Analyze Diet

Topic:Mortality

Mortality in horses refers to the incidence and causes of death within equine populations. Understanding mortality is important for assessing health risks, improving management practices, and guiding veterinary care. Various factors contribute to mortality in horses, including age, breed, health status, and environmental conditions. Common causes of death in horses include colic, injury, infectious diseases, and age-related conditions. Mortality rates and patterns can vary significantly depending on the population and geographic location. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the epidemiology, causes, and trends of mortality in horses, providing insights into preventive measures and management strategies to reduce mortality rates.
Acute postoperative diarrhoea in colic horses.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    March 1, 1986   Volume 57, Issue 1 5-11 
Puotunen-Reinert A, Huskamp B.A retrospective study on surgical cases of colic in horses (n = 216) revealed that 42 (19.4%) developed post-surgical diarrhoea. Salmonella spp. were isolated in 6 (16.2%) of the cases (n = 37) exhibiting diarrhoea. In 35.7% of the cases (n = 42) recovery from surgery was disturbed by other complications; 23.8% (10/42) died, 2 of which from primary acute diarrhoea due to salmonellosis. Most of the outbreaks of diarrhoea occurred in winter and spring. From the associated variables examined, the duration of colic signs revealed a significant difference between the cases which developed acute pos...
Comparison of three feeding techniques after esophageal mucosal resection and anastomosis in the horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1986   Volume 76, Issue 1 16-29 
Todhunter RJ, Stick JA, Slocombe RF.The effects of 3 feeding techniques on healing of a cervical esophageal mucosal resection and anastomosis were investigated in 16 horses. Horses were fed a moistened pelleted diet 1 of 3 ways: 1) per os (n = 5), 2) by nasogastric (n = 5) or 3) by esophagostomy tube (n = 6) until the 14th postoperative day. The pelleted diet was then fed orally in all horses until euthanasia on the 60th postoperative day. Immediate postoperative feeding per os was unsatisfactory, as only 2 of 5 horses survived in this group. Endoscopic evaluation revealed that mucosal dehiscence of varying degrees occurred, wit...
Sudden death in training and racing Thoroughbred horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 12 1354-1356 
Gelberg HB, Zachary JF, Everitt JI, Jensen RC, Smetzer DL.We reviewed case records, necropsy reports, and histologic sections from 25 Thoroughbred racehorses that died suddenly at 3 Chicago racetracks. These were young horses ranging in age from 2 to 5 years. There were more females (n = 16) than males (n = 9), and the incidence of death increased slightly in the spring and summer. Twenty-one of the 25 horses died while racing or training. Only 8 of the 25 horses (32%) had lesions sufficient to account for the death. In 6 of those 8 cases, death was caused by massive thoracic or abdominal hemorrhage. The site or nature of the vascular defect in these...
Malignant edema in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 7 732-736 
Rebhun WC, Shin SJ, King JM, Baum KH, Patten V.Malignant edema (clostridial myositis) was diagnosed in 9 horses with signs of illness that included fever, depression, painful muscular swellings, and toxemia. The infection followed intramuscular injections in 8 horses and developed in a puncture wound in 1 horse. Treatment consisted of surgical fenestration of the involved muscle, high doses of penicillin, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents and analgesics, and supportive fluid therapy. Five horses recovered and 4 died. Those that died had advanced signs of the disease at admission.
Anaerobic bacteria in 21 horses with pleuropneumonia.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 7 721-724 
Sweeney CR, Divers TJ, Benson CE.Anaerobic bacteria are important and overlooked bacterial pathogens of the lower respiratory tract in horses. Twenty-one of 46 horses with pleuropneumonia had anaerobic bacteria isolated from pleural fluid or from tracheobronchial aspirate. Bacteroides oralis and B melaninogenicus were the anaerobes most frequently isolated. Survival was significantly less for horses from which anaerobes were isolated than for horses from which anaerobes were not isolated. Putrid odor was associated with the pleural fluid and/or breath in 62% of the horses from which anaerobes were isolated. In these horses, t...
An unusual cause of anaesthetic death in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1985   Volume 17, Issue 5 403-404 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1985.tb02538.x
Robertson SA, Waterman AE, Lane JG, Brown PJ.No abstract available
Anti-lipopolysaccharide toxin therapy for whole body X-irradiation overdose.
The British journal of radiology    September 1, 1985   Volume 58, Issue 693 881-884 doi: 10.1259/0007-1285-58-693-881
Gaffin SL, Wells M, Jordan JP.Death in humans from ionising radiation overexposure in the 3-8 Gy (300-800 rad) range is in part due to the toxaemia caused by the entry of gram-negative bacteria and/or their lipopolysaccharide toxin (LPS) into the blood circulation through the walls of partially denuded gut. Anti-LPS hyperimmune equine plasma was evaluated for its ability to lower irradiation-induced lethality. Mice were irradiated with 6.3 Gy (630 rad) and six days later received equine Anti-LPS hyperimmune plasma, control plasma or saline. Mortalities in the three groups were 58%, 92% and 79% (p less than 0.01) respective...
Haemolytic crisis associated with ragwort poisoning and rail chewing in two thoroughbred fillies.
New Zealand veterinary journal    September 1, 1985   Volume 33, Issue 9 159-160 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1985.35213
Dewes HF, Lowe MD.Events leading to the deaths of two fillies at pasture are described. Pasture hay containing the flowering stages of Senecio jacobea (ragwort) had been fed three to four months earlier. Paddocks were subdivided with posts and rails treated with copper chrome arsenate. Six horses on the property chewed rails spasmodically. Both fillies presented with haemoglobinurea. Values in liver of 83 mg Cu kg and kidney 35 mg Cu kg wet weight and serum 1.4 mg Cu/l together with histophathology of seneciosis support a sequence of ragwort poisoning followed by copper accumulation in liver and kidney terminat...
Cecal perforation in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 3 249-253 
Ross MW, Martin BB, Donawick WJ.The case records of 23 horses with cecal perforation (CP) were reviewed. The horses averaged 4.5 years of age (6 weeks to 13 years) and included 9 intact males, 12 mares, and 2 geldings. Twelve of the horses were Standardbreds, 9 were Thoroughbreds, and 1 each, a Belgian and Morgan. The horses were allotted to 2 groups: group I-13 hospitalized horses in which CP occurred unexpectedly, and group II-10 horses with CP at the time of admission. The horses characteristically had been sick or affected with disease unrelated to the cecum. Sixteen horses had been given nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory d...
Immunodeficiency manifested by oral candidiasis and bacterial septicemia in foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 11 1195-1197 
McClure JJ, Addison JD, Miller RI.Oral candidiasis and bacterial septicemia were diagnosed in 8 foals that had laboratory and/or pathologic evidence of immunodeficiency. Two foals suffered solely from complete failure of passive transfer of colostal immunoglobulins. Six foals had evidence of immune defects but did not meet the criteria for diagnosis of any of the currently recognized primary equine immunodeficiency syndromes. All six of these foals died or were euthanatized due to bacterial infections. One foal with failure of passive transfer recovered and the other died of a mesenteric torsion before the effect of treatment ...
Exsanguination due to gastric ulceration in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 3 280-281 
Traub-Dagartz J, Bayly W, Riggs M, Thomas N, Pankowski R.An Arabian foal with a congenital heart disease died due to hemorrhage secondary to a large gastric ulcer. Previously, death of foals with gastric ulcers has been due to diffuse peritonitis resulting from gastric ulcer perforation. The foal in this case report died due to hemorrhage secondary to a large gastric ulcer.
“The grave yawns for the horseman.” Equestrian deaths in South Australia 1973-1983.
The Medical journal of Australia    November 10, 1984   Volume 141, Issue 10 632-635 doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.1984.tb113173.x
Pounder DJ.The fatalities associated with the riding and handling of horses in South Australia over the 11-year period 1973-1983 are reviewed. There were 18 deaths, including two sudden natural deaths in the saddle and one drowning. The 15 cases of horse-related trauma represent a death rate of approximately one per million population per annum. Thirteen of the deaths were the result of a head injury after a fall. Nine persons were not wearing protective headgear. The two principal groups at risk were male professional riders with a mean age of 32 years and female amateurs with a mean age of 19 years.
Experimental cantharidiasis in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 11 2261-2266 
Shawley RV, Rolf LL.Crystalline cantharidin in an alfalfa cake or in aqueous suspension was given to 8 horses at a dosage level of 450 to 489 micrograms/kg of body weight (group 1) and 2 horses at a dosage level of 720 micrograms/kg (group 2) via nasogastric tube. Both group 2 horses and 1 group 1 horse died. Horses were evaluated at 6-hour intervals for 36 hours and then again at postcantharidin hours 48. Data evaluation consisted of a comparison of the nonsurvival and survival data to one another and their respective base-line values at each sampling period, irrespective of the route of administration and dosag...
Suspected tremetol poisoning in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1984   Volume 185, Issue 9 1001-1003 
Olson CT, Keller WC, Gerken DF, Reed SM.Of 10 horses in a heavily overgrazed pasture, 4 died within 1 week. Clinical signs included muscle tremors, ataxia, reluctance to walk, heavy sweating, and myoglobinuria. Serum creatine kinase, aspartate transaminase, and alkaline phosphatase activities were high. Histopathologic findings were nonspecific. On the basis of clinical signs, clinicopathologic findings, nonspecific histopathologic findings, the condition of the pasture, the identification of numerous white snakeroot plants from which trematone was extracted, and evidence that these plants had been heavily browsed, it was believed t...
Cynoglossum officinale (hound’s-tongue)–a cause of pyrrolizidine alkaloid poisoning in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1984   Volume 185, Issue 6 647-650 
Knight AP, Kimberling CV, Stermitz FR, Roby MR.The death of 10 horses was attributed to feeding dried grass hay containing hound's-tongue, Cynoglossum officinale. Affected horses developed weight loss, icterus, photosensitization, and hepatic encephalopathy. Histologic examination of the liver of 3 of the horses revealed megalocytosis, biliary hyperplasia, and fibrosis characteristic of pyrrolizidine alkaloid poisoning. Hound's-tongue was found to contain large quantities (0.6% to 2.1%, dry matter basis) of toxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids, which, when fed to a pony for 20 days, caused liver fibrosis and biliary hyperplasia.
[Findings of Corynebacterium equi Magnusson 1923 in connection with foal mortality in the Eastern Bohemia Region].
Veterinarni medicina    September 1, 1984   Volume 29, Issue 9 563-568 
Vyslouzil L, Seidl K, Svarcová J, Landsmannová V.A case history of mass foal disease which affected ten of the total stock of 50 foals and killed eight is described. The disease was characterized by respiratory disorders and extensive pneumonias with abscess formation, metastatic abscesses in mesenterial lymph nodes and in other organs. As a result of the examination of two dead foals and three nasal smears from diseased animals, gram-positive bacteria were isolated from the lungs, pulmonary and abdominal abscesses and the nasal smears of the affected foals; with their cultivation, morphological and biochemical characteristics these bacteria...
Serratia spp infection in 21 horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1984   Volume 185, Issue 2 209-211 
Colahan PT, Peyton LC, Connelly MR, Peterson R.Twenty-three isolations of Serratia spp were made from 21 horses at the University of Florida Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital between Jan 1, 1979 and July 1, 1983. Three Serratia spp were involved in single-organism and mixed infections of various tissues. Eight horses of this group died. All horses that died had massive, mixed, gram-negative infection. The other 13 responded to treatment, including systemic antibiotic therapy. Most of these horses were stressed and under antibiotic therapy prior to the time of culture. Possible nosocomial infection, variable antibiotic sensitivity, and a...
Problems in the post-mortem diagnosis of equine hydatidosis.
Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology    June 1, 1984   Volume 78, Issue 3 199-203 doi: 10.1080/00034983.1984.11811800
Cranley JC.This research article investigates the varying challenges that have arisen in accurately diagnosing equine hydatidosis, a disease in horses, during post-mortem examinations. The paper focuses on the possible influence of […]
Splenic lymphosarcoma in a horse.
Modern veterinary practice    April 1, 1984   Volume 65, Issue 4 269-272 
Nyack B, Padmore CL, Dunn D, Kufuor-Mensan E, Mobini S.A 10-year-old Tennessee Walker gelding, with a history of progressive weight loss, intermittent colic and lethargy, had a slight fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, pallor, ascites and marked ventral edema. Blood analyses revealed anemia, leukocytosis, neutrophilia with a left shift, lymphopenia, monocytosis, hypoproteinemia and a slightly increased SDH level. Abdominocentesis produced red-orange fluid with many RBC and an increased fibrinogen content. Rectal palpation revealed a large mass in the left caudal abdominal quadrant. The animal died shortly after resection of the mass. The histopatholog...
[Meconium constipation in foals].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    April 1, 1984   Volume 109, Issue 7 292-295 
van Wuijckhuise-Sjouke LA.Meconium constipation is observed in a number of foals during every foaling period. The literature on the clinical picture, methods of treatment and complications, is reviewed in the present paper. In addition, the cases of seventy-five foals are reviewed, in which meconium constipation was suspected and which were submitted to the Internal Disease Department of Large Animals during the period from 1972 to 1982. The clinical picture was found to be due to another disorder in nine cases. Treatment with castor oil and alcohol resulted in discharge of the meconium in fifty-eight cases. Complicati...
Phenylbutazone toxicosis in the horse: a clinical study.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 1984   Volume 184, Issue 6 699-703 
Collins LG, Tyler DE.In a retrospective study of 269 horses that had been treated with phenylbutazone, horses receiving less than or equal to 8.8 mg/kg of body weight/day for less than or equal to 4 days or 2 to 4 mg/kg of body weight/day for up to 50 days remained clinically normal. Anorexia, depression, colic, hypoproteinemia, diarrhea, melena, weight loss, ventral edema, petechial hemorrhages of mucous membranes, oral and gastrointestinal tract erosions and ulcers, renal papillary necrosis, and death were among the complications seen in horses that had received greater than 8.8 mg/kg of body weight/day. In 2 ca...
Clostridial cellulitis in the horse: a report of five cases.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    February 1, 1984   Volume 25, Issue 2 67-71 
Valberg SJ, McKinnon AO.Five horses with fatal clostridial cellulitis are described. The characteristic findings were the rapid development of a crepitant swelling with an associated toxemia, which in four cases followed intramuscular injections. The clinical features, diagnostic techniques and pathogenesis are discussed. The importance of an early diagnosis is emphasized.
Clinical observations on an outbreak of strangles.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1984   Volume 25, Issue 1 7-11 
Piché CA.An outbreak of strangles, which occurred during the spring, summer and fall of 1980 on a Standardbred stud farm in eastern Alberta is described. The infective organism, Streptococcus equi, may have been introduced by an outside mare that was brought to the stud for breeding. All of the groups of horses on the farm were affected. For the most part, the disease was allowed to run its natural course. Only severely affected individuals were treated. During the outbreak, the foals were prophylactically treated with penicillin to prevent them from contracting the disease. Ten horses died of complica...
Effects of toxic doses of phenylbutazone in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 12 2277-2279 
MacAllister CG.Toxic doses of phenylbutazone (10 mg/kg of body weight) were administered to 10 ponies once daily for 14 days. Clinical signs of toxicosis similar to those seen in other species included CNS depression, anorexia, oral ulcers, and soft feces. Six ponies died in 7 to 20 days; 1 pony was euthanatized during an acute abdominal crisis; and 3 ponies survived the study. At necropsy, the major lesions were oral and gastrointestinal ulcerations and renal changes.
Disseminated intravascular coagulation in six horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 10 1067-1072 
Morris DD, Beech J.Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) was diagnosed as a secondary disease in 6 horses. Four horses had localized and/or systemic sepsis, one horse had disseminated neoplasia, and one had idiopathic ulcerative enteropathy. The diagnosis of DIC was based on the finding of at least 3 of 4 abnormalities: thrombocytopenia, prolonged prothrombin time, prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time, and a high concentration of fibrinolytic degradation products. The most common clinical signs other than those attributable to the primary disease process were abnormal hemorrhage (4 hours) and v...
Survey of 79 referral colic cases.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 4 345-348 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01819.x
Parry BW.The clinical, surgical and/or necropsy diagnosis of 79 horses admitted to a referral clinic for evaluation of colic are reported. Twenty-one horses were presented with conditions amenable to medical treatment and all were subsequently discharged. Exploratory laparotomies were performed on 44 horses during the present study, in some cases as a diagnostic procedure preceding euthanasia. In general, in surgical cases the mortality rate was highest for problems involving the small intestine, followed by those affecting the large colon and then the small colon. Postoperative sequelae included perit...
Clostridium fallax as a cause of gas-oedema disease in a horse.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1983   Volume 93, Issue 4 597-601 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(83)90067-1
Coloe PJ, Ireland L, Vaudrey JC.We record a fatal case of gas-oedema disease (malignant oedema) in a 5-year-old horse. The nature of the lesion is consistent with a gas-oedema type infection due to a Clostridium spp. The causative organism was isolated and identified by conventional biochemical tests and by gas-liquid chromatographic analysis of its metabolic products as Clostridium fallax, but significant variations in the reported biochemical characteristics of Cl. fallax were detected. We believe that this is the first reported case of Cl. fallax infection in a horse.
Ecology and catastrophic mortality in wild horses: implications for interpreting fossil assemblages.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    June 24, 1983   Volume 220, Issue 4604 1403-1404 doi: 10.1126/science.220.4604.1403
Berger J.The identities, sexes, and reproductive status of groups of wild horses (Equus caballus) living in the Great Basin Desert of North America were known prior to their deaths on ridgelines. Another group of very young horses died on a quagmire. Snow accumulation or drought was apparently responsible for the mass deaths. These data have implications for reconstructing some aspects of the social structure of fossil mammals on the basis of skewed sex or age ratios in bone assemblages.
Sudden death in a horse following fracture of the acetabulum and iliac artery laceration.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 7 712-713 
Sweeney CR, Hodge TG.No abstract available
Animal model of human disease. Infantile X-linked agammaglobulinemia. Agammaglobulinemia in horses.
The American journal of pathology    April 1, 1983   Volume 111, Issue 1 125-127 
Perryman LE, McGuire TC, Banks KL.This research explores X-linked agammaglobulinemia in horses, a severe immune deficiency found in various horse breeds, leading to clinical signs like pneumonia and arthritis. Lymphoid tissues show an absence of […]
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