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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.
A comparative study on acetyl-CoA synthesising enzymes in spinal cord from cows, horses and pigs.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. C, Comparative pharmacology and toxicology    January 1, 1989   Volume 93, Issue 2 201-206 doi: 10.1016/0742-8413(89)90221-1
Björkman C.1. Comparative data are presented of the activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and acetyl-CoA synthetase and of the acetate content in homogenates from ventral grey matter in spinal cord from cows and two non-ruminant species, pigs and horses. The methods used in the study are evaluated and discussed. 2. The total pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity was 24.9-29.9 mU/mg protein and did not differ between the species. The part of the complex that was in active form at the sampling occasion was 60, 85 and 95% in cows, pigs and horses, respectively. 3. Acetyl-CoA synthetase activity dif...
Alterations in the cell cycle characteristics of granulosa cells during the periovulatory period: evidence of ovarian and oviductal influences.
The Journal of experimental zoology    January 1, 1989   Volume 249, Issue 1 105-110 doi: 10.1002/jez.1402490118
Schuetz AW, Whittingham DG, Legg RF.Granulosa cells at different stages of differentiation were collected from ovarian follicles and oviducts during the periovulatory period, and their nuclear DNA content was monitored by flow cytometry to establish their cell cycle characteristics (G0 + G1, S, G2 + M). The proportion of cells in the three phases of the cell cycle varied in characteristics patterns depending upon the time they were collected, before or following ovulation. Granulosa (cumulus) cells recovered from ovulated oocytes were mitotically inactive as shown by the large proportion of cells with a 2C amount of DNA and the ...
Screening, confirmation and quantification of boldenone sulfate in equine urine after administration of boldenone undecylenate (Equipoise).
Journal of chromatography    December 9, 1988   Volume 433 9-21 doi: 10.1016/s0378-4347(00)80580-0
Weidolf LO, Chichila TM, Henion JD.Methods for screening by thin-layer chromatography, quantification by high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection and confirmation by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry of boldenone sulfate in equine urine after administration of boldenone undecylenate (Equipoise) are presented. Sample work-up was done with C18 liquid-solid extraction followed by solvolytic cleavage of the sulfate ester. Confirmatory evidence of boldenone sulfate in equine urine was obtained from 2 h to 42 days following a therapeutic intramuscular dose of Equipoise. The use of 19-nortestosterone sulfat...
Comparison of sensory nerve conduction velocities in horses versus ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2138-2142 
Blythe LL, Engel HN, Rowe KE.Normal sensory nerve conduction velocity (SNCV) values in 8 ponies and 8 horses were compared by use of a percutaneous signal-averaging technique. Nerve fibers evaluated included those in the medial and lateral palmar and plantar digital nerves. Mean SNCV values were significantly slower (P less than 0.0002) for horses, compared with those values for ponies. Animal height and nerve segment length were inversely related to SNCV consistently. The SNCV values were affected by surface skin temperature by a factor of approximately 1.2 m/s change for 1 degree C change in temperatures from 35 C. The ...
Evolution of tooth structure in the Equoidea.
The Journal of Nihon University School of Dentistry    December 1, 1988   Volume 30, Issue 4 287-296 doi: 10.2334/josnusd1959.30.287
Kozawa Y, Mishima H, Sakae T.During the evolution of the Equoidea, the histological structures of the teeth have become more complex as the molars have become hypsodont in form. The straight Hunter-Schreger bands of Hiracotherium have evolved into a more complex pattern in Equus. The enamel prisms changed from an arched form (about 5μm in diameter) with an alternating pattern in Hiracotherium to an oval form (about 2 μm width) arranged in straight rows in Equus. In Equus the rows of prisms are separated by interprismatic sheets. This pattern may have increased the architectural strength of the enamel, and is related to ...
Single injection inulin/PAH method for the determination of renal clearances in adult horses and ponies.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 4 409-412 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1988.tb00203.x
Brewer BD, Clement SF, Lotz WS, Gronwall R.No abstract available
Do the cardiac glands exist? 4. The horse.
Okajimas folia anatomica Japonica    December 1, 1988   Volume 65, Issue 5 245-253 doi: 10.2535/ofaj1936.65.5_245
Imai M, Shibata T, Moriguchi K.No abstract available
Displacements, malpositions, and miscellaneous injuries of the mare’s urogenital tract.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1988   Volume 4, Issue 3 439-450 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30621-1
Pascoe JR, Pascoe RR.Although they are pivotal events in the continued production of new generations of horses, breeding and foaling are not without risk to the mare. This article reviews the accidents that can occur and result in injury, displacement, and malpositions of the urogenital tract of the mare.
The use of enzyme profiles in the training and racing of horses: a review.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    December 1, 1988   Volume 59, Issue 4 213-214 
Gummow B, Reyers F.The effects of age, training, racing and endurance riding on serum enzyme profiles in the horse are reviewed and discussed.
Ultrasonography of umbilical structures in clinically normal foals.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2143-2146 
Reef VB, Collatos C.The umbilical arteries, urachus, and umbilical vein were scanned ultrasonographically in 13 clinically normal foals that ranged in age from 6 hours to 4 weeks. Sonograms were obtained using a 7.5-MHz sector scanner transducer placed across the midline of the ventral portion of the foal's abdominal wall. The umbilical vein was scanned from the umbilical stalk to its entrance into the hepatic parenchyma. The mean (+/- SD) diameter of the umbilical vein was 0.61 +/- 0.20 cm immediately cranial to the umbilical stalk, 0.52 +/- 0.19 cm midway between the umbilicus and liver, and 0.6 +/- 0.19 cm at ...
Microvasculature of the foal metacarpus.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    December 1, 1988   Volume 17, Issue 4 343-348 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1988.tb00572.x
Marais J, Stilson AE.No abstract available
Influence of premedication and body position during halothane anaesthesia on intracardial pressures in the horse.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    December 1, 1988   Volume 35, Issue 10 729-738 
Gasthuys F, Muylle E, de Moor A, van Vlierberghe L, Nagels L.No abstract available
Biphasic disruption of fasting equine gut motility by dopamine–a preliminary study.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 4 354-361 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1988.tb00195.x
King JN, Gerring EL.Dopamine was infused intravenously (1, 5 and 10 micrograms/kg/min) for 60 min in three fasted ponies. A dose-dependent increase in heart rate occurred that was rapid in onset and termination at the start and end of the infusions, respectively. Dose-dependent changes in gastric and small intestinal motility were observed. An initial marked inhibition of gastric contraction amplitude was followed by a secondary prolonged period of activity. At the same time the small intestine showed a prolonged period of irregular activity (phase II) and a marked increase in the interval between successive phas...
Studies on the effect of short term, high dose praziquantel treatment against protoscoleces of ovine and equine Echinococcus granulosus within the cyst, and in vitro. Richards KS, Riley EM, Taylor DH, Morris DL.Protoscoleces of Echinococcus granulosus were subjected to high concentrations of praziquantel (10-1000 micrograms/ml medium or cyst fluid) for a short, 10 min duration in vitro or in situ within cysts. Drug efficacy was then monitored either by in vitro culture in drug-free medium and/or by passage into rodents. The in vitro test of effectiveness suggested that ovine-derived protoscoleces were more sensitive than those of equine origin, and that the in vitro method of treatment was more successful than that performed in situ. However, the subsequent passage of treated protoscoleces, whether i...
Communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2161-2164 
Ford TS, Ross MW, Orsini PG.To study communications and boundaries of the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints of the horse, 50 forelimbs were obtained from fresh cadaver specimens. Blue latex solution (20 +/- 2.5 ml) was injected into the middle carpal joint, and the specimens were frozen in extension. Frozen specimens were cut into 1-cm sagittal sections from the middle of the radius to the middle of the metacarpus. The communications between the middle carpal and carpometacarpal joints and the presence, length, and position of the distopalmar outpouchings of the carpometacarpal joint were recorded. The middle carp...
Effect of phenytoin on the clinical signs and in vitro muscle twitch characteristics in horses with chronic intermittent rhabdomyolysis and myotonia.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2130-2133 
Beech J, Fletcher JE, Lizzo F, Johnston J.In vitro twitch characteristics of the semimembranosus muscle were evaluated in 9 clinically normal horses, in 15 horses with chronic intermittent rhabdomyolysis (CIR) and in 2 horses with myotonia. Effects of phenytoin on in vitro muscle twitch and clinical signs of CIR and myotonia were evaluated in these same horses. Times to 90% relaxation were prolonged in the horses with CIR (mean +/- SEM, 186 +/- 5.9 ms) and in 2 horses with myotonia (197 and 177 ms) compared with those in clinically normal horses (mean +/- SEM, 146 +/- 2.1 ms). Horses with CIR also had significantly (P less than 0.05) ...
Prokinetic effects of cisapride, naloxone and parasympathetic stimulation at the equine ileo-caeco-colonic junction.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 4 322-329 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1988.tb00191.x
Ruckebusch Y, Roger T.The electromyogram of the terminal ileum, the caecum and the proximal right ventral colon was recorded in fasted conscious ponies receiving intravenously equiactive doses of pilocarpine (0.05 mg/kg) and carbachol (0.01 mg/kg) as acetylcholine analogues; cisapride (0.1 mg/kg) and metoclopramide (2 mg/kg) facilitating acetylcholine release from myenteric neurones and naloxone (0.05 mg/kg) as an antagonist of the endogenous inhibitory opioid system. Both cisapride and naloxone induced typical migrating spike bursts in the colon associated with contractions of caecal body and caecal base. Both pil...
Pharmacokinetics, bioavailability, and in vitro antibacterial activity of rifampin in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 12 2041-2046 
Wilson WD, Spensley MS, Baggot JD, Hietala SK.The pharmacokinetics and bioavailability of rifampin were determined after IV (10 mg/kg of body weight) and intragastric (20 mg/kg of body weight) administration to 6 healthy, adult horses. After IV administration, the disposition kinetics of rifampin were best described by a 2-compartment open model. A rapid distribution phase was followed by a slower elimination phase, with a half-life (t1/2[beta]) of 7.27 +/- 1.11 hours. The mean body clearance was 1.49 +/- 0.41 ml/min.kg, and the mean volume of distribution was 932 +/- 292 ml/kg, indicating that rifampin was widely distributed in the body....
Actions of the novel gastrointestinal prokinetic agent cisapride on equine bowel motility.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 4 314-321 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1988.tb00190.x
King JN, Gerring EL.The effect of cisapride was evaluated on the normal fasting bowel motility of four ponies with chronically implanted electromechanical transducers. Cisapride was infused over 60-min periods at 0.05 mg/kg (n = 4), 0.1 mg/kg (n = 5) and 0.25 mg/kg (n = 5). It produced marked and prolonged increases in electrical and mechanical activity at all sites examined. In the stomach there was increased total contraction activity with increased contraction amplitude and a slight reduction in rate. In the small intestine there was an increase in irregular (phase II) activity with an increase in number and a...
Normal and cryptorchid castration.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1988   Volume 4, Issue 3 493-513 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30625-9
Trotter GW.Surgical exploration of the horse that has presumably had a normal castration or a previously successful cryptorchid surgery remains a distinct challenge. No hard and fast rules dictate a proper course of action for each case. If a horse was anesthetized for routine castration, discovered to have only one scrotal testis, had a brief exploratory on the nondescended side and was recovered, trauma to the inguinal region would probably be sufficiently minimal that an inguinal approach could be used at subsequent exploratory surgery. If the inguinal canal was extensively manipulated and the tail of...
Mitochondrial size and shape in equine skeletal muscle: a three-dimensional reconstruction study.
The Anatomical record    December 1, 1988   Volume 222, Issue 4 333-339 doi: 10.1002/ar.1092220405
Kayar SR, Hoppeler H, Mermod L, Weibel ER.Individual mitochondria were reconstructed from ultrathin serial sections of selected muscle fibers in the M. semitendinosus of a horse, over a length of nearly two sarcomeres. Mitochondria were found to be highly variable, with size and complexity of single mitochondria increasing with the fractional part of a fiber occupied by mitochondria. In fibers with a mitochondrial volume density of less than 4%, corresponding to the mitochondrial content of fast-twitch glycolytic fibers, mitochondria were generally rather simple cylindrical shapes, oriented parallel to the myofibrils. In fibers with a...
Monoclonal antibody recognizes a conformational epitope in a random coil protein.
European journal of biochemistry    December 1, 1988   Volume 178, Issue 1 219-224 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1988.tb14446.x
Saad B, Corradin G, Bosshard HR.The antigenic determinants for two monoclonal antibodies directed against horse apo-cytochrome c, a protein of disordered structure, as judged by spectroscopic and hydrodynamic criteria, have been studied by a combination of methods: antigen competition in solution by radio immunoassay and enzyme-linked immunoassay, and differential acetylation of free and antibody-bound antigen. In the latter method the accessibility of lysine residues of the antigen in the antigen-antibody complex is compared to the accessibility in the free antigen. The two antibodies against the heme-free protein do not re...
The accuracy of three different heart rate meters used for studies in the exercising horse.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    November 1, 1988   Volume 35, Issue 9 665-672 
Sloet van Oldruitenborgh-Oosterbaan MM, van den Hoven R, Breukink HJ.No abstract available
Opsonins in uterine washings influencing in vitro activity of equine neutrophils.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 6 435-437 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01568.x
Watson ED.Uterine washings were found to promote neutrophil mediated killing of Streptococcus zooepidemicus. Depletion of complement and/or specific antibody from the washings significantly reduced bactericidal activity. Phagocytosis of yeast by uterine washings was complement dependent. Inhibition of the classical pathway significantly reduced opsonic activity indicating that, in addition to direct activation via the alternate pathway, antibody may also be involved in yeast phagocytosis.
Biotransformation of 1-dehydrotestosterone in the equine male castrate: identification of the neutral unconjugated and glucuronic acid conjugated metabolites in horse urine.
Biomedical & environmental mass spectrometry    November 1, 1988   Volume 17, Issue 5 383-392 doi: 10.1002/bms.1200170507
Dumasia MC, Houghton E.The in vivo biotransformation of (1,2(n)-3H)1-dehydrotestosterone was studied in three equine male castrates and a number of neutral metabolites were identified in the urinary unconjugated and glucuronic acid conjugate fractions by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The metabolites were extracted from aliquots of the 0-24 h urine samples by Amberlite XAD-2 and separated into combined unconjugated plus glucuronic acid conjugated and sulphoconjugated fractions by Sephadex LH-20 column chromatography. After enzymatic hydrolysis of the glucuronides, the crude neutral unconjugated steroids plus ...
Fibrinogen response to surgical tissue trauma in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 6 441-443 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01570.x
Allen BV, Kold SE.No abstract available
An immunochemical demonstration of a pregnancy-specific protein in the horse and its use in the serological detection of early pregnancy.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1988   Volume 84, Issue 2 431-436 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0840431
Lea RG, Bolton AE.Two-dimensional crossed immunoelectrophoresis of sera from pregnant and non-pregnant horses, using antisera developed against early pregnant mare serum, revealed the presence of two immunologically related proteins one of which appeared to be specific to the pregnant state. This pregnancy-specific protein had beta 2-electrophoretic mobility and was first detectable at Day 6 after successful mating with a stallion. The second protein had gamma 2-electrophoretic mobility and was present in sera from pregnant and non-pregnant horses. The proteins were termed beta 2-horse pregnancy protein and gam...
Equine neutrophil locomotion in response to Streptococcus zooepidemicus.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 6 448-450 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01572.x
Pycock JF, Allen WE.The neutrophil is involved in the defence of the mare's uterus against micro-organisms. The ability of Streptococcus zooepidemicus and its growth products to induce shape changes or directional locomotion (chemotaxis) of equine neutrophils was investigated; no effect was found.
Uterine defence mechanisms in mares resistant and susceptible to persistent endometritis: a review.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 6 397-400 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01558.x
Watson ED.No abstract available
Hydrocortisone secretion: production rate and pulse characterization by numerical deconvolution.
The American journal of physiology    November 1, 1988   Volume 255, Issue 5 Pt 1 E688-E695 doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.1988.255.5.E688
Toutain PL, Laurentie M, Autefage A, Alvinerie M.Based on serial blood sampling over 24 h, hydrocortisone was shown to be secreted episodically in the horse. The purpose of the present experiment was to characterize peaks and troughs by analyzing the instantaneous secretion rate profile obtained by a deconvolution technique rather than from the plasma concentration time profile. Kinetic parameters of hydrocortisone were determined following intravenous bolus and intravenous perfusion of hydrocortisone. Stationary and nonlinearity of hydrocortisone disposition were demonstrated. With the use of clearance values calculated from constant perfus...