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Topic:Post Mortem

Post mortem examination in horses involves the systematic investigation of a deceased horse to determine the cause of death and evaluate any underlying health conditions. This process, also known as necropsy, is conducted by veterinary pathologists and involves a thorough external and internal examination of the horse's body. During a post mortem, tissues and organs are inspected for abnormalities, and samples may be collected for further histopathological, microbiological, or toxicological analysis. The findings from a post mortem can provide valuable insights into disease processes, inform management practices, and contribute to broader veterinary research. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore methodologies, findings, and implications of post mortem examinations in equine veterinary practice.
Cecal impaction in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1984   Volume 184, Issue 8 950-952 
Campbell ML, Colahan PC, Brown MP, Grandstedt ME, Peyton LC.During a 3-year period, cecal impaction was diagnosed in 21 horses (mean age, 8 years) at exploratory celiotomy or necropsy. In 7 horses, typhlotomy was used to remove the impaction; 2 horses treated by fluid injection of the impaction did not survive. The 12 other horses had cecal rupture. Surgical correction was not possible in those horses because of inaccessibility of the rupture site. Postmortem examination of the rupture sites did not reveal a cause other than cecal impaction. The duration of clinical signs before rupture ranged from 4 to 96 hours.
Splenic lymphosarcoma in a horse.
Modern veterinary practice    April 1, 1984   Volume 65, Issue 4 269-272 
Nyack B, Padmore CL, Dunn D, Kufuor-Mensan E, Mobini S.A 10-year-old Tennessee Walker gelding, with a history of progressive weight loss, intermittent colic and lethargy, had a slight fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, pallor, ascites and marked ventral edema. Blood analyses revealed anemia, leukocytosis, neutrophilia with a left shift, lymphopenia, monocytosis, hypoproteinemia and a slightly increased SDH level. Abdominocentesis produced red-orange fluid with many RBC and an increased fibrinogen content. Rectal palpation revealed a large mass in the left caudal abdominal quadrant. The animal died shortly after resection of the mass. The histopatholog...
Splenic lymphosarcoma in a horse.
Modern veterinary practice    April 1, 1984   Volume 65, Issue 4 269-272 
Nyack B, Padmore CL, Dunn D, Kufuor-Mensan E, Mobini S.A 10-year-old Tennessee Walker gelding, with a history of progressive weight loss, intermittent colic and lethargy, had a slight fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, pallor, ascites and marked ventral edema. Blood analyses revealed anemia, leukocytosis, neutrophilia with a left shift, lymphopenia, monocytosis, hypoproteinemia and a slightly increased SDH level. Abdominocentesis produced red-orange fluid with many RBC and an increased fibrinogen content. Rectal palpation revealed a large mass in the left caudal abdominal quadrant. The animal died shortly after resection of the mass. The histopatholog...
Three cases of ruptured mitral valve chordae in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 2 125-135 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01880.x
Holmes JR, Miller PJ.The paper describes clinical observations in three horses with ruptured mitral valve chordae. Horses with ruptured mitral valve chordae may have a history of sudden onset of acute distress with predominantly respiratory symptoms. On auscultation there will be a widespread pansystolic murmur with an extension of the area of cardiac auscultation. The third heart sound may be very pronounced and unduly prolonged, associated with high volume flow during early ventricular filling in diastole. However, these sounds are not specific for chordal rupture--they are typical of severe mitral regurgitation...
Three cases of obstruction of the small colon by a foreign body.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1984   Volume 6, Issue 1 31-36 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1984.9693904
van Wuijckhuise-Sjouke LA.This report describes fatal obstruction of the small colon of three horses. The obstructions were caused by irregularly shaped enteroliths of which the centres contained a foreign body, namely a guy-rope, a piece of baling twine , and a fishing-line, respectively. The diagnosis was made by post-mortem examination.
Abortion due to histoplasmosis in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 10 1097-1099 
Saunders JR, Matthiesen RJ, Kaplan W.No abstract available
Survey of 79 referral colic cases.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 4 345-348 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01819.x
Parry BW.The clinical, surgical and/or necropsy diagnosis of 79 horses admitted to a referral clinic for evaluation of colic are reported. Twenty-one horses were presented with conditions amenable to medical treatment and all were subsequently discharged. Exploratory laparotomies were performed on 44 horses during the present study, in some cases as a diagnostic procedure preceding euthanasia. In general, in surgical cases the mortality rate was highest for problems involving the small intestine, followed by those affecting the large colon and then the small colon. Postoperative sequelae included perit...
Clostridium fallax as a cause of gas-oedema disease in a horse.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1983   Volume 93, Issue 4 597-601 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(83)90067-1
Coloe PJ, Ireland L, Vaudrey JC.We record a fatal case of gas-oedema disease (malignant oedema) in a 5-year-old horse. The nature of the lesion is consistent with a gas-oedema type infection due to a Clostridium spp. The causative organism was isolated and identified by conventional biochemical tests and by gas-liquid chromatographic analysis of its metabolic products as Clostridium fallax, but significant variations in the reported biochemical characteristics of Cl. fallax were detected. We believe that this is the first reported case of Cl. fallax infection in a horse.
Radiographic assessment of epiglottic length and pharyngeal and laryngeal diameters in the Thoroughbred.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 9 1660-1666 
Linford RL, O'Brien TR, Wheat JD, Meagher DM.A lateral radiograph of the pharyngeal region provides a technique for identifying pharyngeal disorders, including entrapment of the epiglottic cartilage and dorsal displacement of the soft palate. Epiglottic cartilage length, predicted from radiographs by measurement from the body of the thyroid cartilage to the tip of the epiglottis (thyroepiglottic length), was well correlated to actual length at postmortem examination (r2 = 0.98). Thyroepiglottic length, corrected for magnification, was 8.76 +/- 0.44 cm in 24 healthy Thoroughbreds. Nine Thoroughbreds with entrapment of the epiglottic carti...
Attempted reconstitution of a foal with primary severe combined immunodeficiency.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 3 233-237 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01776.x
Campbell TM, Studdert MJ, Ellis WM, Paton CM.A foal with primary severe combined immunodeficiency, diagnosed within the first two weeks of life, was maintained with its dam in semi-isolation. The foal received continuous prophylactic antibiotic therapy, plasma from a sibling hyperimmunised with equine adenovirus vaccine, and intensive general nursing care. A full sibling female was selected as a bone marrow donor on the basis of red blood cell cross-matching and mixed lymphocyte reactions. Cyclophosphamide was given before two bone marrow transfusions at 35 and 73 days of age. To prevent graft versus host disease graft versus host diseas...
[Prevention of Strongylidae infections in the horse].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    June 15, 1983   Volume 108, Issue 12 475-481 
Mirck MH, Eysker M, Jansen J.Proceeding on the epidemiology of Strongylidae infection in horses, the effects of combined anthelmintic treatment and moving to non-contaminated pasture in July were studied during 1981 and 1982. This strategy for control was found to be effective as was shown by faecal examination, pasture larval counts and post-mortem worm counts. No significant contamination or worm infection developed in the group of treated ponies moved to celan pasture after July 1. On the permanently grazed pasture the same pattern of infection developed as on the pasture where up to July 1 ponies and subsequently shee...
Sudden death in a horse following fracture of the acetabulum and iliac artery laceration.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 7 712-713 
Sweeney CR, Hodge TG.No abstract available
Surgical removal of choleliths in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 7 714-716 
Traub JL, Grant BD, Rantanen NW, McElwain T, Wagner PC, Bayly WM.No abstract available
[A pony with “false” colic].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    January 15, 1983   Volume 108, Issue 2 67-69 
van Wuijckhuise-Sjouke LA.Report on the case of a pony with colic submitted a to the department of internal medicine. However, the animal was found to be affected with dilatation of the oesophagus which had given rise to acute pleurisy resulting from rupture of the wall of the oesophagus. The diagnosis was established after death.
Ischaemic necrosis of the jejunum of a horse caused by a penetrating foreign body.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 1 66-68 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01712.x
Davies JV.No abstract available
Some effects of chronic mercuric chloride intoxication on renal function in a horse.
Veterinary and human toxicology    December 1, 1982   Volume 24, Issue 6 415-420 
Roberts MC, Seawright AA, Ng JC, Norman PD.Chronic mercuric chloride intoxication in an aged horse given 0.8 mg Hg/kg/day for 14 weeks was manifest by signs of progressive respiratory difficulty and renal disease. The effects were not self-limiting after mercury was withdrawn, and the animal was destroyed six weeks later. Renal function changes included heavy glycosuria, modest proteinuria, phosphaturia, reduced urine osmolality, gradually increasing urine production, reduced glomerular filtration rate, and terminally, azotemia. The condition bore similarities to the Fanconi syndrome in man. Urinary gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, alkal...
Experimental Brucella abortus infection in the horse: observations during the three months following inoculation.
Research in veterinary science    November 1, 1982   Volume 33, Issue 3 351-359 
MacMillan AP, Baskerville A, Hambleton P, Corbel MJ.Five mares, one stallion and a colt foal were inoculated intraconjunctivally with Brucella abortus strain 544. No clinical signs of disease developed except mild pyrexia. Intermittent bacteraemia was detected in the mares but not in the stallion or foal. Antibodies to B abortus became detectable from the second week after inoculation. Titres in the serum agglutination and complement fixation tests declined substantially after six to eight weeks but reactions to the Coombs antiglobulin, 2-mercaptoethanol and immunodiffusion tests were maintained. No consistent changes in biochemical or haematol...
Pancreatic adenocarcinoma in a donkey.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1982   Volume 14, Issue 4 338-339 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1982.tb02450.x
Kerr OM, Pearson GR, Rice DA.No abstract available
Multiple congenital heart anomalies in five Arabian foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1982   Volume 181, Issue 7 684-689 
Bayly WM, Reed SM, Leathers CW, Brown CM, Traub JL, Paradis MR, Palmer GH.Five Arabian or half-Arabian foals with suspected multiple cardiac anomalies were examined. Various combinations of clinical examination, electrocardiography, angiocardiography, cardiac catheterization, blood gas analysis, radiography, and echocardiography resulted in clinical data that allowed accurate antemortem diagnoses to be made. In 4 cases, the clinical diagnosis was substantiated by postmortem findings. The confirmed diagnoses were: pseudotruncus arteriosus, a combination of patent ductus arteriosus, pulmonic stenosis, and tricuspid stenosis, pentalogy of Fallot, and tricuspid atresia....
Sudden and unexpected deaths in horses: a review of 69 cases.
The British veterinary journal    September 1, 1982   Volume 138, Issue 5 417-429 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)30987-9
Platt H.No abstract available
[Necropsy findings in two horses with tachycardia paroxysmalis].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    July 6, 1982   Volume 89, Issue 7 293-295 
Schoon HA, Deegen E.No abstract available
Migration of a spiruroid nematode through the brain of a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1982   Volume 180, Issue 11 1306-1311 
Mayhew IG, Lichtenfels JR, Greiner EC, MacKay RJ, Enloe CW.A pregnant 10-year-old Paint mare was examined because of an acute neurologic disturbance. Physical examination revealed signs consistent with extensive, asymmetric brain stem disease. The hemogram, serum chemical panel, and results of lumbosacral spinal fluid analysis were within normal limits. A primary diagnosis of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis was considered, and the mare was placed on treatment with trimethoprim-sulfadiazine. After 5 weeks of steady improvement, an acute exacerbation of neurologic signs necessitated euthanasia of the mare. At necropsy, large, malacic tracts were foun...
The acute abdominal patient: postoperative management and complications.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Large animal practice    May 1, 1982   Volume 4, Issue 1 167-184 doi: 10.1016/s0196-9846(17)30124-6
McIlwraith CW.The postoperative management of the surgical colic patient varies according to the complications experienced. Many of these complications can be related to the time at which surgery is performed relative to commencement of the problem, the condition of the patient at the time of surgery, the particular condition, and, last but not least, the surgeon's performance. Some of the points have been discussed elsewhere in the symposium. The maintenance of asepsis, attention to minimizing trauma to the bowel, and appropriate attention to visceral and parietal closures are all important principles. ...
Medical management of congestive heart failure in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1982   Volume 180, Issue 8 878-883 
Brumbaugh GW, Thomas WP, Hodge TG.A 4-year-old Quarter Horse gelding with atrial fibrillation, mitral regurgitation, and signs of bilateral congestive heart failure was initially treated IV with digoxin and furosemide. After parenteral digitalization, a daily maintenance dose of digoxin was administered orally at a rate of 21.7 micrograms/kg of body weight. At this dosage, a steady-state serum digoxin concentration of 2.3 ng/ml was achieved without clinical signs of toxicosis. The furosemide dosage was decreased and eventually discontinued as clinical improvement occurred. Clinical signs of congestive heart failure were contro...
Noniatrogenic rectal tears in three horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1982   Volume 180, Issue 7 750-751 
Slone DE, Humburg JM, Jagar JE, Powers RD.Rectal tears were detected in three horses treated for colic. Based on historical, clinical, and postmortem findings, the tears could not be attributed to the attending veterinarian and were therefore not iatrogenic (physician induced). One tear was attributable to an infarction that presumably resulted from thromboembolism; 1 tear occurred without any evidence of external cause and resulted in such severe peritonitis that the cause and resulted in such severe peritonitis that the cause could not be determined, and 1 tear occurred during rectal palpation by the owner, before he called the vete...
Pulmonary atresia with dextroposition of the aorta and ventricular septal defect in three Arabian foals.
Veterinary pathology    March 1, 1982   Volume 19, Issue 2 160-168 doi: 10.1177/030098588201900207
Vitums A, Bayly WM.Three Arabian males foals were presented with cyanosis, heart murmur, and exercise intolerance, Results of clinical evaluation suggested a tentative diagnosis of ventricular septal defect in conjunction with malformations of the great arteries. Each foal had a poor prognosis and was killed at the owners' requests. At necropsy, the malformed hearts of the three foals were virtually identical. Each heart had a large defect in the upper interventricular septum. The aorta originated from the hypertrophied right ventricle and partially overrode the ventricular septal defect. The aortic ostium was g...
Renal dysfunction in a case of purpura haemorrhagica in a horse.
The Veterinary record    February 13, 1982   Volume 110, Issue 7 144-146 doi: 10.1136/vr.110.7.144
Roberts MC, Kelly WR.A four-year-old thoroughbred was presented with clinical manifestations of purpura haemorrhagica. Evidence of renal involvement consistent with glomerulopathy and nephrotic syndrome, characterised by heavy proteinuria and azotaemia, became apparent and may have been exacerbated by diuretic therapy. Autopsy revealed membrano- and mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis and chronic pleuritis. Circulating immune complexes may have been responsible for the renal diseases and the purpura.
Urinary indices for differentiation of prerenal azotemia and renal azotemia in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1982   Volume 180, Issue 3 284-288 
Grossman BS, Brobst DF, Kramer JW, Bayly WM, Reed SM.The urine urea nitrogen/plasma urea nitrogen ratio (Uun/Pun), urine creatinine/plasma creatinine ratio (Ucr/Pcr), urine osmolality/plasma osmolality ratio (Uosm/Posm), and fractional excretion of filtered sodium (FENa) were evaluated in 16 horses with acute azotemia to ascertain the significance of each index in the differentiation of prerenal azotemia from renal azotemia. Renal azotemia was diagnosed when renal biopsy or postmortem histologic examination demonstrated evidence of organic renal disease or when azotemia was found in the presence of isosthenuria. The diagnosis of prerenal azotemi...
Fibrinous pericarditis in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1982   Volume 180, Issue 3 266-271 
Dill SG, Simoncini DC, Bolton GR, Rendano VT, Crissman JW, King JM, Tennant BC.During a period of 18 months, between July 1978 and January 1980, 4 adult horses were referred to the New York State College of Veterinary Medicine with evidence of congestive heart failure. Characteristic clinical abnormalities included marked muffling of heart sounds, tachycardia, jugular vein distention, and peripheral edema. Treatment with antibiotics, diuretics, and anti-inflammatory drugs was unsuccessful, and all four died or were euthanatized and necropsied. At necropsy, there was marked distention of the pericardial sac with fluid, and thick layers of fibrin were deposited uniformly o...
Chlamydia psittaci induced pneumonia in a horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1982   Volume 72, Issue 1 92-97 
McChesney SL, England JJ, McChesney AE.An agent lethal to embryonated chicken eggs was isolated from lung tissues of a quarter horse mare with a fatal respiratory disease. The lesions induced in embryonated chicken eggs, the tinctoral properties, the ultrastructural morphology, the resistance of the organism to sodium sulfadiazine, and the presence of a chlamydial complement fixing antigen, identify this isolate as a member of the family Chlamydiaceae and suggest the agent to be Chlamydia psittaci. Two Shetland ponies experimentally infected with the isolated agent developed subclinical infection as demonstrated by an increase in c...
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