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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.
Effect of rider and riding style on deformation of the front hoof wall in warmblood horses.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 81-85 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05125.x
Summerley HL, Thomason JJ, Bignell WW.A rider modifies the weight distribution and dynamic balance of the horse. But what effect does a rider have on the mechanical behaviour of the hoof during each stance phase? Does riding style have any effect on this behaviour? We attempted to answer these questions using strains recorded from 5 rosette strain gauges glued to the surface of the front hooves of 4 Warmblood horses. Comparisons were made between strains with and without a rider, and when the rider was sitting, rising at a trot, or in a forward seated position. The change in strains from trot to lead or nonlead at a canter, and th...
Batimastat (BB-94) inhibits matrix metalloproteinases of equine laminitis.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 119-124 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05130.x
Pollitt CC, Pass MA, Pollitt S.A method for culturing explants of lamellar hoof was developed to investigate the process of lamellar separation that occurs in laminitis. Explants, consisting of hoof wall, dermal and epidermal lamellae and the adjacent sub-lamellar connective tissue remained intact when cultured in tissue culture medium for 2 days. However, when cultured in the presence of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activator aminophenylmercuric acetate (APMA), the lamellae separated when tension was applied by pulling the hoof wall in an opposite direction to the connective tissue. The separation occurred between th...
Equine laminitis: its development coincides with increased sublamellar blood flow.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 125-132 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05131.x
Pollitt CC, Davies CT.The effect of alimentary carbohydrate overload on hoof temperature was investigated to determine the state of the sublamellar vasculature preceding the onset of equine laminitis. Hoof, core and ambient temperatures and heart rate were logged continuously in 21 mature Standardbred horses kept in an environmental chamber set at 10 degrees C. Recording hoof temperature was a successful, noninvasive, method to measure indirectly, shifts in digital blood flow against a background of cold induced, physiological, vasoconstriction. High hoof temperatures were assumed to indicate digital vasodilation a...
In vitro attenuation of impact shock in equine digits.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 96-102 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05127.x
Lanovaz JL, Clayton HM, Watson LG.This study was designed to test the impact characteristics of the equine digit in vitro with the objective of providing a better understanding of the role of the digital structures in the attenuation of impact shock. Uni-axial accelerometers were mounted on cadaver digits on the distolateral hoof wall, the proximolateral hoof wall, the dorsal surface of the second phalanx, and the mid-lateral first phalanx. The hoof-mounted accelerometers were aligned with the hoof tubules while the bone-mounted accelerometers were oriented along the longitudinal axis of the bone. Each digit was mounted in a t...
Preliminary observations in in vitro development of equine embryo after ICSI.
Reproduction, nutrition, development    February 5, 1999   Volume 38, Issue 6 653-663 doi: 10.1051/rnd:19980607
Guignot F, Ottogalli M, Yvon JM, Magistrini M.The objective of this study was to perform intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) on in vitro matured equine oocytes and to improve in vitro embryonic development on Vero cells after activation of the microinjected oocytes with calcium ionophore. After maturation (23 or 40 h, 38.5 degrees C, 5% CO2), the cumulus-oocyte complexes were denuded, centrifuged and all oocytes exhibiting the first polar body were microinjected. ICSI was performed using fresh semen from three fertile stallions. Microinjected oocytes were activated with calcium ionophore A23187 (10 min, 10 microM) and cultured individ...
Exploring the possible functions of equine hoof wall tubules.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 10-14 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05116.x
Kasapi MA, Gosline JM.Possible functions of equine hoof wall tubules were investigated in this study. Hydration tests were conducted on blocks of hoof wall tissue in order to test the hypothesis that hollow tubules facilitate the conduction of water vapour distally. Although water loss or gain was inhibited through the outer wall surface, the increase in surface area provided by medullary spaces was ineffective in facilitating hydration through the face with exposed tubule ends. Rather, hollow tubules appear to allow for a higher dehydration rate through their exposed ends. Analysis of medullary space indicates tha...
Cytokeratins of the equine hoof wall, chestnut and skin: bio- and immunohisto-chemistry.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 66-80 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05124.x
Wattle O.The equine skin and its appendages (chestnut, hoof capsule, ergot, sebaceous glands, sweat glands and hair) consist mainly of keratinocytes. The intermediate filament cytoskeleton of these cells in involved in specialised functions, such as mechanical co-ordination of the cytoskeleton of the cell or tissue. In this study, 7 monoclonal antibodies, one polyclonal antibody and immunoblot analysis were used to characterise cytokeratins (separated by 1- and 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis) from the hoof wall and chestnut. The tissue distribution of these cytokeratins was studied by immunohistoche...
Effects of season and diet on tensile strength and mineral content of the equine hoof wall.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 46-50 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05121.x
Ley WB, Scott Pleasant R, Dunnington EA.Studies evaluating nutritional and seasonal influences on hoof strength and composition in horses, as well as the scientific justification for feeding supplements to improve hoof quality, are lacking. The horseman and veterinarian need controlled studies in this area to make informed decisions. This project quantified, in 2 trials, relative elasticity, tensile strength, % moisture, and mineral composition of hooves of 48 mature Thoroughbred mares maintained on different nutritional/management regimens, sampled quarterly over 12 month periods. Tensile strength was positively associated with sul...
Decreased glucose metabolism causes separation of hoof lamellae in vitro: a trigger for laminitis?
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 133-138 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05132.x
Pass MA, Pollitt S, Pollitt CC.Explants of horses' hooves remained intact for up to 8 days when incubated in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (D-MEM) containing 25 mmol/l glucose but separated within 36 h when incubated in saline. The separation occurred between the basal epidermal cells and their basement membrane which is characteristic of the hoof separation that occurs in laminitis. Separation of hoof explants was prevented by addition of glucose to saline and was induced by adding 2-deoxyglucose or aminophenylmercuric acetate to D-MEM. Glucose consumption by the hoof explants was inhibited by 2-deoxyglucose and aminoph...
Fetal development of the white line (Zona alba) of the equine hoof.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 1999   Issue 26 22-26 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb05118.x
Bragulla H, Budras KD, Reilly JD.The fetal development of the white line (Zona alba) in the equine hoof is described. Its specific structure of lamellar and interlamellar horn, which in turn is composed of cap and terminal horn, is formed in the second half of the hoof's fetal development. In equine fetuses with a crown-rump length of less than 550 mm, the hoof capsule lacks a 'characteristic' white line since no borders between stratum medium, stratum internum and sole horn are discernible. In the hoof of an equine fetus with a crown-rump length of 550 mm, a narrow white line has taken shape. Its shallow lamellae are arrange...
The development of microcracking and failure in bone depends on the loading mode to which it is adapted.
The Journal of experimental biology    February 4, 1999   Volume 202, Issue Pt 5 543-552 doi: 10.1242/jeb.202.5.543
Reilly GC, Currey JD.During locomotion, the anterior cortex of the equine radius is loaded predominantly in tension, the posterior predominantly in compression. The anterior cortex is relatively strong in tension, the posterior in compression. We investigated the pattern of failure of specimens from the two cortices using laser scanning confocal microscopy. All specimens were loaded in four-point bending to increasingly higher loads. We quantified the amount of diffuse microcracking on the tensile side of these specimens by observing the amount of light emitted under laser illumination. The amount of light emitted...
Sarcoplasmic reticulum responses to repeated sprints are affected by conditioning of horses.
Journal of animal science    February 3, 1999   Volume 76, Issue 12 3065-3071 doi: 10.2527/1998.76123065x
Wilson JA, Kronfeld DS, Gay LS, Williams JH, Wilson TM, Lindinger MI.Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) responses to repeated sprints and to physical conditioning were studied in 10 Quarter Horses. Exercise tests (four repeated sprints on a treadmill) were conducted before and after 12 wk of sprint conditioning. Muscle samples from the middle gluteal muscle were taken before and after each exercise test, and SR vesicles were isolated. Calcium uptake was determined spectrophotometrically using antipyrylazo III, and Ca2+-ATPase activity was determined using an enzyme-linked optical assay. Conditioning increased calcium uptake rate and Ca2+-ATPase activity by 14 and 38%,...
Human chorionic gonadotropin induces an inverse regulation of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein messenger ribonucleic acid in theca interna and granulosa cells of equine preovulatory follicles.
Endocrinology    February 2, 1999   Volume 140, Issue 2 667-674 doi: 10.1210/endo.140.2.6499
Kerban A, Boerboom D, Sirois J.The time- and gonadotropin-dependent regulation of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) has not been characterized in vivo in preovulatory follicles of large monoovulatory species or sexually mature animals. The objectives of this study were to clone equine StAR and describe the regulation of its messenger RNA (mRNA) in equine follicles after the administration of an ovulatory dose of hCG. The screening of an equine follicle complementary DNA (cDNA) library with a mouse StAR cDNA probe revealed two forms of equine StAR that differ only in the length of their 3'-untranslated region (3'...
Morphology of the oocyte-follicular connection in the mare.
Anatomy and embryology    January 30, 1999   Volume 199, Issue 1 21-28 doi: 10.1007/s004290050205
Brück I, Greve T, Hyttel P.The present study characterised the oocyte-follicular connection (i.e., oocyte fixation site) in Graafian follicles of the mare morphologically. Antral follicles were dissected in toto from ovaries obtained from oestrous, dioestrous and transitional mares after slaughter. The location of the cumulus oophorus complex in relation to the ovulation fossa, the width and density of the blood vessels surrounding the cumulus oophorus complex, the relative dimensions and histological aspects of the cumulus oophorus were investigated. For ultrastructural analysis of the junctional regions, cumulus-oocyt...
Matrix metalloproteinase activity in equine synovial fluid: influence of age, osteoarthritis, and osteochondrosis.
Annals of the rheumatic diseases    January 30, 1999   Volume 57, Issue 11 697-699 doi: 10.1136/ard.57.11.697
Brama PA, TeKoppele JM, Beekman B, van Weeren PR, Barneveld A.To investigate the influence of age, osteoarthritis (OA), and osteochondrosis (OC) on the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity in the synovial fluid (SF) of equine joints. Methods: SF was collected from normal and osteoarthritic metacarpophalangeal joints (normal: 14 adult, 28 juvenile; OA: 22 adult). And from normal and osteochondrotic tarsocrural joints (5 months: 11 normal, 8 OC; 11 months: 7 normal, 6 OC). Subsequently, overall MMP activity was measured. Results: The level of active MMPs was almost twofold higher in SF from juvenile horses (age up to 11 months) than in SF from mature an...
Variability of oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) in different animal species.
Free radical research    January 30, 1999   Volume 29, Issue 5 399-408 doi: 10.1080/10715769800300441
Ninfali P, Aluigi G.The oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) was measured both in whole (ORAC-T) and deproteinized (ORAC-AS) plasma samples of human, pig, cow, rabbit, dog, cat, sheep, horse, dolphin, turkey, guinea-hen and chicken. In the 12 species, ORAC-T data, expressed as micromoles of peroxyl radicals trapped by 11 of sample, were found scattered between 8,600 and 23,000 micromol/l. The species with the highest ORAC-T values were cat among mammals and chicken among avies. ORAC-AS values ranged between 600 and 2000 micromol/l, with the highest values found in dolphin and sheep among mammals, while chick...
Studies on equine lipid metabolism. 1. A fluorometric method for the measurement of lipolytic activity in isolated adipocytes of rats and horses.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    January 29, 1999   Volume 45, Issue 10 635-643 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1998.tb00868.x
Breidenbach A, Fuhrmann H, Busche R, Sallmann HP.A simple and sensitive method for direct and continuous monitoring of free fatty acid (FFA) release, by measuring the pH-sensitive change in relative fluorescence intensity of seminaphthofluorescein (SNAFL-1) is described. The method was designed to use a small number of adipocytes isolated from fat pads of rats and biopsy specimens of horses for the detection of decreasing pH in fat cell suspensions caused by released FFA into the incubation medium. Species specific differences of lipolysis were demonstrated when adipocytes of rats and horses are incubated with stimulators or inhibitors of li...
Effects of intravenously administered glycopyrrolate in anesthetized horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 27, 1999   Volume 40, Issue 1 29-32 
Dyson DH, Pascoe PJ, McDonell WN.The purpose of this study was to determine the heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) effect of glycopyrrolate in anesthetized horses with low HR ( 5 beats/min within 10 min), glycopyrrolate (same dose) was administered. Heart rate increased by > 5 beats/min in 3 out of 9 horses following the initial glycopyrrolate treatment. Overall changes in HR and mean BP were not significantly different, while systolic and diastolic BP increased significantly (P 5 beats/min, which was significant. A significant increase in BP was produced following treatment with 2.5 micrograms/kg BW, but not followi...
Purification of two equine pepsinogens by use of high-performance liquid chromatography.
American journal of veterinary research    January 26, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 1 114-118 
Sayegh AI, Anderson NV, Harding JW, Cerpovicz P, DeBowes RM, Ritter RC, Baker GJ, Reeck G.To purify and characterize pepsinogens in equine gastric mucosa. Methods: Stomachs collected from 2 healthy horses at necropsy. Methods: After collection, stomachs were placed immediately in ice before storage at -48 C. After slow thawing, the mucosa was scraped off while the tissue was immersed in 0.1M potassium phosphate (pH 7.4) at 4 C, then was homogenized. The filtered extract was subjected to anion-exchange chromatography. Fractions that were found to contain pepsin or pepsinogen were further chromatographed. Individual fractions were tested for pepsinogen or pepsin content by monitoring...
Culture and characterization of equine terminal arch endothelial cells and hoof keratinocytes.
American journal of veterinary research    January 26, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 1 128-132 
Wunn D, Wardrop KJ, Meyers K, Kramer J, Ragle C.To develop methods to isolate, culture, and characterize equine hoof endothelial cells (EC) and keratinocytes. Methods: Cells harvested from the forelimbs of 8 horses. Methods: EC were obtained via catheters placed in the palmar digital arteries of the disarticulated lower portion of the forelimbs from 4 horses that had been heparinized prior to euthanasia. Phosphate-buffered saline solution was used to remove and discard RBC from blood vessels, and collagenase was used to loosen and flush EC from the vasculature. Hoof keratinocytes were obtained from 4 recently euthanatized horses by use of d...
Hemodynamic effects of thyroidectomy in sedentary horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 26, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 1 14-21 
Vischer CM, Foreman JH, Constable PD, Benson GJ, Kline KH, Freeman DE, Campbell KL, Grubb TL.To investigate hemodynamic effects of thyroidectomy in horses at rest. Methods: 6 healthy aged Quarter Horse mares. Methods: Horses were monitored for 5 months before and 4 weeks after thyroidectomy and for an additional 4 weeks after administration of thyroid hormone supplement (2.5 microg of thyroxine/kg of body weight, PO, q 12 h, and 0.6 microg of triiodothyronine/kg, PO, q 12 h). Responses to thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) were measured before and 4 weeks after thyroidectomy. Other variables monitored daily were resting rectal temperature (T), heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR), an...
Metoclopramide ameliorates the effects of endotoxin on gastric emptying of acetaminophen in horses. Doherty TJ, Andrews FM, Abraha TW, Osborne D, Frazier DL.The effect of metoclopramide on gastric emptying of a liquid marker in horses was evaluated by measuring serum concentrations of acetaminophen. Gastric emptying was determined in normal, fasted horses (n = 7), horses given endotoxin intravenously (n = 7), and horses given intravenous metoclopramide plus endotoxin (n = 6). The mean time to reach maximum serum acetaminophen concentration (Tmax), the maximum serum concentration (Cmax), and the area under the serum acetaminophen concentration vs time curve (AUC) were compared among treatment groups. Endotoxin caused a profound delay in gastric emp...
Effects of R and S enantiomers and a racemic mixture of carprofen on the production and release of proteoglycan and prostaglandin E2 from equine chondrocytes and cartilage explants.
American journal of veterinary research    January 26, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 1 98-104 
Armstrong S, Lees P.To examine effects of carprofen (enantiomers and a racemic mixture) on the metabolism of equine chondrocytes. Methods: Cartilage from clinically normal horses. Methods: Effects of carprofen on proteoglycan neosynthesis, glycosaminoglycan (GAG) release and prostaglandin (PG) E2 production by unstimulated chondrocyte monolayers and cartilage explants were examined, as were similar variables in monolayers and explants exposed to carprofen and recombinant human interleukin 1beta (IL-1). Carprofen (enantiomers and racemic mixture) was used alone or along with IL-1 on monolayers and explant cultures...
Metmyoglobin/azide: the effect of heme-linked ionizations on the rate of complex formation.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    January 26, 1999   Volume 362, Issue 1 148-158 doi: 10.1006/abbi.1998.0991
Lin J, Merryweather J, Vitello LB, Erman JE.The kinetics of formation and dissociation of the horse metmyoglobin/azide complex has been investigated between pH 3.5 and 11.5. The ionic strength dependence of the reaction has been determined at integral pH values between 5 and 10. Hydrazoic acid, HN3, binds to metmyoglobin with a rate constant of (3.8 +/- 1.0) x 10(5) M-1 s-1. Protonation of a group with an apparent pKa of 4.0 +/- 0.3 increases the rate of HN3 binding 6.5-fold to (2.5 +/- 0.8) x 10(6) M-1 s-1. The ionizable group is attributed to the distal histidine, His-64. The azide anion, N-3, binds to metmyoglobin with a rate constan...
Micromechanics of the equine hoof wall: optimizing crack control and material stiffness through modulation of the properties of keratin.
The Journal of experimental biology    January 23, 1999   Volume 202, Issue Pt 4 377-391 doi: 10.1242/jeb.202.4.377
Kasapi MA, Gosline JM.Small-scale components of the equine hoof wall were tested to determine their mechanical roles in the morphological hierarchy. Macroscale tensile tests conducted on samples of the inner wall tubules and intertubular material showed a sixfold difference in mean initial stiffnesses (0.47 and 0.08 GPa, respectively), indicating that the inner wall tubules stiffen the wall along its longitudinal axis. The similarity in material properties of tubule and intertubular samples from the mid-wall suggests that tubules in this region offer only minor reinforcement along the longitudinal axis. Microscale ...
A comparison of porosity, fabric and fractal dimension as predictors of the Young’s modulus of equine cancellous bone.
Medical engineering & physics    January 15, 1999   Volume 20, Issue 8 588-593 doi: 10.1016/s1350-4533(98)00063-0
Haire TJ, Hodgskinson R, Ganney PS, Langton CM.The purpose of this study was to compare the structural parameters of fabric and fractal dimension as predictors of the Young's modulus of equine cancellous bone. Eight 15 mm cubes of cancellous bone were obtained from three equine third metacarpal bones. Young's modulus was determined for the three orthogonal directions. The fabric and fractal dimension were calculated for each of the six exposed faces of each cube. Fractal dimension plus porosity provided a higher explanatory power for Young's modulus (R2 = 78.7%. P < 0.0001) than fabric plus porosity (R2 = 69.2%, P < 0.0001). Fractal ...
The effects of dobutamine and ephedrine on packed cell volume, total protein, heart rate, and blood pressure in anaesthetized horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    January 14, 1999   Volume 21, Issue 6 497-499 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2885.1998.00170.x
Hellyer PW, Wagner AE, Mama KR, Gaynor JS.No abstract available
Studies on growth cartilage in the horse and their application to aetiopathogenesis of dyschondroplasia (osteochondrosis).
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    January 12, 1999   Volume 156, Issue 3 177-192 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80121-4
Jeffcott LB, Henson FM.The importance of osteochondrosis (dyschondroplasia) to the horse industry has been well documented since it was first recorded 50 years ago. The condition is known to be multifactorial in origin, arising from focal failure of endochondral ossification at predilection sites in articular/epiphyseal growth cartilage, but specific information on its aetiopathogenesis is sparse. This paper reviews the current knowledge of growth cartilage metabolism and the process of normal endochondral ossification in the horse. It highlights the localization of various protein products of chondrocytes and the d...
Equine developmental osteochondral lesions: the role of biomechanics.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    January 12, 1999   Volume 156, Issue 3 167-168 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80119-6
Whitton RC.No abstract available
Biochemical markers of bone metabolism in horses: potentials and limitations?
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    January 12, 1999   Volume 156, Issue 3 163-165 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80117-2
Price JS.No abstract available