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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.
Ossifying ameloblastoma in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 55, Issue 10 498-500 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1979.tb00380.x
Summers PM, Wells KE, Adkins KF.The features of an ossifying ameloblastoma in a 5-year-old gelding are described. The tumour developed in the angle of the right mandible and microscopically consisted of multiple follicles and islands of epithelial tissue adjacent to which were trabeculae of bone, osteoid and compact collagenous tissue.
An outbreak of foal perinatal mortality due to equid herpesvirus type 1: pathological observations.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 4 215-218 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01348.x
Hartley WJ, Dixon RJ.Twenty-nine cases of EHV1 infection occurred on a property, mainly in full term foals. Some foals were stillborn, some were born alive but weak and soon died and others were healthy at birth, became ill and died within 3 days of birth. Apart from voluminous, oedematous and atelectic lungs there were no gross lesions. Microscopically the lungs showed oedema, pneumonitis and bronchiolitis with intranuclear inclusions and, in many of the foals that survived over 6 hours, there was also hyaline membrane formation. Microscopic lesions were also seen in the liver, adrenal, thymus and spleen of some ...
Ultrastructure of the pigment epithelium and the photoreceptors in the retina of the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 8 1066-1071 
Wouters L, De Moor A.An electron microscopic description was given of the pigment epithelium and the photoreceptors of the horse retina. Duplicity (rods-cones) of the horse retina was proven histologically; the retina was classified as an "E" retina, which indicates predominance of the rod system.
A light and electron microscopic study of a normal adrenal medulla and a pheochromocytoma from a horse.
Veterinary pathology    July 1, 1979   Volume 16, Issue 4 395-404 doi: 10.1177/030098587901600401
Gelberg H, Cockerell GL, Minor RR.The outer medullary (juxtacortical) zone of a normal equine adrenal gland had columnar chromaffin-positive cells arranged with their long axes perpendicular to fine vascular channels. The deeper medullary regions were composed of smaller irregularly round to polygonal chromaffin positive cells in small packets. Both cell types contained two types of membrane-bound cytoplasmic secretory granules. Osmiophilic granules with a homogeneous core, crenated membrane and narrow submembranous halo predominated in the columnar juxtacortical cells. The rounder, central medullary cells contained predominan...
Scanning electron microscopy of ciliary zones of the ciliate protozoa in the large intestine of the horse.
The Journal of parasitology    June 1, 1979   Volume 65, Issue 3 434-440 
Imai S, Ozeki K, Fujita J.The surface structure of the ciliary zone in 13 species of ciliates found in the large intestine of the horse was observed by scanning electron microscopy. In Holophryoides ovalis many fine depressions considered to be a result of phagocytosis or pinocytosis in the naked cytostome were noticed. In Blepharocorys spp. a distinct section was present between the portion with cilia and that without cilia. It was not present, however, in some species of the family Buetschliidae, such as Bundleia postciliata and Didesmis spp. The species of Entodiniomorphida had a lip around the ciliary zone with cil...
Neuritis of the cauda equina, a chronic idiopathic polyradiculoneuritis in the horse.
Acta neuropathologica    April 12, 1979   Volume 46, Issue 1-2 17-24 doi: 10.1007/BF00684799
Cummings JF, de Lahunta A, Timoney JF.Four cases of neuritis of the cauda equina (NCE) were studied by light and electron microscopy. Examination of sacral intradural rootlets revealed inflammatory cell infiltrates and an array of myelinated fiber changes which included myelin stripping by invading mononuclear cells and macrophages, as well as splitting and vesiculation of myelin lamellae without obvious participation by leukocytes. More distally in the extradural roots, there was marked granulomatous inflammation, and demyelinative changes were overshadowed by widespread evidence of irreversible axon damage. In all cases, unusual...
Ultrastructure of the corpus luteum of the cycling mare.
Biology of reproduction    April 1, 1979   Volume 20, Issue 3 492-504 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod20.3.492
Levine H, Wight T, Squires E.No abstract available
Adenocarcinoma of the frontal sinus with extension to the brain in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1979   Volume 174, Issue 7 734-736 
Reynolds BL, Stedham MA, Lawrence JM, Heltsley JR.A space-occupying intracranial mass was diagnosed in a horse. The clinical findings included blindness, circling to the right, apprehension, anorexia, weight loss, and leaning against the stall. On ophthalmoscopic examination, the most striking observation was complete bilateral devascularization of the retinas. The horse was euthanatized and necropsied. Necroscopy revealed the mass to occupy the olfactory and frontal areas of the left hemisphere of the brain and part of the left frontal sinus. Microscopically, the mass was an adenocarcinoma and probably arose from the lining epithelium of the...
Morphology of spermatozoa in semen from stallions of normal fertility.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 39-45 
Bielański W, Kaczmarski F.Semen samples were collected from 3 fertile stallions by means of an 'open' artificial vagina and examined under scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The stallion spermatozoon has many features in common with that of other mammals but differs specifically in that it has an asymmetric head, an abaxial position of the tail and an acrosome of small volume. The presence of microtubules in the neck is also a characteristic of stallion spermatozoa.
Scanning electron microscope studies of the endometrium of the cyclic mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 287-292 
Samuel CA, Ricketts SW, Rossdale PD, Steven DH, Thurley KW.Endometrial biopsies obtained from mares at different stages of the oestrous cycle, during anoestrus and in various abnormal conditions were examined with the scanning electron microscope. Preliminary observations suggest that the patterns of secretory and ciliary activity in the uterine epithelium are similar to those observed by electron microscopical techniques in laboratory and other large domestic animals. The response of the epithelial cells to hormonal variations and infections is compared with that of the endometrium as seen with the light microscope.
[Structure and topography of the nucleus intermediomedialis in the equine spinal cord].
Polskie archiwum weterynaryjne    January 1, 1979   Volume 22, Issue 1 125-135 
Boratyński Z, Flieger S, Eustachiewicz R, Sławomirski J.In this paper, structure and position of the centers of the parasympathetic nervous system in the horse spinal cord were presented. Studies were carried out on 2 horse spinal cordis. After sampling, the material was dehydrated in alcohol, embedded in paraffin and cut into 15 micron thick sections. The sections were stained according to Nissl's method. Every third section was studied. Nucleus intermediomedialis in the horse spinal cord is an intermittent tract of nervous cells passing from the I cervical neuromere to the V sacral segment. The cells of this nucleus form round, horizontally--oval...
Tendon and ligament from the horse: an ultrastructural study of collagen fibrils and elastic fibres as a function of age.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences    December 18, 1978   Volume 203, Issue 1152 293-303 doi: 10.1098/rspb.1978.0106
Parry DA, Craig AS, Barnes GR.A study has been made of the ultrastructural organization of the collagen fibrils and elastic fibres in tendons and ligaments from horses of ages ranging from 2 months premature to 19 years. Diameter distributions of the collagen fibrils in the common digital extensor tendon, the superficial flexor tendon and the suspensory ligament are unimodal in the foetal tissue and at birth, and at these stages of development the three collagenous tissues are virtually indistinguishable. However, at maturity, the ligament and flexor tendon have bimodal distributions similar to that found for rat-tail tend...
A rapid and simple method for the isolation of pure eosinophilic leukocytes from horse blood.
Experientia    December 15, 1978   Volume 34, Issue 12 1654-1656 doi: 10.1007/BF02034734
Jörg A, Portmann P, Fellay G, Dreyer JL, Meyer J.An improved and short method is described for the isolation of intact eosinophilic leukocytes from horse blood with high yield (1--1.5 g/20 l). Viability and purity of the preparations were verified by light and electron microscopy and by the trypan blue exclusion test. Isolated eosinophils were 98--100% pure, intact and viable, and they could be shown to phagocytise immune-complexes.
Spinal ataxia in the horse. A case report.
Nordisk veterinaermedicin    December 1, 1978   Volume 30, Issue 12 546-551 
Kero T, Kuussaari J.The purpose of this communication is to report the first diagnosed case of spinal ataxia in the horse in Finland. The horse was atactic and had a wobbling gait. Especially in turning and backing the rear legs tended to swing outwards. Macroscopical studies revealed malformation of the cervical vertebral articular facets and narrowing of the cervical vertebral canal. The vertebral malformation caused the degeneration of the spinal cord, through the compression of the cord. In this paper the macroscopial and microscopical findings are discussed and compared with the findings of other authors.
Shunting in intracranial microvasculature demonstrated by SEM of corrosion-casts.
The American journal of anatomy    December 1, 1978   Volume 153, Issue 4 617-624 doi: 10.1002/aja.1001530410
Anderson BG, Anderson WD.The use of methyl methacrylate corrosion-casts has made it possible to examine the intracranial microvasculature on a three-dimensional scale with the scanning electron microscope. By this means we have compared regions of four cerebral and cerebellar arteries among three domestic animal species. The results of this study suggest that there are from one to three different levels of interarteriolar anastomosis between branches of the same or adjacent vessels. In the horse and ox anastomoses were demonstrated (1) at the level of the precapillary arterioles, (2) along the arterioles, and (3) betw...
A light and electron microscopic study of the neuropathy of equine idiopathic laryngeal hemiplegia.
Neuropathology and applied neurobiology    November 1, 1978   Volume 4, Issue 6 483-501 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2990.1978.tb01358.x
Duncan ID, Griffiths IR, Madrid RE.A study has been made of the pathological changes in the recurrent laryngeal nerves from horses with clinical and sub-clinical idiopathic laryngeal hemiplegia. Qualitative and quantitative studies showed in clinical cases there was a progressive distal loss of large myelinated fibres in the left recurrent nerve. Regenerating clusters and onion bulbs were frequently seen in affected nerves both at proximal and distal levels. Degenerating axons were characterized by collections of organelles, and denervated bands of Bungner were common. Similar but less severe changes were seen in the left recur...
Site of initiation of the plasma cell reaction in the rabbit lymph node. Ultrastructural evidence for two distinct antibody forming cell precursors.
Virchows Archiv. B, Cell pathology    October 16, 1978   Volume 28, Issue 3 187-202 doi: 10.1007/BF02889069
Veldman JE, Keuning FJ, Molenaar I.Two times sublethal total body-X-irradiation with weekly local thymus irradiation established a T-cell deprived experimental model in rabbits. Humoral immunity reactions in draining lymph nodes have been analyzed histologically and at the submicroscopical level after challenge with Salmonella Java vaccine, horse spleen ferritin, horse-gamma-globulin, a chemical sensitizer oxazolone (2 phenyl-4-ethoxymethylene-5-oxazolone) and after skin allografting respectively. The time sequence studies in these animals with an 'isolated B-cell system' are compared with similar experiments in normal non-irra...
Electron microscopy in the diagnosis of infectious diarrhea.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1978   Volume 173, Issue 5 Pt 2 538-543 
Flewett TH.No abstract available
Scanning electron microscopy of the epithelium and spermatozoa in the equine excurrent duct system.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 9 1428-1434 
Johnson L, Amann RP, Pikett BW.No abstract available
Pathogenicity of equine herpesvirus: in vivo persistence in equine tissue macrophages of herpesviuus type 2 detected in monolayer macrophage cell culture.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 9 1422-1427 
Dutta SK, Campbell DL.Equine macrophages from the mammary glands of a yearling filly and an 18-year-old barren nonlactatind mare formed cell monolayers in continuous cultures. There was absence of viral cytopathic effect (CPE) in early cell culture passages. The cells from the early cell culture passages having no CPE failed to show evidence of virus or viral antigen by electron microscopic and immunofluorescence studies. Foci of CPE first appeared in the monolayer cell cultures from the filly and the mare in the 3rd and the 4th serial passages respectively, and the CPE increased on subsequent serial passages. Equi...
Quantitative study of the decussating optic axons in the pony, cow, sheep, and pig.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 7 1137-1139 
Herron MA, Martin JE, Joyce JR.A quantitative study of optic axons in the optic tracts of several species was performed to determine the number and percentage of optic axons that decussate. Animals were prepared by unilateral ocular enucleation, and light microscopic techniques were employed to count the fibers. The mean number of fibers projecting from a single eye was 732,119 for the pony, 1,041,739 for the cow, 534,755 for the sheep, and 442,629 for the pig. The mean degree of crossover at the chiasm was 80.8% in ponies, 82.9% in cattle, 88.9% in sheep, and 87.8% in pigs.
Malignant medulloepithelioma of the optic nerve in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    July 1, 1978   Volume 15, Issue 4 488-494 doi: 10.1177/030098587801500406
Eagle RC, Font RL, Swerczek TW.An 18-month-old Standardbred filly had a large intraocular tumor involving the optic nerve. The tumor was a malignant medulloepithelioma, a rare intraocular neoplasm derived from the primitive medullary epithelium. By light microscopy the tumor had cords and lobules of primitive neuroepithelial cells that formed clefts and true rosettes. Electron microscopy of the rosettes showed a girdle of zonulae adherentes joining the apices of the cells as well as several basal bodies. This is the sixth report of equine intraocular medulloepithelioma, and, to the best of our knowledge, the first intraocul...
Scanning and transmission electron microscopic study of equine infectious anemia virus.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 5 731-740 
Gonda MA, Charman HP, Walker JL, Coggins L.Scanning and transmission electron microscopy were used to study in detail the morphogenesis and replication of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) in cultured, persistently infected equine fetal kidney fibroblasts. The EIAV was shown by thin-section electron microscopy to resemble morphologically more closely the members of the genus Lenti-virus in the family Retroviridae than other genera. Scanning electron microscopy demonstrated budding virus on only about 5% of the equine fetal kidney fibroblasts; however, the entire surface of these cells was involved in viral replication. Except where...
Perinatal foal mortality associated with a herpesvirus.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1978   Volume 54, Issue 3 103-105 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1978.tb05512.x
Dixon RJ, Hartley WJ, Hutchins DR, Lepherd EE, Feilen C, Jones RF, Love DN, Sabine M, Wells AL.An outbreak of perinatal foal mortality associated with a herpesvirus is described. Twenty two foals either were still-born, or died soon after birth, or were weak and soon developed severe respiratory signs, or were normal at birth and developed respiratory symptoms 18 to 24 hours later. Elevated temperatures, heart and respiratory rates were constant features. The animals were severely leucopaenic, and showed an absolute neutropaenia. At autopsy the lungs were enlarged, and showed varying degrees of aeration and moderate to severe oedema and congestion. Histopathology showed an acute focal n...
[Occurence of an outbreak of horse dermatophytosis caused by the fungus Trichophyton equinum].
Veterinarni medicina    March 1, 1978   Volume 23, Issue 3 175-184 
Stros K, Krivanec K, Komárek J, Malinský B.There is a description of equine dermatophytosis enzootic, caused by the microscopic fungus Trichophyton equinum. The disease affected 32 horses, mostly young, all in the same herd (74.4%). The diseased horses were successfully treated with the preparation Fenoform forte, applied superficially at the concentration of 0.5% of the active substance. The authors made an attempt to determine the criteria for clinical differentiation of fully developed trichophytosis and microsporosis of horses. Trichophytosis (T. equinum) is characterized as typical numerous small and round patches, covered by smal...
Scanning electrons and light microscopy of the equine seminiferous tubule.
Fertility and sterility    February 1, 1978   Volume 29, Issue 2 208-215 
Johnson L, Amann RP, Pickett BW.Changes within the equine seminiferous tubules during the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium were studied light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Once observed with SEM, tubules were sectioned and staged using light microscopy. As viewed by SEM, the weblike, spongy cytoplasm of germ cells or Sertoli cells in stages I and II extended over the entire height of the germinal epithelium. The cytoplasm of the basal portion of the germinal epithelium in stages III to VIII was similar to that in stages I and II. However, the cytoplasm which occupied the luminal third of the epithelium in stage...
Scanning electron microscopy of Gasterophilus intestinalis lesions of the equine stomach.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 310-313 
Shefstad DK.The lesions caused by larvae of Gasterophilus intestinalis in the cardiac region of the equine stomach were funnel-shaped ulcers surrounded by a rim of hyperplastic epithelial cells. Bacteria were commonly seen on the rim of epithelial cells, at the base of some ulcers, and within the cavities produced by the hooks of the larvae. Cellular debris and mucus were within the ulcer.
Demonstration of equine infectious anemia virus in primary leukocyte cultures by electron microscopy.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 12 2067-2069 
McConnel MB, Katada M, McConnell S, Moore R.Electron microscopy was used to demonstrate the presence of viral particles in primary cultures of leukocytes taken from a horse after SC inoculation with the Wyoming strain of equine infectious anemia virus. Unlike previous studies, the exposure virus was not passaged through cell culture prior to horse inoculation. Cultures were begun approximately 1 week before and 1 week after the 1st pyrexic period after inoculation. In both samples, viral particles and cytoplasmic alterations were observed resembling those previously reported in equine infectious anemia virus and other retravirus-infecte...
Ultrastructural observations suggesting merocrine secretion in the initial segment of the mammalian epididymis.
Cell and tissue research    November 23, 1977   Volume 184, Issue 4 487-490 doi: 10.1007/BF00220971
Nicander L, Malmqvist M.Principal cells in the initial segment of the epididymis in horses, cattle, pigs, sheep, dogs, cats, and rabbits have an abundant, partly rough, endoplasmic reticulum and a large Golgi complex. Small vacuoles with opaque content seem to be formed by the Golgi complex and move to the cell apex, where they empty their contents into the lumen by a merocrine mechanism.
Studies on the equine placenta. III. Ultrastructure of the uterine glands and the overlying trophoblast.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1977   Volume 51, Issue 2 433-437 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0510433
Samuel CA, Allen WR, Steven DH.Ultrastructural studies of the uterine glands at intervals during pregnancy in the mare show that secretory activity continues after formation of the placental exchange units. The nature of the glandular secretion appeared initially to be proteinaceous, but cellular debris was also present during the last third of gestation. These secretions were absorbed by the trophoblast overlying the mouths of the glands. The fate secretions and their significance for the fetus and placenta are unknown.
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