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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.
Occurrence of exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage in show jumping horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 6, 2019   Volume 248 91-94 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.05.003
Bonomo CCM, Michelotto PV, Viccino C, Barussi FCM, Fernandes WR.Pulmonary haemorrhage occurs in sport horses performing high-intensity exercise, but the factors involved in the occurrence of pulmonary haemorrhage in jumping horses have not been elucidated. This study aimed to determine the occurrence of pulmonary haemorrhage and factors involved in competitive jumping horses. Fifty adult jumping horses competing in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, were included. The horses were divided into two groups based on jump height at competition: Low group (LG, n=26), with jump height between 1.00 and 1.20m, and High group (HG, n=24), with jump height between 1.30 a...
Gastrointestinal and pulmonary parasites of working horses from Colombia.
Veterinary parasitology, regional studies and reports    April 24, 2019   Volume 17 100296 doi: 10.1016/j.vprsr.2019.100296
Ramírez-Hernández A, Polo G, Robayo-Sánchez LN, Cruz-Maldonado OA, Imbacuán-Pantoja WO, Cortés-Vecino JA.Working equids are used in different countries for numerous purposes and regularly are crucial for multiple communities' income and profit. Historically, in Bogotá D.C. they were used as animal-powered vehicles but in 2013 it was initiated a substitution and adoption program as a result of society pressure and lawful processes. Infectious diseases and mainly parasitic diseases, poses a threat in the health and productivity of these animals. Our aim was to identify, by coproparasitological methods, the gastrointestinal and pulmonary parasite species infecting working horses submitted to the me...
Effect of different doses of inhaled ciclesonide on lung function, clinical signs related to airflow limitation and serum cortisol levels in horses with experimentally induced mild to severe airway obstruction.
Equine veterinary journal    April 5, 2019   Volume 51, Issue 6 779-786 doi: 10.1111/evj.13093
Lavoie JP, Bullone M, Rodrigues N, Germim P, Albrecht B, von Salis-Soglio M.Inhaled corticosteroids are effective for the treatment of equine asthma but they induce cortisol suppression with potential side effects. Objective: To study the efficacy of ciclesonide, an inhaled corticosteroid with an improved safety profile, on lung function, clinical signs related to airway obstruction, and serum cortisol levels in asthmatic horses exposed to a mouldy hay challenge. Methods: Cross-over placebo controlled, blinded, randomised experiment. Methods: Sixteen horses were enrolled in three subsequent dose-titration studies (8 horses/study) to investigate the effects of inhaled ...
Insights into animal models for cell-based therapies in translational studies of lung diseases: Is the horse with naturally occurring asthma the right choice?
Cytotherapy    March 29, 2019   Volume 21, Issue 5 525-534 doi: 10.1016/j.jcyt.2019.02.010
Lange-Consiglio A, Stucchi L, Zucca E, Lavoie JP, Cremonesi F, Ferrucci F.Human asthma is a widespread disease associated with chronic inflammation of the airways, leading to loss of quality of life, disability and death. Corticosteroid administration is the mainstream treatment for asthmatic patients. Corticosteroids reduce airway obstruction and improve quality of life, although symptoms persist despite treatment in many patients. Moreover, available therapies failed to reverse the lung pathology present in asthma. Animal models, mostly rats and mice, in which the disease is experimentally induced, have been studied to identify new therapeutic targets for human as...
Nebulisation of dexamethasone sodium phosphate for the treatment of severe asthmatic horses.
Equine veterinary journal    March 28, 2019   Volume 51, Issue 5 641-645 doi: 10.1111/evj.13091
Mainguy-Seers S, Bessonnat A, Picotte K, Lavoie JP.Inhaled corticosteroids are effective in the treatment of equine asthma. A recent study reported that nebulisation of injectable dexamethasone had low systemic bioavailability in healthy horses and could represent a cost-effective therapy for equine inflammatory lung diseases. Objective: To determine the effects of dexamethasone nebulisation on lung function in severe asthmatic horses. It was hypothesised that dexamethasone administered by nebulisation would be more effective than the same dose administered orally. Methods: Randomised blinded experimental study in severe asthmatic horses. Meth...
Evaluation of lipid markers in surfactant obtained from asthmatic horses exposed to hay.
American journal of veterinary research    February 26, 2019   Volume 80, Issue 3 300-305 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.80.3.300
Christmann U, Hite RD, Witonsky SG, Buechner-Maxwell VA, Wood PL.OBJECTIVE To evaluate the lipidomic profile of surfactant obtained from horses with asthma at various clinical stages and to compare results with findings for healthy horses exposed to the same conditions. SAMPLE Surfactant samples obtained from 6 horses with severe asthma and 7 healthy horses. PROCEDURES Clinical evaluation of horses and surfactant analysis were performed. Samples obtained from horses with severe asthma and healthy horses before (baseline), during, and after exposure to hay were analyzed. Crude surfactant pellets were dried prior to dissolution in a solution of isopropanol:me...
Effects of ventilation mode and blood flow on arterial oxygenation during pulse-delivered inhaled nitric oxide in anesthetized horses.
American journal of veterinary research    February 26, 2019   Volume 80, Issue 3 275-283 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.80.3.275
Auckburally A, Grubb TL, Wiklund M, Nyman G.OBJECTIVE To determine the impact of mechanical ventilation (MV) and perfusion conditions on the efficacy of pulse-delivered inhaled nitric oxide (PiNO) in anesthetized horses. ANIMALS 27 healthy adult horses. PROCEDURES Anesthetized horses were allocated into 4 groups: spontaneous breathing (SB) with low ( 70 mm Hg. Data were collected after a 60-minute equilibration period and at 15 and 30 minutes during PiNO administration. Variables included Pao, arterial oxygen saturation and content, oxygen delivery, and physiologic dead space-to-tidal volume ratio. Data were analyzed with Shapiro-Wilk, ...
The effect of single pretreatment with salbutamol on recovery of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid in horses with suspected or confirmed severe equine asthma.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    February 1, 2019   Volume 33, Issue 2 976-980 doi: 10.1111/jvim.15359
Varegg MS, Kløverød KM, Austnes MK, Siwinska N, Slowikowska M, Zak A, Niedzwiedz A.Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) is a method for the recovery of respiratory secretion from the lower airways. Objective: To investigate if the administration of a single dose of a bronchodilatator in horses with a suspected or confirmed severe equine asthma could improve recovery of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF). Methods: Twenty-eight horses with severe equine asthma. Methods: Horses were divided into 2 groups: group "treated" was given salbutamol before endoscopic examination and BALF collection, whereas group "not treated" was not given. BAL was performed with BAL-catheter by instilling 3...
Total intravenous anesthesia with alfaxalone, dexmedetomidine and remifentanil in healthy foals undergoing abdominal surgery.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    January 22, 2019   Volume 46, Issue 3 315-324 doi: 10.1016/j.vaa.2019.01.003
Jones T, Bracamonte JL, Ambros B, Duke-Novakovski T.To evaluate effects of anesthesia induced with alfaxalone and maintained with alfaxalone, dexmedetomidine and remifentanil infusions in foals. Methods: Prospective, experimental study. Methods: A group of six healthy foals [median (range) 11 (8-33) days] undergoing abdominal surgery. Methods: Intravenous (IV) dexmedetomidine (3-7μgkg) provided sedation for insertion of a pulmonary artery catheter. IV anesthesia was induced with alfaxalone (2mgkg) and maintained with alfaxalone (6mgkghour), dexmedetomidine (1μgkghour) and remifentanil (3μgkghour). Foals were endotracheally intubated and lung...
Equine lung decellularization: a potential approach for in vitro modeling the role of the extracellular matrix in asthma.
Journal of tissue engineering    November 12, 2018   Volume 9 2041731418810164 doi: 10.1177/2041731418810164
da Palma RK, Fratini P, Schiavo Matias GS, Cereta AD, Guimarães LL, Anunciação ARA, de Oliveira LVF, Farre R, Miglino MA.Contrary to conventional research animals, horses naturally develop asthma, a disease in which the extracellular matrix of the lung plays a significant role. Hence, the horse lung extracellular matrix appears to be an ideal candidate model for in vitro studying the mechanisms and potential treatments for asthma. However, so far, such model to study cell-extracellular matrix interactions in asthma has not been developed. The aim of this study was to establish a protocol for equine lung decellularization that maintains the architecture of the extracellular matrix and could be used in the future ...
Prolonged Recovery From General Anesthesia Possibly Related to Persistent Hypoxemia in a Draft Horse.
Frontiers in veterinary science    October 1, 2018   Volume 5 235 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00235
Dupont J, Serteyn D, Sandersen C.Horses are susceptible to developing large areas of pulmonary atelectasis during recumbency and anesthesia. The subsequent pulmonary shunt is responsible for significant impairment of oxygenation. Since ventilation perfusion mismatch persists into the post-operative period, hypoxemia remains an important concern in the recovery stall. This case report describes the diagnosis and supportive therapy of persistent hypoxemia in a 914 kg draft horse after isoflurane anesthesia. It highlights how challenging it can be to deal with hypoxemia after disconnection from the anesthesia machine and how lif...
Efficacy of an alveolar recruitment maneuver for improving gas exchange and pulmonary mechanics in anesthetized horses ventilated with oxygen or a helium-oxygen mixture.
American journal of veterinary research    September 27, 2018   Volume 79, Issue 10 1021-1027 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.79.10.1021
Hopster K, D○ LR, Hopster-Iversen CCS, Driessen B.OBJECTIVE To evaluate efficacy of an alveolar recruitment maneuver (ARM) with positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEPs) in anesthetized horses ventilated with oxygen or heliox (70% helium and 30% oxygen). ANIMALS 6 healthy adult horses. PROCEDURES In a randomized crossover study, horses were anesthetized and positioned in dorsal recumbency. Volume-controlled ventilation was performed with heliox or oxygen (fraction of inspired oxygen [Fio] > 90%). Sixty minutes after mechanical ventilation commenced, an ARM with PEEP (0 to 30 cm HO in steps of 5 cm HO every 5 minutes, followed by incremental s...
Efficacy of inhaled budesonide for the treatment of severe equine asthma.
Equine veterinary journal    September 25, 2018   Volume 51, Issue 3 401-407 doi: 10.1111/evj.13018
Lavoie JP, Leclere M, Rodrigues N, Lemos KR, Bourzac C, Lefebvre-Lavoie J, Beauchamp G, Albrecht B.Corticosteroids are the most potent drugs for the control of severe equine asthma, but adverse effects limit their chronic systemic administration. Inhaled medications allow for drug delivery directly into the airways, reducing the harmful effects of these drugs. Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of inhaled budesonide specifically formulated for the equine use and administered by a novel inhalation device in horses with severe asthma. Methods: Experimental studies in horses with naturally occurring asthma with cross-over, randomised, blinded experimental designs. Methods: In Study 1, budeson...
An observational study of environmental exposures, airway cytology, and performance in racing thoroughbreds.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    September 17, 2018   Volume 32, Issue 5 1754-1762 doi: 10.1111/jvim.15226
Ivester KM, Couëtil LL, Moore GE.Mild equine asthma is presumed to arise in response to environmental exposures but the relative impact of differing inflammatory phenotypes upon performance are largely unexplored. Objective: Airway inflammation negatively affects performance and cytological phenotype varies with environmental exposure. Methods: Thoroughbred racehorses in active training and racing. Methods: Thoroughbreds were recruited 24-48 hours before racing. Each horse was eligible for re-enrollment with each race entry. Within one hour of race completion, physical examination, respiratory endoscopy, and BAL were performe...
Effects of 12 and 17 cmH2O positive end-expiratory pressure applied after alveolar recruitment maneuver on pulmonary gas exchange and compliance in isoflurane-anesthetized horses.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    September 7, 2018   Volume 46, Issue 1 64-73 doi: 10.1016/j.vaa.2018.08.003
Andrade FS, Facó LL, Ida KK, Silva LC, Fantoni DT, Ambrósio AM.To compare static compliance (C) and alveolar-arterial oxygen tension difference [P(a-a)O] between positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEP) of 7, 12 and 17 cmHO applied after an alveolar recruitment maneuver (RM) in isoflurane-anesthetized horses. Methods: Prospective, randomized, clinical study. Methods: A group of 30 healthy adult horses undergoing arthroscopic surgery. Methods: Animals in dorsal recumbency and mechanically ventilated with a tidal volume of 14 mL kg and 7 cmHO PEEP (control; n = 6) were subjected to an RM by increasing PEEP from 7 to 22 cmHO in 5 cmHO increments at 5 minute...
Lung Microbiome Is Influenced by the Environment and Asthmatic Status in an Equine Model of Asthma.
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology    September 6, 2018   Volume 60, Issue 2 189-197 doi: 10.1165/rcmb.2017-0228OC
Fillion-Bertrand G, Dickson RP, Boivin R, Lavoie JP, Huffnagle GB, Leclere M.There is evidence that the lung microbiome differs between patients with asthma and healthy humans, but the effect of environmental conditions and medication is unknown and difficult to study. Equine asthma is a naturally occurring chronic airway disease characterized by reversible airway inflammation and bronchoconstriction upon exposure to inhaled antigens. In the present study, we evaluated the effect that environmental conditions and disease status have on pulmonary, nasal, and oral microbiomes. Six asthmatic and six healthy horses were studied while at pasture ("low antigen exposure"), as...
Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cytology and airway hyper-reactivity in clinically normal horses.
Australian veterinary journal    August 22, 2018   Volume 96, Issue 8 291-296 doi: 10.1111/avj.12721
Cullimore AM, Secombe CJ, Lester GD, Robertson ID.To characterise the relationship between bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) cytology and pulmonary function testing with histamine bronchoprovocation (HBP) methods in a population of clinically normal horses. Methods: Cross-sectional study METHODS: Clinically normal adult horses (n = 33) underwent pulmonary function testing and HBP with a commercial flowmetric plethysmography system. BAL was performed 1-5 days later. Statistical analysis was used to assess associations between BALF cell concentration, relative inflammatory cell percentages and categorisation, and airway hyper-reactivity...
Lower airway disease: Does research fit our practice needs?
Equine veterinary journal    August 18, 2018   Volume 50, Issue 5 701 doi: 10.1111/evj.12988
Kinnison T, Cardwell J, Smith K, Couëtil L, Wylie C, Whiting M, Roder C.No abstract available
Efficacy of tamoxifen for the treatment of severe equine asthma.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    August 7, 2018   Volume 32, Issue 5 1748-1753 doi: 10.1111/jvim.15289
Mainguy-Seers S, Picotte K, Lavoie JP.Tamoxifen, a selective estrogen receptor modulator, decreased airway neutrophilia and improved clinical signs in an experimental model of equine asthma, and induced neutrophilic apoptosis in vitro. Objective: Tamoxifen reduces airway neutrophilia and improves lung function in severe asthmatic horses. Methods: Twelve severe asthmatic horses from a research herd. Methods: Randomized controlled blinded study design. The effects of a 12-day oral treatment with tamoxifen (0.22 mg/kg, q24h) or dexamethasone (0.06 mg/kg, q24h) on lung function, endoscopic tracheal mucus score and bronchoalveolar ...
Lower Airway Disease in the Athletic Horse.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    July 17, 2018   Volume 34, Issue 2 443-460 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2018.04.010
Mazan MR.The airways are the first part of the pathway in the oxygen transport chain that is critical to excellent athletic performance, and the lower airways are considered the final gatekeeper before oxygen enters the blood and carbon dioxide exits. Horses are blessed with large airways and lungs that allow them to be superb athletes, but the down side of this largesse on the part of evolution is that unless they are truly elite athletes they may withstand noninfectious disease of the lower respiratory tract for months to years before the owner or trainer notices. The two conditions of the lower resp...
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha protein concentrations in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from healthy horses and horses with severe equine asthma.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    June 24, 2018   Volume 202 70-73 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2018.06.014
Montgomery JB, Husulak ML, Kosolofski H, Dos Santos S, Burgess H, Meachem MD.The objective of this study was to determine if TNF-α protein concentration differs in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) obtained from healthy horses, horses with naturally occurring exacerbations of severe equine asthma and horses in remission from severe equine asthma. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF- α) protein concentrations were determined in BALF by commercial equine ELISA. Horses with naturally occurring exacerbation of severe equine asthma were found to have significantly lower BALF TNF-α protein concentrations than healthy horses (p = 0.0026). There was no significant differ...
Role of neutrophils in equine asthma.
Animal health research reviews    May 24, 2018   Volume 19, Issue 1 65-73 doi: 10.1017/S146625231800004X
Uberti B, Morán G.Neutrophilic bronchiolitis is the primary lesion in asthma-affected horses. Neutrophils are key actors in host defense, migrating toward sites of inflammation and infection, where they act as early responder cells toward external insults. However, neutrophils can also mediate tissue damage in various non-infectious inflammatory processes. Within the airways, these cells likely contribute to bronchoconstriction, mucus hypersecretion, and pulmonary remodeling by releasing pro-inflammatory mediators, including the cytokines interleukin (IL)-8 and IL-17, neutrophil elastase, reactive oxygen specie...
Physiologic Factors Influencing the Arterial-To-End-Tidal CO2 Difference and the Alveolar Dead Space Fraction in Spontaneously Breathing Anesthetised Horses.
Frontiers in veterinary science    March 28, 2018   Volume 5 58 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00058
Mosing M, Böhm SH, Rasis A, Hoosgood G, Auer U, Tusman G, Bettschart-Wolfensberger R, Schramel JP.The arterial to end-tidal CO difference (PCO) and alveolar dead space fraction (VDalv = PCO/PaCO), are used to estimate Enghoff's "pulmonary dead space" (V/Q), a factor which is also influenced by venous admixture and other pulmonary perfusion abnormalities and thus is not just a measure of dead space as the name suggests. The aim of this experimental study was to evaluate which factors influence these CO indices in anesthetized spontaneously breathing horses. Six healthy adult horses were anesthetized in dorsal recumbency breathing spontaneously for 3 h. Data to calculate the CO indices...
Effect of a syringe aspiration technique versus a mechanical suction technique and use of N-butylscopolammonium bromide on the quantity and quality of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples obtained from horses with the summer pasture endophenotype of equine asthma.
American journal of veterinary research    February 22, 2018   Volume 79, Issue 3 348-355 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.79.3.348
Bowser JE, Costa LRR, Rodil AU, Lopp CT, Johnson ME, Wills RW, Swiderski CE.OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effect of 2 bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) sampling techniques and the use of N-butylscopolammonium bromide (NBB) on the quantity and quality of BAL fluid (BALF) samples obtained from horses with the summer pasture endophenotype of equine asthma. ANIMALS 8 horses with the summer pasture endophenotype of equine asthma. PROCEDURES BAL was performed bilaterally (right and left lung sites) with a flexible videoendoscope passed through the left or right nasal passage. During lavage of the first lung site, a BALF sample was collected by means of either gentle syringe aspirati...
Exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage in barrel racing horses in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    February 20, 2018   Volume 32, Issue 2 839-845 doi: 10.1111/jvim.15066
Gold JR, Knowles DP, Coffey T, Bayly WM.Exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH) refers to bleeding from the lungs in association with strenuous exercise. It has been documented in race horses but little information exists on EIPH in barrel racing horses. Objective: Our goals were to evaluate the presence of EIPH in barrel racing horses and estimate its prevalence in the Pacific Northwest. Methods: 149 barrel racing horses enrolled at events in WA (11), ID (3), and MT (33). Methods: Observational cross-sectional study. Data collected included signalment, history of illness, respiratory disease, race division, and pre-race medica...
Modeling asthma: Pitfalls, promises, and the road ahead.
Journal of leukocyte biology    February 16, 2018   Volume 104, Issue 1 41-48 doi: 10.1002/JLB.3MR1117-436R
Rosenberg HF, Druey KM.Asthma is a chronic, heterogeneous, and recurring inflammatory disease of the lower airways, with exacerbations that feature airway inflammation and bronchial hyperresponsiveness. Asthma has been modeled extensively via disease induction in both wild-type and genetically manipulated laboratory mice (Mus musculus). Antigen sensitization and challenge strategies have reproduced numerous important features of airway inflammation characteristic of human asthma, notably the critical roles of type 2 T helper cell cytokines. Recent models of disease induction have advanced to include physiologic aero...
Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid neutrophilia is associated with the severity of pulmonary lesions during equine asthma exacerbations.
Equine veterinary journal    February 7, 2018   Volume 50, Issue 5 609-615 doi: 10.1111/evj.12806
Bullone M, Joubert P, Gagné A, Lavoie JP, Hélie P.The severe form of equine asthma is associated with pathological changes of the peripheral airways and pulmonary parenchyma that are only partly described. Also, the relationship between these structural alterations and the percentage of neutrophils found within the airway lumen, assessed by bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) cytology, remains ill-defined. Objective: To examine the histological lesions associated with equine asthma during disease exacerbation and remission, and their relationship with lung function and BALF neutrophilia. Methods: Observational retrospective study. Methods: Pe...
Maintenance of equine anaesthesia over the last 50 years: Controlled inhalation of volatile anaesthetics and pulmonary ventilation.
Equine veterinary journal    January 8, 2018   Volume 50, Issue 3 282-291 doi: 10.1111/evj.12793
Mosing M, Senior JM.In the first edition of this journal, Barbara Weaver wrote a review titled 'Equine Anaesthesia', stating that, at that time, it was quickly becoming accepted practice that many horses were being anaesthetised 'by essentially similar procedures, i.e. premedication, induction and then maintenance by controlled inhalation'. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first edition of this journal, this review covers the development of understanding and practice of inhalational anaesthesia and controlled ventilation in horses over the last 50 years. We review how the perceived benefits of halothane ...
Comparative View of Lung Vascular Endothelium of Cattle, Horses, and Water Buffalo.
Advances in anatomy, embryology, and cell biology    December 31, 2017   Volume 228 21-39 doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-68483-3_2
Schneberger D, Sethi RS, Singh B.Endothelium plays an important role in maintaining the vascular barrier and physiological homeostasis. Endothelium also is fundamental to the initiation and regulation of inflammation. Endothelium demonstrates phenotypic and functional heterogeneity not only among various organs but also within an organ. One of the striking examples would be the pulmonary endothelium that participates in creating blood-air barrier. Endothelium in large pulmonary blood vessels is distinct in structure and function from that lining of the pulmonary capillaries. This chapter focuses on the comparative aspects of ...
Effects of controlled hypoxemia or hypovolemia on global and intestinal oxygenation and perfusion in isoflurane anesthetized horses receiving an alpha-2-agonist infusion.
BMC veterinary research    November 28, 2017   Volume 13, Issue 1 361 doi: 10.1186/s12917-017-1265-3
Hopster K, Wittenberg-Voges L, Geburek F, Hopster-Iversen C, Kästner SBR.Aim of this prospective experimental study was to assess effects of systemic hypoxemia and hypovolemia on global and gastrointestinal oxygenation and perfusion in anesthetized horses. Therefore, we anesthetized twelve systemically healthy warmblood horses using either xylazine or dexmedetomidine for premedication and midazolam and ketamine for induction. Anesthesia was maintained using isoflurane in oxygen with either xylazine or dexmedetomidine and horses were ventilated to normocapnia. During part A arterial oxygen saturation (SaO) was reduced by reducing inspiratory oxygen fraction in steps...