Analyze Diet

Topic:Physiology

The physiology of horses encompasses the study of the biological functions and processes that occur within the equine body. This includes the examination of various systems such as the cardiovascular, respiratory, musculoskeletal, digestive, and nervous systems. Understanding equine physiology is essential for comprehending how horses adapt to different environmental conditions, perform physical activities, and respond to health challenges. Research in this field often focuses on the mechanisms of energy metabolism, thermoregulation, and muscle function during exercise, as well as the physiological responses to stress and disease. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the diverse aspects of equine physiology, providing insights into the biological processes that support the health and performance of horses.
Effects of various doses of ovine corticotrophin-releasing hormone on plasma and saliva cortisol concentrations in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    March 4, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 3 361-364 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.3.361
Reijerkerk EP, Visser EK, van Reenen CG, van der Kolk JH.To compare the effects of IV administration of various doses of ovine corticotrophin-releasing hormone (oCRH) on plasma and saliva cortisol concentrations in healthy horses and determine whether an oCRH challenge test protocol is valid for use in adult horses. Methods: 24 healthy Warmblood horses. PROCEDURES-Each horse received oCRH in saline (0.9% NaCl) via IV administration at a dose of 0 (control treatment), 0.01, 0.1, or 1.0 Mg/kg (6 horses/group). Jugular blood and saliva samples were collected simultaneously 15 minutes before and immediately prior to injection (baseline); data from these...
Determination of cardiac output in anesthetized neonatal foals by use of two pulse wave analysis methods.
American journal of veterinary research    March 4, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 3 334-339 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.3.334
Shih AC, Giguère S, Sanchez LC, Valverde A, Jankunas HJ, Robertson SA.To compare cardiac output (CO) measured by lithium arterial pressure waveform analysis (PULSECO) and CO measured by transpulmonary pulse contour analysis (PICCO) in anesthetized foals, with CO measured by use of lithium dilution (LIDCO) considered the criterion-referenced standard. Methods: 6 neonatal (1- to 4-day-old) foals that weighed 38 to 45 kg. Procedures-Foals were anesthetized and instrumented to measure direct blood pressure, heart rate, arterial blood gases, and CO. The CO was measured by use of PULSECO, PICCO, and LIDCO techniques. Measurements were converted to specific CO (sCO) va...
Poor horse traders: large mammals trade survival for reproduction during the process of feralization.
Proceedings. Biological sciences    March 4, 2009   Volume 276, Issue 1663 1911-1919 doi: 10.1098/rspb.2008.1828
Grange S, Duncan P, Gaillard JM.We investigated density dependence on the demographic parameters of a population of Camargue horses (Equus caballus), individually monitored and unmanaged for eight years. We also analysed the contributions of individual demographic parameters to changes in the population growth rates. The decrease in resources caused a loss of body condition. Adult male survival was not affected, but the survival of foals and adult females decreased with increasing density. Prime-aged females maintained high reproductive performance at high density, and their survival decreased. The higher survival of adult m...
[Regeneration of testicular tissue and restoration of rat fertility in xenotransplantation of enriched fetal cell cultures in bilateral abdominal cryptorchism].
Urologiia (Moscow, Russia : 1999)    March 3, 2009   Issue 6 7-11 
Kamalov AA, Gukhikh GT, KirpatovskiÄ­ VI, ZaraÄ­skiÄ­ EI, Poltavtseva RA, Plotnikov EIu, Kudriavtsev IuV, Efremov EA, Obokhotov DA.The study of cell cultures enriched with stem and progenitor cells in the treatment of experimental hypergonadotropic hypogonadism was made on 30 white non-inbred rats with experimental cryptorchism who have undergone xenotransplantation of human fetal enriched cell cultures. Spermatogenic epithelium on histological sections was studied on day 14 and 28 after xenotransplantation with calculation of the spermatogenesis index. The fertility index was estimated for each of the groups. Transplantation of enriched cell cultures enhances efficacy of restoration of adequate germinogenic and spermatog...
Feeding grape seed extract to horses: effects on health, intake and digestion.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    March 1, 2009   Volume 3, Issue 3 380-384 doi: 10.1017/S1751731108003509
Davies JA, Krebs GL, Barnes A, Pant I, McGrath PJ.A feeding trial involving four Thoroughbred race horses was undertaken to establish whether inclusion of grape seed extract (GSE) in the diet of horses undergoing mild exercise had any effects on their general health, intake and digestion. Supplementation with GSE had no effect on either feed or water intake of the horses and the supplement was readily palatable to the horses at all levels of inclusion. Feeding GSE caused no adverse effects in terms of animal health (temperature, pulse and respirations rates), and there were some positive effects related to a presumed alteration in fermentatio...
Characterization of the magic angle effect in the equine deep digital flexor tendon using a low-field magnetic resonance system. Spriet M, McKnight A.Three isolated equine limbs were imaged with a low-field magnetic resonance system with a vertical magnetic field. Each limb was scanned in multiple positions with mild variation of the angle between the magnetic field and the long axis of the limb. When the long axis of the limb was not perpendicular to the magnetic field, a linear hyperintense signal was present at the palmar aspect of one of the deep digital flexor tendon lobes, at the level of the navicular bone and collateral sesamoidean ligaments, in proton density and T1-weighted pulse sequences. With increased angulation of the limb, t...
Ultrasonographic assessment of laryngohyoid position as a predictor of dorsal displacement of the soft palate in horses. Chalmers HJ, Yeager AE, Ducharme N.Dorsal displacement of the soft palate is an important cause of poor performance in racehorses, yet its etiology is not fully understood. Diagnosis requires treadmill videoendoscopy, which is not widely available. The relationship of the larynx, the hyoid apparatus, and the remainder of the skull may be important in predisposing horses to dorsal displacement of the soft palate. We hypothesized that this relationship could be accurately assessed in unsedated horses through ultrasonographic examination. Fifty-six racehorses presented for evaluation of poor performance were subjected to treadmill...
Effect of loading on the organization of the collagen fibril network in juvenile equine articular cartilage.
Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society    February 27, 2009   Volume 27, Issue 9 1226-1234 doi: 10.1002/jor.20866
Brama PA, Holopainen J, van Weeren PR, Firth EC, Helminen HJ, Hyttinen MM.We investigated the effects of exercise-induced loading on the collagen network of equine articular cartilage. Collagen fibril architecture at a site (1) subjected to intermittent high-intensity loading was compared with that of an adjacent site (2) sustaining continuous low-level load. From horses exposed to forced exercise (CONDEX group) or not (PASTEX group), the spatial parallelism of fibrils and the orientation angle between fibrils and the surface at depths 9 microm apart through cartilage from surface to tidemark were determined using polarized light microscopy, and expressed as paralle...
Influence of calcium chloride on the cardio-respiratory effects of a bolus of enoximone in isoflurane anaesthetized ponies.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    February 26, 2009   Volume 36, Issue 2 101-109 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2008.00435.x
Schauvliege S, Van den Eede A, Duchateau L, Pille F, Vlaminck L, Gasthuys F.To investigate the influence of calcium chloride (CaCl(2)) on the cardio-respiratory effects of enoximone in isoflurane anaesthetized ponies. Methods: Prospective consecutive experimental trial. Animals Six healthy ponies, weighing 287 +/- 55 kg were included in this study. Methods: After sedation (romifidine, 80 microg kg(-1)), anaesthesia was induced with midazolam (0.06 mg kg(-1)) and ketamine (2.2 mg kg(-1)) and maintained with isoflurane in oxygen. The ponies' lungs were ventilated to maintain normocapnia. After 90 minutes, a bolus of enoximone (0.5 mg kg(-1)) was administered, followed b...
Effect of detomidine on visceral and somatic nociception and duodenal motility in conscious adult horses.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    February 26, 2009   Volume 36, Issue 2 162-172 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2008.00441.x
Elfenbein JR, Sanchez LC, Robertson SA, Cole CA, Sams R.To evaluate the effects of detomidine on visceral and somatic nociception, heart and respiratory rates, sedation, and duodenal motility and to correlate these effects with serum detomidine concentrations. Methods: Nonrandomized, experimental trial. Methods: Five adult horses, each with a permanent gastric cannula weighing 534 +/- 46 kg. Methods: Visceral nociception was evaluated by colorectal (CRD) and duodenal distension (DD). The duodenal balloon was used to assess motility. Somatic nociception was assessed via thermal threshold (TT). Nose-to-ground (NTG) height was used as a measure of sed...
Thyreotropic effect of human Chorionic Gonadotropin (hCG) in mares at estrus.
Immunopharmacology and immunotoxicology    February 25, 2009   Volume 31, Issue 2 299-303 doi: 10.1080/08923970802668500
Rizzo A, Mutinati M, Spedicato M, Minoia G, Trisolini C, Punzi S, Roscino MT, Jirillo F, Sciorsci R.The beta-subunits of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) share a high homology, just like the ectodomains of their receptors, do. As a consequence, hCG was shown to exert a thyrotropic action in humans and hamsters. This study aimed to investigate whether hCG, used to induce ovulation, displays a thyrotropic effect in the equine species too. Forty mares at estrus were divided in two groups; 20 were intravenously treated with sterile saline solution (NaCl 0.9%) (group A); 20 were intravenously treated with 4000 I.U. of hCG (group B). All the mares were artif...
Equine cytochrome P450 2C92: cDNA cloning, expression and initial characterization.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    February 24, 2009   Volume 485, Issue 1 49-55 doi: 10.1016/j.abb.2009.02.009
DiMaio Knych HK, DeStefano Shields C, Buckpitt AR, Stanley SD.Substantial gaps exist in our knowledge of the metabolic clearance of therapeutic agents in horses. Accordingly, a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase in the 2C family was cloned from an equine liver, sequenced and expressed in a baculovirus expression system. Catalytic activities of the recombinant protein were measured with a number of substrates. The protein, assigned CYP2C92, displayed optimal catalytic activity with diclofenac using molar ratios of CYP2C92 to NADPH CYP450 reductase of 1:18. Addition of cytochrome b(5) to diclofenac incubations had no significant effect on metabolic turnover. CY...
A multifrequency HYSCORE study of weakly coupled nuclei in frozen solutions of high-spin aquometmyoglobin.
Inorganic chemistry    February 21, 2009   Volume 47, Issue 23 11294-11304 doi: 10.1021/ic8016886
García-Rubio I, Fittipaldi M, Trandafir F, Van Doorslaer S.In this work, we show the extreme power of multifrequency HYSCORE (hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy) techniques to unravel the hyperfine interactions of the electron spin with the remote nuclei in the heme site of high-spin ferric heme proteins. Horse heart aquo-metmyoglobin was used as a model system to demonstrate the power of these techniques. Experimental evidence was collected and assigned to protons of the proximal histidine ligand, to the mesoprotons of the heme ligand, and to two different protons of the distal water ligand. The latter difference relates to the stabilization...
Biological and anatomical evidence for kisspeptin regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis of estrous horse mares.
Endocrinology    February 19, 2009   Volume 150, Issue 6 2813-2821 doi: 10.1210/en.2008-1698
Magee C, Foradori CD, Bruemmer JE, Arreguin-Arevalo JA, McCue PM, Handa RJ, Squires EL, Clay CM.The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effects of kisspeptin (KiSS) on LH and FSH secretion in the seasonally estrous mare and to examine the distribution and connectivity of GnRH and KiSS neurons in the equine preoptic area (POA) and hypothalamus. The diestrous mare has a threshold serum gonadotropin response to iv rodent KiSS decapeptide (rKP-10) administration between 1.0 and 500 microg. Administration of 500 microg and 1.0 mg rKP-10 elicited peak, mean, and area under the curve LH and FSH responses indistinguishable to that of 25 microg GnRH iv, although a single iv injection...
Development of an intra-lamellar microdialysis method for laminitis investigations in horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    February 14, 2009   Volume 183, Issue 1 22-26 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2009.01.003
Nourian AR, Mills PC, Pollitt CC.Microdialysis (MD) was used for continuous monitoring of the lamellar extracellular fluid (ECF) in six mature healthy Standardbred horses. MD probes were introduced into the lamellar tissue under local anaesthesia. Following intravenous injection of gentamicin (5mg/kg), MD and serum samples were collected for 24h and analysed using a sensitive ELISA test for gentamicin and fluorescence polarization immunoassay for urea concentrations. Calibration of probes was performed through in vivo urea recovery and in vitro gentamicin and urea recovery. Data obtained from different body compartments were ...
Circadian intraocular pressure rhythms in athletic horses under different lighting regime.
Chronobiology international    February 13, 2009   Volume 26, Issue 2 348-358 doi: 10.1080/07420520902751035
Bertolucci C, Giudice E, Fazio F, Piccione G.The present study was undertaken to investigate the existence of intraocular pressure (IOP) rhythms in athletic thoroughbred horses maintained under a 24 h cycle of light and darkness (LD) or under constant light (LL) or constant dark (DD) conditions. We identified an IOP circadian rhythm that is entrained to the 24 h LD cycle. IOP was low during the dark phase and high during the light phase, with a peak at the end of the light phase (ZT10). The circadian rhythm of IOP persisted in DD (with a peak at CT9.5), demonstrating an endogenous component in IOP rhythm. As previously shown in other mam...
In vivo and in vitro effects of interleukin-1beta on equine oocyte maturation and on steroidogenesis and prostaglandin synthesis in granulosa and cumulus cells.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    February 13, 2009   Volume 21, Issue 2 265-273 doi: 10.1071/rd08046
Caillaud M, Gérard N.We analysed the effect of interleukin-1 on oocyte maturation and on steroid and prostaglandin production by equine granulosa and cumulus cells. In Experiment 1, interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) was injected into the growing dominant follicle, which was punctured 38 h later. Follicular fluid was assayed for steroids and prostaglandin-F2alpha (PGF2alpha). Granulosa cells were analysed for 3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3beta-HSD), progesterone receptor (PR), cyclooxygenase 1 and 2 (Cox 1 and Cox 2) and steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) mRNAs. In Experiment 2, cumulus-oocyte complexe...
Use of a stand-alone pressure plate for the objective evaluation of forelimb symmetry in sound ponies at walk and trot.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    February 13, 2009   Volume 183, Issue 3 305-309 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2008.12.012
Oosterlinck M, Pille F, Back W, Dewulf J, Gasthuys F.Subtle lameness in horses may be difficult to diagnose and methods to evaluate lameness objectively are useful when equine clinicians fail to reach a consensus. The aim of this study was to determine whether equine pressure plate measurements are repeatable when used to calculate forelimb loading (peak vertical pressure [PVP], peak vertical force [PVF], vertical impulse [VI]) and symmetry ratios, and to establish if these data are similar to the 'gold standard' force plate values. Since plate dimensions are relatively small, ponies were used to enable recordings to be taken from both forelimbs...
Identification of protein tyrosine phosphatases and dual-specificity phosphatases in mammalian spermatozoa and their role in sperm motility and protein tyrosine phosphorylation.
Biology of reproduction    February 11, 2009   Volume 80, Issue 6 1239-1252 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod.108.073486
González-Fernández L, Ortega-Ferrusola C, Macias-Garcia B, Salido GM, Peña FJ, Tapia JA.Protein tyrosine kinases have important roles in spermatozoa; however, little is known about the presence and regulation in these cells of their counterparts in signaling, namely, protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) and dual-specificity phosphatases (DSPs). The objectives of the present study were to identify PTPs and DSPs in boar, stallion, and dog spermatozoa; to characterize their subcellular distribution; and to investigate the roles of tyrosine phosphatases in maintenance of protein tyrosine phosphorylation level and in sperm motility. Using Western blotting with specific antibodies in b...
The Streptococcus equi prophage-encoded protein SEQ2045 is a hyaluronan-specific hyaluronate lyase that is produced during equine infection.
Microbiology (Reading, England)    February 10, 2009   Volume 155, Issue Pt 2 443-449 doi: 10.1099/mic.0.020826-0
Lindsay AM, Zhang M, Mitchell Z, Holden MTG, Waller AS, Sutcliffe IC, Black GW.Streptococcus equi causes equine 'strangles'. Hyaluronate lyases, which degrade connective tissue hyaluronan and chondroitins, are thought to facilitate streptococcal invasion of the host. However, prophage-encoded hyaluronate lyases are hyaluronan-specific and are thought to be primarily involved in the degradation of the hyaluronan capsule of streptococci during bacteriophage infection. To understand the role of prophage-encoded hyaluronate lyases further, we have biochemically characterized such a hyaluronate lyase, SEQ2045 from S. equi, and have shown that it is produced during equine infe...
Parental genomes mix in mule and human cell nuclei.
Chromosoma    February 7, 2009   Volume 118, Issue 3 335-347 doi: 10.1007/s00412-008-0200-6
Hepperger C, Mayer A, Merz J, Vanderwall DK, Dietzel S.Whether chromosome sets inherited from father and mother occupy separate spaces in the cell nucleus is a question first asked over 110 years ago. Recently, the nuclear organization of the genome has come increasingly into focus as an important level of epigenetic regulation. In this context, it is indispensable to know whether or not parental genomes are spatially separated. Genome separation had been demonstrated for plant hybrids and for the early mammalian embryo. Conclusive studies for somatic mammalian cell nuclei are lacking because homologous chromosomes from the two parents cannot be d...
Hyperactivation of stallion sperm is required for successful in vitro fertilization of equine oocytes.
Biology of reproduction    February 4, 2009   Volume 81, Issue 1 199-206 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod.108.074880
McPartlin LA, Suarez SS, Czaya CA, Hinrichs K, Bedford-Guaus SJ.Capacitation is a complex and not well-understood process that encompasses all the molecular changes sperm must undergo to successfully fertilize an oocyte. In vitro fertilization has remained elusive in the horse, as evidenced by low in vitro fertilization (IVF) rates (0%-33%); moreover, only two foals have ever been produced using IVF. Incubation of stallion sperm in modified Whittens supplemented with bovine serum albumin and sodium bicarbonate yielded significant rates of time-dependent protein tyrosine phosphorylation and induced acrosomal exocytosis, consistent with capacitation. The obj...
Calprotectin in myeloid and epithelial cells of laminae from horses with black walnut extract-induced laminitis.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    January 30, 2009   Volume 23, Issue 1 174-181 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2008.0241.x
Faleiros RR, Nuovo GJ, Belknap JK.Laminar inflammation is one of the earliest events in equine laminitis. Calprotectin (CP), a Damage-Associated Molecular Pattern protein, is overexpressed in inflammatory conditions of human skin. Objective: CP is overexpressed in the laminar epidermis of horses with black walnut extract (BWE)-induced laminitis. Methods: Twenty adult horses. Methods: Experimental study. Horses were allocated to one of 4 groups. BWE was administered to horses in 3 groups, which were sampled 1.5, 3, and 12 hours (LAM) later. CP was visualized by immunohistochemistry. Laminar leukocyte counts and intensity of lam...
Thyroid function in anhidrotic horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    January 30, 2009   Volume 23, Issue 1 168-173 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2008.0217.x
Breuhaus BA.This study was performed to determine whether anhidrotic horses have altered thyroid function compared with horses that sweat normally. Objective: Anhidrotic horses have normal thyroid function. Methods: Ten client-owned horses with clinical signs of anhidrosis were paired with 10 horses living in the same environment that had normal sweat production. Methods: Horses were diagnosed as having normal sweat production or being anhidrotic based on responses to intradermal injections of terbutaline and physiologic responses to lunging exercise. Control horses were selected from the same environment...
Morphological characterization and meiotic competence of oocytes collected from filly ovaries.
Theriogenology    January 30, 2009   Volume 71, Issue 7 1046-1053 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2008.11.011
Mlodawska W, Okolski A.The effect of filly age on morphology of the ovaries, collected oocytes and their capacity for in vitro maturation (IVM) was examined. The ovaries of slaughtered fillies were classified into three groups, according to filly age: (I) <10 month old (<10MF); (II) approximately 1 year old (1YF); and (III) approximately 1.5 year old (1.5YF). The ovaries of mares were used as a control group. Ovarian morphology and collected oocytes were evaluated. Only oocytes with expanded (Ex) and compact (Cm) cumuli were used for IVM. In <10MF, 1YF, 1.5YF and mare groups, corpora lutea were found in the...
Can programmed cell death be induced in post-ejaculatory bull and stallion spermatozoa?
Theriogenology    January 25, 2009   Volume 71, Issue 7 1138-1146 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2008.12.006
Hendricks KE, Hansen PJ.Apoptosis is common during spermatogenesis. Here, it was tested whether apoptosis could be induced in sperm after ejaculation. There were several lines of evidence to indicate that sperm are resistant to induction of apoptosis. First, incubation of bull sperm at temperatures characteristic of normothermia (38.5 degrees C) or heat shock (40 and 41 degrees C) for 4h did not increase the proportion of sperm positive for the TUNEL reaction. There was also no reduction in mitochondrial polarity caused by exposure to 40 or 41 degrees C. Incubation at 38.5 degrees C (least-squares mean+/-SEM=4.0+/-1....
Colloidal centrifugation with Androcoll-E prolongs stallion sperm motility, viability and chromatin integrity.
Animal reproduction science    January 24, 2009   Volume 116, Issue 1-2 119-128 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2009.01.008
Johannisson A, Morrell JM, Thorén J, Jönsson M, Dalin AM, Rodriguez-Martinez H.The objective was to investigate the changes in stallion sperm quality (sperm motility, viability, membrane integrity and chromatin integrity) occurring during cool storage, and to study the effect of sperm selection by single layer colloidal centrifugation on these parameters of sperm quality. Spermatozoa from 3 stallions (10 ejaculates, 3-4 per stallion) were selected by centrifugation through a single layer of colloid (SLC). The resulting sperm preparations and the control samples (extended but unselected semen samples) were stored at 5 degrees C for 48h. Assessments of sperm quality, such ...
Implications of different degrees of arytenoid cartilage abduction on equine upper airway characteristics.
Equine veterinary journal    January 24, 2009   Volume 40, Issue 7 629-635 doi: 10.2746/042516408x330329
Rakesh V, Ducharme NG, Cheetham J, Datta AK, Pease AP.The necessary degree of arytenoid cartilage abduction (ACA) to restore airway patency at maximal exercise has not been determined. Objective: Use computational fluid dynamics modelling to measure the effects of different degrees of ACA on upper airway characteristics of horses during exercise. Objective: Maximal ACA by laryngoplasty is necessary to restore normal peak airflow and pressure in Thoroughbred racehorses with laryngeal hemiplegia. Methods: The upper airway was modeled with the left arytenoid in 3 different positions: maximal abduction; 88% cross-sectional area of the rima glottis; a...
Pharmacokinetics of carbetocin, a long-acting oxytocin analogue, following intravenous administration in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 24, 2009   Volume 40, Issue 7 658-661 doi: 10.2746/042516408x334343
Schramme AR, Pinto CR, Davis J, Whisnant CS, Whitacre MD.Current therapy protocols to treat persistent post mating endometritis and retained fetal membranes in mares typically include the administration of ecbolic drugs. Evaluation of the pharmacokinetics and tolerability of carbetocin, a long-acting oxytocin analogue, after i.v. administration is required. Objective: To determine the pharmacokinetic parameters (principally half-life) of carbetocin in horses. Methods: Five mature mares and one gelding received 0.175 mg carbetocin i.v. All animals were monitored periodically throughout the study for elevation in rectal temperature, heart rate, respir...
Screening, quantification, and confirmation of phenylbutazone and oxyphenbutazone in equine plasma by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Journal of analytical toxicology    January 24, 2009   Volume 33, Issue 1 41-50 doi: 10.1093/jat/33.1.41
You Y, Uboh CE, Soma LR, Guan F, Li X, Rudy JA, Chen J.A sensitive liquid chromatographic-tandem mass spectrometric method was developed and validated for screening, quantification, and confirmation of phenylbutazone and oxyphenbutazone in equine plasma. Analytes were recovered from plasma by liquid-liquid extraction followed by separation in a reversed-phase column and identification by mass spectrometry with selected reaction monitoring in negative electrospray ionization mode. Extraction recovery for both analytes was >80%. Limits of detection, quantification, and confirmation for both analytes were 0.01 microg/mL (S/N>or= 3), 0.05 microg...