Analyze Diet

Topic:Laboratory Methods

Laboratory methods in equine research encompass a variety of techniques and procedures used to analyze biological samples from horses to study health, disease, genetics, and physiology. These methods include hematological analyses, biochemical assays, molecular biology techniques, and microbiological cultures. Commonly utilized laboratory techniques involve blood tests for complete blood count (CBC) and serum chemistry, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for genetic and infectious disease studies, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for detecting specific proteins or antibodies. These methods provide valuable data that contribute to understanding equine health and disease mechanisms. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the application, development, and outcomes of laboratory methods in the context of equine research.
A laboratory restraining device for the pony.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1971   Volume 32, Issue 7 1097-1098 
Rosborough JP, Garner HE, Amend JF.No abstract available
Purification and properties of butyrylcholinesterase from horse serum.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    July 1, 1971   Volume 145, Issue 1 55-63 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(71)90009-9
Lee JC, Harpst JA.No abstract available
The routine estimation of serum cholesterol with special reference to low concentrations.
The British veterinary journal    July 1, 1971   Volume 127, Issue 7 327-345 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)37485-7
Harvey DG.No abstract available
An in vitro immune response to penicillin.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    July 1, 1971   Volume 107, Issue 1 302-305 
Naor D, Henry C, Fudenberg HH.No abstract available
In vitro synthesis of immunoglobulin-A by salivary glands from animals of different species.
Immunology    July 1, 1971   Volume 21, Issue 1 101-111 
Hurlimann J, Darling H.The synthesis of immunoglobulins by the salivary glands from eight different species was studied. It has been demonstrated that salivary glands from the cow, horse, sheep, pig, rat and guinea-pig preferentially synthesize a fast migrating immunoglobulin which seems to be analogous to IgA. In three of the species, the cow, sheep and pig, the IgA-like component cross-reacts with human IgA. The IgA synthesized by the salivary glands from the rat cross-reacts with the mouse IgA. When one compares the salivary IgA from the cow, horse, sheep, pig and rat with the IgA synthesized by the lymph nodes,...
Influence of chemical modifications of the reactive SH groups on the proton binding behaviour of human and horse hemoglobin.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    June 29, 1971   Volume 236, Issue 3 777-779 doi: 10.1016/0005-2795(71)90262-5
Janssen LH, de Bruin SH, van OS GA.No abstract available
Biochemical properties of the blood of three equines.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    June 15, 1971   Volume 39, Issue 2 279-284 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(71)90170-2
Yousef MK, Burk D, Dill DB.No abstract available
Limited proteolysis of horse heart cytochrome c.
European journal of biochemistry    June 11, 1971   Volume 20, Issue 3 414-419 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1971.tb01407.x
Schejter A, Goldkorn T, Sokolovsky M.No abstract available
Production of antibody against Australia antigen in horses.
Vox sanguinis    June 1, 1971   Volume 20, Issue 6 559-560 doi: 10.1111/j.1423-0410.1971.tb00468.x
Geserick G, Müller G, Schnitzler S, Mix H.No abstract available
Preparation and standardization of an Australia antigen antibody of equine origin.
Applied microbiology    June 1, 1971   Volume 21, Issue 6 1017-1023 doi: 10.1128/am.21.6.1017-1023.1971
Cabasso VJ, Nieman R, Schroeder DD, Hok KA, Louie RE, Mozen MM.A horse has been immunized with Australia antigen (Au/SH) purified 20-fold by a procedure employing gel filtration of Cohn fraction IV derived from an Au/SH-positive human plasma pool. Hyperimmunization was initiated by the intramuscular injection of 20 ml of a mixture of equal parts of purified Au/SH and complete Freund's adjuvant. The 20-ml volume was divided into four 5-ml doses, two of which were administered on each side of the horse's neck. Booster doses of antigen alone were given as follows: 10 ml intravenously 30 days later and 5 ml intramuscularly on each of days 77 and 205. Au/SH an...
Evidence for a relationship between equine abortion (herpes) virus deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis and the S phase of the KB cell mitotic cycle.
Journal of virology    June 1, 1971   Volume 7, Issue 6 736-748 doi: 10.1128/JVI.7.6.736-748.1971
Lawrence WC.Autoradiographic analyses of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis in randomly growing KB cell cultures infected with equine abortion virus (EAV) suggested that viral DNA synthesis was initiated only at times that coincided with the entry of noninfected control cells into the S phase of the cell cycle. Synchronized cultures of KB cells were infected at different stages of the cell cycle, and rates of synthesis of cellular and viral DNA were measured. When cells were infected at different times within the S phase, viral DNA synthesis was initiated 2 to 3 hr after infection. However, when cells ...
Structure and functional properties of chemically modified horse hemoglobin. I. Determination of the functional properties.
Journal of molecular biology    May 28, 1971   Volume 58, Issue 1 69-77 doi: 10.1016/0022-2836(71)90232-4
Simon SR, Arndt DJ, Konigsberg WH.No abstract available
Structure and functional properties of chemically modified horse hemoglobin. II. X-ray studies.
Journal of molecular biology    May 28, 1971   Volume 58, Issue 1 79-88 doi: 10.1016/0022-2836(71)90233-6
Moffat JK.No abstract available
[Study of the activity of the serum of mares in foal].
Veterinariia    May 1, 1971   Volume 5 101-102 
Sevast'ianov SI, Leont'ev IuK.No abstract available
Free erythrocyte protoporphyrin in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1971   Volume 12, Issue 3 280-282 
Barnett AL, Steel JD, Stewart GA.Free erythrocyte protoporphyrin was estimated in 166 Thoroughbred horses and the mean value was found to be 4o vg.Poo ml. packed cells. Signifi-cantly lower haemoglobin concentrations were found in 21 horses whose erythrocyte protoporphyrin concentration was 7o p.g.lioo ml. packed cells or greater.
Heat-labile factor necessary for hemagglutination-inhibition testing of horse sera.
Applied microbiology    May 1, 1971   Volume 21, Issue 5 860-861 doi: 10.1128/am.21.5.860-861.1971
DeMeio JL, DeSanctis AN.Normal and immune sera were obtained from horses immunized with either aqueous, alum, or adjuvant bivalent vaccines containing Milford equine 2 virus. Upon heating at 56 C for 30 min, a factor, required for hemagglutination-inhibition but not complement fixation or neutralization testing, was destroyed. This factor which is present in normal sera does not appear to be complement.
Experimental variability of Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus. I. Properties of mutants induced by alkylating compounds.
Soviet genetics    May 1, 1971   Volume 7, Issue 5 655-660 
Solyanik RG, Podoplekin VD, Fedorov YV.No abstract available
Induction of skin-sensitizing antibody to horse gamma-globulin by a horse antimouse thymocyte serum.
Transplantation    May 1, 1971   Volume 11, Issue 5 489-491 doi: 10.1097/00007890-197105000-00011
Kind LS, Ako D.No abstract available
[Pregnancy diagnosis in mares using the hemagglutination-inhibition test as compared to the results of the mouse test and rectal palpation].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 1, 1971   Volume 78, Issue 9 270-272 
Luttmann U, von Lepel JD.No abstract available
Phospholipid composition of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus.
Journal of virology    May 1, 1971   Volume 7, Issue 5 642-645 doi: 10.1128/JVI.7.5.642-645.1971
Heydrick FP, Comer JF, Wachter RF.Phospholipid analyses of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus showed that virus propagated in L-cell monolayers had a higher sphingomyelin content and a lower phosphatidylcholine content than virus grown in chick fibroblast monolayers. Virus of L-cell origin also was found to possess greater thermal stability than virus derived from the chick fibroblast cell.
On the electron-transfer-coupled proton release of cytochrome c.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    April 6, 1971   Volume 234, Issue 1 57-61 doi: 10.1016/0005-2728(71)90129-0
Czerlinski GH, Dar K.No abstract available
Laboratory housing for the pony in an urban research facility.
Laboratory animal science    April 1, 1971   Volume 21, Issue 2 269-271 
Garner HE, Rosborough JP, Amend JF.No abstract available
[Comparative studies on the biochemical nature of myosin–smooth and skele- tal muscle myosin].
Seikagaku. The Journal of Japanese Biochemical Society    April 1, 1971   Volume 43, Issue 4 185-196 
Yamaguchi M.No abstract available
Tobacco mosaic virus specific immunoglobulins from horse serum. II. Structural specificity and association constants.
European journal of immunology    April 1, 1971   Volume 1, Issue 2 81-86 doi: 10.1002/eji.1830010206
Anderer FA, Koch MA, Hirschle SD.No abstract available
[Experimental reproduction of meningo-encephalomyelitis of horses with West Nile arbovirus. II. Anatomo-clinical study].
Bulletin de l'Academie veterinaire de France    March 1, 1971   Volume 44, Issue 3 147-158 
Oudar J, Joubert L, Lapras M, Guillon JC.No abstract available
The haemagglutination inhibition test for pregnancy in the mare.
The Veterinary record    February 20, 1971   Volume 88, Issue 8 209-210 doi: 10.1136/vr.88.8.209
Rogerson B.No abstract available
Organic anions in fecal contents.
The New England journal of medicine    February 11, 1971   Volume 284, Issue 6 329-330 doi: 10.1056/NEJM197102112840612
Fordtran JS.No abstract available
Chemical and immunochemical properties of two classes of globoside from equine organs.
The Japanese journal of experimental medicine    February 1, 1971   Volume 41, Issue 1 67-81 
Naiki M.No abstract available
Immunofluorescent localization of equine infectious anemia virus in tissue.
The American journal of pathology    February 1, 1971   Volume 62, Issue 2 283-294 
McGuire TC, Crawford TB, Henson JB.No abstract available
Laboratory aids to clinical diagnosis in equine practice.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1971   Volume 3, Issue 1 25-30 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1971.tb04435.x
Doxey DL.No abstract available