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Topic:Lung Health

Lung health in horses encompasses the study of respiratory system function, disease, and maintenance in equine species. The equine respiratory system is vital for oxygen exchange and plays a significant role in overall health and athletic performance. Conditions affecting lung health include inflammatory airway disease (IAD), recurrent airway obstruction (RAO), and exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH). These conditions can impact a horse's respiratory efficiency and performance capabilities. Research in this area often focuses on understanding the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of respiratory diseases, as well as the impact of environmental factors on lung function. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms, diagnostic approaches, and therapeutic strategies related to lung health in horses.
Scintigraphical evaluation of alveolar clearance in horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    August 6, 1998   Volume 156, Issue 1 51-58 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80061-0
Votion D, Vandenput S, Duvivier DH, Lambert P, Art T, Lekeux P.This study proposed a standardized method for measuring alveolar epithelium membrane permeability in the horse. The normal rate of clearance (%.min-1) from lung into blood of nebulized 99mTc-DTPA has been established for healthy horses (Group A) compared with values obtained with horses suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD; Group B). The 99mTc-DTPA clearance was measured in the caudoventral (R1) and in the half caudal (R2) parts of the left lung during different time intervals. The two regions aimed to define the influence of the airways on measured clearance (R2 containe...
Regional differences in endothelial function in horse lungs: possible role in blood flow distribution?
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    August 4, 1998   Volume 85, Issue 2 537-542 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1998.85.2.537
Pelletier N, Robinson NE, Kaiser L, Derksen FJ.We investigated regional differences of in vitro responses of pulmonary arteries (6-mm OD) from the dorsocaudal (top) and cranioventral (bottom) lung regions to endothelium-dependent vasodilators (methacholine, bradykinin, and calcium ionophore A-23187). Methacholine relaxed endothelium-intact top vessels; however, in bottom vessels, a small relaxation preceded a profound contraction. In top vessels, removal of endothelial cells converted relaxation to contraction, and in bottom vessels it abolished relaxation and enhanced contraction. Bradykinin and A-23187 were more potent and caused greater...
Effect of the 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, fenleuton, on antigen-induced neutrophil accumulation and lung function changes in horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    July 23, 1998   Volume 21, Issue 3 241-246 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2885.1998.00127.x
Marr KA, Lees P, Page CP, Cunningham FM.The leukotrienes (LT) LTD4 and LTB4 have been shown to cause bronchoconstriction and neutrophil accumulation, respectively, in horse lungs. Such changes are characteristic of the equine allergic respiratory disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). To further investigate the role of these putative mediators in the pathogenesis of equine COPD the effect of a 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, fenleuton, on antigen-induced changes in horses with this condition has been examined. Six horses with COPD underwent a series of four antigen challenges, one month apart, with placebo pre-treatment on...
Exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) in horses results from locomotory impact induced trauma–a novel, unifying concept.
Equine veterinary journal    June 11, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 3 186-192 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04486.x
Schroter RC, Marlin DJ, Denny E.Exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) in horses, although of major welfare and economic importance worldwide, is of uncertain cause. It is accepted that the dorsocaudal region of the lung is particularly prone to the condition, but present theories of causation cannot satisfactorily explain the mechanism or pattern of occurrence. We propose that EIPH results from locomotory impact induced trauma; the mechanism being similar to that producing lung tissue damage following thoracic impact injury. In impact injury, the localised impulsive load on the chest wall is transmitted by pressure w...
Influence of tidal volume and positive end-expiratory pressure on inspiratory gas distribution and gas exchange during mechanical ventilation in horses positioned in lateral recumbency.
American journal of veterinary research    April 2, 1998   Volume 59, Issue 3 307-312 
Moens Y, Lagerweij E, Gootjes P, Poortman J.To study effects of intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV) with large tidal volumes and addition of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on maldistribution of ventilation in anesthetized horses positioned in lateral recumbency. Methods: 6 healthy adult horses. Methods: Anesthesia was induced by i.v. infusion of thiopental sodium and guiafenesin and was maintained with supplemental doses of thiopental and i.v. infusion of chloral hydrate. Functional separation of the lungs was achieved, using a tube-in-tube intubation technique. Intermittent positive-pressure ventilation of both l...
Association between bronchoalveolar lavage cytologic features and airway reactivity in horses with a history of exercise intolerance.
American journal of veterinary research    March 11, 1998   Volume 59, Issue 2 176-181 
Hoffman AM, Mazan MR, Ellenberg S.To correlate indices of airway reactivity to bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid cytologic features in horses with a recent decline in exercise tolerance. Methods: 20 actively working horses from 2 to 24 years old. Methods: Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples were obtained and analyzed. Forced oscillatory mechanics (1-7 Hz) technique was used for measurements of total respiratory system resistance (RRS), compliance (CRS), and resonant frequency (fres). Changes in RRS (1 Hz) during histamine challenge were used to generate histamine dose-response curves, from which the provocative concentration...
Oxidant stress in the equine lung: response to oral prednisolone.
The Veterinary record    January 7, 1998   Volume 141, Issue 20 518-519 doi: 10.1136/vr.141.20.518
Mills PC, Roberts CA, Smith NC.No abstract available
Field imaging of the respiratory tract. Radiology and ultrasonography.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    November 22, 1997   Volume 13, Issue 3 487-499 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30226-2
O'Brien RT, Biller DS.This article addresses the current status and clinical opportunities for portable radiography and ultrasonography. Radiology is indicated for imaging the nasal cavity, larynx, pharynx and thin portions of the neck. In young foals, adequate radiographs of the entire respiratory tract may be possible. Ultrasonography is indicated in superficial parts of the head and neck, the pleural space and diseased parts of the lungfields.
Aerosol deposition in equine lungs following ultrasonic nebulisation versus jet aerosol delivery system.
Equine veterinary journal    November 5, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 5 388-393 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb03145.x
Votion D, Ghafir Y, Munsters K, Duvivier DH, Art T, Lekeux P.Therapeutic aerosols pay an increasing role in the treatment of equine respiratory disorders. This route of delivery permits concentration of significant amounts of drugs at the site of action without unwanted high systemic concentration and resultant side effects. The efficiency of such a topical therapy depends on the quantity of inhaled drugs deposited in the lungs and, for some drugs, on the proportion retained in specific parts of the lungs. The objective of this study was to define and to compare quantitative (dose deposited) and qualitative (regional distribution) deposition of an aeros...
In vitro responses of equine small airways and lung parenchyma.
Respiration physiology    August 1, 1997   Volume 109, Issue 2 167-176 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5687(97)00053-4
Olszewski MA, Robinson NE, Derksen FJ.In vitro responses of equine small peripheral airways (SA) and lung parenchyma (LP) were studied. We examined their contractile and relaxant responses and investigated effects of histamine, and endogenous prostanoids as these mediators may play a role in development or recurrent airway obstruction in horses (heaves). SA and LP electrical field stimulation (EFS) induced nearly maximal and partial frequency-dependent contractions, respectively. These contractions were virtually abolished in SA but only partially inhibited in LP by atropine (ATR) and tetrodotoxin (TTX). Methacholine (MCh) contrac...
Lesions of experimental equine morbillivirus pneumonia in horses.
Veterinary pathology    July 1, 1997   Volume 34, Issue 4 312-322 doi: 10.1177/030098589703400407
Hooper PT, Ketterer PJ, Hyatt AD, Russell GM.Laboratory examinations of equine morbillivirus included experimental reproductions of the disease caused by the virus by transmission of mixed lung and spleen taken from two field equine cases into two horses and by inoculating tissue culture virus into a further two horses. The most distinctive gross lesions of the diseases that developed in three of the horses was that of pulmonary edema characterized by gelatinous distension of subpleural lymphatics. Histologically, the lesions in the lungs were those of serofibrinous alveolar edema, alveolar macrophages, hemorrhage, thrombosis of capillar...
Effect of antigen challenge on the activation of peripheral blood neutrophils from horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1997   Volume 62, Issue 3 253-260 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(97)90200-9
Marr KA, Foster AP, Lees P, Cunningham FM, Page CP.The effect of antigen challenge on the state of activation of peripheral blood neutrophils from horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has been determined by measuring neutrophil superoxide anion formation. Prior to a seven-hour antigen challenge superoxide anion production by neutrophils from asymptomatic horses with COPD and normal horses in response to platelet activating factor (PAF) (with and without cytochalasin B), serum treated zymosan (STZ) and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) was similar. Agonist-induced superoxide production by neutrophils from symptomatic COPD and ...
What is your diagnosis? Unilateral pneumothorax with collapse of the left caudal lung lobe.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1997   Volume 210, Issue 8 1109-1110 
Jorgensen JS.No abstract available
Effect of a single bout of high intensity exercise on lower respiratory tract contamination in the horse.
Australian veterinary journal    April 1, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 4 293-295 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1997.tb10101.x
Raidal SL, Love DN, Bailey GD.No abstract available
Use of Rhodococcus equi virulence-associated protein for immunization of foals against R equi pneumonia.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 4 356-359 
Prescott JF, Nicholson VM, Patterson MC, Zandona Meleiro MC, Caterino de Araujo A, Yager JA, Holmes MA.To evaluate use of the virulence-associated protein of Rhodococcus equi in immunizing foals against R equi pneumonia. Methods: Eight (experimental group) and 6 (controls) mares with their foals. Methods: Virulence-associated protein extracted from R equi was used to prepare an acetone-precipitated. Triton X-extracted (APTX) antigen. After determination of the efficacy of passive immunization, in untreated foals or in foals given plasma from a horse vaccinated with APTX antigen or from a nonvaccinated horse, a field trial was done to evaluate the efficacy of vaccination of 8 mares, twice with A...
Frequency dependence of forced oscillatory respiratory mechanics in horses with heaves.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    March 1, 1997   Volume 82, Issue 3 983-987 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1997.82.3.983
Young SS, Tesarowski D, Viel L.The effect of measurement frequency on respiratory mechanics was investigated in six horses with reversible allergic airway disease. Total respiratory impedance was measured at 1.5, 2.0, 3.0, and 5.0 Hz by using the forced oscillation technique with the horses in remission, after acute antigenic challenge producing clinical heaves, and with heaves but after the administration of 2 mg fenoterol by inhalation. The slopes of the magnitude (magnitude of Zrs) and real part (R) of total respiratory impedance over the frequency range 1.5-3 Hz changed significantly after antigenic challenge and fenote...
Oxidant injury, nitric oxide and pulmonary vascular function: implications for the exercising horse.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 1, 1997   Volume 153, Issue 2 125-148 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(97)80034-2
Mills PC, Higgins AJ.The athletic ability of the horse is facilitated by vital physiological adaptations to high-intensity exercise, including a thin (but strong) pulmonary blood-gas barrier, a large pulmonary functional reserve capacity and a consequent maximum oxygen uptake (VO2max) far higher than in other species. A high pulmonary artery pressure also serves to enhance pulmonary function, although stress failure of lung capillaries at high pulmonary transmural pressures, and the contribution of other factors which act in the exercising horse to increase pulmonary vascular tone, may lead to pathological or path...
Analysis of equine scintigraphical lung images.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    January 1, 1997   Volume 153, Issue 1 49-61 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(97)80008-1
Votion D, Vandenput S, Duvivier H, Art T, Lekeux P.A method is proposed (1) to create inhalation to perfusion ratio (I/Q) images from equine lung scintiscans and (2) to analyse these I/Q images. This method was applied to five healthy horses in order to establish reference ranges of I/Q distribution pattern. Computed I/Q images were divided in three regions based on the activity due to the inhalation (I) versus perfusion (Q) procedure. For each region a regional mismatching factor (Iri), i.e. the I/Q of the region, and an intraregional mismatching factor (Lri), which expresses the variability of pixels' I/Q within the region, were calculated. ...
Ultrasound spirometry in the horse: a preliminary report on the method and the effects of xylazine and lobeline hydrochloride medication.
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1997   Volume 139, Issue 12 558-563 
Herholz C, Tschudi P, Gerber H, Moens Y, Straub R.A new computerised ultrasound-based spirometry system according to Buess et al. (1995) modified by a double flow measurement facility was used to study pulmonary function in healthy horses and horses affected with subclinical and manifest chronic bronchiolitis (CB). The horses were first evaluated at rest without any medication. On another occasion all horses were tested following i.v. administration of xylazine (0.4 mg/kg) and following i.v. administration of lobeline hydrochloride (l.hy.; 0.2 mg/kg) to evaluate the effect of xylazine and l.hy. on different spirometric variables. Ultrasound-b...
Lower respiratory tract disease.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 457-472 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30267-5
Moore BR.Lower respiratory tract disease is an important source of poor performance and exercise intolerance in racehorses and middle-aged sport horses. Horses that perform high-intensity exercise are predisposed to development of infectious and noninfectious respiratory disease. Diagnostic aids for investigation of lower respiratory tract disease include thorough thoracic auscultation with rebreathing, endoscopic examination, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), and thoracic radiographic examination. The therapeutic approach for horses with lower respiratory tract diseases often can be directed by cytologic ...
Measurement of extravascular lung water by the double indicator dilution method using heat and sodium in horses under general anesthesia.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    December 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 12 1205-1209 doi: 10.1292/jvms.58.12_1205
Ito S, Ishimaru M, Hobo S, Fujinaga T.Rapid infusion is believed to be harmful to the lung, however, the pathological status of pulmonary edema resulting from excessive fluid therapy in horses has not been clarified because the quantitative diagnosis of pulmonary edema is impossible. To evaluate the precision of the double indicator dilution method using heat and sodium in horses, which allows the quantitative diagnosis of pulmonary edema, we compared extravascular lung water volume measured using a lung water computer based on the theory of the double indicator dilution method with that determined by the direct method. The value ...
[A pony with a metastasized hemangiosarcoma].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    October 1, 1996   Volume 121, Issue 19 544-546 
Geelen SN, Sloet van Oldruitenborgh-Oosterbaan MM.A splenic hemangiosarcoma with multiple organ metastases in a pony is reported. Clinical signs included weakness and pallor. Abdominal paracentesis revealed haemorrhagic fluid. Laboratory data included anaemia, thrombocytopenia and hypoproteinaemia. Necropsy findings included a haemangiosarcoma in the spleen with metastases in the lung, liver, kidney and omentum.
Effects of ozone and airway inflammation on glutathione status and iron homeostasis in the lungs of horses.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 9 1359-1363 
Mills PC, Roberts CA, Smith NC.To investigate the effects of ozone and airway inflammation on indices of oxidant injury in horses. Methods: 5 clinically normal horses and 25 horses referred for poor performance. Methods: Blood, tracheal wash, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples were collected before and after ozone exposure (n = 5) or from clinical cases (n = 25), and were analyzed for reduced glutathione (GSH), glutathione disulfide (GSSG), and free and total iron (Fe) values. A scoring system (0 to 5) was used to assess airway inflammation on the basis of clinical signs and cytologic analysis of the tracheal wash and...
Pulmonary blood flow distribution in standing horses is not dominated by gravity.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    September 1, 1996   Volume 81, Issue 3 1051-1061 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1996.81.3.1051
Hlastala MP, Bernard SL, Erickson HH, Fedde MR, Gaughan EM, McMurphy R, Emery MJ, Polissar N, Glenny RW.Recent studies using microspheres in dogs, pigs and goats have demonstrated considerable heterogeneity of pulmonary perfusion within isogravitational planes. These studies demonstrate a minimal role of gravity in determining pulmonary blood flow distribution. To test whether a gravitational gradient would be more apparent in an animal with large vertical lung height, we measured perfusion heterogeneity in horses (vertical lung height = approximately 55 cm). Four unanesthetized Thoroughbred geldings (422-500 kg) were studied awake in the standing position with fluorescent microspheres injected ...
Effects of platelet activating factor on the distribution of radiolabelled leucocytes and platelets in normal horses and asymptomatic horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1996   Volume 61, Issue 2 107-113 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(96)90083-1
Fairbairn SM, Marr KA, Lees P, Cunningham FM, Page CP.Antigen challenge is known to cause the recruitment of neutrophils to the lungs of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). To evaluate a possible role of platelet activating factor (PAF) in this process, the effects of PAF on the distribution of radiolabelled neutrophils were compared in normal horses and asymptomatic horses with COPD. Changes in lung function, heart rate and the distribution of platelets and eosinophils were also measured. PAF (5 ng kg-1 intravenously) caused immediate but transient increases in the number of radiolabelled neutrophils in the lungs and a conc...
Pulmonary function measurements during repeated environmental challenge of horses with recurrent airway obstruction (heaves).
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 8 1214-1219 
Tesarowski DB, Viel L, McDonell WN.To evaluate the degree of reproducibility in clinical variables, blood gas measurements, and lung function variables, and the changes in these variables caused by exposure to moldy hay in naturally sensitized and control horses. Methods: The magnitude of variation in arterial blood gas and pulmonary function measurements were evaluated in a model of naturally acquired heaves. Horses with heaves and similarly aged control horses were studied prior to moldy hay challenge and again after the horses with heaves manifested clinical signs of airway obstruction. This cycle of testing was repeated 3 t...
Congenital polyalveolar lobe in three foals.
Journal of comparative pathology    July 1, 1996   Volume 115, Issue 1 85-88 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(96)80030-2
Hong CB.Three cases of congenital polyalveolar lobe (pulmonary hamartoma) were diagnosed in female Thoroughbred foals. Foal 1 was born at full term but died shortly afterwards. Foal 2 was aborted at the seventh month of gestation. Parturition was induced at the tenth month of gestation in foal 3 because it developed hydrops of the amnion and ascites. In all three foals, the polyalveolar lobe occurred on the right side and affected the entire right lung. In each case, the right lung formed a tumour-like mass, and expanded into the left chest cavity. The lung masses were pink to dark red and spongy to r...
What is your diagnosis? Severe cranioventral alveolar lung disease and generalized megaesophagus, with gastric dilatation and duodenal obstruction.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1996   Volume 208, Issue 11 1809-1810 
Dennis LE, White SL.No abstract available
A study of the effect of a platelet activating factor (PAF) receptor antagonist on antigen challenge of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1996   Volume 19, Issue 3 233-237 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1996.tb00043.x
Marr KA, Fairbairn SM, Page CP, Lees P, Cunningham FM.Antigen challenge involving exposure to straw and mouldy hay for 7 h produced lung function changes and neutrophil recruitment to the lungs in horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). During the challenge, an increase in radiolabelled neutrophils in the lungs occurred, together with increased respiratory rate and pleural pressure. The role of platelet activating factor (PAF) in antigen-induced neutrophil accumulation, and increased pleural pressure and respiratory rate was investigated by administering the PAF receptor antagonist WEB 2086 to asymptomatic COPD horses prior to a...
Inhibition of the protease activity in tracheobronchial aspirates of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 5 603-607 
Koivunen AL, Maisi P, Fang W, Sandholm M.To clarify the role of proteolytic enzymes in the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in horses, and to investigate new possibilities for treatment of this disease by interfering in the proteolytic process. Methods: Effect of antiproteolytic activity of selected protease inhibitors on tracheal aspirates was studied in vitro, and the inhibition profiles were compared with those of purified proteases. Methods: Respiratory tract secretions with antiproteolytic activity from 9 horses with COPD. Methods: Caseinolytic agar-diffusion assay. Results: The protease-inhibition pr...
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