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Topic:Neurology

Neurology in horses encompasses the study of the equine nervous system, including its structure, function, and associated disorders. The equine nervous system is divided into the central nervous system (CNS), consisting of the brain and spinal cord, and the peripheral nervous system (PNS), which includes nerves extending throughout the body. Neurological conditions in horses can manifest as gait abnormalities, behavioral changes, or sensory deficits. Common neurological disorders include equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM), cervical vertebral stenotic myelopathy (CVSM), and equine herpesvirus myeloencephalopathy (EHM). Diagnostic approaches may involve clinical evaluation, imaging techniques, and laboratory tests. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the anatomy, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of neurological disorders in horses.
Equine pericardium for dural grafts: clinical results in 200 patients.
Journal of neurosurgical sciences    March 21, 2007   Volume 51, Issue 1 17-19 
Montinaro A, Gianfreda CD, Proto P.Serous sheets are currently used in Neurosurgery as dural substitute. The aim of this study is to demonstrate that the horse pericardium, which has the essential charasteristics of reabsorbable membranes and moreover is BSE-free, is an excellent dural substitute. Methods: 200 patients, 53 suffering from cranial traumatic conditions and 97 from cranial and craniospinal neoplastic pathologies, underwent a surgical procedure with the application of horse pericardium as a dural prosthesis. Results: The follow-up controls of the patients included a neurosurgical visit and advanced diagnostic imagin...
Advantages and limitations of the equine disease, pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction as a model of spontaneous dopaminergic neurodegenerative disease.
Ageing research reviews    February 20, 2007   Volume 6, Issue 1 54-63 doi: 10.1016/j.arr.2007.02.001
McFarlane D.Parkinson's disease (PD) is a leading cause of neurologic disability in the aged population. Remarkable progress has been made in the past decade to understand the cellular and molecular events that occur in PD. However attempts to unravel the early, initiating factors in the pathogenesis of dopaminergic neurodegeneration and PD have been limited by the lack of a suitable animal model. Models in which there has been genetic or environmental manipulation are not of use in determining the natural cause of a disease. While a large scale prospective human study would be ideal, the relatively low p...
Effects of butorphanol on the withdrawal reflex using threshold, suprathreshold and repeated subthreshold electrical stimuli in conscious horses.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    January 24, 2007   Volume 34, Issue 1 48-58 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2006.00289.x
Spadavecchia C, Arendt-Nielsen L, Spadavecchia L, Mosing M, Auer U, van den Hoven R.To assess the effects of a single intravenous dose of butorphanol (0.1 mg kg(-1)) on the nociceptive withdrawal reflex (NWR) using threshold, suprathreshold and repeated subthreshold electrical stimuli in conscious horses. Methods: 'Unblinded', prospective experimental study. Methods: Ten adult horses, five geldings and five mares, mean body mass 517 kg (range 487-569 kg). Methods: The NWR was elicited using single transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the palmar digital nerve. Repeated stimulations were applied to evoke temporal summation. Surface electromyography was performed to record a...
Verminous encephalitis in a horse produced by nematodes in the family protostrongylidae.
Veterinary pathology    January 2, 2007   Volume 44, Issue 1 119-122 doi: 10.1354/vp.44-1-119
Tanabe M, Kelly R, de Lahunta A, Duffy MS, Wade SE, Divers TJ.Parasitic granulomatous eosinophilic inflammation was observed in the central nervous system (CNS) of a 6-month-old Arabian colt from New York state. Inflammation was associated with eggs, larvae, and adult nematodes in the cerebellum. Nematodes had histological characteristics of the superfamily Metastrongyloidea. The presence of dorsal-spined larvae in the CNS was further indicative of infection with a nematode in the family Protostrongylidae. Infections were most compatible with Parelaphostrongylus tenuis but specific diagnosis was not possible. This is the first definitive report of a prot...
Juvenile idiopathic epilepsy in Egyptian Arabian foals: 22 cases (1985-2005).
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    December 26, 2006   Volume 20, Issue 6 1443-1449 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2006)20[1443:jieiea]2.0.co;2
Aleman M, Gray LC, Williams DC, Holliday TA, Madigan JE, LeCouteur RA, Magdesian KG.Epilepsy is relatively uncommon in horses compared with other species and limited information is available. Objective: The objectives of the study were to describe the age of onset, clinical signs, clinicopathologic data, electroeticephalographic findings, treatment, and outcome, including long-term prognosis in Arabian foals with idiopathic epilepsy. Methods: Twenty-two foals were included in the study. Methods: Medical records from 1985 to 2005 were reviewed. Results: The age of onset of affected foals ranged from 2 days to 6 months. Seizures were characterized by generalized tonic and cloni...
The long-term neurocompatibility of human fibrin sealant and equine collagen as biomatrices in experimental spinal cord injury.
Experimental and toxicologic pathology : official journal of the Gesellschaft fur Toxikologische Pathologie    November 21, 2006   Volume 58, Issue 4 237-245 doi: 10.1016/j.etp.2006.07.004
Petter-Puchner AH, Froetscher W, Krametter-Froetscher R, Lorinson D, Redl H, van Griensven M.While fibrin sealant (FS) and equine collagen (EC) have been used as scaffold materials in experimental spinal cord injury (SCI), questions concerning neurocompatibility still remain. In this study, we assessed potential adverse effects, as well as functional and histological impact of FS and EC in subtotal hemisection of the thoracic spinal cord (SC) in rats. Methods: 124 male rats were randomly assigned to four main groups (n=31): Sham (SH), Lesion only (L), fibrin sealant (GFS) and equine collagen group (GEC). SH animals received laminectomy only; all other animals underwent subtotal latera...
Age-related and non-age-related changes in 100 surveyed horse brains.
Veterinary pathology    September 13, 2006   Volume 43, Issue 5 740-750 doi: 10.1354/vp.43-5-740
Jahns H, Callanan JJ, McElroy MC, Sammin DJ, Bassett HF.Brains from 100 horses, aged 2-25 years, were systematically examined by histopathology at 46 different neuroanatomical sites. The horses were sourced from a slaughterhouse (group A, n = 57), from a kennel that collected dead animals, and from 2 diagnostic laboratories (group B, n = 43). All horses from group A and 26 horses from group B were examined by a veterinarian in the period before death. None of the horses were known to exhibit clinical signs suggestive of neurologic disease. Among the main changes identified were vacuolation in the neuropil (n = 73), neurons (n = 32), white matter (n...
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...
Equine herpesvirus neurologic disease: reflections from across the pond.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    June 1, 2006   Volume 20, Issue 3 467-468 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2006)20[467:eehndr]2.0.co;2
Kydd JH, Smith KC.No abstract available
Intermediate amyloid oligomers of lysozyme: Is their cytotoxicity a particular case or general rule for amyloid?
Biochemistry. Biokhimiia    May 31, 2006   Volume 71, Issue 5 505-512 doi: 10.1134/s0006297906050063
Malisauskas M, Darinskas A, Zamotin VV, Gharibyan A, Kostanyan IA, Morozova-Roche LA.In the current study we investigated the molecular mechanisms of cytotoxicity of amyloid oligomers of horse milk lysozyme. We have shown that lysozyme forms soluble amyloid oligomers and protofibrils during incubation at pH 2.0 and 4.5 and 57 degrees C. These structures bind the amyloid-specific dyes thioflavin T and Congo Red, and their morphology and size were analyzed by atomic force microscopy. Monomeric lysozyme and its fibrils did not affect the viability of three cell types used in our experiments including primary murine neurons and fibroblasts, as well as neuroblastoma cell line IMR-3...
Unilateral ataxia and head tilt in a 7-year-old Thoroughbred stallion. Temporohyoid osteoarthropathy.
Australian veterinary journal    April 25, 2006   Volume 84, Issue 4 136-142 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2006.tb13397.x
Hughes KJ, Hodgson DR.The research article discusses the case of a 7-year-old Thoroughbred stallion presenting symptoms such as ataxia, a leftward head tilt and a cloudy left eye, revealing a diagnosis of temporohyoid […]
Fluphenazine-induced extrapyramidal side effects in a horse.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 22, 2006   Volume 22, Issue 1 e37-e45 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2005.12.025
Brashier M.No abstract available
Neuromuscular disease associated with glycogen storage in a Spanish-bred filly.
The Veterinary record    April 18, 2006   Volume 158, Issue 15 513-516 doi: 10.1136/vr.158.15.513
Gil F, Alemán M, Rivero MA, Latorre R, Carrión MA, Aguirre C, Ruíz I, Ayala I.No abstract available
Electroencephalographic and electromyographic changes during the use of detomidine and detomidine-butorphanol combination in standing horses.
Acta veterinaria Hungarica    April 15, 2006   Volume 54, Issue 1 35-42 doi: 10.1556/AVet.54.2006.1.4
Kruluc P, Nemec A.Clinically, the use of detomidine and butorphanol is suitable for sedation and deepening of analgosedation. The aim of our study was to establish the influence of detomidine used alone and a butorphanol-detomidine combination on brain activity and to evaluate and compare brain responses (using electroencephalography, EEG) by recording SEF90 (spectral edge frequency 90%), individual brain wave fractions (beta, alpha, theta and delta) and electromyographic (EMG) changes in the left temporal muscle in standing horses. Ten clinically healthy cold-blooded horses were divided into two groups of five...
Effect of romifidine on the nociceptive withdrawal reflex and temporal summation in conscious horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 13, 2005   Volume 66, Issue 11 1992-1998 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2005.66.1992
Spadavecchia C, Arendt-Nielsen L, Andersen OK, Spadavecchia L, Schatzmann U.To investigate the action of a single IV administration of romifidine on the thresholds of the nociceptive withdrawal reflex (NWR) and temporal summation in conscious horses. Methods: 10 adult horses. Methods: Single electrical stimulations were applied on the digital nerves to evoke NWR from the left forelimb and hind limb. Repeated electrical stimulations (10 stimuli, 5 Hz) were given to obtain temporal summation. Surface electromyographic reflex activity was recorded from the common digital extensor and cranial tibial muscles. After baseline assessment of NWR and temporal summation threshol...
Traumatic cerebral partial lobotomy in a Thoroughbred stallion.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 11 674-677 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb13045.x
Rayner SG.No abstract available
Scanning electron microscopy of the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle of the horse.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    November 18, 2005   Volume 34, Issue 6 379-382 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.2005.00628.x
Adami M, Faria MM, Almeida AE, Pinto MG, Prada IL.The present study examined the ultrastructure of the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle of the horse. The material was fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 m sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.3, processed and analysed by scanning electron microscopy. The choroid plexus was characterized by regions with a predominance of villi, which resembled finger-like projections or bunches of grapes, and others where straight and uniform folds predominated. Epithelial cells projected into the ventricle and large amounts of cilia and microvilli were observed on their surface. The choroid glomus corresponded...
Proopiomelanocortin gene expression and beta-endorphin localization in the pituitary, testis, and epididymis of stallion.
Molecular reproduction and development    September 24, 2005   Volume 73, Issue 1 1-8 doi: 10.1002/mrd.20341
Soverchia L, Mosconi G, Ruggeri B, Ballarini P, Catone G, Degl'Innocenti S, Nabissi M, Polzonetti-Magni AM.Proopiomelanocortin (POMC) is a precursor protein that contains the sequences of several bioactive peptides including adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), beta-endorphin (beta-EP), and melanocyte-stimulating-hormone (MSH). POMC is synthesized in the pituitary gland, brain, and many peripheral tissues. Immunoreactive POMC-derived peptides as well as POMC-like mRNA have been evidenced in several nonpituitary tissues, thus suggesting that POMC is actively synthesized by these tissues. The present study was aimed at evaluating if also in the case of stallion POMC-derived peptide, beta-EP, is produced local...
Neurologic disorders of neonatal foals.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    July 30, 2005   Volume 21, Issue 2 387-vii doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2005.04.006
MacKay RJ.Neurologic examination of the neonatal foal is quite different from the process used to examine older foals and adult horses. Abnormal neurologic signs are best appreciated in the context of a detailed knowledge of general neonatal medicine and awareness of nor-mal foal behavior and milestones of development. A systematic approach to neurologic examination is provided. The results of such examination are used to localize a lesion or lesions in the nervous system. Descriptions and treatment strategies are given for most common and important neonatal neurologic diseases.
Detection and comparison of nitric oxide in clinically healthy horses and those with naturally acquired strangulating large colon volvulus. Mirza MH, Seahorn TL, Oliver JL, Hosgood G, Moore RM.The objective of the study was to determine whether nitric oxide (NO) is present in clinically healthy horses (control) under basal conditions, and if it increases secondary to naturally acquired strangulating large colon volvulus (affected). Eleven affected horses and 10 controls were studied. Jugular venous blood, abdominal fluid, and urine were collected. The NO concentrations were standardized to the creatinine concentration in the respective samples. A biopsy specimen collected from the large colon pelvic flexure at surgery was divided into subsections for processing for inducible nitric ...
Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease in a horse.
Acta neuropathologica    June 22, 2005   Volume 110, Issue 2 191-195 doi: 10.1007/s00401-005-1033-5
Pumarola M, Vidal E, Trens JM, Serafín A, Marquez M, Ferrer I.Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID) is reported in a 16-year-old Pure Spanish breed female horse suffering from progressive ataxia and motor deficiencies. The neuropathological study revealed NIIs throughout the central nervous system, although mainly in the brain stem and spinal cord. This distribution did not correlate with neuron loss, which was marked in the hippocampus and moderate in the neocortex, particularly in the occipital cortex. As in humans, NIIs in the horse were hyaline autofluorescent inclusions composed of non-membrane-bound aggregates of filaments and fine granule...
A new collagen biomatrix of equine origin versus a cadaveric dura graft for the repair of dural defects–a comparative animal experimental study.
Acta neurochirurgica    June 3, 2005   Volume 147, Issue 8 877-887 doi: 10.1007/s00701-005-0552-0
Knopp U, Christmann F, Reusche E, Sepehrnia A.Numerous types of materials have been evaluated over the past decades in the quest for the ideal dural replacement, but no product fully meets all the applicable criteria. This paper presents the long-term results of an animal trial of a collagen biomatrix (TISSUDURA, Baxter AG, Vienna/Austria) for the repair and regeneration of dural defects. This product provides a matrix with a special layer structure and consists of pure naturally cross-linked collagen of equine origin. The comparable material is Tutoplast Dura, a human cadaveric-derived dural graft preserved in a multiple stage chemical p...
A novel, progressive, sclerosing panencephalitis in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    May 17, 2005   Volume 37, Issue 3 276-280 doi: 10.2746/0425164054530623
Swain JM, Hudson NP, Rhind SM, Baird PM, Mayhew IG.No abstract available
The role of electromyography in clinical diagnosis of neuromuscular locomotor problems in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 20, 2005   Volume 36, Issue 8 718-722 doi: 10.2746/0425164044848019
Wijnberg ID, Back W, de Jong M, Zuidhof MC, van den Belt AJ, van der Kolk JH.Systematically performed EMG needle examination of muscles provides essential information about the functional aspects of the motor unit. However, clinical studies in which information is given on the diagnostic and discriminative values of electromyography (EMG) in the horse are scarce. Objective: To determine to what extent inclusion of EMG analysis in clinical examination contributes to determination of type and localisation of abnormality. Methods: EMG analysis, complete clinical examination and diagnosis of 108 horses (mean +/- s.d. age 75 +/- 3.8 years; bodyweight 548 +/- 86 kg; height 1...
Altered mesoaccumbens and nigro-striatal dopamine physiology is associated with stereotypy development in a non-rodent species.
Behavioural brain research    December 8, 2004   Volume 159, Issue 1 113-118 doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2004.10.014
McBride SD, Hemmings A.Stress-induced changes in mesoaccumbens dopamine neurophysiology have been associated with the development of stereotypic behaviour in in-bred strains of laboratory rodents. This experiment evaluated whether similar changes are associated with environmentally-induced stereotypic behaviour in a higher-vertebrate species, the horse. D1- and D2-like dopamine receptor densities (B(max)) and dissociation constants (K(d)) were measured in control (n=9) and stereotypy (n=9) horses in the nucleus accumbens, caudate nucleus, putamen, substantia nigra and ventral tegmentum brain regions. Results reveale...
Metastatic esthesioneuroblastoma in a horse.
Journal of comparative pathology    December 7, 2004   Volume 132, Issue 2-3 218-222 doi: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2004.07.003
Döpke C, Gröne A, von Borstel M, von Oppen T, Boéve MH, Baumgärtner W.A 17-year-old horse developed severe proptosis of the left eye over a period of 1.5 years. At post-mortem examination a neoplasm was found involving the left ethmoid bone, left maxillary sinus, left orbit, left superior turbinate, and the left eye. Tumour cells were arranged in nests separated by a fine fibrovascular stroma. Immunohistochemically, the tumour cells were labelled by antibodies against neurofilament protein, synaptophysin, glial fibrillary acidic protein and S-100 protein antigen, but were negative for chromogranin A, cytokeratin and desmin. Electronmicroscopically, the cells sho...
Does the cytotoxic effect of transient amyloid oligomers from common equine lysozyme in vitro imply innate amyloid toxicity?
The Journal of biological chemistry    December 1, 2004   Volume 280, Issue 8 6269-6275 doi: 10.1074/jbc.M407273200
Malisauskas M, Ostman J, Darinskas A, Zamotin V, Liutkevicius E, Lundgren E, Morozova-Roche LA.In amyloid diseases, it is not evident which protein aggregates induce cell death via specific molecular mechanisms and which cause damage because of their mass accumulation and mechanical properties. We showed that equine lysozyme assembles into soluble amyloid oligomers and protofilaments at pH 2.0 and 4.5, 57 degrees C. They bind thioflavin-T and Congo red similar to common amyloid structures, and their morphology was monitored by atomic force microscopy. Molecular volume evaluation from microscopic measurements allowed us to identify distinct types of oligomers, ranging from tetramer to oc...
Heterogeneity of the neuropeptide Y (NPY) contractile and relaxing receptors in horse penile small arteries.
British journal of pharmacology    November 22, 2004   Volume 143, Issue 8 976-986 doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0706005
Prieto D, Arcos LR, Martínez P, Benedito S, García-Sacristán A, Hernández M.The distribution of neuropeptide Y (NPY)-immunorective nerves and the receptors involved in the effects of NPY upon electrical field stimulation (EFS)- and noradrenaline (NA)-elicited contractions were investigated in horse penile small arteries. NPY-immunoreactive nerves were widely distributed in the erectile tissues with a particularly high density around penile intracavernous small arteries. In small arteries isolated from the proximal part of the corpora cavernosa, NPY (30 nM) produced a variable modest enhancement of the contractions elicited by both EFS and NA. At the same concentration...
Characterization of the role of glutathione in repin-induced mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress and dopaminergic neurotoxicity in rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells.
Neurotoxicology    October 12, 2004   Volume 25, Issue 6 989-999 doi: 10.1016/j.neuro.2004.03.013
Tukov FF, Rimoldi JM, Matthews JC.Repin, a major constituent in extracts of the plant Centaurea repens is thought to be the active principal responsible for the development of equine nigropallidal encephalomalacia (ENE), a fatal Parkinson-like neurodegenerative disorder in horses. Although the exact mechanism by which ingestion of this weed causes ENE is uncertain, a limited body of experimental evidence suggests a critical role for the glutathione redox system. In the present study, the mechanism of repin neurotoxicity was examined in PC12 cells with a focus on determining the role of glutathione (GSH) in repin-induced mitoch...
Quantitative motor unit action potential analysis in skeletal muscles in horses and ponies.
Veterinary research communications    September 18, 2004   Volume 28 Suppl 1 177-179 doi: 10.1023/b:verc.0000045400.72642.9d
Ciminaghi B, Albertini M, Costanzi M, Patrese F, Clement MG.No abstract available
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