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Topic:Pulmonary Health

Pulmonary health in horses encompasses the study of the respiratory system's function, structure, and disorders within equine species. This area of research addresses various conditions affecting the lungs and airways, such as equine asthma, exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH), and infectious respiratory diseases. The respiratory system's efficiency is vital for horses, particularly those involved in athletic activities, as it influences performance and overall well-being. Research in pulmonary health investigates diagnostic methods, treatment options, and preventive measures for maintaining respiratory function in horses. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the anatomy, physiology, and pathophysiology of the equine respiratory system, as well as the management and therapeutic approaches for respiratory conditions in horses.
Pulmonary eosinophilia associated with increased airway responsiveness in young racing horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    May 22, 1998   Volume 12, Issue 3 163-170 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1998.tb02112.x
Hare JE, Viel L.Horses are known to acquire small airway disease (SAD), an allergen-induced naturally occurring syndrome of reversible obstructive lung disease accompanied by airway hyperresponsiveness and increased inflammatory cell numbers on bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). This disorder has received scant attention in young racehorses. The purpose of the present report was to examine the effect of BAL eosinophilia in young racehorses on clinical examination, BAL, hematology, airway responsiveness, and on pulmonary function at rest and after a standardized exercise challenge. Five (3 males, 2 females; age 2.6...
Effect of a set stabled environmental control on pulmonary function and airway reactivity of COPD affected horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 2, 1998   Volume 155, Issue 2 189-195 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(98)80018-x
Vandenput S, Votion D, Duvivier DH, Van Erck E, Anciaux N, Art T, Lekeux P.The aim of this study was to evaluate the respiratory function of horses affected with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) when maintained in a barn on wood shavings and fed grass silage for a period of 6 weeks. The mechanics of breathing, blood gas analysis and bronchial reactivity were examined on five horses with COPD at the end of the environment-controlled period (Period B) and the results compared with values obtained after 2 months at pasture (Period A) and after the onset of clinical signs of acute crisis (Period C). The results showed that clinical and functional parameters w...
Evaluation of an in vitro degranulation challenge procedure for equine pulmonary mast cells. Hare JE, Viel L, Conlon PD, Marshall JS.Pulmonary mast cells (PMC) are important components of the inflammatory process in equine allergic lung diseases such as heaves. Very little, however, is known of the degranulation kinetics of these cells and thus, their pathophysiologic role remains largely speculative. The purpose of this study was to develop a repeatable protocol for in vitro equine PMC degranulation. Five mature horses (sex: 2 M, 3 F; age: 8.8 +/- 6.5 y), historically free of pulmonary disease and normal on clinical respiratory examination, arterial blood gas analysis, pulmonary mechanics testing and histamine inhalation c...
Interstitial pneumonia and pulmonary fibrosis in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    April 16, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 2 173-175 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04480.x
Donaldson MT, Beech J, Ennulat D, Hamir AN.No abstract available
Effects of inhaled beclomethasone dipropionate on respiratory function in horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Equine veterinary journal    April 16, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 2 152-157 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04475.x
Ammann VJ, Vrins AA, Lavoie JP.The effects of beclomethasone dipropionate on pulmonary function and arterial blood gas values were investigated in horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Six mature mares, diagnosed as having COPD based on clinical signs, cytological examination of bronchoalveolar lavage and pulmonary function testing, were used. Beclomethasone dipropionate (3750 microg) was administered b.i.d. for a 2 week period with a metered dose inhaler using a mask. Pulmonary function tests and arterial blood gas analyses were performed at weekly intervals, starting before beclomethasone administratio...
Does an acute COPD crisis modify the cardiorespiratory and ventilatory adjustments to exercise in horses?
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    April 16, 1998   Volume 84, Issue 3 845-852 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1998.84.3.845
Art T, Duvivier DH, Votion D, Anciaux N, Vandenput S, Bayly WM, Lekeux P.The present study was conducted to understand better the mechanisms leading to the decrease in exercise capacity observed in horses suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Five COPD horses were submitted to a standardized submaximal treadmill exercise test while they were in clinical remission or in acute crisis. Respiratory airflow, O2 and CO2 fractions in the respired gas, pleural pressure changes and heart rate were recorded, and arterial and mixed venous blood were analyzed for gas tensions, hemoglobin, and plasma lactate concentrations. O2 consumption, CO2 production,...
Environmental control to maintain stabled COPD horses in clinical remission: effects on pulmonary function.
Equine veterinary journal    April 16, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 2 93-96 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04466.x
Vandenput S, Duvivier DH, Votion D, Art T, Lekeux P.The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that stabled COPD horses can be maintained in clinical remission by replacing hay by grass silage and bedding made of wood shavings (Period B) and of wheat straw (Period C) during 6 weeks, respectively. At the end of these different periods, the pulmonary function of the horses was assessed by mechanics of breathing and arterial blood analyses. These results were compared to those measured in clinical remission obtained after 2 months in pasture (Period A). No significant difference was observed between these 3 periods neither to values ob...
Pulmonary vascular pressures of strenuously exercising Thoroughbred horses after administration of phenylbutazone and frusemide.
Equine veterinary journal    April 16, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 2 158-162 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04476.x
Manohar M, Goetz TE, Sullivan E, Griffin R.The present study was carried out to examine the effects of phenylbutazone treatment on the pulmonary haemodynamic effects of frusemide in strenuously exercising horses. Using catheter mounted manometers, whose in vivo signals were referenced at the point of the shoulder, heart rate, right atrial, right ventricular and pulmonary vascular pressures were measured in 3 different sets of experiments. Seven Thoroughbreds were subjected to 1) control (no medications), 2) frusemide control and 3) phenylbutazone + frusemide. The experiments were carried out in random order and were separated by 7 days...
Equine pulmonary mycosis due to Aspergillus niger and Rhizopus stolonifer.
Journal of comparative pathology    February 3, 1998   Volume 117, Issue 3 191-199 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(97)80014-x
Carrasco L, Tarradas MC, Gómez-Villamandos JC, Luque I, Arenas A, Méndez A.Invasive pulmonary mycosis caused by Aspergillus niger and Rhizopus stolonifer is reported in a 2-year-old horse, one of three that died after being housed in a disused, uncleaned stable. Lesions were characterized by thrombosis of the blood vessels with haemorrhage and tissue necrosis. Fungal hyphae were observed both in thrombosed vessels and in adjacent necrotic tissue. In culture media inoculated with lung samples and samples from the bedding hay, two types of colony were recorded and identified as A. niger and R. stolonifer. This study is the first description of equine pulmonary mucormyc...
Pulmonary-locomotory interactions in exercising dogs and horses.
Respiration physiology    January 4, 1998   Volume 110, Issue 2-3 287-294 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5687(97)00094-7
Ainsworth DM, Smith CA, Eicker SW, Ducharme NG, Henderson KS, Snedden K, Dempsey JA.In exercising quadrupeds, limb movement is often coupled with breathing frequency. This finding has lead some investigators to conclude that locomotory forces, associated with foot plant, abdominal visceral displacements or lumbo-sacral flexion, are the primary determinants of airflow generation. Analysis of respiratory muscle electrical activation (EMG) and contraction profiles in chronically instrumented dogs and horses, along with measurements of esophageal pressure (Pes) changes and limb movements, provide evidence that each breath during the exercise hyperpnea is determined by respiratory...
Influence of antigen challenge on platelet responsiveness in horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Equine veterinary journal    November 5, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 5 382-386 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb03144.x
Ablett JM, Fairbairn SM, Page CP, Lees P, Cunningham FM.A role for platelets in allergic airways disease has been postulated and changes in the responsiveness of circulating platelets have been demonstrated following antigen challenge of asthmatic human subjects. In this study agonist-induced aggregation of equine platelets in vitro has been compared before and after exposure of horses to a controlled hay and stray challenge. Prior to challenge the response of platelets, from horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and normal animals, to adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and platelet activating factor (PAF) did not differ. Five hours aft...
Airway response of horses with COPD to dry powder inhalation of ipratropium bromide.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    October 6, 1997   Volume 154, Issue 2 149-153 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(97)80052-4
Duvivier DH, Votion D, Vandenput S, Art T, Lekeux P.To determine the effects of the dry powder inhalation (DPI) of ipratropium bromide (ipratropium) on the airways of health horses and the dose-response curve in horses suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) by means of pulmonary function tests, five healthy horses were first studied. Ipratropium (2400 micrograms ipratropium horse-1) was contained in gelatine capsules and administered using a dry powder device connected to an adapted face mask. Pulmonary function tests were recorded before inhalation and 15 and 60 min after inhalation. No modification of pulmonary function w...
Effects of airway obstruction on transmural pulmonary artery pressure in exercising horses.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 8 897-903 
Jackson JA, Ducharme NG, Hackett RP, Rehder RS, Ainsworth DM, Shannon KJ, Erickson BK, Erb HN, Jansson N, Soderholm LV, Thorson LM.To determine whether laryngeal hemiplegia would increase transmural pulmonary artery pressure (TPAP). Methods: 6 horses. Methods: Horses were studied under 5 conditions: control conditions, after induction of left laryngeal hemiplegia, during obstruction of the left nostril, after placement of an instrumented tracheostomy, and after placement of an open tracheostomy. Horses were evaluated after being given saline solution and after being given furosemide. Methods: Horses were exercised on a high speed treadmill, using a maximum speed of 13 m/s. During each exercise, airway pressures, airflow, ...
Lesions of experimental equine morbillivirus pneumonia in horses.
Veterinary pathology    July 1, 1997   Volume 34, Issue 4 312-322 doi: 10.1177/030098589703400407
Hooper PT, Ketterer PJ, Hyatt AD, Russell GM.Laboratory examinations of equine morbillivirus included experimental reproductions of the disease caused by the virus by transmission of mixed lung and spleen taken from two field equine cases into two horses and by inoculating tissue culture virus into a further two horses. The most distinctive gross lesions of the diseases that developed in three of the horses was that of pulmonary edema characterized by gelatinous distension of subpleural lymphatics. Histologically, the lesions in the lungs were those of serofibrinous alveolar edema, alveolar macrophages, hemorrhage, thrombosis of capillar...
Pulmonary vascular pressures of strenuously exercising Thoroughbreds after administration of varying doses of frusemide.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 4 298-304 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb03127.x
Manohar M, Goetz TE, Sullivan E, Griffin R.The frusemide dose-response for attenuation of exercise-induced pulmonary capillary hypertension was studied in 7 healthy, exercise-conditioned Thoroughbred horses using previously described haemodynamic procedures. Four different doses of frusemide were tested: 250 mg regardless of bodyweight (amounting to 0.56 +/- 0.03 mg/kg bwt), 1.0 mg/kg bwt, 1.5 mg/kg bwt and 2.0 mg/kg bwt. Frusemide was administered i.v., 4 h before exercise. Haemodynamic data were obtained at rest and during treadmill exercise performed at 14.2 m/s on a 3.5% uphill grade; this workload elicited maximal heart rate of ho...
Pathogenicity and virulence of Rhodococcus equi in foals following intratracheal challenge.
Veterinary microbiology    June 16, 1997   Volume 56, Issue 3-4 301-312 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(97)00098-9
Wada R, Kamada M, Anzai T, Nakanishi A, Kanemaru T, Takai S, Tsubaki S.Twelve foals, between 27 and 83 days old, were infected with 2 strains of Rhodococcus equi by intratracheal administration. Ten of the 12 foals were inoculated with 10(4)-10(10) colony forming units (cfu) of ATCC 33701 strain. The other 2 foals were inoculated with 10(9) cfu of a plasmid-cured derivative of the ATCC 33701 strain (ATCC 33701P-). All of the 10 foals challenged with the ATCC 33701 strain showed clinical signs of pulmonary disease within 5-13 days, such as gross lesions associated with acute bronchopneumonia and microscopic lesions associated with granulomatous pneumonia. The two ...
The comparative biology of pulmonary intravascular macrophages.
Frontiers in bioscience : a journal and virtual library    June 1, 1997   Volume 2 d232-d241 doi: 10.2741/a186
Longworth KE.Pulmonary intravascular macrophages are an important part of the mononuclear phagocyte system in some species of mammals, mainly sheep and other ruminants, pigs, and horses. These cells phagocytize foreign particles, cell debris and pathogens that pass through the pulmonary circulation. Species with intravascular macrophages localize intravenously injected tracer particles and bacteria predominantly in the lung rather than the liver, and exhibit pulmonary hypertension when these cells are activated. Both in vivo and in vitro studies show that pulmonary intravascular macrophages have distinct s...
Very high pressures are required to cause stress failure of pulmonary capillaries in thoroughbred racehorses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    May 1, 1997   Volume 82, Issue 5 1584-1592 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1997.82.5.1584
Birks EK, Mathieu-Costello O, Fu Z, Tyler WS, West JB.Thoroughbred horses develop extremely high pulmonary vascular pressures during galloping, all horses in training develop exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage, and we have shown that this is caused by stress failure of pulmonary capillaries. It is known that the capillary transmural pressure (Ptm) necessary for stress failure is higher in dogs than in rabbits. The present study was designed to determine this value in horses. The lungs from 15 Thoroughbred horses were perfused with autologous blood at Ptm values (midlung) of 25, 50, 75, 100 and 150 mmHg, and then perfusion fixed, and samples (d...
Effect of transportation on the composition of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid obtained from horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 5 531-534 
Hobo S, Oikawa M, Kuwano A, Yoshida K, Yoshihara T.To study the effects of extended transportation on the composition of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) obtained from horses. Methods: 30 horses (14 males, 16 females: 25 Thoroughbreds and 5 Thoroughbred-Arabian cross-breds; 27 to 30 months old) without a history or clinical signs of respiratory tract disease. Bronchoalveolar lavage was performed on nontransported control horses (groups 1 and 2) and transported horses (group 3). Methods: 20 horses were used to determine the effect of 41 hours of transportation on the composition of BALF (group 3). Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was analyzed fo...
Oxidant injury and nitric oxide: a role in exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage?
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 1, 1997   Volume 153, Issue 2 119-121 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(97)80032-9
Derksen FJ.No abstract available
Methods for the isolation, culture and characterisation of equine pulmonary artery endothelial cells.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1997   Volume 62, Issue 2 147-152 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(97)90137-5
MacEachern KE, Smith GL, Nolan AM.Equine endothelial cells were isolated from the pulmonary artery by enzymatic digestion and grown to confluency. The cells were characterised by positive immunofluorescent staining for von Willebrand factor and NADPH-diaphorase staining for nitric oxide synthase. Measurements of endothelins indicated that there were significant release rates from the cells for up to six hours. Measurements of intracellular calcium concentration showed that the application of bradykinin caused a transient increase in calcium concentration with similar characteristics to those observed in other endothelial cell ...
Frequency dependence of forced oscillatory respiratory mechanics in horses with heaves.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    March 1, 1997   Volume 82, Issue 3 983-987 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1997.82.3.983
Young SS, Tesarowski D, Viel L.The effect of measurement frequency on respiratory mechanics was investigated in six horses with reversible allergic airway disease. Total respiratory impedance was measured at 1.5, 2.0, 3.0, and 5.0 Hz by using the forced oscillation technique with the horses in remission, after acute antigenic challenge producing clinical heaves, and with heaves but after the administration of 2 mg fenoterol by inhalation. The slopes of the magnitude (magnitude of Zrs) and real part (R) of total respiratory impedance over the frequency range 1.5-3 Hz changed significantly after antigenic challenge and fenote...
Oxidant injury, nitric oxide and pulmonary vascular function: implications for the exercising horse.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 1, 1997   Volume 153, Issue 2 125-148 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(97)80034-2
Mills PC, Higgins AJ.The athletic ability of the horse is facilitated by vital physiological adaptations to high-intensity exercise, including a thin (but strong) pulmonary blood-gas barrier, a large pulmonary functional reserve capacity and a consequent maximum oxygen uptake (VO2max) far higher than in other species. A high pulmonary artery pressure also serves to enhance pulmonary function, although stress failure of lung capillaries at high pulmonary transmural pressures, and the contribution of other factors which act in the exercising horse to increase pulmonary vascular tone, may lead to pathological or path...
Exercise-induced changes in the lung of Shetland ponies: ultrastructure and morphometry.
Journal of submicroscopic cytology and pathology    January 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 1 65-72 
Erickson HH, McAvoy JL, Westfall JA.The ultrastructural changes in pulmonary alveoli produced by running two ponies on a high speed treadmill at 7.6 m/sec, 3-degree incline, for 2 min support the hypothesis of pulmonary capillary stress failure as an explanation for exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH). Light microscopy combined with scanning and transmission electron microscopy confirmed the presence of red blood cells and proteinaceous material in the alveolar lumina and interstitial swelling in approximately one third of the pulmonary alveoli examined. Morphometric analysis revealed that the blood-gas barrier was 30-7...
Gelatinolytic activity in tracheal aspirates of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1997   Volume 38, Issue 1 17-27 doi: 10.1186/BF03548504
Koivunen AL, Maisi P, Konttinen YT, Sandholm M.The gelatinolytic activity in tracheal aspirates (TA) of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) was analyzed using SDS-PAGE-gelatin-gel electrophoresis (zymography) and compared to TAs from healthy controls. The 110-90 kD MMP-9 type gelatinase was high in symptomatic disease phases (permanent disease 0.46 +/- 0.15, p < 0.001; or intermittent disease 0.47 +/- 0.12, p < 0.001) compared to healthy controls (0.10 +/- 0.07). Similarly, the overall gelatinolytic activity, the activity in high-mw gelatinolytic bands (210-190 and 150 kD) and in proteolytically processed fragments in ...
Measurement of cardiac output in standing horses by Doppler echocardiography and thermodilution.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 1 18-25 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb01631.x
Blissitt KJ, Young LE, Jones RS, Darke PG, Utting J.Measurement of cardiac output by Doppler echocardiography were compared to simultaneous measurements by thermodilution in 9 conscious horses. In the Doppler technique, mean blood flow velocities for estimation of cardiac output were recorded from the aorta and pulmonary artery. The flow area of each vessel was calculated from the vessel diameter, measured from a 2-dimensional ultrasound image. Differences in the site and method of measuring the vessel diameter altered the estimation of cardiac output by the Doppler method. Cardiac output was modified by the i.v. infusion of 4 micrograms/kg bwt...
Ultrasound spirometry in the horse: a preliminary report on the method and the effects of xylazine and lobeline hydrochloride medication.
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    January 1, 1997   Volume 139, Issue 12 558-563 
Herholz C, Tschudi P, Gerber H, Moens Y, Straub R.A new computerised ultrasound-based spirometry system according to Buess et al. (1995) modified by a double flow measurement facility was used to study pulmonary function in healthy horses and horses affected with subclinical and manifest chronic bronchiolitis (CB). The horses were first evaluated at rest without any medication. On another occasion all horses were tested following i.v. administration of xylazine (0.4 mg/kg) and following i.v. administration of lobeline hydrochloride (l.hy.; 0.2 mg/kg) to evaluate the effect of xylazine and l.hy. on different spirometric variables. Ultrasound-b...
Effect of treatment with erythromycin on bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cell populations in foals.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 1 56-61 
Lakritz J, Wilson WD, Watson JL, Hyde DM, Mihalyi J, Plopper CG.To determine whether oral administration of erythromycin alters the inflammatory response to bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in young horses. Methods: 12 healthy, unweaned, mixed-breed foals of either sex, between 2 and 4 months old. Methods: BAL was performed; 250 ml of phosphate-buffered saline solution (300 mOsm, pH 7.4) was administered in 50-ml aliquots. Foals were carefully monitored for 4 days, then erythromycin base (25 mg/kg of body weight, PO, q 12 h) was given to foals of the treated group. After 4 days, foals were reanesthetized, and the same lung was relavaged. Cytologic examination ...
Measurement of extravascular lung water by the double indicator dilution method using heat and sodium in horses under general anesthesia.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    December 1, 1996   Volume 58, Issue 12 1205-1209 doi: 10.1292/jvms.58.12_1205
Ito S, Ishimaru M, Hobo S, Fujinaga T.Rapid infusion is believed to be harmful to the lung, however, the pathological status of pulmonary edema resulting from excessive fluid therapy in horses has not been clarified because the quantitative diagnosis of pulmonary edema is impossible. To evaluate the precision of the double indicator dilution method using heat and sodium in horses, which allows the quantitative diagnosis of pulmonary edema, we compared extravascular lung water volume measured using a lung water computer based on the theory of the double indicator dilution method with that determined by the direct method. The value ...
Effects of road transport on indices of stress in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1996   Volume 28, Issue 6 446-454 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1996.tb01616.x
Smith BL, Jones JH, Hornof WJ, Miles JA, Longworth KE, Willits NH.Stress associated with road transport is believed to be a significant contributor to the pathogenesis of post transport respiratory disease in horses. To determine the effects of road transport on pulmonary function, pulmonary aerosol clearance rates were measured in 4 horses 24 h before, and immediately after, 24 h of road transport by delivering aerosolised 99mtechnetium-labelled diethylenetriaminepentacetate (99mTc-DTPA) to the lungs and monitoring its washout. Each horse was transported twice, once while the trailer was equipped with a leaf-spring suspension and bias-ply tyres (trailer's o...
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