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Topic:Public Health

The topic of Public Health and horses encompasses the study of interactions between equine populations and human health systems. It involves examining the transmission of zoonotic diseases, which are diseases that can be transferred between animals and humans, as well as the role of horses in the epidemiology of such diseases. This field also considers the impact of equine-related activities on public health, including injuries and environmental effects. Research in this area often explores preventive measures, management strategies, and policies to mitigate health risks associated with horses. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the intersection of equine and public health, focusing on disease transmission, risk assessment, and health management strategies.
[Leptospiroses in horses; serological study].
Revista do Instituto Adolfo Lutz    January 1, 1955   Volume 15 186-193 
CORREA MO, NETO VA, VERONESI R, FABBRI OS.No abstract available
Facilitation of demonstration of hemolytic streptococci in throat swabs by the use of nucleate and a mixture of sheep and horse blood.
Acta pathologica et microbiologica Scandinavica    January 1, 1955   Volume 36, Issue 2 187-192 doi: 10.1111/j.1699-0463.1955.tb04587.x
GRUBB R, NYMAN M.No abstract available
Studies on the North American arthropod-borne encephalitides. V. The extrinsic incubation of eastern and western equine encephalitis in mosquitoes.
American journal of hygiene    November 1, 1954   Volume 60, Issue 3 269-277 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a119720
CHAMBERLAIN RW, CORRISTAN EC, SIKES RK.No abstract available
[Isolation of an unusual strain of Pasteurella pestis var. orientalis from a horse in the Belgian Congo].
Annales de la Societe belge de medecine tropicale (1920)    August 31, 1954   Volume 34, Issue 4 469-473 
JESIERSKI A, FAIN A, DEVIGNAT R.No abstract available
Equine encephalomyelitis in Florida.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1954   Volume 125, Issue 929 115-116 
WINN JF, SCATTERDAY JE.No abstract available
[Histoplasmin reaction in horses and dogs].
Comptes rendus des seances de la Societe de biologie et de ses filiales    May 1, 1954   Volume 148, Issue 9-10 811-812 
VERGE J, PARAF A, BERTRAND A.No abstract available
[Iridocyclitis of horses and leptospirosis].
Revue de pathologie generale et de physiologie clinique    March 1, 1954   Volume 54, Issue 656 432-479 
ROSSI P, KOLOCHINE-ERBER B.No abstract available
Human epidemic in Colombia caused by the Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 1, 1954   Volume 3, Issue 2 283-293 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1954.3.283
SANMARTIN-BARBERI C, GROOT H, OSORNO-MESA E.No abstract available
[Isolation of encephalomyelitis virus from ticks. I. Isolation of the virus and its properties].
Orvosi hetilap    February 7, 1954   Volume 95, Issue 6 144-149 
FORNOSI F, MOLNAR E.No abstract available
[Isolation of an encephalomyelitic virus from Brazzaville. II. Immunological study].
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur    January 1, 1954   Volume 86, Issue 1 53-58 
PELLISSIER A.No abstract available
Equine encephalomyelitis in Utah; a survey of horses and man utilizing serum-neutralization tests.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1954   Volume 124, Issue 922 40-42 
GRUNDMANN AW, LEYMASTER GR.No abstract available
The 1952 outbreak of encephalitis in California; epidemiologic aspects.
California medicine    August 1, 1953   Volume 79, Issue 2 84-90 
HOLLISTER AC, LONGSHORE WA, DEAN BH, STEVENS IM.For the most part, epidemiologic phenomena observed in the outbreak of encephalitis in 1952 accorded with patterns that had been apparent in previous years. Ninety-seven per cent of the 414 laboratory-confirmed cases of western equine and St. Louis encephalitis in humans occurred in the 20 Central Valley counties. The cases of western equine encephalomyelitis in horses were generally scattered over the state. In the Central Valley most of the cases in horses were in animals less than two years of age; elsewhere the incidence was higher in older horses.There were no laboratory-confirmed cases o...
Encephalitis in racehorses in Malaya.
Journal of comparative pathology    July 1, 1953   Volume 63, Issue 3 195-198 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(53)80023-8
HALE JH, WITHERINGTON DH.No abstract available
California encephalitis virus, a newly described agent.
California medicine    November 1, 1952   Volume 77, Issue 5 303-309 
HAMMON WM, REEVES WC.In three cases of encephalitis in humans that occurred in the area where the newly described California virus was isolated from mosquitoes, serological evidence seemed to indict the California virus as the etiological agent. In the case of an infant with very severe disease, the serological evidence was convincing; the evidence was almost as strong in the case of a seven-year-old boy; the results in an adult were equivocal. Inapparent infection in man is quite common as indicated by neutralization tests on the sera of nearly 600 residents of California, but encephalitic manifestations of infec...
An outbreak of leptospirosis in horses on a small farm.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1952   Volume 121, Issue 907 237-242 
ROBERTS SJ, YORK CJ, ROBINSON JW.No abstract available
Interference between St. Louis encephalitis virus and Western equine encephalomyelitis virus along a neuronal pathway.
The Journal of infectious diseases    September 1, 1952   Volume 91, Issue 2 165-172 doi: 10.1093/infdis/91.2.165
JORDAN RT, DUFFY CE.No abstract available
INFECTIOUS equine encephalomyelitis in the United States in 1951.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 1, 1952   Volume 121, Issue 906 164-165 
No abstract available
Fungous disease in man acquired from cattle and horses (due to Trichophyton faviforme).
The New England journal of medicine    June 26, 1952   Volume 246, Issue 26 996-999 doi: 10.1056/NEJM195206262462602
JILLSON OF, BUCKLEY WR.No abstract available
[Toxicity of an acrid powder with a hexachlorocyclohexane base to horses].
Maroc medical    May 1, 1952   Volume 31, Issue 324 472-473 
BELOT M.No abstract available
The problem of human and equine encephalomyelitis in Ecuador.
Acta tropica    January 1, 1952   Volume 9, Issue 1 77-80 
LEVI-CASTILLO R.No abstract available
[Research on the diagnosis of equine glanders in Iran, by the allergic reaction to extracts of Whitmore’s bacillus and of Pseudomonas aeruginosa].
Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l'Academie des sciences    December 19, 1951   Volume 233, Issue 25 1705-1707 
DEYHIMI S.No abstract available
[New treatments of human or animal glanders].
Revue de pathologie comparee    December 1, 1951   Volume 51, Issue 633 1-4 
VERGE J.No abstract available
Western equine encephalitis; the 1949 epidemic in Colorado.
Diseases of the nervous system    September 1, 1951   Volume 12, Issue 9 259-264 
MULDER DW.No abstract available
Infectious equine encephalomyelitis in the United States in 1950.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1951   Volume 119, Issue 893 110-111 
SIMMS BT.No abstract available
[Drinking water, the greatest unknown: typho-colibacillosis of the horse].
La Pathologie generale    April 1, 1951   Volume 51, Issue 627 250-251 
PIEROT M.No abstract available
[Infectious anemia of horses in Czechoslovakia].
Medycyna weterynaryjna    February 1, 1951   Volume 7, Issue 2 115-117 
RADOMSKI W.No abstract available
[The role of climate in the occurrence of equine piroplasmosis].
Zeitschrift fur Tropenmedizin und Parasitologie    January 1, 1951   Volume 2, Issue 3 401-410 
ENIGK K.No abstract available
[Note on a central nervous system disorder in horses and a meningo-encephalitic syndrome in humans].
La Pathologie generale    December 1, 1950   Volume 50, Issue 623 875-878 
CHASSIGNEUX AF.No abstract available
[Infectious anemia of the horse in Haute-Marne].
La Pathologie generale    November 1, 1950   Volume 50, Issue 622 728-752 
LAMARRE L.No abstract available
Bionomics of Culex tarsalis in relation to Western equine encephalomyelitis.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    November 1, 1950   Volume 30, Issue 6 909-916 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1950.s1-30.909
JENKINS DW.No abstract available