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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.
Perspectives in perissodactyls.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1981   Volume 13, Issue 2 85-87 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1981.tb04118.x
Rowlands IW.The world-wide foaling rate in the mare is low and in the Hannoverian breed has remained asymptotic at about 50 per cent for over 150 years. In an attempt to discover some of the possible reasons for this low fertility rate, the evolutionary history of the perissodactyls, the odd-toed ungulates, is reviewed here. Of the 156 genera of this order, 152 are in the fossil record; this gives them the highest extermination rate of all the mammal groups. Some of the unusual and unique features of the reproductive physiology of the mare and their possible association with low fertility are considered.
Cardiorespiratory and metabolic responses to treadmill exercise in the horse.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    April 1, 1981   Volume 50, Issue 4 864-868 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1981.50.4.864
Thomas DP, Fregin GF.The purpose of this study was to measure cardiovascular, respiratory, and metabolic responses to graded treadmill exercise in the horse. A five-stage treadmill test up to 90% of predicted maximal heart rate was administered to five sedentary horses. The highest measured level of exercise produced a sixfold increase in cardiac output and a 41% elevation of stroke volume over standing values. Left ventricular, arterial, and right atrial pressures as well as the maximal time derivative of left ventricular pressure were all elevated during exercise. Under the same two conditions hematocrit (Hct) i...
The histidine residues in pig and horse colipases.
Biochemical and biophysical research communications    March 16, 1981   Volume 99, Issue 1 114-119 doi: 10.1016/0006-291x(81)91720-4
Granon S, Rahmani-Jourdheuil D, Desnuelle P, Chapus C.No abstract available
Stabilization of the C-terminal part of pig and horse colipase by carboxypeptidase and trypsin inhibitors.
European journal of biochemistry    March 16, 1981   Volume 115, Issue 1 99-105 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1981.tb06203.x
Chapus C, Desnuelle P, Foglizzo E.Pig and horse colipases have been purified by a common procedure using trypsin and carboxypeptidase inhibitors as stabilizers. Two forms of pig colipase were identified: a predominant A1 form with about 103-105 residues, and a minor slightly degraded A2 form in which the last two C-terminal residues, Asp and Ser, were lacking. This type of degradation is considerably slowed down by carboxypeptidase inhibitors. A total of four forms of the horse cofactor were characterized: two (A1 and B1) were probably isocolipases which differed by only a few substitutions. Both contained the same number of r...
GnRH localization in the equine brain and infundibulum: an immunohistochemical study.
Brain research    March 9, 1981   Volume 208, Issue 1 123-134 doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(81)90625-9
Dees WL, Sorensen AM, Kemp WM, McArthur NH.Immunohistochemical localization of the decapeptide gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) in neural structures in the pony brain and infundibulum (INF) was conducted at the light-microscopic level. This procedure utilized an antiserum generated against GnRH conjugated to bovine serum albumin. In the rostral INF, GnRH was distributed mainly in the external layer, with greatest concentrations adjacent to the long capillary loops of the hypophyseal portal system. The intermediate portion of the INF contained the hormone throughout the external layer, especially in the dorsolateral regions just ve...
Interaction of estradiol and a nonsteroidal follicular fluid substance in the regulation of gonadotropin secretion in the mare.
Biology of reproduction    March 1, 1981   Volume 24, Issue 2 354-358 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod24.2.354
Miller KF, Wesson JA, Ginther OJ.No abstract available
Technique for reversible vagal blockade in the standing conscious pony.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 3 523-525 
Derksen FJ, Robinson NE, Stick JA.A surgical technique is described for preparation of chronic cervical vagal loops in ponies. Vagal blockade was induced by circulating methanol (-2 C) through coils which enclosed the loops. Vagal blockade increased tidal volume, heart rate, and systemic blood pressure and decreased respiratory rate. Atropine, given at a dose of 0.04 mg/kg IV, increased heart rate and systemic pressure but did not alter respiratory variables, indicating that vagal cooling caused both afferent and efferent blockade. The effects of vagal blockade were rapidly reversed when refrigerated coils were removed.
Effect of aspirin on haemostasis in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1981   Volume 30, Issue 2 241-242 
Judson DG, Barton M.No abstract available
[The ST-segment and T-wave in the ECG of horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 1, 1981   Volume 94, Issue 5 81 
Grauerholz H.No abstract available
D(+)-xylose absorption test in the horse. A clinical study.
Nordisk veterinaermedicin    March 1, 1981   Volume 33, Issue 3 114-120 
Dietz HH.25 horses were subjected to the D(+)-xylose absorption test. 1 gram of D(+)-xylose/kg bw. was administered orally. Based upon the shape of the absorption curves the 25 patients were divided into four groups. Group 1 11 patients with a normal absorption curve (Figure 3) Group 2 5 patients with a flat absorption curve (Figure 4) Group 3 3 patients with a flat absorption curve (Figure 5) Group 4 7 patients with an intermediary type of absorption curve (Figure 6). Administration of sodium chloride in equimolar concentrations did not improve the absorption of D(+)-xylose. 73 per cent of the horses ...
Vaginal pH during estrus in mares.
Theriogenology    March 1, 1981   Volume 15, Issue 3 271-276 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(81)90049-2
Polak KL, Kammlade WG.Vaginal hydrogen ion concentration of Saddlebred mares was measured throughout the behavioral estrous period. The mean pH on the day of ovulation was significantly (P = <.01) lower than on all other tested days of estrus. Follicular development and vaginal pH values in pony mares at time of slaughter were highly correlated. A significant decrease in vaginal pH values, determined through a series of carefully monitored measurements during estrus, was found to be characteristic and indicative of ovulation.
Studies on the physiopathology of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the horse. IV. Blood gas and acid-base values at rest.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1981   Volume 48, Issue 1 37-45 
Littlejohn A, Bowles F.Radiometer Blood Micro-system 2 was used in studies designed to, (a) compare the mean blood gas and acid-base values of 38 normal horses and 20 horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), (b) determine the means and standard deviations of blood gas and acid-base values of Thoroughbred horses in training, and (c) investigate the relationships between clinical data, blood gas values, intracardiac and pulmonary arterial pressures in subjects with COPD. There were significant differences between the mean values for partial pressure of arterial oxygen (PaO2), arterial carbon dioxide (...
Cardiopulmonary effects of clenbuterol in the horse.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    March 1, 1981   Volume 4, Issue 1 43-50 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1981.tb00709.x
Shapland JE, Garner HE, Hatfield DG.Clenbuterol, a bronchospasmolytic agent (beta 2 agonist) was studied in terms of its hemodynamic and airflow response in eight, healthy horses. Four animals were instrumented to record intrapleural pressure and air flow, these were used to compute pulmonary resistance, peak flow rates, and tidal volumes. Four animals were instrumented to record pulmonary arterial pressure, carotid arterial pressure, cardiac output, and arterial gas tensions. After control values were recorded, clenbuterol (0.8 microgram/kg) was intravenously administered to each horse in each experiment group. Following clenbu...
Effect of exogenous hyaluronic acid on joint function in experimentally induced equine osteoarthritis: dosage titration studies.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1981   Volume 30, Issue 2 192-197 
Gingerich DA, Auer JA, Fackelman GE.A single intra-articular injection of 20 or 40 mg of purified hyaluronic acid of rooster comb origin resulted in restoration of normal joint function in horses with experimentally induced osteoarthritis. The functional improvement, measured by pressure sensitive force plate techniques, was detectable within one week after treatment and persisted throughout a four week experimental period despite continued use of the joints. The response was dose dependent in that injection of 0 (saline), 5 or 10 mg hyaluronic acid per joint space resulted in no significant change in joint function while dosage...
The cleavage of the Met-Lys bond in a bradykinin derivative by glandular kallikreins.
Hoppe-Seyler's Zeitschrift fur physiologische Chemie    March 1, 1981   Volume 362, Issue 3 337-345 doi: 10.1515/bchm2.1981.362.1.337
Araujo-Viel MS, Juliano L, Prado ES.The synthetic tridecapeptide Gly-Leu-Met-Lys-Arg-Pro-Pro-Gly-Phe-Ser-Pro-Phe-Arg was used as a model substrate for horse urinary and porcine pancreatic kallikreins. The Met-Lys bond is hydrolyzed selectively by both enzymes. Oxidation of the methionine residue to sulfoxide made the peptide resistant to both kallikreins. Substitution of either the methionine or lysine residues by norleucine led to peptides in which the Nle-Lys or the Met-Nle bonds, respectively, were susceptible to the urinary kallikrein. The esterolytic and Met-Lys bond-splitting activities of both enzymes were inhibited simil...
Physico-chemical properties of pregnant mare serum gonadotropin.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    February 27, 1981   Volume 667, Issue 2 267-276 doi: 10.1016/0005-2795(81)90192-6
Combarnous Y, Salesse R, Garnier J.Pregnant mare serum gonadotropin exhibits a dissociation at acid pH as shown by the drop of s20,w values from 3.52 S at pH 8.1 to 2.52 S at pH 2.0. The dissociation is accompanied by an absorbance change with a maximum at 287 nm and a parallel loss of both follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) activities as followed by radioreceptor assays. The apparent pKa of the acid transition is 3.45 with an extremely slow and temperature-dependent rate at pH 2.0 (1.8 . 10(-4) s-1 at 37 degrees C). By gel filtration the molecular weight of the active hormone is estimated to be 45 ...
[Studies of the ST-segment and T-wave in the ECG of horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    February 15, 1981   Volume 94, Issue 4 71-76 
Grauerholz H.No abstract available
Isolation and characterization of a new beta-melanotropin from horse pituitary glands.
Biochemical and biophysical research communications    February 12, 1981   Volume 98, Issue 3 621-627 doi: 10.1016/0006-291x(81)91159-1
Ng TB, Oosthuizen MM, Chung D, Li CH.No abstract available
Activation of pigeon erythrocyte adenylate cyclase by cholera toxin. Partial purification of an essential macromolecular factor from horse erythrocyte cytosol.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    February 5, 1981   Volume 672, Issue 3 248-261 doi: 10.1016/0304-4165(81)90291-9
Le Vine H, Cuatrecasas P.A cytosolic, macromolecular factor required for the cholera toxin-dependent activation of pigeon erythrocyte adenylate cyclase and cholera toxin-dependent ADP-ribosylation of a membrane-bound 43,000 dalton polypeptide has been purified 1100-fold from horse erythrocyte cytosol using organic solvent precipitation and heat treatment. This factor, 13,000 daltons, does not absorb to anionic or cationic exchange resins, is sensitive to trypsin or 10% trichloroacetic acid and is not extractable by diethyl ether. Activation of adenylate cyclase by cholera toxin requires the simultaneous presence of AT...
Growth rates at the extremities of limb bones in young horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    February 1, 1981   Volume 22, Issue 2 31-33 
Goyal HO, MacCallum FJ, Brown MP, Delack JB.Measurements were made of growth at the extremities of all the long bones of the left limbs of 23 horses between 52 and 104 days of age. Growth rates were more rapid in the younger than in the older animals. Growth was more rapid in the hind limb than in the forelimb. Growth rates were greater for males than in females. Although this age group represents only two of the 60 or so months necessary for maturity to be reached, oxytetracycline bone-labelling produced results which are more precise than measurements obtained by other methods. This study provides a substantial amount of data for an a...
Prostaglandin F2 alpha for treatment of pyometra in the mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1981   Volume 178, Issue 3 306-308 
Beaufait HE, Stick JA, Morrow DA.No abstract available
Rapid-scanning spectral evidence for catalytically nonequivalent but interconvertible forms of equine liver alcohol dehydrogenase.
Biochimie    February 1, 1981   Volume 63, Issue 2 97-102 doi: 10.1016/s0300-9084(81)80171-x
Koerber SC, Dunn MF.These rapid-scanning stopped-flow kinetic studies of the equine liver alcohol dehydrogenase-catalyzed reduction of p-nitrobenzaldehyde by NADH and (4R)-4-deuterio NADH (NADD) under single turnover conditions establish : (1) The reaction is biphasic using NADD as coenzyme, k1 approximately 200 sec-1, k2 = 0.5 sec-1 and the amplitude ratio (A1)/(A1 + A2) approximately equal to 0.5. (2) Each phase of the reaction involves the oxidation of enzyme-bound reduced coenzyme. (3) The recycling of sites in the presence of 20 mM pyrazole is negligible. (4) The rates of E(NAD-pyrazole) complex formation at...
Sexual behavior in mares.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    February 1, 1981   Volume 76, Issue 2 167-168 
Beaver BV.No abstract available
Equine cytomegalovirus: cultural characteristics and properties of viral DNA.
Virology    February 1, 1981   Volume 109, Issue 1 106-119 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(81)90475-x
Wharton JH, Henry BE, O'Callaghan DJ.No abstract available
Clinicopathologic effects of rapid infusion of 5% sodium bicarbonate in 5% dextrose in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1981   Volume 178, Issue 3 267-271 
Rumbaugh GE, Carlson GP, Harrold D.Clinicopathologic effects of rapid intravenous infusion of 3 L of 5% dextrose in water containing 150 g of sodium bicarbonate were evaluated in 8 clinically normal horses. A highly significant metabolic alkalosis was produced in all the horses. This response was maximal at the end of the 20-minute infusion but persisted for as long as 8 hours. Packed cell volume, total plasma proteins, plasma potassium, and plasma chloride concentration decreased significantly after infusion, while plasma sodium concentration increased significantly. The clinical and clinicopathological responses of the horses...
Systemic and digital vascular effects of intravenous histamine in the pony.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 2 205-208 
Robinson NE, Scott JB.The effects of a 60-minute IV infusion of histamine (0.5 mg of histamine base/minute) on the systemic, pulmonary, and digital vasculature were investigated in mature ponies. Immediately after the start of histamine infusion, there were a transient decrease in systemic pressure lasting less than 1 minute and then a brief period of systemic hypertension. Systemic pressure then returned to preinfusion levels for the remainder of the infusion period. Pulmonary arterial pressure increased transiently coincident with systemic hypotension. Histamine increased cardiac output and decreased both total p...
Development of the adrenal cortex in the fetal foal: an ultrastructural study.
Journal of developmental physiology    February 1, 1981   Volume 3, Issue 1 59-73 
Webb PD, Steven DH.The adrenal cortex from twelve fetal foals (gestational ages from 61 to 300 days) was examined by light and electron microscopy. Adrenal glands from three newborn foals were also examined by light microscopy. Between 61 and 100 days of gestation the adrenal cortex became organised into two distinct regions, the zona glomerulosa and zona fasciculata, which grew steadily in thickness until the 300th day. Between 300 days and birth there was a dramatic increase in the width of the zona fasciculata. From 200 days a narrow band of compact cells marked the cortico-medullary border. Though these cell...
Fibrinolytic activity without fibrinogenolysis during long-distance racing in horses.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    February 1, 1981   Volume 50, Issue 2 245-249 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1981.50.2.245
Ferguson EW, Bernier LL, Shaughness GP, Boucher JH.Fourteen horses were studied during a 157-km endurance ride. Two humans who ran the 157 km were also evaluated at the finish. Fibrin monomer samples were examined by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Two major species of horse Beta-chain with higher molecular weights and different isoelectric mobilities than human beta-chain were observed. Horse alpha-chains had higher molecular weights than human alpha-chains but similar alpha-chain heterogeneities. Mean euglobulin lysis time (ELT) in the horses was accelerated to similar levels...
Normal and abnormal sleep in mammals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 15, 1981   Volume 178, Issue 2 121-126 
Hendricks JC, Morrison AR.No abstract available
Effects of limited denaturation by heat on the dynamic conformation of equine immunoglobulin M antibody and on interaction with antigen and complement.
Biochemistry    January 6, 1981   Volume 20, Issue 1 192-198 doi: 10.1021/bi00504a032
Siegel RC, Cathou RE.No abstract available