Analyze Diet

Topic:Necropsy

Necropsy, also known as an autopsy, is a systematic examination of a horse's body after death to determine the cause of death and evaluate any disease or injury. This procedure involves a thorough assessment of the horse's organs and tissues, often including histopathological analysis to identify abnormalities at the microscopic level. Necropsy can provide valuable insights into equine health issues, contributing to a better understanding of disease processes, management practices, and potential preventive measures. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, findings, and implications of necropsy in equine veterinary science.
Muscle distribution of sylvatic and domestic Trichinella larvae in production animals and wildlife.
Veterinary parasitology    June 28, 2005   Volume 132, Issue 1-2 101-105 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2005.05.036
Kapel CM, Webster P, Gamble HR.Only a few studies have compared the muscle distribution of the different Trichinella genotypes. In this study, data were obtained from a series of experimental infections in pigs, wild boars, foxes and horses, with the aim of evaluating the predilection sites of nine well-defined genotypes of Trichinella. Necropsy was performed at 5, 10, 20 and 40 weeks post inoculation. From all host species, corresponding muscles/muscle groups were examined by artificial digestion. In foxes where all Trichinella species established in high numbers, the encapsulating species were found primarily in the tongu...
Species composition of Gasterophilus spp. (Diptera, Oestridae) causing equine gastric myiasis in southern Italy: parasite biodiversity and risks for extinction.
Veterinary parasitology    June 28, 2005   Volume 133, Issue 1 111-118 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2005.05.015
Otranto D, Milillo P, Capelli G, Colwell DD.Horse gastrointestinal myiasis caused by larvae of Gasterophilus spp. (Diptera, Oestridae) flies has a worldwide distribution and, where present, it is primarily caused by larvae of Gasterophilus intestinalis and Gasterophilus nasalis. Other species, i.e., Gasterophilus inermis, Gasterophilus pecorum and Gasterophilus haemorrhoidalis, present in different or in the same regions of the gastrointestinal tract, were only occasionally reported in very limited areas of eastern European Countries and in central Italy. With the aim to contribute data on the species composition of Gasterophilus and on...
Acute hemoperitoneum in horses: a review of 19 cases (1992-2003).
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    June 16, 2005   Volume 19, Issue 3 344-347 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2005)19[344:ahihar]2.0.co;2
Pusterla N, Fecteau ME, Madigan JE, Wilson WD, Magdesian KG.The medical records of 19 horses with acute hemoperitoneum were reviewed. The causes for the hemoperitoneum were idiopathic (8 horses), splenic hematoma with capsular tear (7), bleeding from the reproductive tract (3), multicentric hemangiosarcoma (1), and systemic amyloidosis (1). The affected horses were between 4 and 32 years of age (median 11.5 years). The most consistent findings on initial examination were depression, tachycardia, tachypnea, pale mucous membranes, prolonged capillary refill time, colic, and abdominal discomfort. Less common clinical signs included abdominal distention, p...
Diagnosis of Taxus (yew) poisoning in a horse. Tiwary AK, Puschner B, Kinde H, Tor ER.A 2-year-old bay Thoroughbred colt was found dead overnight in its stall without a known history of any illness, existing disease, or toxicant exposure. No information on the clinical signs before this animal's death was reported. A full necropsy was performed the next morning and revealed a mild to moderate degree of endocardial hemorrhages in both ventricles. Microscopic examination of the heart showed an acute mild multifocal necrosis of papillary muscles and ventricles. The stomach content contained approximately 2% Taxus alkaloids as determined by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. In ...
Infarctive purpura hemorrhagica in five horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 7, 2005   Volume 226, Issue 11 1893-1845 doi: 10.2460/javma.2005.226.1893
Kaese HJ, Valberg SJ, Hayden DW, Wilson JH, Charlton P, Ames TR, Al-Ghamdi GM.Five horses were examined because of signs of muscle stiffness, colic, or both. All 5 had been exposed to Streptococcus equi within 3 weeks prior to examination or had high serum titers of antibodies against the M protein of S equi. Horses had signs of unrelenting colic-like pain and focal areas of muscle swelling. Four horses were euthanatized. The fifth responded to treatment with penicillin and dexamethasone; after 3 weeks of treatment with dexamethasone, prednisolone was administered for an additional 10 weeks. Common hematologic and serum biochemical abnormalities included neutrophilia wi...
Post-anaesthetic myelomalacia in a horse.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    May 20, 2005   Volume 76, Issue 1 36-39 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v76i1.392
Jouber KE, Duncan N, Murray SE.This article describes a rare neurological complication of anaesthesia in a 2 year-old Clydesdale colt undergoing castration. Anaesthesia was induced with glyceryl guaiacol ether and ketamine and maintained with halothane. Following an uneventful anaesthetic of 40 minutes, the horse recovered from anaesthesia in a padded recovery stall. After approximately 70 minutes in the recovery stall, the horse attempted to stand and adopted a dog sitting position. One hundred and fifty minutes later, the horse became distressed and was sedated with xylazine. Clinical examination of the horse did not reve...
Masseter myodegeneration as a cause of trismus or dysphagia in adult horses.
The Veterinary record    May 17, 2005   Volume 156, Issue 20 642-646 doi: 10.1136/vr.156.20.642
Pearson EG, Snyder SP, Saulez MN.The medical records of eight horses with histological evidence of myodegeneration of the masseter muscles were examined. While they were alive their most common clinical signs had included difficulty in eating or opening their mouths, weight loss, difficulty in moving, and noticeable atrophy of the masseter muscles. The serum activities of muscle enzymes were abnormally high in all of the horses. Whole blood and/or liver selenium and vitamin E concentrations were less than the reference ranges in some of the horses. The lesions varied with the stage of the disease and consisted of swelling and...
Acute necrotising pancreatitis following grain overload in a donkey.
Australian veterinary journal    May 13, 2005   Volume 82, Issue 10 619-621 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2004.tb12605.x
Kawaguchi K, Church S, Slocombe RF.A donkey developed abdominal discomfort and distension together with cardiovascular collapse and gastric reflux 24 to 36 hours after ingesting a large amount of poultry feed. Rectal findings prompted a laparotomy that identified extensive gastric dilation, an empty, atonic small intestine, dry colonic content and an easily corrected caecal displacement. These findings were not consistent with the severity of the signs, which were attributed to endotoxaemia. The donkey was euthanased during recovery. Necropsy revealed acute necrotising pancreatitis with massive gastric dilation and right dorsal...
Antibiotic treatment of experimentally Borrelia burgdorferi-infected ponies.
Veterinary microbiology    May 3, 2005   Volume 107, Issue 3-4 285-294 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2005.02.006
Chang YF, Ku YW, Chang CF, Chang CD, McDonough SP, Divers T, Pough M, Torres A.The objective of this study is to determine whether doxycycline, ceftiofur or tetracycline could be effectively used to treat equine Lyme disease. Ponies experimentally infected with Borrelia burgdorferi by tick exposure were treated with doxycycline, ceftiofur or tetracycline for 4 weeks (28 days). Doxycyline and ceftiofur treatment were inconsistent in eliminating persistent infection in this experimental model. However, tetracycline treatment seems to eliminate persistent infection. Although serum antibody levels to B. burgdorferi in all ponies declined gradually after antibiotic treatment,...
Disseminated acute concomitant aspergillosis and mucormycosis in a pony.
Journal of veterinary medicine. A, Physiology, pathology, clinical medicine    April 20, 2005   Volume 52, Issue 3 121-124 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.2005.00700.x
Thirion-Delalande C, Guillot J, Jensen HE, Crespeau FL, Bernex F.A 6-year-old female pony died after 2 days of prostration. Clinical signs included hyperthermia and abnormal pulmonary auscultation sounds. Necropsy revealed diffuse severe necrohaemorrhagic colitis and splenitis, multiple visceral ecchymoses, petechial haemorrhages in the brain and lungs. Microscopical examination showed acute necrohaemorrhagic colitis, encephalitis, pneumonia and splenitis associated with fibrinoid vasculitis, thrombosis and fungal hyphae within and around vessels. Immunohistologically, concomitant aspergillosis (caused by Aspergillus fumigatus) and mucormycosis (causde by A...
Splenic haemangiosarcoma with metastasis to the cervical musculature in an aged pony.
New Zealand veterinary journal    March 16, 2005   Volume 52, Issue 1 37-39 doi: 10.1080/00480169.2004.36388
Parkinson TJ, Mogg TD, Dykgraaf S, Collett MG.An aged pony gelding presented with sudden onset of neck pain, depression and ataxia and weakness of the hindlegs, together with longer-term weight loss. Diagnostic procedures failed to isolate the cause of these signs and, despite symptomatic treatment, the animal's condition deteriorated until it required euthanasia. Unassigned: Post mortem examination revealed the presence of multiple splenic and hepatic haemangiosarcomata, with metastases to the lung and dorsal cervical muscles overlying C1 and C2 vertebrae. No lesions were present in the spinal cord, spinal column or brain. Conclusions: T...
Injury of the collateral ligaments of the distal interphalangeal joint diagnosed by magnetic resonance. Zubrod CJ, Farnsworth KD, Tucker RL, Ragle CA.We describe the clinical, imaging, and necropsy findings of two horses with severe injury of the collateral ligaments of the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joint diagnosed using magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. In MR images it was possible to examine the collateral ligaments of the DIP joint from the origin at the middle phalanx to the insertion on the distal phalanx. Both horses in this report had abnormal high signal intensity within the collateral ligaments of the DIP joint, and one horse had abnormal high signal intensity within the bone of the distal phalanx on short tau inversion recovery ...
Microbiologic and pathologic findings in an epidemic of equine pericarditis. Bolin DC, Donahue JM, Vickers ML, Harrison L, Sells S, Giles RC, Hong CB, Poonacha KB, Roberts J, Sebastian MM, Swerczek TW, Tramontin R, Williams NM.During the spring and summer of 2001 and in association with the mare reproductive loss syndrome, 22 terminal and 12 clinical cases of equine pericarditis were diagnosed in central Kentucky. Actinobacillus species were the principal isolates from 8 of 10 nontreated, terminally affected and 3 of 10 clinically affected horses. Enterococcus faecalis and Streptococcus zooepidemicus were cultured from the remaining 2 nontreated terminal cases. No viruses were isolated in tissue culture. Nucleic acid of equine herpesvirus-2 was detected in pericardial and tracheal wash fluids of 3 and 1 individuals,...
In vitro assessment of movements of the sacroiliac joint in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 20, 2005   Volume 36, Issue 8 694-698 doi: 10.2746/0425164044848064
Degueurce C, Chateau H, Denoix JM.Sacroiliac joint (SIJ) disease is associated with poor hindlimb action, lameness and poor performance in horses. However, little is known about the biomechanics of this low-motion joint. Objective: To determine in vitro the capacities of movement of the SIJ in the sagittal plane, and to test the effect of a sacrosciatic and sacrotuberal desmotomy on its stabilisation. Methods: Six anatomical specimens underwent cycles of flexion-extension of the lumbosacral joint (LSJ) before and after desmotomy. Kinematic triads were linked rigidly to the sacrum, spinous process of vertebra L5 and iliac wing....
Systemic AL amyloidosis associated with multiple myeloma in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    January 20, 2005   Volume 42, Issue 1 81-84 doi: 10.1354/vp.42-1-81
Kim DY, Taylor HW, Eades SC, Cho DY.AL amyloidosis is the most common type of systemic amyloidosis in humans, and it is frequently associated with multiple myeloma. But, AL amyloidosis is very rare in domestic animals. A 16-year-old Quarter horse gelding was diagnosed with systemic AL amyloidosis associated with multiple myeloma. Clinical problems were rapid weight loss, muscle atrophy, soft unformed stool, and ventral edema. Grossly, diffuse gastrointestinal hemorrhage, markedly thickened jejunal mucosa, and splenomegaly were present. Microscopically, diffuse severe amyloid deposits were present in the lamina propria of glandul...
[A horse with a badly-healing wound? A case report].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    January 20, 2005   Volume 130, Issue 1 2-7 
Ensink JM, Voermans M, Bartels JH, Passon-Vastenburgen MH, Loeb E.A 14-year-old Haflinger mare was presented with a wound on the right metatarsus which it had sustained 3 years earlier. The wound had never completely healed but had only recently become a problem. Over a period of several months, the wound became larger, produced a lot of exudate, and the horse became lame on the affected limb. Clinical examination and radiographs failed to reveal the cause of the deterioration. Histological evaluation of tissue removed during debridement of the wound revealed squamous cell carcinoma. Because the tumour had already invaded the bone, the prognosis was unfavour...
Metastatic tumors to the adrenal glands in domestic animals.
Veterinary pathology    January 20, 2005   Volume 42, Issue 1 52-58 doi: 10.1354/vp.42-1-52
Labelle P, De Cock HE.Although metastases to the adrenals are common in humans, they have not been thoroughly studied in animals. The purpose of this retrospective study was to document the types of malignant tumors that metastasize to canine, feline, equine, and bovine adrenals, and the rate at which they do so. The average rate of adrenal involvement in metastatic cancer was 112/534 (21.0%) in dogs, 12/81 (14.8%) in cats, 18/67 (26.9%) in horses, and 5/16 (31.3%) in cattle. In dogs, 26 different tumor types metastasized to the adrenals. Pulmonary, mammary, prostatic, gastric, and pancreatic carcinomas, and melano...
Assessment of the ultrasonographic characteristics of the podotrochlear apparatus in clinically normal horses and horses with navicular syndrome.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 13, 2005   Volume 225, Issue 12 1881-1888 doi: 10.2460/javma.2004.225.1881
Grewal JS, McClure SR, Booth LC, Evans RB, Caston SS.To characterize the normal ultrasonographic appearance of the podotrochlear apparatus in horses by use of standardized measurements and identify soft tissue changes associated with navicular syndrome. Methods: Prospective study. Methods: 7 clinically normal horses and 28 horses with navicular syndrome. Methods: The feasibility of identifying and measuring the soft tissue structures of the podotrochlear apparatus ultrasonographically via the transcuneal approach was assessed in 2 additional horses without navicular syndrome; both horses were euthanatized, and the structures identified ultrasono...
Cowpox virus infection associated with a streptococcal septicaemia in a foal.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 5, 2005   Volume 132, Issue 1 101-105 doi: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2004.06.005
Ellenberger C, Schüppel KF, Möhring M, Reischauer A, Alex M, Czerny CP, Fercho A, Schoon HA.Cowpox virus infection associated with a streptococcal septicaemia was diagnosed in a weak German Warmblood filly, born 29 days prematurely, and humanely destroyed on the sixth day of life. At necropsy, ulcerative lesions in the alimentary tract, colitis, polyarthritis and nephritis were observed. Transmission electron microscopical examination of specimens from ulcerative lesions revealed typical orthopox virions. Cowpox virus was unequivocally identified by virological and molecular-biological methods.
Fibrocartilaginous embolic myelopathy in a horse.
Journal of veterinary medicine. A, Physiology, pathology, clinical medicine    November 10, 2004   Volume 51, Issue 7-8 341-343 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.2004.00648.x
Sebastian MM, Giles RC.Fibrocartilaginous embolic myelopathy was diagnosed in a 11-year-old, male, Tennessee Walking Horse by histopathological examination of the spinal cord after the horse was killed because of severe neurological dysfunction. Both ventral funiculi of C6 and C7 cervical spinal cord had extensive necrosis with blood vessels containing fibrocartilaginous emboli. A similar fibrocartilaginous embolus was observed in a single large spinal artery adjoining the vertebral leptomeninges.
Fatal yew (Taxus sp) poisoning in Willamette Valley, Oregon, horses.
Veterinary and human toxicology    October 19, 2004   Volume 46, Issue 5 279-281 
Cope RB, Camp C, Lohr CV.Despite the well-founded reputation of plants of the genus Taxus as being amongst the most toxic plants for domestic livestock in the US, there are surprisingly few published case reports of yew poisoning in horses. This report documents 2 acute fatalities in horses in the central Willamette Valley, OR associated with the consumption of Taxus sp. The predominant features of the intoxication were peracute death, with no signs of struggling or convulsions, in otherwise fit and well managed adult horses. The most significant gross necropsy findings were limited to pulmonary congestion and hemorrh...
Myonecrosis and cutaneous infarction associated with Salmonella serovar Infantum infection in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 2, 2004   Volume 225, Issue 5 722-699 doi: 10.2460/javma.2004.225.722
Pellegrini-Masini A, Dolente BA, Habecker PL, Jesty SA.A 5-year-old Quarter Horse mare was referred for evaluation of oral ulcers, limb edema, weight loss, and weakness. There was marked diffuse swelling extending from the stifle region to the tarsal region of the left hind limb, and the horse had a left hind limb lameness. Firm swellings ranging from 2 to 15 cm in diameter and consisting of nodules, plaques, and discrete masses were palpated on both sides of the neck, over the right shoulder region, over the left elbow region, and over the left caudoventral aspect of the abdomen. Laboratory abnormalities included hypoproteinemia, neutrophilia, an...
Rupture of the flexor tendons of a horse secondary to a non-responsive digital sheath sepsis.
The Veterinary record    September 17, 2004   Volume 155, Issue 7 201-204 doi: 10.1136/vr.155.7.201
Kidd JA, Voute LC, Hewetson M.A 12-year-old hunter gelding became severely lame as a result of a laceration to the sheath of the digital flexor tendons of its left hindlimb, but there was no apparent damage to the tendons. The injury became chronically infected with Pseudomonas and Streptococcus species and Escherichia coli which did not respond to antibiotic treatment, and the horse remained lame. A postmortem examination revealed that the tendons had ruptured.
Hand-assisted laparoscopic ovariohysterectomy in the mare.
Veterinary surgery : VS    September 15, 2004   Volume 33, Issue 5 487-494 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.2004.04063.x
Delling U, Howard RD, Pleasant RS, Lanz OI.To develop a minimally invasive, hand-assisted laparoscopic ovariohysterectomy (HALS-OHE) technique in the mare and to evaluate safety and any associated complications. Methods: Experimental study. Methods: Eight, 11-24-year-old mares with anatomically normal urogenital tracts. Methods: The surgical technique was developed in 2 non-survival mares and subsequently evaluated in 6 survival procedures. Food was withheld for 48 hours, then mares were anesthetized and positioned in dorsal recumbency for laparoscopic surgery. A hand access device (Omniport) was placed followed by 4 laparoscopic porta...
Multifocal pleural cystic squamous metaplasia in a horse with chronic obstructive bronchopneumonia.
Veterinary pathology    September 7, 2004   Volume 41, Issue 5 532-534 doi: 10.1354/vp.41-5-532
Baum B, Hewicker-Trautwein M, Wohlsein P.A 10-year-old Knabstrupper stallion was euthanatized because of severe dyspnea and exercise intolerance. Postmortem examination revealed diffuse severe alveolar emphysema and chronic fibrosing pleuritis of the caudal lung. Parts of both caudal lung lobes were covered with multiple raised firm gray to yellow plaques. Histologically, these areas consisted of circumscribed pleural fibroses and cysts of metaplastic keratinizing squamous epithelium. Immunohistochemistry revealed intense labeling for cytokeratins 5/6 and 10. In addition, caudal lung lobes were severely affected by a chronic partiall...
Hypercalcemia and high serum parathyroid hormone-related protein concentration in a horse with multiple myeloma.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 27, 2004   Volume 225, Issue 3 409-376 doi: 10.2460/javma.2004.225.409
Barton MH, Sharma P, LeRoy BE, Howerth EW.A 13-year-old gelding was examined because of weight loss, hyperglobulinemia, and hypercalcemia. Possible causes of hypercalcemia that were considered included renal failure, primary hyperparathyroidism, vitamin D toxicosis, and malignancy. There was no history of vitamin D ingestion, and serum creatinine and parathyroid hormone concentrations were normal, making renal failure and primary hyperparathyroidism unlikely. The hypercalcemia was suspected to be a result of malignancy, but thorough testing did not reveal any neoplastic disease. Eight months later, serum parathyroid hormone-related pr...
Cytology of the normal and abnormal choroid plexi in selected domestic mammals, wildlife species, and man. Garma-Aviña A.A cytologic study of the choroid plexi of animals and humans was carried out using impression smears (imprints, imp) to understand better the cellular changes that occur in the cerebrospinal fluid in the case of disease. The samples, totaling 756 imp were from 11 dogs (239 imp), 10 horses (219 imp), 1 mule (23 imp), 3 cattle (69 imp), 1 sheep (19 imp), 2 pigs (39 imp), 1 deer (20 imp), 4 monkeys (22 imp), and 7 humans (106 imp). The samples came from individuals clinically free of neurologic disease, as well as from a few abnormal cases. Six of the 7 humans had no history of neurologic disease...
Compensated overexpression of procollagens alpha 1(I) and alpha 1(III) following perilla mint ketone-induced acute pulmonary damage in horses.
Journal of comparative pathology    July 28, 2004   Volume 131, Issue 2-3 186-198 doi: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2004.03.005
Schmidbauer SM, Venner M, von Samson-Himmelstjerna G, Drommer W, Gruber AD.Interstitial lung disease with chronic fibrosis is a frequent cause of reduced performance in horses. The aim of this study was to establish a model of acute alveolar damage and interstitial lung disease in horses that could be used to monitor the histopathological lesions and changes in expression levels of genes relevant to pulmonary fibrosis. Six adult horses were given a single intravenous injection (6 mg per kg body weight) of perilla mint ketone (PMK). Transthoracic lung biopsy samples (1 x 0.2 x 0.2 cm) were collected before and after (days 1, 4, 8, 11, 15, 18, 22, 25 and 29) the admini...
Mesenteric myofibroblastoma in a horse.
The Veterinary record    July 6, 2004   Volume 154, Issue 25 795-796 doi: 10.1136/vr.154.25.795
Hikita M, Ishikawa Y, Shibahara T, Kadota K.No abstract available
Magnetic resonance imaging of a brain abscess in a 10-month-old filly. Audigié F, Tapprest J, George C, Didierlaurent D, Foucher N, Faurie F, Houssin M, Denoix JM.The purpose of this paper was to correlate the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) characteristics of a mature brain abscess in a horse with histopathologic alterations of brain tissue. Eight months after the onset of clinical signs, MRI of the brain of a 10-month-old filly was performed. A large space-occupying lesion in the right cerebral hemisphere was identified. This space-occupying lesion was delineated by a thick and well-defined capsule that was isointense to brain parenchyma on the T1-weighted images and with a markedly hypointense on the T2-weighted images. The identification of such a ...
1 15 16 17 18 19 42