a diarrhoeic syndrome of horses with ulceration of the mucosae of the colon and caecum are described. Patients could be divided into three groups according to their presenting symptoms and the disease is probably caused by the thrombo-embolism associated with migrating larvae of Strongylus vulgaris. The differential diagnosis, prognosis and treatment are outlined with particular reference to the use of antithrombotic agents.
[Serological studies on Listeriosis in horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    September 15, 1975   Volume 88, Issue 18 345-347 
Mayer H, Seeliger HP, Sickel E, Kinzler M.No abstract available
A case of equine infectious anaemia in Newmarket.
The Veterinary record    September 13, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 11 207-208 doi: 10.1136/vr.97.11.207
Rossdale PD, Hunt MD, Peace CK, Hopes R, Ricketts SW.No abstract available
[Equine influenza in Czechoslovakia during the 1973 epizootic].
Veterinarni medicina    September 1, 1975   Volume 20, Issue 9 555-560 
Zakopal J, Pour L.During the epizootic spreading in Europe, equine influenza was brought in also into Czechoslovakia. The disease gradually spread from Slovakia (where horses were isolated after a trip abroad) to race horses throughout the country. The serological examination by the IH test showed that, again, the A equi 1/Praha 56 virus was the causative agent of the infection. The application of the Grippeguin vaccine from France was effective. No clinical manifestations of the disease were observed in two mares from one farm that had not been vaccinated although they had been in the focus of infection. Howev...
[Dynamics of the complement-fixing antibodies in nuttalliosis and of the elimination of the causative agent from the body of horses].
Veterinariia    September 1, 1975   Issue 9 68-70 
Petrovskiĭ VV.No abstract available
Equine piroplasmosis: leukocytic response to Babesia equi (Laveran, 1901) infection in Chile.
The British veterinary journal    September 1, 1975   Volume 131, Issue 5 601-609 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)35194-1
Rudolph W, Correa J, Zurita L, Manley W.No abstract available
Mites of medical and veterinary importance in Iran.
Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique et de ses filiales    September 1, 1975   Volume 68, Issue 5 508-511 
Rak H.No abstract available
Investigation of equine infectious anaemia in Queensland using gel diffusion.
Australian veterinary journal    September 1, 1975   Volume 51, Issue 9 440-442 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1975.tb15795.x
Thomas RJ.An antigen for the gel diffusion test for equine infectious anaemia (EIA) was prepared from the spleen of a horse experimentally infected with the CQ strain of the virus. The antigen produced a single, distinct line of precipitation when tested against a range of known positive serums, and did not react with pre-inoculation and known negative serums. Extracts prepared from uninfected spleens displayed no reaction when similarly tested. Serum from 34 of 451 Queensland horses contained detectable levels of antibody to EIA virus. The positive serums were from horses in widely separated areas of t...
Editorial: An unwelcome visitor.
The Veterinary record    August 16, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 7 119-120 doi: 10.1136/vr.97.7.119
No abstract available
[Possibilities and limits of planned parasite control in the horse].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    August 5, 1975   Volume 82, Issue 8 328-333 
Stoye M.No abstract available
Strongylus vulgaris-the horse killer.
Modern veterinary practice    August 1, 1975   Volume 56, Issue 8 569-572 
Kester WO.No abstract available
Equine ringworm by Trichophyton verrucosum.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    August 1, 1975   Volume 37, Issue 4 407-411 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.37.407
Ichijo S, Konishi T, Takatori K.No abstract available
Studies on the epidemiology of Strongylus vulgaris infection of the horse.
International journal for parasitology    August 1, 1975   Volume 5, Issue 4 423-426 doi: 10.1016/0020-7519(75)90008-9
Ogbourne CP.Studies on the epidemiology of Strongylus vulgaris infection of the horse. International Journalfor Parasitology 5: 423426. Observations are reported on the size and age structure of Stronglyus vulguris populations recovered from the anterior mesenteric artery and its main branches of horses slaughtered at regular intervals throughout a year. Marked seasonal variations were found in the mean monthly numbers of worms present. During spring/early summer the numbers were relatively low and a large proportion of the arteries had no worms in them at all. Thereafter, the arterial worm burdens q...