Analyze Diet

Topic:Inflammation

Inflammation is a biological response of the horse's body to harmful stimuli, such as pathogens, damaged cells, or irritants. It is a complex process that involves the activation of immune cells, the release of inflammatory mediators, and changes in blood flow. In horses, inflammation can manifest in various forms, affecting different tissues and organs, including the joints, respiratory system, and skin. The inflammatory response is an essential component of the horse's immune system, aiming to eliminate the initial cause of cell injury, clear out damaged cells and tissues, and establish tissue repair. This topic page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms, effects, and management of inflammation in equine health.
A clinincal evaluation of abdominal paracentesis in the horse.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1976   Volume 52, Issue 3 109-117 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1976.tb05440.x
Swanwick RA, Wilkinson JS.This paper evaluates the usefulness of abdominal paracentesis as a diagnostic aid in abdominal disease in the horse and in particular considers whether or not it can be effectively utilised as an indication for surgical intervention in cases of colic. The results are based upon peritoneal fluid samples collected from 20 normal horses and from 20 cases of colic and peritonitis. Peritoneal fluid was collected from standing horses by inserting a bovine teat cannula into the horses abdomen through the linea alba after desensitisation of the skin on the ventral midline with local anaesthetic. Usual...
Substrate specificity and modifications of the active centre of elastase-like neutral proteinases from horse blood leucocytes.
The Biochemical journal    February 1, 1976   Volume 153, Issue 2 397-402 doi: 10.1042/bj1530397
Koj A, Chudzik J, Dubin A.Two proteinases (2A and 2B) purified from the granular fraction of horse blood leucocytes degrade casein (Km values 12.8 and 6mg/ml respectively) with maximum activity at pH 7.4 and in the presence of 2m-urea. Urea-denatured haemoglobin, fibrinogen, albumin and resorcin/fuchsin-stained elastin are digested at a slower rate. The enzymes hydrolyse synthetic substrates of elastase, N-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-alanine 4-nitrophenyl ester (Km 0.114 and 0.178 mM) and N-acetyl-tri-L-alanine methyl ester (Km 5.55 and 0.98 mM), but they do not hydrolyse synthetic substrates of trypsin, chymotrypsin and throm...
Letter: Laminitis in ponies.
The Veterinary record    January 24, 1976   Volume 98, Issue 4 77-78 doi: 10.1136/vr.98.4.77
Jones M.No abstract available
Surgical repair of a fistula of the urethral diverticulum in a horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    January 1, 1976   Volume 71, Issue 1 96 
Munger RJ, Meagher DM.No abstract available
LDH and LDH isoenzymes of synovial fluid in the horse.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1976   Volume 17, Issue 2 178-189 doi: 10.1186/BF03547926
Rejnö S.LDH is an intracellular enzyme, which when cells degenerate is released to the extracellular spaces and body fluids. Cells and organs in the mammalian body differ from each other with respect to their LDH isoenzyme patterns. These circumstances have led to the use of LDH isoenzyme determinations in laboratory diagnostic work. In the present investigation total LDH activity and LDH isoenzyme distribution in equine synovial fluid from healthy joints, joints with serous arthritis, osteochondrosis dissecans and arthrosis, were determined. The fluids from the diseased joints differed from normal sy...
Light and electron microscopic investigation of equine synovial membrane. A comparison between healthy joints and joints with intraarticular fractures and osteochondrosis dissecans.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1976   Volume 17, Issue 2 153-168 doi: 10.1186/BF03547924
Johansson HE, Rejnö S.Light and electron microscopic examination was made on equine synovial membrane from 23 healthy joints, nine joints with synovitis caused by intraarticular fracture and 10 joints with synovitis caused by osteochondrosis dissecans. Histologically as well as ultrastructurally the equine synovial membrane from healthy joints was of principally the same character as described in other species. Three types of synovial membrane — areolar, fibrous and adipose — and two types of lining cell were distinguished histologically. Ultrastructurally three types of lining cells were distinguished: A and ...
Viscosity of equine synovial fluid.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1976   Volume 17, Issue 2 169-177 doi: 10.1186/BF03547925
Rejnö S.Synovial fluid samples from 51 light horses were examined with respect to their rhéologie properties. The analyses were made with a Rotovisco RV3 rotational viscosimeter. Samples from carpal, stifle and hock joints and from healthy joints, joints with synovitis and joints with infectious arthritis were studied. The analyses showed that synovial fluids from both healthy and diseased joints have complex rhéologie properties. In most samples the viscosity varied with the shear rates, the main exceptions being synovial fluids from joints with infectious arthritis. Flow curves (flow behaviour), r...
Digitoxin metabolism by rat liver microsomes.
Biochemical pharmacology    September 1, 1975   Volume 24, Issue 17 1639-1641 doi: 10.1016/0006-291x(75)90337-x
Schmoldt A, Benthe HF, Haberland G, Tarentino AL, Maley F, Berkmen YM, Lande A, Ti-sheng C, Teh-chao W.The chest roentgenographic findings in Takayasu's arteritis include widening of the ascending aorta, contour irregularities of the descending aorta, arotic calcifications, pulmonary arterial changes, rib notching, and hilar lymphadenopathy. The single most important diagnostic sign is a segmental calcification outlining a localized or diffuse narrowing of the aorta. The other signs may be suspicious or suggestive, but the diagnostic accuracy increases when several findings are present simultaneously.
Traumatic hyphema and iridocyclitis in the horse.
Modern veterinary practice    July 1, 1975   Volume 56, Issue 7 475-479 
Gelatt KN.Traumatic iridocyclitis and hyphema in the horse usually follow blunt blows to the orbit and eye. The condition is characterized by miosis, ocular hypotony, ciliary flush, swelling of the iris, and hemorrhage with excessive fibrin in the anterior chamber which permits from 2 to 6 weeks. Vigorous treatment with mydriatics, topical and systemic corticosteroids is recommended. Possible complications include anterior and posterior synechiae, cataracts, and fibropupillary membranes.
Biochemistry, cytology, and microbiology of equine peritoneal fluid after experimental strangulation obstruction of the distal ileum.
The American journal of digestive diseases    June 1, 1975   Volume 20, Issue 6 595 
Hamiliton DP, Hardenbrook HJ.No abstract available
Letter: Illness after racing: acute gastric dilatation?
The Veterinary record    May 10, 1975   Volume 96, Issue 19 437-438 doi: 10.1136/vr.96.19.437
Owenn RR.No abstract available
Skin conditions in horses.
Modern veterinary practice    May 1, 1975   Volume 56, Issue 5 363-367 
No abstract available
Chicken hypersensitivity pneumonitis in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1975   Volume 166, Issue 7 673-677 
Mansmann RA, Osburn BI, Wheat JD, Frick O.No abstract available
Intestinal obstruction in the horse. Physical signs and blood chemistry.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1975   Volume 65, Issue 2 152-172 
Datt SC, Usenik EA.Physical signs and blood changes were studied in horses with artificially produced obstructions of the duodenum and the small colon and simulated volvulus of the ileum. Horses with obstruction of the duodenum had the most violent physical signs and the shortest survival time. Blood changes were an initial rise in pH followed by acidosis, hyperkalemia and a decrease in HCO3 minus, Na+ and C1 minus. Obstruction of the small colon resulted in mild physical signs. The blood parameters recorded were normal. Simulated volvulus resulted in continuous colic. Blood changes were acidosis and hyperkalemi...
Equine laminitis of alimentary origin: an experimental model.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 4 Pt.1 441-444 
Garner HE, Coffman JR, Hahn AW, Hutcheson DP, Tumbleson ME.Acute alimentary form of laminitis was uniformly induced in 11 of 12 horses by administration of a starch and wood flour gruel and could be graded by previously established (Obel) and presently defined criteria. The experimentally induced laminitis was similar to naturally occurring laminitis, as determined on the basis of lameness severity and vital signs. Packed cell volume, leukocyte count, and total protein were significantly increased (P smaller than 0.05) at 24 and 40 hours after administration of gruel. Arterial systolic and diastolic pressures increased, central venous pressure decreas...
Causes of colic and types requiring surgical intervention.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    March 1, 1975   Volume 46, Issue 1 95-99 
Wheat JD.The migration of strongyle larvae is the most common or basic underlying cause of colic in the horse. Disease conditions producing symptoms of colic occur in all sections of the intestinal tract and consist of impactions, torsions, herniations and foreign bodies. Colic also occurs as a result of pre- and post-partum diseases such as torsion of the uterus, haemorrhage, rupture and inversion of the uterus. In general, lesions resulting in circulatory obstruction are the types requiring surgical intervention. There are six general types of small intestine obstruction that lend themselves to surgi...
Naturally-occurring Tyzzer’s disease (Bacillus piliformis infection) in horse foals.
The Veterinary record    January 18, 1975   Volume 96, Issue 3 59-63 doi: 10.1136/vr.96.3.59
Harrington DD.Spontaneous Tyzzer's disease is described in quarter horse foals which died suddenly with no clinical history of apparent illness. Significant gross findings included icterus, focal paletan areas in the liver and catarrhal entercolitis. Focal dark red lesions were present in the small intestine of one foal, and the mesenteric lymph nodes of another were enlarged and hyperemic. Histopathologically, the liver showed multiple discrete and confluent foci of necrosis, fatty change, sinusoid congestion and haemorrhage. Bundles of intracytoplasmic bacilli were demonstrated in hepatocytes at the margi...
Equine laminitis and associated hypertension: a review.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1975   Volume 166, Issue 1 56-57 
Garner HE, Coffman JR, Hahn AW, Ackerman N, Johnson JH.No abstract available
Haemorrhagic nasal polyps of the horse.
The Journal of pathology    January 1, 1975   Volume 115, Issue 1 51-55 doi: 10.1002/path.1711150109
Platt H.A series of 10 haemorrhagic polyps of the equine nasal cavity is described. The lesions show haematoma formation, abundant haemosiderin in macrophages and giant cells, and organising fibrous tissue. In one case, angiomatoid lesions were observed in the mucous membrane of the paranasal sinuses and it is suggested that some haemorrhagic nasal polyps may originate from pre-existing haemangiomatous areas in the respiratory mucosa.
The role of bacterial adjuvant in experimental arthritis.
Rheumatology    January 1, 1975   Volume 6 283-287 
Glynn LE.No abstract available
Mixed IgG-IgA cryoglobulinemia in human serum sickness. Evidence for Equine IgG in the cryoprecipitate.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1975   Volume 48, Issue 6 756-763 doi: 10.1159/000231364
Moroz LA, Comerford TA, Guttman RD.Serum sickness followed the administration of anti-lymphocyte globulin to a patient with multiple sclerosis. In addition to other characteristic features of this syndrome, there was hypocomplementemia and transient renal dysfunction similar to that observed in the 'one-shot' experimental model of serum sickness. Cryoglobulinemia was transiently demonstrable at the height of the inflammatory response. Analysis of the purified cryoprecipitate revealed the presence of human IgG and IgA, and, in addition, equine IgG. This demonstration of a well-defined exagenous antigen in the cryoprecipitate pro...
Cytology of tracheobronchial aspirates in horses.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 3 157-164 doi: 10.1177/030098587501200301
Beech J.Tracheobronchial aspirates were obtained from 27 normal horses and from 57 horses with respiratory disease. Aspirates from normal horses contained mainly ciliated columnar epithelial cells, mononuclear cells, a few neutrophils and mucus. Aspirates from horses with acute suppurative bronchopneumonias or chronic bronchiolitis had predominantly neutrophils and usually large amounts of mucus; in severe suppurative inflammatory diseases, many of the cells were degenerated, and there were coils of fibrinous material resembling Curschmann's spirals. Eosinophils were rarely found, even from horses wit...
Mastitis in a mare caused by C ovis.
The Veterinary record    August 31, 1974   Volume 95, Issue 9 193 doi: 10.1136/vr.95.9.193
Addo PB, Wilcox GE, Taussig R.No abstract available
Prostaglandin-induced ovarian ascorbic acid depletion.
Endocrinology    August 1, 1974   Volume 95, Issue 2 417-420 doi: 10.1210/endo-95-2-417
Sato T, Iesaka T, Jyujo T, Taya K, Ishikawa J.No abstract available
Passive cutaneous anaphylaxis and its enhancement by normal IgG.
Immunology    August 1, 1974   Volume 27, Issue 2 271-283 
Williams MR.Rats were injected intradermally with rabbit anti-ovalbumin serum and 3 hours later were challenged intravenously with ovalbumin and Evans Blue dye. Inflammatory lesions were produced within 20 minutes and their size was markedly dose-dependent. Attempts were made to interfere with this passive cutaneous anaphylaxis (PCA) by admixture of normal IgG with the rabbit anti-ovalbumin to measure the relative tissue binding affinities of IgG from various species. It was found that normal IgG from any of the species tested had an enhancing effect on PCA in rats. These immunoglobulins serially arranged...
Interpretation of synovial fluid findings in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 1, 1974   Volume 165, Issue 1 91-95 
VAN Pelt RW.No abstract available
Letter: Mastitis in the mare.
The Veterinary record    June 1, 1974   Volume 94, Issue 22 526 doi: 10.1136/vr.94.22.526
Strong MG.No abstract available
Letter: Mastitis in the mare.
The Veterinary record    April 20, 1974   Volume 94, Issue 16 380 doi: 10.1136/vr.94.16.380
Prentice MW.No abstract available
Reticuloendothelial clearance studies in the course of horse serum induced nephritis.
British journal of experimental pathology    April 1, 1974   Volume 55, Issue 2 149-152 
Wardle EN.Assessment of changes in activity of the reticuloendothelial system (RES), including the mesangial cells of the kidney, has been made by means of clearance studies of human aggregated gamma-globulin and of colloidal gold, during the course of horse serum sickness nephritis. RES blockade was found after protein loading and at the phase of circulating immune complexes. At other times RES activity was normal or increased. “Mesangial saturation” may have important implications for human nephritis.
Early development of and pathology associated with Strongylus edentatus.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    April 1, 1974   Volume 38, Issue 2 124-138 
McCraw BM, Slocombe JO.Pony foals inoculated with infective Strongylus edentatus larvae were monitored for clinical signs and selected blood changes and were examined at necropsy from two to 56 days postinfection. Larvae penetrated the intestine and reached the liver intravenously before 40 hours postinfection. Occasional thrombi and larval tracks associated with the intima of cecal and colic veins suggested aberrant paths. Larvae in the liver doubled in width between seven and 15 days postinfection and a sudden increment in circulating eosinophils occurred between 11 and 15 days. These changes were probably associa...