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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.
Radiographic diagnosis of bone and joint diseases in the horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1968   Volume 58 28-47 
Morgan JP.No abstract available
The involution of the muscle tissue of the proximal sesamoidean ligament of horse.
Lo sperimentale    January 1, 1968   Volume 118, Issue 1 57-69 
Callegari E.No abstract available
Biomechanics of equine lameness.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1968   Volume 58 49-58 
Rooney JR.No abstract available
Localized nodular tenosynovitis in the horse.
Pathologia veterinaria    January 1, 1968   Volume 5, Issue 5 436-441 doi: 10.1177/030098586800500507
Ragland WL.No abstract available
Suspected adenovirus bronchitis in Arab foals.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1967   Volume 43, Issue 12 600 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1967.tb04823.x
Johnston KG, Hutchins DR.No abstract available
Respiratory distress in a newborn foal with failure to form lung lining film.
Nature    September 30, 1967   Volume 215, Issue 5109 1498-1499 doi: 10.1038/2151498a0
Rossdale PD, Pattle RE, Mahaffey LW.A SYNDROME in newborn thoroughbred foals, characterized by irregular respiration, convulsions, and lung pathology, has been described already1, and its resemblance to the respiratory distress syndrome of the newborn human noted. This latter condition is associated with the absence of the surface active lung lining complex, or lung surfactant2; this absence can be investigated by observation of bubbles obtained from the lung3. From normal lungs bubbles of very low surface tension which show great stability in air-saturated water can be obtained4,5. The present case demonstrates the common facto...
[On navicular bone fractures of the horse].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    September 1, 1967   Volume 109, Issue 9 487-496 
Wintzer HJ, Dämmrich K.No abstract available
Radiologic findings in equine choke.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 1, 1967   Volume 151, Issue 1 47-53 
Alexander JE.No abstract available
Congenital lordosis of the horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1967   Volume 57, Issue 3 417-428 
Rooney JR, Prickett ME.No abstract available
[The development of petechial hemorrhages on the under-surface of the tongue in the horse and its relation to infection with the virus of equine infectious anemia].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    June 1, 1967   Volume 14, Issue 4 348-365 
Steck W.No abstract available
Diagnosis and prevention of equine respiratiory diseases.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    May 1, 1967   Volume 62, Issue 5 426-433 
Searl RC.No abstract available
Evidence for N-acetyl-alpha-aspartyl-glutamate in horse brain.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    March 1, 1967   Volume 119, Issue 1 581-583 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(67)90494-8
Olson EJ, Wade LH, Auditore JV.No abstract available
Conduction velocities in the corticospinal tract of the horse.
Experimental neurology    March 1, 1967   Volume 17, Issue 3 357-363 doi: 10.1016/0014-4886(67)90112-4
Breazile JE, Jennings DP, Swafford BC.No abstract available
Experimental equine influenza in Chincoteague ponies.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    February 1, 1967   Volume 124, Issue 2 510-515 doi: 10.3181/00379727-124-31777
Cameron TP, Alford RH, Kasel JA, Harvey EW, Byrne RJ, Knight V.No abstract available
Endocrine cells in the antro-pyloric mucosa of the stomach.
Zeitschrift fur Zellforschung und mikroskopische Anatomie (Vienna, Austria : 1948)    January 1, 1967   Volume 81, Issue 4 474-486 doi: 10.1007/BF00541009
Solcia E, Vassallo G, Sampietro R.No abstract available
Pathological studies on bone marrow in equine infectious anemia. II. Histopathology of vertebral, sternal and femoral bone marrow.
National Institute of Animal Health quarterly    January 1, 1967   Volume 7, Issue 2 84-94 
Yamamoto H, Konno S.No abstract available
[Contributions on the diagnosis of tuberculosis in horses. 3. Tuberculin tests in experimentally infected horses].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    January 1, 1967   Volume 21, Issue 5 1235-1251 
Richter W.No abstract available
[Microscopic studies on lung dusts of mining horses].
Beitrage zur Silikose-Forschung    January 1, 1967   Volume 91 37-49 
Einbrodt HJ, Metze H.No abstract available
Microscopic lesions in the hearts of aged horses and mules.
Pathologia veterinaria    January 1, 1967   Volume 4, Issue 2 162-185 doi: 10.1177/030098586700400206
Marcus LC, Ross JN.The hearts of 23 aged equids (18 horses and 5 mules) were examined histologically. Major findings included arteriolosclerosis and intimal bodies in small muscular arteries, myocarditis, myocardial fibrosis, fatty metamorphosis of myocardial and Purkinje fibers, myocytolysis, and basophilic (mucinous) degeneration of myocardium. Lesions less frequently seen included chronic fibrotic valvulitis, acute myocardial necrosis, sarcosporidiosis, and hemosiderosis. Single cases of malignant melanoma, cartilaginous metaplasia of the I-V septum, mineralization of connective tissue in the I-V septum, and ...
[Demonstration of dermatophytes in dermatologically healthy horses]. Böhm KH.No abstract available
[Circumscribed elephantiasis of the penis. (Unusual case with preputialsite, cause by a horse biet 36 years earlier].
Il Fracastoro    November 1, 1966   Volume 59, Issue 6 768-776 
Noto L.No abstract available
Altered serum lipoproteins in equine infectious anemia: comparisons of values among normal horses and horses infected with Babesia caballi.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1966   Volume 27, Issue 121 1611-1621 
Gainer JH, Amster RL, Needham JW, Schilling KF.No abstract available
Field strains of western encephalitis virus in ponies: virologic, clinical, and pathologic observations.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1966   Volume 27, Issue 121 1591-1598 
Sponseller ML, Binn LN, Wooding WL, Yager RH.Four field strains of western encephalitis virus were inoculated subcutaneously or intracranially (i/c) into recently weaned ponies. After s/c inoculation, 3 of the 4 strains produced an inapparent infection with a short period of viraemia. The 4th strain produced viraemia, fever, and signs of central nervous system disease. Viraemia occurred after intracranial inoculation with each strain; however, a variation in clinical response occurred, ranging from an inapparent infection to death. The disease pattern was characterized by three successive phases: viraemia, increased body temperature, and...
Cleft palate in the horse.
British journal of plastic surgery    October 1, 1966   Volume 19, Issue 4 327-331 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1226(66)80074-7
Batstone JH.No abstract available
Granulomas associated with Micronema deletrix in the maxillae of a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1966   Volume 149, Issue 2 155-159 
Johnson KH, Johnson DW.No abstract available
[Spontaneous fracture of small metacarpal and metatarsal bones in race horses].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    June 1, 1966   Volume 53, Issue 6 404-407 
Uberreiter O.No abstract available
Functional and morphologic pathology of equine aortic insufficiency.
Pathologia veterinaria    January 1, 1966   Volume 3, Issue 2 137-158 doi: 10.1177/030098586600300203
Bishop SP, Cole CR, Smetzer DL.Twelve horses and 3 mules with grade II or louder prolonged diastolic murmurs were selected for functional and histopathologic study. Aortic insufficiency was demonstrated in all mules and in all except two horses on the basis of murmurs, jet lesions and/or pathologic and incompetent valve cusps. In 15 control animals lesions resulting in aortic insufficiency were not found. A thick fibrous band was present on all aortic valve cusps judged to be definitely insufficient. This band occurred at the line of valvular closure, parallel to the free edge, and allowed eversion of the peripheral portio...
[Activity determinations of serum enzymes in veterinary medicine. 3. F. LDH isoenzymes in various organs and the serum of diseases and healthy horses].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1966   Volume 108, Issue 1 33-46 
Gerber H.No abstract available
[On dust retention in lungs and lymph nodes of large animals (mine horses)].
Beitrage zur Silikose-Forschung    January 1, 1966   Volume 90 11-18 
Einbrodt HJ, Weller W.No abstract available
Equine centrilobular emphysema. With further observations on the pathology of heaves.
The American review of respiratory disease    January 1, 1966   Volume 93, Issue 1 17-21 doi: 10.1164/arrd.1966.93.1.17
Foley FD, Lowell FC.No abstract available
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