Topic:Physiology

The isolation of estrone sulfate from the urine of stallions.
Revue canadienne de biologie    January 1, 1945   Volume 4, Issue 4 535-537 
JENSEN H, LARIVIERE M, ELIE JJ.No abstract available
An equine hermaphrodite.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1945   Volume 35 373-375 
BRITTON JW.No abstract available
The isolation of a new sulphuric acid ester from the urine of pregnant mares.
The Biochemical journal    January 1, 1945   Volume 39, Issue 5 xlv 
KLYNE W, MARRIAN GF.No abstract available
Study of horse fatigue on change of step length.
Biulleten' eksperimental'noi biologii i meditsiny    January 1, 1945   Volume 20, Issue 10 62-64 
SCHERBAKOV NM.No abstract available
Anesthesia in horses and swine. DANKS AG.No abstract available
Oesophageal Conditions in Horses.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine (Gardenvale, Quebec)    January 1, 1939   Volume 3, Issue 1 26-28 
Hafele JA.No abstract available
Effect of Formalin on the Virus of Vesicular Stomatitis of Horses.
The Journal of experimental medicine    May 31, 1928   Volume 47, Issue 6 835-841 doi: 10.1084/jem.47.6.835
Olitsky PK, Long PH.The virus of vesicular stomatitis is not readily killed by formalin. This chemical is one of a group which coagulates the proteins of the medium in which the virus is usually contained. It has already been found(7) that other reagents of the protein-coagulating group are not actively virucidal) and the effect of formalin in this instance is therefore characteristic of the group. The so called formalinized vaccines which give rise to immunity can be shown to have done so because of the presence of living virus. A single injection of such so called "vaccine," or of other material containing livi...
The Electrophoresis of the Blood Platelets of the Horse with Reference to Their Origin and to Thrombus Formation.
The Journal of experimental medicine    April 30, 1928   Volume 47, Issue 5 677-683 doi: 10.1084/jem.47.5.677
Abramson HA.1. The cataphoretic velocity of blood platelets (horse) in plasma has been found to be between 40 and 51 micro per sec. per volt per cm. The mean velocity obtained from five horses is . 45 micro per sec. per volt per cm. 2. The cataphoretic velocity of polymorphonuclear leucocytes in similar specimens is practically identical with that of the platelets. This is noteworthy because of the fact that lymphocytes and red cells have different speeds. 3. With spontaneous agglutination of platelets, white cells and red cells, there is no change in the cataphoretic velocity incidental to aggregation. 4...
The Precipitin Reaction of Antipneumococcus Sera: II. The Ratio of Precipitin to Protective Antibody.
The Journal of experimental medicine    January 1, 1928   Volume 47, Issue 1 79-89 doi: 10.1084/jem.47.1.79
Friedlander M, Sobotka H, Banzhaf EJ.The precipitin indices for a number of monovalent and polyvalent antipneumococcus sera were determined under known conditions, and found to vary as did the number of protective units. The ratio precipitin index/protective units in monovalent sera was found to lie between 2.8 and 4.8 for Type I and to be about ten times greater for Type III. Lower values were found in polyvalent horses and when mixing heterologous monovalent sera with each other. The influence of the duration of treatment upon the quotient was studied. Several refined and concentrated preparations showed a relative increase in ...
The Occurrence of Degraded Pneumococci in Vivo.
The Journal of experimental medicine    April 30, 1927   Volume 45, Issue 5 807-814 doi: 10.1084/jem.45.5.807
Reimann HA.It is conceivable that a change from the virulent, non-phagocytable S form of Pneumococcus to the avirulent phagocytable R form may take place in pneumococcus disease, but the experiments here reported do not settle the question whether or not this is an important factor in determining the outcome in natural infection. It has been shown experimentally that the degradation from the S form to the R form actually does take place in cultures of Pneumococcus growing in agar subcutaneously embedded in guinea pigs, in agar enclosed in vials subcutaneously embedded in rabbits, and spontaneously in the...
A Specific Flocculation Reaction Occurring Between Alcoholic Extracts of Pneumococci and Antipneumococcus Serum.
The Journal of experimental medicine    January 31, 1927   Volume 45, Issue 2 227-241 doi: 10.1084/jem.45.2.227
Jungeblut CW.1. A flocculation reaction has been described which occurs between alcoholic extracts of pneumococci and antipneumococcus serum. 2. The reaction appears to be species-specific. It is not strictly type-specific, as slight or moderate cross-reactions occurred between Type I serums and Type II and Type III extracts. 3. The flocculating power of the serum from five horses undergoing immunization with pneumococcus, Type I, did not develop to any extent before the end of the 4th or 5th month. 4. In the case of two of these horses in which it was possible to carry out parallel tests on a larger numbe...
The Blood of Equines.
The Biochemical journal    January 1, 1922   Volume 16, Issue 6 770-779 doi: 10.1042/bj0160770
Neser CP.No abstract available
The Quantitative Changes in the Proteins in the Blood Plasma of Horses in the Course of Immunization.
The Journal of experimental medicine    May 1, 1910   Volume 12, Issue 3 411-434 doi: 10.1084/jem.12.3.411
Gibson RB, Banzhaf EJ.Gravimetric determinations were recorded for the total and several individual proteins (in the sodium oxalate plasma) fractioned with ammonium sulphate and sodium chloride. At precipitation, the plasma salt mixture had been diluted to a final volume of ten times the amount of plasma employed. Coagulations were on aliquot portions of filtrates, and the individual protein constituents (except serumalbumin) were calculated by difference. The eleven horses had been subjected to simultaneous immunization against diphtheria and tetanus toxins, each horse being subsequently continued on the toxin to ...
Comparative Statistics of Antitoxin Horses: A Study of the Records of One Hundred Horses Immunized to Diphtheria Toxin, with Composite of Curves.
The Journal of experimental medicine    April 25, 1905   Volume 7, Issue 2 176-182 doi: 10.1084/jem.7.2.176
Hubbert WR.1. Better results in the production of diphtheria antitoxin can be obtained with greater experience in the selection of the most suitable type of horses to be used. Young animals are usually to be preferred. Over one-half of all such horses can be made to yield 300-unit serum, while a third will yield (5)oo-unit serum. 2. High-test horses require a shorter time to immunize and will yield a potent serum for a longer period than will low-test horses. 3. The period of usefulness of an antitoxin horse is short, and on an average endures only a few months. 4. A horse having attained a maximal antit...
Serum-Globulin and Diphtheric Antitoxin: A Comparative Study of the Amount of Globulin in Normal and Antitoxic Sera, and the Relation of the Globulins to the Antitoxic Bodies.
The Journal of experimental medicine    October 1, 1900   Volume 5, Issue 1 47-66 doi: 10.1084/jem.5.1.47
Hiss PH, Atkinson JP.THE RESULTS OF THE FOREGOING EXPERIMENTS MAY BE BRIEFLY SUMMARIZED AS FOLLOWS: The amount of antitoxic substance obtained by precipitation with magnesium sulphate from the blood-serum of the horse corresponds, as nearly as can be determined by the use of test guinea-pigs, in full to the protective power of the serum from which it is obtained, i. e. the precipitate from 1 cc. of serum will protect against the same amount of toxin as 1 cc. of the serum itself. Equal amounts of the precipitates by magnesium sulphate from immunized and non-immunized horses act differently toward toxin; i. e. the p...
The Fractional Precipitation of the Globulin and Albumin of Normal Horse’s Serum and Diphtheria Antitoxic Serum, and the Antitoxic Strength of the Precipitates.
The Journal of experimental medicine    October 1, 1900   Volume 5, Issue 1 67-76 doi: 10.1084/jem.5.1.67
Atkinson JP.1. The globulins of both normal and diphtheria antitoxic serum exhibit chemically toward reagents the same reactions, being precipitated by magnesium sulphate and split up into fractions in precisely the same way. 2. All of the diphtheric antitoxic power of both normal and immunized serum is always carried by the globulin and its fractional precipitates. 3. During the fractional precipitation of the serum globulin of horses immunized from diphtheria toxin and horses not immunized from diphtheria toxin, some of the globulin is lost, likewise at the same time some of the antitoxic power of the g...
Callosities on Horses’ Legs.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    August 3, 1900   Volume 12, Issue 292 194 doi: 10.1126/science.12.292.194
McGee WJ.No abstract available
Record of Fastest Time Made by Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    December 1, 1893   Volume 14, Issue 6 441-442 
No abstract available
Rheumatism in Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    December 1, 1892   Volume 13, Issue 12 725-734 
Hinebauch TV.No abstract available
Contrastive Coloring in Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    August 1, 1892   Volume 13, Issue 8 507-508 
Smith HJ.No abstract available
Physical Condition of Horses for Military Purposes.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    February 1, 1890   Volume 11, Issue 2 120-132 
Fleming G.No abstract available
The Care of Horses.
Hall's journal of health    October 1, 1885   Volume 32, Issue 10 15-16 
No abstract available
The Ancients on Equine Age Marks.
The Journal of comparative medicine and surgery    January 1, 1884   Volume 5, Issue 1 19-24 
Clarke WH.No abstract available
The Action of Pilocarpin upon Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and surgery    January 1, 1883   Volume 4, Issue 1 56 
No abstract available
Colic in Horses: Part of a Clinical Lecture Recently Delivered at Columbia Veterinary College.
The Archives of comparative medicine and surgery    July 1, 1880   Volume 1, Issue 3 149-153 
Berns GH.Before we conclude the diseases of the digestive organs, I wish to call your special attention to one of the most prevalent, and therefore most important, diseases of equine practice, namely, colic in its various forms. When we consider the injudicious management that our horses frequently receive, together with the peculiar anatomical arrangement of the cardiac opening of the stomach, which pre-vents a horse from vomiting when his stomach is overloaded, or contains indigestible food, it is not at all surprising that this form of trouble should be so very frequent...
On the Affection Commonly Termed “Corn” in the Equine Foot.
The Archives of comparative medicine and surgery    April 1, 1880   Volume 1, Issue 2 79-86 
Hamill J.No abstract available
Insanity in Horses.
Hall's journal of health    July 1, 1875   Volume 22, Issue 7 221 
No abstract available
New York Medico-Chirurgical College-Morbus Coxarius; Rudimentary Tooth Involuted through the Meatus Auditorius Externus; Cystic Degeneration of the Kidneys; Action of Anæsthetics on Horses; Case of Extra-Uterine Gestation. No abstract available
Hippopathology; or, Treatise on Diseases and Lameness of Horses.
The Medico-chirurgical review    July 1, 1834   Volume 21, Issue 41 88-92 
No abstract available
Remarks on the Inability to Produce the Effect of Emetics in Horses.
The Medical and physical journal    October 1, 1810   Volume 24, Issue 140 271-274 
Hargrove G.No abstract available
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