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Topic:Microscopy

Microscopy in equine research involves the use of various microscopic techniques to study the cellular and subcellular structures of horses. This field encompasses the examination of tissues, cells, and microorganisms to gain insights into equine health, disease mechanisms, and physiological processes. Techniques such as light microscopy, electron microscopy, and fluorescence microscopy are employed to observe and analyze samples at high magnification, providing detailed information on morphology and pathology. Microscopy aids in the diagnosis of diseases, identification of pathogens, and evaluation of cellular responses to treatments. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the applications, methodologies, and findings of microscopy in the study of equine biology and medicine.
Confocal laser scanning analysis of an equine oral mast cell tumor with atypical expression of tyrosine kinase receptor C-KIT.
Veterinary pathology    February 24, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 2 225-228 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-2-225
Seeliger F, Hess O, Pröpsting MJ, Naim HY, Kleinschmidt S, Woehrmann T, Germann PG, Baumgärtner W.A 20-year-old female horse showed a nodular, firm, focal ulcerated mast cell tumor at the right dorsobuccal face of the tongue. Histologically, the nonencapsulated tumor consisted of dense, infiltrating aggregates of well-differentiated, Cresyl violet-positive mast cells accompanied by numerous eosinophils. Furthermore, they exhibited a strong, diffuse, intracytoplasmatic immunohistochemical signal for tryptase and a faint membrane-associated and perinuclear signal for tyrosine kinase receptor KIT. Confocal laser scanning microscopy confirmed an aberrant spatial colocalization of KIT in the Go...
Three equine cases of mixed hepatoblastoma with teratoid features.
Veterinary pathology    February 24, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 2 211-214 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-2-211
Loynachan AT, Bolin DC, Hong CB, Poonacha KB.Hepatoblastoma was diagnosed in 3 Thoroughbreds at the University of Kentucky Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center (LDDC) since 1997. Case #1 involved a fetus with a well-demarcated, multilobulated, solitary mass that extended from the left liver lobe. Case #2 was observed in a neonate with a primary hepatic mass and multiple metastases in the skin, brain, meninges, and stylohyoid bone. Case #3 was a solitary hepatic mass incidentally discovered in a neonate at necropsy. Microscopically, the masses were similarly composed of sheets and cords of fetal and embryonal epithelial cells that frequent...
Differentiating human bone from animal bone: a review of histological methods.
Journal of forensic sciences    February 24, 2007   Volume 52, Issue 2 249-263 doi: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2006.00368.x
Hillier ML, Bell LS.This review brings together a complex and extensive literature to address the question of whether it is possible to distinguish human from nonhuman bone using the histological appearance of cortical bone. The mammalian species included are rat, hare, badger, racoon dog, cat, dog, pig, cow, goat, sheep, deer, horse, water buffalo, bear, nonhuman primates, and human and are therefore not exhaustive, but cover those mammals that may contribute to a North American or Eurasian forensic assemblage. The review has demonstrated that differentiation of human from certain nonhuman species is possible, i...
First description of the horse stomach worm, Habronema muscae (Spirurida: Habronematidae) by scanning electron microscopy.
Parasitology research    February 22, 2007   Volume 101, Issue 2 427-432 doi: 10.1007/s00436-007-0492-0
Naem S.Habronema muscae (Spirurida: Habronematidae) occurs in the stomach of equids, is transmitted by adult muscid dipterans and causes gastric habronemiasis. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to study the morphological aspects of adult worms of this nematode in detail. The worms possess two trilobed lateral lips. The buccal cavity was cylindrical, with thick walls and without teeth. Around the mouth, four submedian cephalic papillae and two amphids were seen. A pair of lateral cervical papillae was present. There was a single lateral ala and in the female the vulva was situated in the mid...
Reactivity of equine airways–a study on precision-cut lung slices.
Veterinary research communications    January 24, 2007   Volume 31, Issue 5 611-619 doi: 10.1007/s11259-007-3501-y
Vietmeier J, Niedorf F, Bäumer W, Martin C, Deegen E, Ohnesorge B, Kietzmann M.A study was performed to evaluate the use of precision-cut lung slices (PCLS) for studies on the contraction of equine airways. Lungs of 10 horses were taken to prepare PCLS of approximately 250 microm from equine lung tissue using a special microtome. The lung slices were cultured and the enclosed small airways were monitored using a microscope with coupled digital camera, which was used to determine the airway luminal area and diameter from digital images. As indicated by the beating of the ciliated epithelium and reactivity of airways on methacholine challenge, the tissue slices were found ...
Physiological death of hypertrophic chondrocytes.
Osteoarthritis and cartilage    December 13, 2006   Volume 15, Issue 5 575-586 doi: 10.1016/j.joca.2006.10.016
Ahmed YA, Tatarczuch L, Pagel CN, Davies HM, Mirams M, Mackie EJ.Post-proliferative chondrocytes in growth cartilage are present in two forms, light and dark cells. These cells undergo hypertrophy and die by a mechanism that is morphologically distinct from apoptosis, but has not been characterized. The aims of the current study were to document the ultrastructural appearance of dying hypertrophic chondrocytes, and to establish a culture system in which the mechanism of their death can be examined. Methods: Growth cartilage from fetal and growing postnatal horses was examined by electron microscopy. Chondrocytes were isolated from epiphyseal cartilage from ...
Defining cytochemical markers for different cell types in the equine retina.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    December 13, 2006   Volume 35, Issue 6 412-415 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.2006.00722.x
Deeg CA, Amann B, Hauck SM, Kaspers B.The major cell types in the mammalian retina are photoreceptors, amacrine, horizontal, bipolar, ganglion and Mueller glial cells. Most of the specific cell types are conserved, but cytochemical markers vary between species. The aim of our study was to characterize cytochemically distinctive markers for different cell types in the equine retina. We were able to define specific markers for equine Mueller glial cells and photoreceptor cells. Furthermore, we describe markers for large ganglion cells, horizontal and amacrine cells and a subpopulation of bipolar cells. Additionally, discrimination b...
[Detection of leptospira in the vitreous body of horses without ocular diseases and of horses with equine recurrent uveitis (ERU) using transmission-electron microscopy].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 7, 2006   Volume 113, Issue 11 418-422 
Niedermaier G, Wollanke B, Hoffmann R, Brem S, Gerhards H.Equine recurrent uveitis (ERU) is caused by persistent intraocular leptospira, which appear to use the vitreous body as a refuge. The detection of leptospira in the vitreous body of horses with spontaneous ERU by histological methods has not yet been described. Thirty eight vitreous body samples from 36 horses with ERU (collected during vitrectomy), and 10 vitreous body samples obtained from 5 horses without ocular disease (control group) were examined by transmission electron microscopy. Prior to sample collection, 2 ml of a leptospira culture suspension were injected into the vitreous body o...
Subchondral bone failure in overload arthrosis: a scanning electron microscopic study in horses.
Journal of musculoskeletal & neuronal interactions    December 5, 2006   Volume 6, Issue 3 251-257 
Norrdin RW, Stover SM.Mechanical overload leads to a common arthrosis in the metacarpal condyle of the fetlock joint of racehorses. This is usually asymptomatic but severe forms can cause lameness. Subchondral bone failure is often present and the predictability of the site provided an opportunity to study of the progression of bone failure from microcracks to actual collapse of subchondral bone. Twenty-five fetlock condyles from racehorses with various stages of disease were selected. Stages ranged from mild through severe subchondral bone sclerosis, to the collapse of bone and indentation or loss of cartilage kno...
The blood vessel system in the periodontal ligament of the equine cheek teeth–part I: The spatial arrangement in layers.
Annals of anatomy = Anatomischer Anzeiger : official organ of the Anatomische Gesellschaft    December 5, 2006   Volume 188, Issue 6 529-533 doi: 10.1016/j.aanat.2006.06.010
Masset A, Staszyk C, Gasse H.Corrosion casts of blood vessels in the periodontium of cheek teeth from eight horses were observed three-dimensionally with a dissection microscope. Selected specimens were examined in a scanning electron microscope. Periodontal blood vessels communicated with those from the gingiva, the alveolar bone, and the apical region. In the upper jaw, there were anastomoses with the blood vessels of the mucosa of the maxillary sinus. The periodontal vascular system was organized in two or three layers. The peripheral layer was mainly composed of large venules, the inner one consisted of capillaries. I...
The blood vessel system in the periodontal ligament of the equine cheek teeth–part II: The micro-architecture and its functional implications in a constantly remodelling system.
Annals of anatomy = Anatomischer Anzeiger : official organ of the Anatomische Gesellschaft    December 5, 2006   Volume 188, Issue 6 535-539 doi: 10.1016/j.aanat.2006.06.007
Masset A, Staszyk C, Gasse H.The micro-vasculature of the equine periodontal ligament (PDL) was investigated using corrosion casts for scanning electron microscopy. Specimens from eight healthy warm-blooded horses were examined. Specific vascular features such as large ampullae with a diameter of up to 300 microm and blind vascular casts were found in the specimens of the equine PDL. The ampullae-shaped venules occurred only in the peripheral layer, where they were formed at the confluence of several vessels. Two types of blind stumps were identified. The first was developed in all three layers, while the second was found...
Sperm morphology in stallions: ultrastructure as a functional and diagnostic tool.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    November 30, 2006   Volume 22, Issue 3 683-692 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2006.08.001
Veeramachaneni DN, Moeller CL, Sawyer HR.Conventional light microscopic evaluation of a seminal ejaculate does not fully avail potential indicators of functional impairment in spermatozoal organelles. The technique of critical quantitative evaluation of morphologic features of individual structural components of spermatozoa at a light microscopic level in conjunction with critical qualitative evaluation of spermatozoal organelles at an ultrastructural level, as described in this article, is a valuable clinical tool. Compared with a battery of sperm function assays used in human andrology clinics, this relatively less expensive and si...
In vitro effects of fungi isolated from equine hooves on primary human keratinocytes.
Medical mycology    November 28, 2006   Volume 44, Issue 8 715-722 doi: 10.1080/13693780600932950
Apprich V, Spergser J, Rosengarten R, Stanek C.The effects of two dermatophytes (Microsporum gypseum and Trichophyton mentagrophytes) and four moulds (Scopulariopsis brevicaulis, Alternaria alternata, Geotrichum candidum and Penicillium spp.) on living keratinocyte cultures were examined in vitro using primary human keratinocytes. Rates of apoptosis of infected cells were determined using a colorimetric TUNEL system which detects the characteristic nuclear DNA fragmentation of apoptotic cells. The cytotoxicity of the individual fungi was tested by quantitatively measuring cytosolic enzyme lactate dehydrogenase, released upon cell lysis, in...
Halicephalobus gingivalis-associated meningoencephalitis in a Thoroughbred foal. Bryant UK, Lyons ET, Bain FT, Hong CB.A 13-week-old Thoroughbred colt from central Kentucky was euthanized after an acute onset of ataxia, blindness, head tremors, leaning to the right, recumbency, and seizures. Microscopically, there was a verminous meningoencephalitis characterized by an eosinophilic and granulomatous inflammatory reaction primarily affecting the cerebellum. Dispersed within regions of inflammation were numerous cross and longitudinal sections of intact and degenerative small nematodes. The nematodes had dorsoflexed ovaries and ventroflexed vulvas, which are distinguishing features of Halicephalobus gingivalis. ...
Equine piroplasmoses at the reintroduction site of the Przewalski’s horse (Equus ferus przewalskii) in Mongolia.
Journal of wildlife diseases    November 10, 2006   Volume 42, Issue 3 518-526 doi: 10.7589/0090-3558-42.3.518
Rüegg SR, Torgerson PR, Doherr MG, Deplazes P, Böse R, Robert N, Walzer C.Piroplasmosis has been identified as a possible cause of mortality in reintroduced Przewalski's horses (Equus ferus przewalskii) in the Dsungarian Gobi (Mongolia). A cross-sectional and a longitudinal study were conducted in a representative sample (n = 141) of the resident domestic horse population and in 23 Przewalski's horses to assess the prevalence of Theileria equi and Babesia caballi. Piroplasms were detected in blood by light microscopy in 6.7% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.6-12.2%) of the domestic horse samples. Antibody prevalence was 88.6% (95% CI: 82.4-92.9%) for T. equi and 75....
Collagen fiber architecture of the periodontal ligament in equine cheek teeth.
Journal of veterinary dentistry    October 7, 2006   Volume 23, Issue 3 143-147 doi: 10.1177/089875640602300303
Staszyk C, Wulff W, Jacob HG, Gasse H.The objective of this study was to examine the spatial arrangement of the fiber apparatus of the equine periodontium which is supposed to meet two contrary requirements: (1) to attach the tooth firmly and elastically to the alveolar bone; and, to be appropriately remodeled and reconstructed in order to facilitate the prolonged eruption of the tooth. Specimens of periodontal ligament were obtained from the buccal and lingual/palatal aspects of the first molars from the maxilla and mandible of 12 horses. The animals were assigned to three age groups. Histological sections were prepared from thre...
Fatty acid transport in articular cartilage.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    October 6, 2006   Volume 456, Issue 1 71-78 doi: 10.1016/j.abb.2006.09.014
Arkill KP, Winlove CP.Articular cartilage extracellular matrix imposes a significant transport barrier to albumin, the principal carrier of fatty acids. It has not been previously established whether it also influences the transport of fatty acids important for chondrocyte metabolism. Albumin was labelled with rhodamine-maleimide and bound to NBD-labelled lauric acid. Plugs of fresh equine metacarpal-phalangeal cartilage and subchondral bone were incubated with the complex at 4 degrees C for 2-160 h. The fluorophore distribution was quantified using quantitative microscopy in histological sections. The fluorescence...
Post-testicular changes in the density and distribution of intramembrane particles of stallion sperm surface domains.
Animal reproduction science    October 2, 2006   Volume 100, Issue 1-2 204-210 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2006.08.027
López ML, Olea N, Retamal CA.Freeze-fracture replicas of stallion spermatozoa, collected from the proximal caput, corpus and cauda epididymides regions, were analyzed by electron microscopy to explore the distribution and density of intramembrane particles (IMP). Conspicuous differences in density and arrangement of the IMP were observed in the different topographical domains of mature and immature spermatozoa. A reduction of IMP, especially remarkable in the post-acrosomal domain, was observed in mature epididymal spermatozoa when compared with samples collected from ductuli efferentes. Some structural species-specific d...
Long terminal repeats are not the sole determinants of virulence for equine infectious anemia virus.
Archives of virology    August 24, 2006   Volume 152, Issue 1 209-218 doi: 10.1007/s00705-006-0830-z
Tu YB, Zhou T, Yuan XF, Qiu HJ, Xue F, Sun CQ, Wang L, Wu DL, Peng JM, Kong XG, Tong GZ.The long terminal repeats (LTRs) of equine infectious anemia virus donkey leukocyte-attenuated virus (EIAV-DLA) were substituted with those of the wild-type EIAV-L (wt EIAV-L, the parent virus of EIAV-DLA). The resulting chimeric plasmid was designated pOK-LTR DLA/L. Purified pOK-LTR DLA/L was transfected into monocyte-derived macrophage (MDM) cultures prepared from EIAV-negative, heparinized whole blood from a donkey. Eighth-passage cell cultures developed the typical cytopathogenic effects (CPE) of EIAV infection, and virions with typical EIAV profiles were observed with an electron microsco...
Purkinje cell apoptosis in arabian horses with cerebellar abiotrophy.
Journal of veterinary medicine. A, Physiology, pathology, clinical medicine    August 12, 2006   Volume 53, Issue 6 286-287 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.2006.00836.x
Blanco A, Moyano R, Vivo J, Flores-Acuña R, Molina A, Blanco C, Monterde JG.Purkinje cerebellar cells were studied in three Arabian horses aged between 6 and 8 months with clinical disorders in their movements, tremors and ataxia; the occurrence of apoptosis in this cell population was investigated by the (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase biotin-dUTP nick-end labelling (TUNEL) method. Both optical and electron microscopical images showed a scant number of Purkinje cells, most of them with morphological features of apoptosis such as condensation of the nucleus and cytoplasm as well as segregation and fragmentation of the nucleus into apoptotic bodies. The TUNEL te...
[Depiction of the structure of the vitreous body in horses without ocular diseases and in horses with equine recurrent uveitis (ERU) using transmission electron microscopy].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    July 22, 2006   Volume 113, Issue 6 211-217 
Niedermaier G, Wollanke B, Hoffmann R, Matiasek K, Gerhards H.Neither the ultrastructure of the vitreous body from horses without ocular diseases, nor the pathomorphological changes in the vitreous body associated with equine recurrent uveitis (ERU) have been described. However, the vitreous body plays an important role in the pathogenesis of ERU. Ten vitreous body samples obtained from 5 horses without ocular disease, and 38 vitreous body samples from horses with ERU (collected during vitrectomy) were examined by transmission electron microscopy. The vitreous body samples of horses without ocular diseases were characterized by a loose network of unbranc...
Endothelial cell hypertrophy is associated with microvascular occlusion in horse wounds. Dubuc V, Lepault E, Theoret CL.Wound repair in horse limbs is often complicated by excessive fibroplasia and scarring. Occlusion of the microvessels populating the granulation tissue appears to be involved in the excessive accumulation of extracellular matrix during the repair of limb wounds. This study aimed to determine whether endothelial cell hypertrophy or hyperplasia, or both, contribute to microvascular occlusion and whether the pericyte is involved in this anomaly. We created 5 wounds, each 2.5 x 2.5 cm, on both forelimbs and on the body of 6 horses. One limb was bandaged to stimulate excessive wound fibroplasia. We...
Equine herpesvirus 2-associated granulomatous dermatitis in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    July 19, 2006   Volume 43, Issue 4 548-552 doi: 10.1354/vp.43-4-548
Sledge DG, Miller DL, Styer EL, Hydrick HA, Baldwin CA.Granulomatous dermatitis in horses has been linked to many etiologies, including various parasites, fungi, and bacteria. Idiopathic forms of granulomatous inflammation-producing diseases, some of which are localized to the skin, also have been reported in horses. Herein we describe a case of recurrent equine granulomatous skin disease characterized by intranuclear viral inclusions within macrophages and giant cells. The histologic changes were primarily noted in the deep dermis and included multifocal to coalescing areas of necrosis marked by histiocytic cell infiltration and presence of giant...
Cytochemical characterization of glycoconjugates in the apocrine glands of the equine scrotal skin.
Archives of histology and cytology    July 5, 2006   Volume 69, Issue 2 109-117 doi: 10.1679/aohc.69.109
Yasui T, Tsukise A, Miura T, Fukui K, Meyer W.Cytochemistry of glycoconjugates in the apocrine glands in the scrotal skin of the horse was studied using cytochemical methods for electron microscopy, particularly lectin cytochemistry. The secretory cells possessed a variable number of secretory vesicles, a well-developed Golgi apparatus, and abundant cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Additionally, the basolateral plasma membrane formed numerous interdigitating folds. Glycoconjugates with vicinal diol groupings were present predominantly in the secretory vesicles, the Golgi apparatus, the surface coat of the plasma membrane, and...
Use of an in vitro culture system to detect Theileria equi strains from infected equids and/or reservoirs.
Veterinaria italiana    July 1, 2006   Volume 42, Issue 3 217-215 
Bonfini B, Semproni G, Savini G.A horse erythrocyte culture technique, partly modifying that originally developed by Holman, was used to detect the presence of Theileria equi strains in 12 horse and 2 mule blood samples. The animals were placed into four groups on the basis of their case history and laboratory test results: the mules and two horses were considered as infected and included in the 'recent infection' group, four horses with a history of past infection were included in the 'past infection' group and four animals subjected to anti-theileria treatment formed the 'treated animals' group. The final group consisted o...
Pathomorphological and immunohistochemical study of selected markers of tumour cell proliferation in equine sarcoids.
Polish journal of veterinary sciences    June 20, 2006   Volume 9, Issue 2 109-119 
Kasperowicz B, Rotkiewicz T, Otrocka-Domagała I.The purpose of the study was a pathomorphological and immunohistochemical analysis of tumour cells and connective tissue in equine sarcoids. Investigations were performed using histopathological, ultrastructural, immunohistochemical (PCNA, p53, cytokeratin, vimentin) and histochemical (Ag-NORs) methods. The study was conducted on 50 sarcoids originating from 36 horses and classified as occult, verrucous, fibroblastic and a mixed type of sarcoid based on their clinical appearance. Most of the tumours were located on the girth (30%), neck (24%), head (12%), and legs (12%). The average age of the...
Epidemiology of equine histoplasmosis (epizootic lymphangitis) in carthorses in Ethiopia.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    June 15, 2006   Volume 172, Issue 1 160-165 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2005.02.025
Ameni G.A study was conducted between January 2003 and June 2004 on 19,082 carthorses in 28 towns in Ethiopia to investigate the epidemiology of equine histoplasmosis (EH). Clinical and microscopic examinations were used and an overall prevalence of 18.8% (3579/19082) was recorded. Statistically significant (P<0.001) differences was observed in the average prevalence with high, medium, and low prevalence categories. The highest prevalence (39%) was recorded at Mojo while the lowest (0.0%) was recorded at five towns, namely, Agaro, Bokoji, Debre Berhan, Dinsho, and Sagure. The prevalence of EH was n...
Microscopic change in macroscopically normal equine cartilage from osteoarthritic joints.
Connective tissue research    June 7, 2006   Volume 47, Issue 2 92-101 doi: 10.1080/03008200600584165
Weaver RE, Sharif M, Livingston LA, Andrews KL, Fuller CJ.The objective of this study was to assess whether macroscopically normal articular cartilage taken from joints containing focal osteoarthritic lesions is histologically similar to articular cartilage taken from macroscopically normal joints. Metacarpophalangeal, proximal interphalangeal, and distal interphalangeal joints were obtained from 10 horses following euthanasia. Gross articular cartilage damage was scored and the cartilage assigned to one of two groups: (1) macroscopically normal cartilage from normal joints (control) and (2) macroscopically normal cartilage from diseased joints in wh...
Calcium-ions are involved in erythrocyte invasion by equine Babesia parasites.
Parasitology    June 2, 2006   Volume 133, Issue Pt 3 289-294 doi: 10.1017/S0031182006000436
Okubo K, Wilawan P, Bork S, Okamura M, Yokoyama N, Igarashi I.Ethylene glycol bis (beta-aminoethylether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) is a chelating agent capable of binding to positively-charged metal ions, including a calcium-ion (Ca2+). Here, we demonstrated the inhibitory effect of the chemical on the in vitro asexual growth of the equine protozoan parasites, Babesia caballi and Babesia equi. The growth of both B. caballi and B. equi was significantly inhibited in the presence of EGTA (IC50=1.27 and 2.25 mM, respectively). Under microscopical observation, increased percentages of extracellular merozoites in the total parasites were detected in bot...
New staining methods for sperm evaluation estimated by microscopy and flow cytometry.
Theriogenology    May 27, 2006   Volume 48, Issue 7 1229-1235 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(97)00355-5
Magistrini M, Guitton E, Levern Y, Nicolle JC, Vidament M, Kerboeuf D, Palmer E.New staining methods and automated instruments are now available to evaluate the sperm cell in vitro. Individual compartments of the sperm cell, such as the nucleus and the plasma and acrosomal membranes, may be investigated, as well as the cell function as shown by mitochondria activity and capacitation. Various probes are used and they can be analyzed by direct light or fluorescent microscopy or by flow cytometry. The automated instruments allow objective and accurate analysis and quantification as well as the ability to evaluate large population of cells in a shorter time, thus providing ac...
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