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Topic:Pathology

Pathology in horses involves the study of diseases and abnormalities affecting equine health, encompassing a range of conditions that can impact various systems within the horse's body. This field examines the causes, mechanisms, and effects of diseases, as well as the structural and functional changes they induce in equine tissues and organs. Common pathological conditions in horses include laminitis, colic, equine infectious anemia, and respiratory disorders. Understanding these diseases involves evaluating clinical signs, diagnostic methods, and treatment options. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the etiology, pathogenesis, and clinical implications of pathological conditions in horses.
A primary production deficit in the thrombocytopenia of equine infectious anemia.
Journal of virology    November 1, 1996   Volume 70, Issue 11 7842-7850 doi: 10.1128/JVI.70.11.7842-7850.1996
Crawford TB, Wardrop KJ, Tornquist SJ, Reilich E, Meyers KM, McGuire TC.The purpose of this study was to identify the mechanisms responsible for the thrombocytopenia that develops following infection of horses by the lentivirus equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV). Immunocompetent Arabian foals and Arabian foals with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), which lack functional B and T lymphocytes, were experimentally infected with EIAV. Levels of viremia and a number of clinical and hematologic parameters were examined prior to and following infection. Thrombocytopenia was not dependent on the immune response: SCID foals were affected as severely as immunocompe...
[Strangulation ileus of the jejunum combined with intersexuality in a horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    October 1, 1996   Volume 24, Issue 5 476-478 
Haider W, Brehm W, Keller H.An apparently unilateral cryptorchid stallion was referred to the clinic with a history of colic. In the course of laparotomy an ileus caused by strangulation of the small intestine was found and the horse was euthanized because of poor prognosis. During autopsy strictures and ectasia of the jejunum were found as well as hermaphroditism along with male phenotype. The frequency of cryptorchidism in the case of intersexuality is discussed.
An account on equine babesioses.
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    September 1, 1996   Volume 15, Issue 3 1191-1201 doi: 10.20506/rst.15.3.972
Friedhoff KT, Soulé C.A review of the distribution of Babesia equi and Babesia caballi, the transmission of these protozoa by ticks and the immune response of infected horses, in addition to a brief survey of diagnostic. tests and chemotherapy.
A perspective on equine viral arteritis (infectious arteritis of horses).
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    September 1, 1996   Volume 15, Issue 3 1203-1208 doi: 10.20506/rst.15.3.971
Timoney PJ, Klingeborn B, Lucas MH.No abstract available
Anatomy of the ocular arteries in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 5 360-367 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03106.x
Simoens P, Muylle S, Lauwers H.Orbital and intrabulbar arteries were studied in 20 equine eyes by means of latex injections and methylmethacrylate casts. The orbital branches of the external ophthalmic artery arise far caudal to the posterior pole of the eyeball and present a variable topographic arrangement. The intrabulbar arteries are supplied by ciliary and choroidoretinal arteries. Dependent on their entrance into the eyeball, the ciliary arteries are subdivided into a posterior and an anterior group. The posterior ciliary arteries perforate the sclera post equatorially and consist of 4 major vessels that penetrate in ...
Factors associated with gastric lesions in thoroughbred racehorses.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 5 368-374 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03107.x
Murray MJ, Schusser GF, Pipers FS, Gross SJ.Gastroscopic examinations were performed on 67 Thoroughbred horses in training at a race track and repeat examinations performed in 35 horses, 2 to 3 months later. Horses were age 2-9 years and included 16 two-year-olds, 32 three-year-olds and 19 horses > or = 4-years-old. Forty-two of the 67 horses had raced within the 2 months before the initial examination and the remaining 25 horses were in training. Sixty-two of the 67 horses (93%) had one or more lesions present in the gastric mucosa and lesions were present in all of the 42 horses that had raced. Thirty-two of the 35 horses, examined...
Fatal experimental equine arteritis virus infection of a pregnant mare: immunohistochemical staining of viral antigens. MacLachlan NJ, Balasuriya UB, Rossitto PV, Hullinger PA, Patton JF, Wilson WD.No abstract available
Equine cryptococcal endometritis and placentitis with neonatal cryptococcal pneumonia. Petrites-Murphy MB, Robbins LA, Donahue JM, Smith B.No abstract available
Ultrastructure of equine morbillivirus.
Virus research    July 1, 1996   Volume 43, Issue 1 1-15 doi: 10.1016/0168-1702(96)01307-x
Hyatt AD, Selleck PW.The ultrastructure of the equine morbillivirus (EMV) which was implicated in the death of one human and fourteen horses in Queensland, Australia during September 1994 and a 36 year old man from Queensland in October 1995 is described. The ultrastructure of the virus and the intracellular virus-specific structures are characteristic for the family Paramyxoviridae. Cytoplasmic nucleocapsids were observed within the infected cells monolayers, endothelial cells (lung) of infected horses and the neurons within the brain of the 36 year old Queensland man. Aggregates of smaller nucleocapsid-like stru...
The diagnostic utility of cerebrospinal fluid creatine kinase activity in the horse.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    July 1, 1996   Volume 10, Issue 4 246-251 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1996.tb02057.x
Jackson C, de Lahunta A, Divers T, Ainsworth D.We evaluated creatine kinase (CK) activity in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 128 horses with various neurological disorders. No association was found between CSF CK activity and CSF red blood cell count, CSF nucleated cell count, CSF total protein concentration, or serum CK activity. The sensitivity and specificity of CSF CK activity as a diagnostic test for protozoal myelitis in horses (61% and 56%, respectively) was higher than for cervical stenotic myelopathy, degenerative myelopathy, or motor neuron disease, but was considered to be inadequate to be of use diagnostically. Contamination o...
Diagnosis of oleander poisoning in livestock. Galey FD, Holstege DM, Plumlee KH, Tor E, Johnson B, Anderson ML, Blanchard PC, Brown F.Since mid-1989, 37 cases of oleander poisoning in livestock have been diagnosed at the California Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory System. The most frequent source for oleander exposure was plant clippings. Sudden death was the most common presenting complaint. Other signs reported included diarrhea, pulmonary edema, tachycardia, cardiac arrhythmias, colic, and lethargy. In the past, a presumptive diagnosis of oleander poisoning could be based only on matching clinical signs with evidence of consumption of oleander. A new 2 dimensional Thin-layer chromatography analysis of ingesta for oleandri...
[Ascites as a result of peritoneal mesotheliomas in a horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    June 1, 1996   Volume 24, Issue 3 270-274 
Harps O, Brumhard J, Bartmann CP, Hinrichs U.An abdominal tumor was suspected after clinical evaluation in an eight-year-old, bay-coloured hannoveranian gelding. The diagnosis was based on the symptoms of ascites, on the results of the transcutaneous abdominal ultrasound examination and on the characteristic changes in the serum-electrophoresis. Postmortem a peritoneal mesothelioma was diagnosed. This primary tumor of the peritoneum is rarely described in horses.
Papillary ductal adenocarcinoma in the mammary glands of two horses.
The Veterinary record    May 25, 1996   Volume 138, Issue 21 518-519 doi: 10.1136/vr.138.21.518
Reppas GP, McClintock SA, Canfield PJ, Watson GF.Mammary gland neoplasms in horses are uncommon and may initially be confused with mastitis. Masses from the mammary glands of two horses with chronic discharges were examined by cytology and histopathology. Both masses were diagnosed as papillary ductal adenocarcinomas with extensive intraductal and intralobular involvement and only focal infiltration of the adjacent stroma. Complementary immunohistochemical studies were made of both fresh and formalin-fixed tumour tissue, and attempts were made to assess the steroid receptor status of fresh tissue biochemically to assess the possibility of ho...
Penetrating keratoplasty for treatment of recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the cornea in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 15, 1996   Volume 208, Issue 10 1692-1694 
van der Woerdt A, Gilger BC, Wilkie DA.Squamous cell carcinoma involving the cornea and conjunctiva of the left eye in a 14-year-old horse was treated by superficial keratectomy in combination with beta-radiation and radiofrequency hyperthermia. The tumor recurred 4 months later in the central cornea at the edge of the previous keratectomy site. Penetrating keratoplasty was performed in an effort to remove the tumor and retain a visual eye. The eye was visual 13 months after surgery. Mild fibrosis and vascularization were observed in the area of the penetrating keratoplasty.
Chylothorax due to primary thoracic haemangiosarcoma in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 3 241-244 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03780.x
Brink P, Wilkins LP, Spano JS.No abstract available
Mycoplasma infections in horses: a fresh look using modern methods may reveal an elusive ‘virus’.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 3 177-179 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb03770.x
Wood JLN, Chanter N.No abstract available
Proliferative enteropathy in a foal caused by Lawsonia intracellularis-like bacterium. Williams NM, Harrison LR, Gebhart CJ.No abstract available
A comparison of equid herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) vascular lesions in the early versus late pregnant equine uterus.
Journal of comparative pathology    April 1, 1996   Volume 114, Issue 3 231-247 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(96)80045-4
Smith KC, Mumford JA, Lakhani K.Four Welsh Mountain pony mares at 3 months of gestation and one mare at 5 months were inoculated intranasally with equid herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1: Ab4 isolate) at doses of 10(5) to 10(6.6) TCID50. All five mares became infected, but no cases of paresis or abortion occurred. On days 8, 9, 11, 12 (3-month-pregnant mares) and 13 (5-month-pregnant mare) after infection, a detailed examination of the pregnant uterus was made. Small numbers of vascular lesions with EHV-1 antigen expression in endothelial cells were present in the uteri of the early gestational mares; thrombi were rare and foci of thromb...
Surgical management of osteomyelitis of the sustentaculum tali in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    February 1, 1996   Volume 73, Issue 2 73-74 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1996.tb09971.x
Dart AJ, Hodgson DR.No abstract available
Malignant mast cell neoplasia with local metastasis in a horse.
New Zealand veterinary journal    February 1, 1996   Volume 44, Issue 1 22-25 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1996.35926
Reppas GP, Canfield PJ.A 12-year-old Arab stallion was presented with a chronically swollen right carpus resulting in profound lameness of the same leg. An incisional biopsy of subcutaneous tissue from the right carpus submitted for cytology and histopathology revealed large numbers of eosinophils interspersed by substantial numbers of variably sized and granulated mast cells. Fungal culture of a subcutaneous tissue sample taken from the right carpus was negative. Serial full blood counts revealed persistent mature eosinophilia, not accompanied by a mastocytaemia, neutrophilia without left shift and persistent hyper...
Multiple congenital cardiac anomalies and idiopathic thoracic aortitis in a horse.
The Veterinary record    January 6, 1996   Volume 138, Issue 1 14-16 doi: 10.1136/vr.138.1.14
Reppas GP, Canfield PJ, Hartley WJ, Hutchins DR, Hoffmann KL.An echocardiographical and clinical pathological investigation of the rapid loss of weight by a yearling thoroughbred filly revealed an atrial septal defect, a ventricular septal defect and hyperfibrinogenaemia. A post mortem examination confirmed the cardiac abnormalities and revealed a severe thoracic aortitis. It is proposed that the idiopathic thoracic aortitis contributed to the horse's compromised cardiovascular homoeostasis.
Neuroaxonal dystrophy in a two-year-old quarter horse filly.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1996   Volume 37, Issue 1 43-44 doi: 10.4141/cjas57-006
Adams AP, Collatos C, Fuentealba C, Illanes O, Blanchard R.No abstract available
Spontaneous vascular mineralization in the brain of horses.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    January 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 1 35-40 doi: 10.1292/jvms.58.35
Yanai T, Masegi T, Ishikawa K, Sakai H, Iwasaki T, Moritomo Y, Goto N.Cerebral vascular mineralization was found in 12 (60%) of 20 3- to 10-year-old healthy horses collected at an abattoir. It was variable in degree and occurred mostly in the pallidal arteries showing two types of lesions; small globoid bodies along capillaries, and amorphous deposits in the wall of arterioles, small- or medium-sized arteries and veins. Both types were strongly positive for periodic acid-Schiff reaction, and weakly positive for von Kossa's and Berlin blue stains. Elemental analysis of the deposit revealed the presence of large amounts of aluminum, moderate amounts of phosphorus,...
Three cases of carcinoid in the equine nasal cavity and maxillary sinuses: histologic and immunohistochemical features.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 1 92-95 doi: 10.1177/030098589603300114
van Maanen C, Klein WR, Dik KJ, van den Ingh TS.Three cases of carcinoid tumor in horses are described. The tumors originated from the maxillary sinuses and the retrobulbar region and caused exophthalmos. Histologically, they had a characteristic endocrine pattern and were argyrophilic with the Grimelius stain. All tumors contained reactivity for neuron-specific enolase and synaptophysin. Two of three tumors were reactive for both bovine and porcine chromogranin A. These immunohistochemical results confirm the neuroendocrine nature of these tumors. Neuroendocrine cells could not be detected in the nasal mucosa and maxillary sinuses of a nor...
Congenital cleft vertebral centrum and intra- and extraspinal cyst in a foal.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1996   Volume 33, Issue 1 87-89 doi: 10.1177/030098589603300112
Doige CE.A midsagittal centrum cleft of T5-6, malformation and fusion of T3-7, intra- and extraspinal cyst, and myelodysplasia were found in a 3-month-old female Arabian foal that had experienced posterior ataxia since birth. Based on studies in other species, ecto-endodermal adhesions early in embryogenesis leading to formation of an enterogenous cyst is the most probable pathogenesis.
Pyrrole detection and the pathologic progression of Cynoglossum officinale (houndstongue) poisoning in horses. Stegelmeier BL, Gardner DR, James LF, Molyneux RJ.Houndstongue (Cynoglossum officinale), a noxious weed that contains pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs), infests pastures and fields in the western United States and Europe. The purpose of this study was to develop techniques to better diagnose PA poisoning and describe the progression of gross and microscopic lesions caused by houndstongue intoxication. Six horses were gavaged daily with a suspension of houndstongue containing 5 or 15 mg/kg total PA for 14 days. Two horses were treated similarly with ground alfalfa as controls. Liver biopsy samples and serum biochemical and hematologic values were ...
Acute post-treatment enterocolitis in 13 horses treated in a Norwegian surgical ward.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1996   Volume 37, Issue 2 203-211 doi: 10.1186/BF03548112
Larsen J, Dolvik NI, Teige J.Case histories, results of laboratory analyses, treatment regimens and outcome are described for 13 horses that developed acute enterocolitis after various surgical treatments. Twelve of the 13 horses had been cast in lateral recumbency, and 10 of those 12 had received general anesthesia. Eleven horses had been treated with antimicrobial drugs. Most horses (11) developed diarrhea 2 days after initiation of treatment, with a variation from 1 to 5 days. The most apparent symptoms were fever, up to 40.5 degrees C, elevated heart rate, discoloration of mucous membranes, and diarrhea. Dehydration, ...
Recent acute and subacute mycotoxicoses recognized in France.
Veterinary research    January 1, 1996   Volume 27, Issue 4-5 383-394 
Le Bars J, Le Bars P.Successful investigation and prevention of mycotoxic problems requires close collaboration between scientists from several disciplines ranging from agronomists and technologists required during production of food and feeds, to toxicologists and pathologists examining the effects of mycotoxins on animals and man. Zootoxic metabolites following fungal infection result from four general mechanisms: (i) secondary fungal metabolism (mycotoxins, eg, aflatoxins); (ii) bioconversion of vegetal compounds (eg, dicoumarol); (iii) plant reactions (phytoalexins, eg, coumestrol); and (iv) plant-fungus assoc...
[A horse with chronic eosinophilic enteritis].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    December 1, 1995   Volume 120, Issue 23 680-682 
van der Kolk JH, Grinwis GC.A three-year-old pregnant Dutch Warmblood mare was referred to the Department of Large Animal Medicine and Nutrition, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, because of weight loss for 1 month. The main clinical features were (beside weight loss) moderate ventral oedema, enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes, and uniform thickening of the wall of the jejunum. Haematological evaluation revealed leukocytosis (15.9 G.l-1 with 18% lymphocytes and 1% eosinophils) and a decreased total serum protein and albumin concentration (35 g.l-1 and 36.3% albumin). At necropsy transmural eosinophilic enteritis was found in ...
Hematology and hemostasis in the horse: normal functions and common abnormalities.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1995   Volume 11, Issue 3 351-389 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30306-1
Lassen ED, Swardson CJ.In diseased animals, laboratory evaluations of erythrocytes, leukocytes, and hemostasis provide important information that contributes to either narrowing the list of potential diagnoses or to determining a specific diagnosis. To adequately interpret the results of these evaluations, normal erythrocyte and leukocyte kinetics and normal hemostatic function must be understood. In addition, knowledge of common diseases resulting in abnormalities of these laboratory tests and of typical changes in these tests caused by these diseases is vital. This article has reviewed normal erythrocyte and leuko...
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