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Topic:Pneumonia

Pneumonia in horses is a respiratory condition characterized by inflammation of the lungs, often caused by bacterial, viral, or fungal infections. It can affect horses of all ages, though young and immunocompromised animals are more susceptible. Clinical signs of pneumonia in horses may include coughing, nasal discharge, fever, and labored breathing. Diagnosis typically involves a combination of clinical examination, imaging techniques such as radiography or ultrasonography, and laboratory tests including blood work and microbial cultures. Treatment strategies vary depending on the underlying cause and may involve antimicrobial therapy, supportive care, and environmental management. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the etiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of pneumonia in equine populations.
Studies of an outbreak of Corynebacterium equi pneumonia in foals.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1981   Volume 13, Issue 4 223-228 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1981.tb03500.x
Smith BP, Robinson RC.Five out of 6 foals between 2 and 4 months old, on a ranch in northern California, developed pneumonia within a 3 week period in June and July 1978. Corynebacterium equi was recovered from each of the 5 foals by transtracheal aspiration. Clinical signs were variable but included increased respiratory rate, fever, cough, nasal discharge, harsh airway sounds over middle sized airways and wheezing over small airways. Cyanosis was present in the most severely affected foal. Radiographic findings included diffusely increased interstitial and peribronchial densities, areas of consolidation and, in 3...
Silicate pneumoconiosis and pulmonary fibrosis in horses from the Monterey-Carmel peninsula.
Chest    July 1, 1981   Volume 80, Issue 1 Suppl 82-85 doi: 10.1378/chest.80.1_supplement.82s
Schwartz LW, Knight HD, Whittig LD, Malloy RL, Abraham JL, Tyler NK.No abstract available
Chronic granulocytic leukemia in a horse.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    May 1, 1981   Volume 22, Issue 5 148-151 
Searcy GP, Orr JP.A nine year old quarter horse exhibited progressive weight loss and inappetance over a 47 day period. There was clinical evidence of pleuritis and pneumonia substantiated by leukocytosis and elevated protein in pleural fluid. Over the entire period the horse was neutropenic and had circulating abnormal immature granulocytes and low numbers of blast cells. Anemia and thrombocytopenia progressively worsened. Bone marrow examination revealed very few mature granulocytes but large numbers of immature cells of the granulocytic series and marked megaloblastic transformation of erythroid cells. These...
The treatment of pneumonia in foals caused by Rhodococcus (Corynebacterium) equi.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1981   Volume 57, Issue 3 150-151 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1981.tb00496.x
Gay CC, Sloss V, Wrigley RH, Horsey R.No abstract available
Involvement of adenovirus in pneumonia in a thoroughbred foal.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1981   Volume 57, Issue 3 142-143 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1981.tb00490.x
Webb RF, Knight PR, Walker KH.No abstract available
Cryptococcus as a cause of neonatal pneumonia and abortion in two horses.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1981   Volume 18, Issue 2 270-272 doi: 10.1177/030098588101800216
Ryan MJ, Wyand DS.No abstract available
A survey of post mortem findings in 480 horses 1958 to 1980: (2) disease processes not directly related to the cause of death.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1981   Volume 13, Issue 1 47-50 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1981.tb03449.x
Baker JR, Ellis CE.Disease processes not directly related to the cause of death recorded in 480 consecutive post mortem examinations of horses performed at the department of pathology, Veterinary Field Station, University of Liverpool, between February 1958 and February 1980 are reported. The alimentary, cardiovascular, respiratory and locomotor systems were those most frequently diseased. The most common specific entities were those associated with endoparasitism and its associated vascular lesions, pneumonia and fractures.
Determination of plasma fibrinogen concentration in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 1 100-104 
Campbell MD, Bellamy JE, Searcy GP.The microhematocrit heat-precipitation methods of Millar et al (1971) and Schalm et al (1975) were compared with the reference clottable protein method of Ratnoff and Menzie (1951) in the measurement of plasma fibrinogen concentration in horses. The millar et al method was more precise and accurate and showed better positive correlation with the reference method than did the Schalm et al method. There was no significant difference in the plasma fibrinogen concentration between healthy Thoroughbreds and healthy horses of other breeds. Horses with bacterial pneumonia and abscesses had significan...
Tracheal wash as a way to diagnose equine respiratory infection.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    December 1, 1980   Volume 75, Issue 12 1893-1894 
Seals W.No abstract available
Criteria for development of animal models of diseases of the respiratory system: the comparative approach in respiratory disease model development.
The American journal of pathology    December 1, 1980   Volume 101, Issue 3 Suppl S103-S122 
Slauson DO, Hahn FF.Advances in the understanding of human respiratory disease can come from careful clinical studies of the diseases as they occur in man, but such studies are naturally limited in terms of experimental manipulation. In the last 2 decades, an increasingly complex plethora of experimental respiratory disease models has been developed and utilized by investigators, but relatively less attention has been paid to the naturally occurring pulmonary diseases of animals as potential models. This paper is aimed at presenting selected examples of spontaneous pulmonary disease in animals that may serve as e...
Lymphocyte immunostimulation in the diagnosis of Corynebacterium equi pneumonia of foals.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 12 2073-2075 
Prescott JF, Ogilvie TH, Markham RJ.A lymphocyte stimulation test using antigens of Corynebacterium equi was used to compare the response of peripheral blood lymphocytes from foals with C equi pneumonia with those of clinically normal foals and adult horses. The test clearly distinguished infected foals from normal foals when tested in animals less than or equal to 2 months old. After the 2nd month, stimulation response from individual normal foals sometimes exceed those from infected foals, but mean stimulation response to C equi antigens was significantly (P less than 0.025) greater in 3- to 5-month-old infected foals when com...
Nocardia brasiliensis in a horse with pneumonia and pleuritis.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1980   Volume 70, Issue 4 321-328 
Deem DA, Harrington DD.A 15 month-old Quarter Horse colt developed severe bacterial pneumonia and effusive pleuritis. A beta-hemolytic streptococcus was isolated from a tracheal wash specimen but the colt died despite conventional therapy. The gross post mortem and histologic lesions were characteristic of pulmonary nocardiosis. Nocardia brasiliensis was isolated from the lung and bronchial lymph node.
Cryptococcal pneumonia in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    August 1, 1980   Volume 56, Issue 8 391-392 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1980.tb09566.x
Hilbert BJ, Huxtable CR, Pawley SE.No abstract available
Subepiglottic cyst in three foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 1, 1980   Volume 177, Issue 1 62-64 
Stick JA, Boles C.Three foals with chronic cough, bilateral nasal discharge, and pneumonia were found to have a subepiglottic cyst as the inciting cause. Consistent findings were dysphagia and aspiration pneumonia, in addition to the abnormal respiratory noise usually found in the adult horse with a subepiglottic cyst. Histologic examination of the cysts suggested their origin was traumatic rather than embryonic.
Experimental studies on the pathogenesis of Corynebacterium equi infection in foals. Prescott JF, Johnson JA, Markham RJ.Four month-old foals were infected orally with 75 mL of a suspension of 5.0 x 10(8)Corynebacterium equi per mL. Two foals were killed after ten days and had scanty number of C. equi in the caeco-colic lymph nodes. No C. equi were recovered from the other two foals, killed 20 days after infection. No gross pathological change was detected in these four foals, although mild microscopic lesions were seen in the ileum of one foal. Results of lymphocyte blastogenesis using peripheral blood lymphocytes and C. equi antigens showed, however, that lymphocytes became sensitized to C. equi following this...
Antibacterial therapy for pulmonary infections.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 15, 1980   Volume 176, Issue 10 Spec No 1091-1094 
Larson VL.No abstract available
Vascular anatomy and surgical technique for bilateral adrenalectomy in the equid.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 5 829-832 
Slone DE, Vaughan JT, Garrett PD, Vaden MF, Purohit RC.The vascular anatomy of the adrenal glands and a surgical technique for bilateral adrenalectomy in the equid are described. Bilateral adrenalectomy was performed in six ponies and one horse via bilateral transcostal retroperitoneal approaches through the 18th rib during a single anesthetic period. Complications included hemorrhage from the right side only and pneumothorax which usually occurred on the right side. One pony died as a result of the surgical technique. Maintenance of adrenal function was accomplished with desoxycorticosterone pivilate and prednisolone.
Cellular and humoral immune response of foals to vaccination with Corynebacterium equi.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    October 1, 1979   Volume 43, Issue 4 356-364 
Prescott JF, Markham RJ, Johnson JA.Transformation of peripheral blood lymphocytes from pony foals vaccinated and subsequently infected with Corynebacterium equi was studied. Three foals were vaccinated on two occasions using a formalinized C. equi vaccine with aluminum hydroxide as an adjuvant. Three nonvaccinated foals served as controls. Foals were challenged intratracheally with 9 x 10(9) C. equi six weeks after the initial vaccination. Foals survived this infection for one to two weeks. Significant lymphocyte transformation in response to C. equi antigens was detected in two vaccinated foals at the third week after initial ...
Intranasal oxygen in the treatment of staphylococcal pneumonia in a foal.
The Veterinary record    May 12, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 19 437 doi: 10.1136/vr.104.19.437
Rose RJ, Love DN, Amos A, Bergin M.No abstract available
Hazards of disease transfer from marine mammals to land mammals: review and recent findings.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1978   Volume 173, Issue 9 1131-1133 
Smith AW, Vedros NA, Akers TG, Gilmartin WG.In a 5-year study (1972-1977) of microbial agents isolated from both clinically normal and diseased marine mammals, it was shown that certain disease agents are widespread in a diversity of ocean populations and that some are also transmissible to a number of terrestrial mammal species. Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona has been isolated repeatedly from 2 species of pinnipeds (Zalophus californianus califonianus and Callorhinus ursinus). Some of the more important bacterial pathogens for land mammals that were isolated from wild marine mammals are Pseudomonas mallei, Clostridium chauvoei, ...
Homologous and cross-reactive precipitins in anti-pneumococcal sera raised in mules.
Immunology    July 1, 1978   Volume 35, Issue 1 105-113 
Allen PZ, Heidelberger M, Rappaport IA, Ward GM.Serial bleedings were obtained from two mules during prolonged immunization, one with type XXV the other with type VIII pneumococcal vaccine. IgGa, IgGb, IgGc, IgB, IgG(T) and IgM present among purified Pn anti-XXV and Pn anti-VIII immunoglobulin isolated from various bleedings were identified by use of rabbit anti-equine heavy chain specific reagents. Radioimmunodiffusion with 14C-labelled type XXV pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide and horse and donkey reagents with species specificity directed against donkey or horse IgGa respectively, demonstrated both parental horse and donkey IgGa heav...
Acute pulmonary failure in the conscious pony with Escherichia coli septicemia.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 7 1147-1154 
Sembrat R, Di Stazio J, Reese J, Lembersky B, Stremple J.No abstract available
Maintenance of foals with combined immunodeficiency: causes and control of secondary infections.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 6 1043-1047 
Perryman LE, McGuire TC, Crawford TB.Sixty-six cases of combined immunodeficiency (CID) in foals were studied to determine the most prevalent causes of infection and death. Lesions of the respiratory system were observed in 59 of the foals and were attributable to infection with equine adenovirus. Pneumocystis carinii, and bacteria. Significant lesions were also observed in liver, pancreas, intestines, heart, and kidneys. Maintenance of foals with CID for experimental purposes is directed at the prevention and control of these secondary infections. Adenovirus can be controlled by administration of horse plasma containing high tit...
[Demonstration of a clinically manifested mixed reovirus serotype III and rhinopneumonitis virus infection in a horse].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 15, 1978   Volume 91, Issue 6 103-106 
Thein P.No abstract available
[Occurrence and histogenesis of various fetal pneumopathies in equine viral abortion].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 15, 1977   Volume 90, Issue 22 429-432 
Geisel O, Boch E, Bachmann PA.No abstract available
Beta hemolytic group C streptococcal respiratory infection in infant and horse.
The Journal of pediatrics    November 1, 1977   Volume 91, Issue 5 845 doi: 10.1016/s0022-3476(77)81056-1
Rom S.No abstract available
Disseminated septic meningitis in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1977   Volume 171, Issue 5 452-454 
Rumbaugh GE.Physical, neurologic, and clinicopathologic findings in a 3-year-old female Morgan horse with anorexia and nasal discharge suggested suppurative meningitis. Necropsy findings substantiated the tentative diagnosis. Actinomyces sp was cultured from a meningeal abscess surrounding the pituitary gland and from resolving lung abscesses.
Studies on equine adenovirus. I. Characteristics of an adenovirus isolated from a thoroughbred colt with pneumonia.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    April 1, 1977   Volume 39, Issue 2 117-125 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.39.117
Konishi SI, Harasawa R, Mochizuki M, Akashi H, Ogata M.No abstract available
Effects of equine rhinopneumonitis vaccination on an epizootic of race track cough (tracheopharyngitis).
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    April 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 4 594-596 
Waldman M.No abstract available
Dysphagia resulting from unilateral rupture of the rectus capitis ventralis muscles in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1977   Volume 170, Issue 7 735-738 
Knight AP.Dysphagia developed in a 2-year-old Quarter Horse filly following an incident in which it fell over backward while exercising on a mechanical horse walker. Hyperextension of the neck at this time apparently caused unilateral rupture of the longus capitis (rectus capitis ventralis major) and the rectus capitis ventralis minor muscles at their insertion. An existing mycotic lesion involving the dorsomedial wall of the left guttural pouch may have weakened the area of insertion of the involved muscles. Tearing of the tendinous insertion of these muscles caused damage to the IX, X, and XI cranial ...