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.
H-Y antigen in a fertile XY female horse.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    January 1, 1980   Volume 58, Issue 1 157-160 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0580157
Sharp AJ, Wachtel SS, Benirschke K.The presence of significantly reduced levels of H-Y antigen in the blood of an XY mare is consistent with the view that H-Y genes comprise a system of testis determinants. Loss or suppression of a critical portion of H-Y genes and subthreshold expression of H-Y antigen could account for a failure of testicular differentiation, thereby allowing a measure of ovarian development in an XY embryo.
The direct influence of stallion semen on progesterone production in cultured corpus luteum cells.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    January 1, 1980   Volume 27, Issue 9-10 788-795 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1980.tb02032.x
Gregoraszczuk E, Okólski A, Galas J.No abstract available
[Laboratory diagnostic studies of haflinger horses and mules (pack-animals of the Federal German Army). 2. Enzyme activity in serum].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1980   Volume 8, Issue 3 387-393 
Weigert P, Scheck K, Lemmer B, Noreisch W.No abstract available
Effects of furosemide on pulmonary arterial pressures of normal horses and horses affected with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 1 28-29 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02296.x
Dixon PM.No abstract available
Simultaneous preparation of mononuclear and polymorphonuclear leucocytes from horse blood on Ficoll-Hypaque medium.
Journal of immunological methods    January 1, 1980   Volume 34, Issue 4 279-285 doi: 10.1016/0022-1759(80)90100-3
Ferrante A, Thong YH.Results presented show that highly purified populations of mononuclear (MN) and polymorphonuclear (PMN) leucocytes can be obtained from horse blood by a procedure similar to that previously described for the separation of these leucocytes from human blood. This involved centrifugation of horse blood on a Ficoll-Hypaque medium with a density of 1.095 g/ml. The procedure required approximately 1 h for completion and resulted in the simultaneous preparation of MN (greater than 98% purity) and PMN (greater than 96% purity) leucocytes. Cell viability exceeded 95% and cells retained immunological fu...
[Pharmacokinetic model studies of sulfamerazine in domestic mammals. 1. Elimination of Mebacid 200 following intravenous administration to large animals].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    January 1, 1980   Volume 34, Issue 3 443-449 
Losch K, Heinze W, Mieth K, Lender S.Pharmacokinetic data of sulphamerazine were recorded from eight heads each of calf, adult cattle, horse, and sheep, following intravenous application of Mebacid 200, and mathematical implications were discussed. Exponential excretion was recorded from all species, according to the following equation: c = B x e-k2 x t The most favourable pharmacokinetic parameters were recorded from calf.
Pharmacological and immunological aspects of histamine release from horse leucocytes.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1980   Volume 62, Issue 4 397-408 doi: 10.1159/000232542
Kings MA, de Weck AL.Pharmacological histamine releasing agents, such as compound 48/80, poly-L-lysine, adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH; beta 1-24 available commercially as Synacthen), catecholamines, purine bases, etc., are well known to induce histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells and mast cells of other species; and to a lesser extent from peripheral blood leucocytes. It is reported in this paper that several of these potent histamine-releasing agents induce little or no histamine release from horse leucocytes. In particular the calcium ionophore A 23187 induced no histamine release. On the other ...
Direct measurement of biliary bilirubin excretion in ponies during fasting.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 1 125-126 
Gronwall R, Engelking LR, Noonan N.Biliary excretion of bilirubin, including the conjugate composition, was studied during feeding and during a 2.5-day fast of three pony mares with chronic external biliary (T-tube) fistulas. Fasting bilirubin excretion (1.96 +/- 0.74 microgram/min/kg of body weight), after establishing a new steady state, was not different from excretion during feeding (1.99 +/- 0.45 microgram/min/kg). Hyperbilirubinemia of fasting resulted from a reduced removal of plasma bilirubin rather than from an increased input of bilirubin into the plasma. Relative plasma excretion of the individual conjugate fractions...
The origin of nuclear bodies: a study of the undifferentiated epithelial cells of the equine small intestine.
The American journal of anatomy    January 1, 1980   Volume 157, Issue 1 61-70 doi: 10.1002/aja.1001570107
Doyle DG.During an electron and light microscopic study of the equine intestinal epithelium, it was observed that some secretory granules of the undifferentiated crypt epithelium were incorporated into the nucleus during mitosis. A study was made of the chemical nature of the granules, using standard histochemical techniques: PAS-Alcian blue, Deamination-PAS, and Ninhydrin-Schiff reactions. The granules contained a neutral protein-polysaccharide complex with many terminal amino groups, possibly an antibody (IgA). The intranuclear granules underwent coalescence and degeneration during differentiation. T...
Quantitative comparisons of acidic prealbumin (PR) phenotypes in horses.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1980   Volume 21, Issue 3 380-388 doi: 10.1186/BF03546870
Ek N, Braend M.Comparisons of Pr protein amounts in horse sera have been performed using .’s (1965) immunodiffusion technique. Relative values against a chosen standard of 100 % were determined for a total of 435 horses. There was considerable variation between horses, the highest Pr value being 125 and the lowest 50 % of the standard. In animals of the same Pr phenotype the mean Pr values were significantly higher (P < 0.001) in foals than in mares. In Norwegian Trotter horses the Pr value of Pr NN animals was significantly higher than that of Pr SS phenotypes, whereas the mean Pr values of Pr SS was sig...
Cerebral blood flow during normocapnic hyperoxia in the unanesthetized pony.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    January 1, 1980   Volume 48, Issue 1 10-15 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1980.48.1.10
Busija DW, Orr JA, Rankin JH, Liang HK, Wagerle LC.The effect of hyperoxia on cerebral blood flow (CBF) was examined in 12 unanesthetized ponies. CBF was determined using radioactive microspheres, 15 micrometer in diam, durijng inspriation of the following gases: 1) room air (control); 2) 40% I2 in N2; and 3) approximately 100% O2 with 2.2-4.5% CO2 added to maintain isocapnia. CBF did not change from control values during either level of hyperoxia. However, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) carbon dioxide tension (PCO2) increased during 40% O2 (delta 1.0 Torr) and approximately 100% O2 (delta 2.9 Torr). This rise in CSF PCO2, not due to a change in CB...
[Estimation of milk production in the nursing mare by labeling the body water of the foal].
Reproduction, nutrition, developpement    January 1, 1980   Volume 20, Issue 6 1883-1892 
Doreau M, Dussap G.Female milk production was related to offspring water turnover, estimated by a tracer method (fig. 1). After deuterium oxide was injected into the blood of the offspring, we measured the decrease of its concentration in time. Milk intake was calculated by equations taking into account the weight gain of the offspring. The reliability of this method was checked in 28 bottle-fed lambs with known milk intake; the correlation between the actual intakes and our estimates was 0.98 with an error means of 5.6 p. 100. The error on the mean of 28 lambs was 0.5 p. 100 (table 1). The milk production of 6 ...
[Comparative study of the digestion of a complete food in the pony and the rabbit].
Reproduction, nutrition, developpement    January 1, 1980   Volume 20, Issue 5B 1723-1730 
Wolter R, Nouwakpo F, Durix A.A complete pelleted diet (table 1) containing 11 p. 100 of crude protein and 17 p. 100 of cellulose (ADF-lignine according to the method of Van Soest) was distributed to ponies and rabbits. Total digestibilities, partial cumulative digestibilities in different compartments of the digestive tract (stomach, small intestine, caecum, proximal and distal colon) and changes in biochemical composition, measured by pH, VFA, lactic acid and ammonia concentrations, were compared. Total digestibilities (table 2). There was no significant difference in dry matter between the two species. Crude protein dig...
Postural effects on lung volumes and asynchronous ventilation in anesthetized horses.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    January 1, 1980   Volume 48, Issue 1 97-103 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1980.48.1.97
Sorenson PR, Robinson NE.Quasi-static pressure-volume curves and single-breath nitrogen washouts were performed simultaneously on eight anesthetized horses (average body wt = 485 kg) in left lateral, right lateral, prone, and supine postures (sequence randomized). The shift from prone to lateral or supine posture decreased expiratory reserve volume (ERV), vital capacity (VC), residual volume (RV), functional residual capacity (FRC), and total lung capacity (TLC); RV and FRC expressed as %TLC were unchanged, suggesting that in the lateral and supine postures a significant portion of the lung volume was not recruited by...
[Preliminary study of the effect of supplementation of iron, copper, cobalt and zinc on cellulolytic activity in the cecum of the pony].
Reproduction, nutrition, developpement    January 1, 1980   Volume 20, Issue 5B 1691-1694 
Tisserand JL, Boulard F, Deponge P.We studied a caecum-cannulated pony fed hay libitum in order to determine the mineral elements likely to cause deficiencies which decrease microbial activity in the caecum. During four successive 1-month periods, we observed the effects of adding 50 mg of iron, 1 mg of cobalt, 40 mg of copper and 200 mg of zinc, respectively. Except for the introduction of zinc, which greatly diminishes cellulolytic activity measured with the nylon bag technique, there was no significant modification in that activity as shown by pH, NH3-nitrogen, total nitrogen and volatile fatty acid production (table 1). It ...
The effect of benzo(a)pyrene on fertility, primordial oocyte number, and ovarian response to pregnant mare’s serum gonadotropin.
Pediatric pharmacology (New York, N.Y.)    January 1, 1980   Volume 1, Issue 2 143-151 
Mattison DR, White NB, Nightingale MR.The polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) benzo(a)pyrene (BP) reduced the fertility of DBA/2N mice in a dose-dependent fashion. Control mice produced offspring at a rate of 0.91 pups/mouse per week. Treatment with BP at doses of 10, 100, 200, and 500 mg/kg decreased offspring production rates to 0.61, 0.20, zero and zero pups/mouse per week, respectively. BP also destroyed primordial oocytes in similarly treated mice. Treatment with BP at doses of 10, 50, 100, and 500 mg/kg destroyed 20%, 58%, 88%, and 100%, respectively, of the primordial oocytes in DBA/2N mouse ovaries. Dose-response curves ...
Estrus, ovulation, and serum hormones in mares given prostaglandin F2 alpha, estradiol, and gonadotropin-releasing hormone.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 1 120-122 
Booth LC, Oxender WD, Douglas RH, Woodley SL.A gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) was injected in mares given prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) to induce luteolysis in an attempt to sunchronize ovulation. Pretreatment with estradiol-17 beta (E2-17 beta) was used to determine whether or not estradiol would enhance the release of luteinizing hormone (LH) after treatment with GnRH. Twelve mares were used in a balanced Latin square crossover design. Mares were injected with PGF2 alpha, treatment A; PGF2 alpha mgnRH, treatment B; or PGF2 alpha me2-17 beta mgnRH, treatment C. The interval +/- SEM from PGF2 alpha injection to estrus was 3....
Concentration of serum prealbumin (PR) protein in sick horses and its correlation to blood leucocyte count and albumin content in serum.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1980   Volume 21, Issue 4 482-497 doi: 10.1186/BF03546836
Ek N.Studies of Pr protein concentrations in sera of sick horses were carried out using ’s (1965) immunodiffusion technique. Relative values against a chosen standard of 100 were determined for a total of 102 horses. Horses with acute infections had Pr protein values significantly above the normal. The highest individual Pr protein value recorded in this group was 202. Horses suffering from acute laminitis and malignant tumours also had increased Pr protein values. There was a positive correlation between the Pr protein value and the blood leucocyte count and a negative correlation between the P...
[Effect of the distribution of hay and cereals on the cellulolytic activity in the large intestine of the pony].
Reproduction, nutrition, developpement    January 1, 1980   Volume 20, Issue 5B 1685-1689 
Tisserand JL, Ottin Pecchio M, Rollin G.The cellulolytic activity in the large intestine of the pony varies according to the form and the composition of the feed. This activity was measured on two caecal and ventral colon-cannulated ponies receiving the following 4 diets during four successive 6-week periods: --6 kg of hay, --4 kg of hay + 1 kg of oats, --6 kg of ground, pelleted hay. --5 kg of a ground, pelleted blend of 80 p. 100 hay and 20 p. 100 oats. Adding oats to a hay feed increased the cellulolytical activity in the caecum and the colon, whereas grinding and pelleting hay alone or hay enriched with oats diminished that acti...
Topographic antigenic determinants on cytochrome c. Immunoadsorbent separation of the rabbit antibody populations directed against horse cytochrome.
The Journal of biological chemistry    December 25, 1979   Volume 254, Issue 24 12706-12716 
Jemmerson R, Margoliash E.Seven populations of site-specific antibodies were isolated from each of three sera of rabbits immunized against glutaraldehyde-polymerized horse cytochrome c. The antibodies were separated using an immunoadsorption scheme which employed the following cytochromes c: horse, beef, guanaco, rabbit, mouse testicular, pigeon, and the cyanogen-bromide cleaved fragment of the rabbit protein containing residues 1 to 65. The monovalent, antigen-binding fragments of the antibodies (Fab') gave 1:1 stoichiometries with native horse cytochrome c in fluorescence quenching assays. Cross-reactivities with het...
[Effect of glucagon on ureteral motility: in vitro in vivo studies].
Revista clinica espanola    December 15, 1979   Volume 155, Issue 5 351-354 
Vela Navarrete R, García Sacristán A, Illera M, González Azpeitia JA, Jiménez J.No abstract available
Reappraisal of energetics of locomotion shows identical cost in bipeds and quadrupeds including ostrich and horse.
Nature    December 13, 1979   Volume 282, Issue 5740 713-716 doi: 10.1038/282713a0
Fedak MA, Seeherman HJ.No abstract available
Comparison of yeast and beef cytochrome c oxidases. Kinetics and binding of horse, fungal, and Euglena cytochromes c.
The Journal of biological chemistry    December 10, 1979   Volume 254, Issue 23 11973-11981 
Dethmers JK, Ferguson-Miller S, Margoliash E.No abstract available
Differential diagnosis of dysphagia in the horse.
Modern veterinary practice    December 1, 1979   Volume 60, Issue 12 1029-1033 
Wagner PC, Rantanen NW, Grant BD.No abstract available
[The nutritive and intraosseous arteries of the os femoris and patella of foals].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1979   Volume 92, Issue 24 512-517 
Pohlmeyer K, Butendieck E.No abstract available
The growth of the transverse sectional area (TSA) of M. semitendinosus in the dog and horse and its relation to athletic ability in the two species.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    December 1, 1979   Volume 8, Issue 4 365-368 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1979.tb00822.x
Gunn HM.The acceleration capacity of an animal determines its length of stride and hence influences its maximum running speed (GuNN, 1975 a). This is related to the potential force of its propulsive muscles relative to its live-weight. Intensive selection over the generations has produced the Greyhound and Thoroughbred horse, breeds renowned for their ability to run at greater speeds than other members of their species (CLARKE, 1965; WENTWORTH, 1957). This study describes the relationship of TSA of m. semitendinosus (represen-tative of the propulsive muscles of the hindlimb (GUNN, 1975 b) to live-weig...
Cadmium, zinc and copper in horse kidney metallothionein.
Environmental research    December 1, 1979   Volume 20, Issue 2 341-350 doi: 10.1016/0013-9351(79)90010-0
Nordberg M, Elinder CG, Rahnster B.No abstract available
[Histology of the vaginal mucosa of the mare depending on the stage of the cycle (author’s transl)].
Zuchthygiene    December 1, 1979   Volume 14, Issue 4 151-158 
Steinberger G, Nesseler D.No abstract available
Fleischner Lecture. Looking into the lung: what can it tell us?
AJR. American journal of roentgenology    December 1, 1979   Volume 133, Issue 6 1021-1031 doi: 10.2214/ajr.133.6.1021
Weibel ER.No abstract available
Clinical chemistry and pathophysiology of horses: enzymology–part 2.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    December 1, 1979   Volume 74, Issue 12 1791-1795 
Coffman J.No abstract available