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Topic:Infectious Disease

Infectious diseases in horses encompass a range of illnesses caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi, or parasites. These diseases can affect various systems within the equine body, leading to symptoms that range from mild discomfort to severe systemic illness. Common infectious diseases in horses include equine influenza, strangles, equine herpesvirus, and West Nile virus. These diseases can be transmitted through direct contact with infected animals, contaminated surfaces, or vectors such as insects. Understanding the mechanisms of transmission, pathogenesis, and immune response is essential for effective prevention and control. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment, and management of infectious diseases in horses.
Electrophoretic study of the horse serum of equine infectious anemia.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1954   Volume 15, Issue 56 343-345 
KAO KY, REAGAN RL, BRUECKNER AL.No abstract available
[Histoplasmin reaction in horses and dogs].
Comptes rendus des seances de la Societe de biologie et de ses filiales    May 1, 1954   Volume 148, Issue 9-10 811-812 
VERGE J, PARAF A, BERTRAND A.No abstract available
Second ecdysis of infective nematode larvae parasitic in the horse.
Nature    April 24, 1954   Volume 173, Issue 4408 781 doi: 10.1038/173781a0
PYNTER D.No abstract available
Thermal, hematological, and serological responses of weanling horses following inoculation with equine abortion virus: its similarity to equine influenza.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1954   Volume 44, Issue 2 181-190 
DOLL ER, WALLACE E, RICHARDS MG.Manninger and Csontos reported that mares inoculated with equine abortion virus developed a transient fever 2 to 4 days after pharyngeal or intravenous inoculation and that an uninoculated horse in contact with the experimentally inoculated mares contracted a febrile disease resembling equine influenza. Also, mares that had aborted virus-infected fetuses were resistant to inoculation with equine influenza virus. From these observations, they proposed that virus abortions were a manifestation of infection of pregnant mares by the equine influenza virus. In reports on equine virus abortions, Kre...
The epidemiology and causation of recurrent iridocyclitis of horses.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine    April 1, 1954   Volume 47, Issue 4 233-236 
CRAWFORD M.This disease has a very long history, with the earliest written description by Vegetius in the fourth century A.D. It has many names, such as periodic ophthalmia, recurrent ophthalmia, iridocyclitis, uveitis, moon-blindness, etc. Periodic ophthalmia is perhaps the name more generally used, but I prefer to use recurrent iridocyclitis because (a) there is no definite fixed period between the recurrent attacks and (b) because the essential lesion is iridocyclitis.
[Iridocyclitis of horses and leptospirosis].
Revue de pathologie generale et de physiologie clinique    March 1, 1954   Volume 54, Issue 656 432-479 
ROSSI P, KOLOCHINE-ERBER B.No abstract available
[Leptospirosis and ophthalmia in the horse; clinical findings in a thoroughbred stud farm].
Revue de pathologie generale et de physiologie clinique    March 1, 1954   Volume 54, Issue 656 480-487 
MARCENAC .No abstract available
Human epidemic in Colombia caused by the Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 1, 1954   Volume 3, Issue 2 283-293 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1954.3.283
SANMARTIN-BARBERI C, GROOT H, OSORNO-MESA E.No abstract available
[Isolation of encephalomyelitis virus from ticks. I. Isolation of the virus and its properties].
Orvosi hetilap    February 7, 1954   Volume 95, Issue 6 144-149 
FORNOSI F, MOLNAR E.No abstract available
An Attempt to Passively Immunize Chicks against The Virus Of Newcastle Disease by the use of an Antiserum of Equine origin.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine and veterinary science    February 1, 1954   Volume 18, Issue 2 62-64 
Moynihan IW, Walker RV, Powell EP, Cooper DM.No abstract available
[Serological investigation for leptospirosis and toxoplasmosis in equine abortions].
Przeglad epidemiologiczny    January 1, 1954   Volume 8, Issue 4 287-289 
DYMOWSKA Z, WOYCIECHOWSKA S, KOZŁOWSKA D, WŁODEK Z.No abstract available
[Isolation of an encephalomyelitic virus from Brazzaville. II. Immunological study].
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur    January 1, 1954   Volume 86, Issue 1 53-58 
PELLISSIER A.No abstract available
The quantitative precipitin reaction of equine diphtheria antitoxin.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    January 1, 1954   Volume 72, Issue 1 112-117 
BOWEN HE, POLLEY BA, HUANG J.No abstract available
Equine encephalomyelitis in Utah; a survey of horses and man utilizing serum-neutralization tests.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1954   Volume 124, Issue 922 40-42 
GRUNDMANN AW, LEYMASTER GR.No abstract available
[Attempted transmission to monkey of the virus of infectious anemia of horses (Vallée and Carré disease)].
Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l'Academie des sciences    October 28, 1953   Volume 237, Issue 17 1041-1043 
PLACIDI L, VERGE J.No abstract available
Interference between influenza and equine encephalitis viruses in tissue culture.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    September 1, 1953   Volume 71, Issue 3 125-133 
TAYLOR CE.No abstract available
Ringworm of horses and its control.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1953   Volume 123, Issue 917 111-114 
BATTE EG, MILLER WS.No abstract available
Encephalitis in racehorses in Malaya.
Journal of comparative pathology    July 1, 1953   Volume 63, Issue 3 195-198 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(53)80023-8
HALE JH, WITHERINGTON DH.No abstract available
CORYNEBACTERIUM pseudotuberculosis infection in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1953   Volume 122, Issue 914 387 
No abstract available
SUSCEPTIBILITY of animals to louse infection.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1953   Volume 122, Issue 914 377 
No abstract available
Virus encephalomyelitides.
The Medical clinics of North America    March 1, 1953   Volume 37, Issue 2 373-393 doi: 10.1016/s0025-7125(16)35020-9
FINLEY KH.No abstract available
Complement-fixation reactions in equine virus abortion.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1953   Volume 14, Issue 50 40-45 
DOLL ER, MCCOLLUM WH, WALLACE ME, BRYANS JT, RICHARDS MG.No abstract available
Intrauterine and intrafetal inoculations with equine abortion virus in pregnant mares.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1953   Volume 43, Issue 1 112-121 
DOLL ER.No abstract available
Comparative susceptibility of cultured cell strains to the virus of eastern equine encephalomyelitis.
Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital    December 1, 1952   Volume 91, Issue 6 427-461 
BANG FB, GEY GO, FOARD M, MINNEGAN D.No abstract available
California encephalitis virus, a newly described agent.
California medicine    November 1, 1952   Volume 77, Issue 5 303-309 
HAMMON WM, REEVES WC.In three cases of encephalitis in humans that occurred in the area where the newly described California virus was isolated from mosquitoes, serological evidence seemed to indict the California virus as the etiological agent. In the case of an infant with very severe disease, the serological evidence was convincing; the evidence was almost as strong in the case of a seven-year-old boy; the results in an adult were equivocal. Inapparent infection in man is quite common as indicated by neutralization tests on the sera of nearly 600 residents of California, but encephalitic manifestations of infec...
The characters of streptococci isolated from the uteri of thoroughbred mares in Ireland.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1952   Volume 62, Issue 4 260-265 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(52)80027-x
CRONIN MT.No abstract available
Seasonal incidence and fetal age in equine virus abortion.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1952   Volume 42, Issue 4 505-509 
DOLL ER.No abstract available
An outbreak of leptospirosis in horses on a small farm.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1952   Volume 121, Issue 907 237-242 
ROBERTS SJ, YORK CJ, ROBINSON JW.No abstract available
[Study on behaviour of hematic antibodies with neutralizing action in horses variously vaccinated with the neuro-mesodermotropic virus of pferdepest].
Bollettino dell'Istituto sieroterapico milanese    September 1, 1952   Volume 31, Issue 9-10 434-447 
CILLI V, CORAZZI G.No abstract available
Interference between St. Louis encephalitis virus and Western equine encephalomyelitis virus along a neuronal pathway.
The Journal of infectious diseases    September 1, 1952   Volume 91, Issue 2 165-172 doi: 10.1093/infdis/91.2.165
JORDAN RT, DUFFY CE.No abstract available