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Topic:Respiratory Disease

Respiratory disease in horses encompasses a range of conditions affecting the respiratory system, including the upper and lower airways. These diseases can result from various etiologies such as infectious agents, environmental factors, or genetic predispositions. Common respiratory conditions in horses include equine asthma, equine influenza, and strangles. Clinical signs often associated with respiratory disease in horses include coughing, nasal discharge, and labored breathing. Diagnostic approaches may involve endoscopy, imaging, and laboratory tests to assess the function and health of the respiratory tract. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of respiratory diseases in equine populations.
[Creation of an avirulent and immunogenic mutant from the rhinopneumonitis virus].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1986   Volume 23, Issue 7 33-40 
Tatarov G, Dilovski M.An avirulent immunogenic virus strain mutant of the causative agent of rhinopneumonia was found to cause abortions and respiratory diseases in horses. The mutant was obtained with the use of a virulent strain that induced strongly manifested clinical symptoms of the disease, and was cultured in cell media containing 5-iodine-2-desoxiuridine as an antimetabolite, following a definite pattern. It was found that the mutant completely lost its virulence, however, it retained its immunogenicity. It likewise retained these newly acquired biologic properties with regard to its being stable and irreve...
Mononuclear phagocytes of transport-stressed horses with viral respiratory tract infection.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 11 2272-2277 
Anderson NV, DeBowes RM, Nyrop KA, Dayton AD.Twelve horses comprised 3 treatment groups; all horses in 2 of the groups had recently been transported and had clinical and laboratory evidence of respiratory tract infection, with equine influenza type 2 virus being the principal pathogen. Mononuclear phagocytes and other leukocytes from blood, lung, and peritoneal cavity were studied in phagocytosis and erythrocyte-antibody (EA) rosette assays. Total numbers of pulmonary alveolar macrophages were increased over control values in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid of group 3 horses after recovery from influenza (P less than 0.02), whereas th...
Pharyngeal trauma from endotracheal intubation in a colt.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 9 944-946 
Brock KA.A pharyngeal performation, probably associated with endotracheal intubation, occurred in a healthy 4 1/2-month-old colt. Inhalation anesthesia was carried out for elective surgery, but acute cervical cellulitis, pleuritis, and pneumonia developed after the surgery. Antibacterial and supportive therapy was ineffective.
Bronchoalveolar lavage in ponies with recurrent airway obstruction (heaves).
The American review of respiratory disease    November 1, 1985   Volume 132, Issue 5 1066-1070 doi: 10.1164/arrd.1985.132.5.1066
Derksen FJ, Scott JS, Miller DC, Slocombe RF, Robinson NE.We performed bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in 2 groups of ponies. Principal ponies had a history of heaves, a disease characterized by recurrent airway obstruction and airway hyperreactivity when ponies are housed in a barn and fed hay; control ponies had no history of airway obstruction. Ponies were paired (principal and control), and BAL was performed after 2 months of being pastured when principal ponies were in clinical remission (Period A), after barn housing when principal ponies had acute airway obstruction (Period B), and after a 1- and a 2-wk recovery phase of pasture grazing (Periods ...
Anaerobic bacteria in 21 horses with pleuropneumonia.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 7 721-724 
Sweeney CR, Divers TJ, Benson CE.Anaerobic bacteria are important and overlooked bacterial pathogens of the lower respiratory tract in horses. Twenty-one of 46 horses with pleuropneumonia had anaerobic bacteria isolated from pleural fluid or from tracheobronchial aspirate. Bacteroides oralis and B melaninogenicus were the anaerobes most frequently isolated. Survival was significantly less for horses from which anaerobes were isolated than for horses from which anaerobes were not isolated. Putrid odor was associated with the pleural fluid and/or breath in 62% of the horses from which anaerobes were isolated. In these horses, t...
Effect of upper airway CO2 on breathing in awake ponies.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    October 1, 1985   Volume 59, Issue 4 1222-1227 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1985.59.4.1222
Forster HV, Pan LG, Flynn C, Bisgard GE, Hoffer RE.We determined whether the [CO2] in the upper airways (UA) can influence breathing in ponies and whether UA [CO2] contributes to the attenuation of a thermal tachypnea during periods of elevated inspired CO2. Six ponies were studied 1 mo after chronic tracheostomies were created. For one protocol the ponies were breathing room air through a cuffed endotracheal tube. Another smaller tube was placed in the tracheostomy and directed up the airway. By use of this tube, a pump, and prepared gas mixtures, UA [CO2] was altered without affecting alveolar or arterial PCO2. When the ponies were at a neut...
Upper respiratory tract obstruction caused by a pharyngeal abscess in a filly.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 3 268-270 
Sweeney CR, Sweeney RW, Raker CW, Freeman DE.A 3-year-old Thoroughbred filly had a pharyngeal abscess causing obstruction of the upper respiratory tract. Diagnosis was made by a combination of endoscopy, biopsy, cytology, and radiography. Treatment with antimicrobials and analgesics resulted in successful resolution of the abscess.
[Concentration and size distribution of air-borne dust particles in horse stables].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    July 1, 1985   Volume 98, Issue 7 241-246 
Zeitler MH.No abstract available
Surgical and medical management of rhinophycomycosis (conidiobolomycosis) in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 15, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 10 1105-1107 
French DD, Haynes PF, Miller RI.A horse had severe granulomatous lesions of the upper airways that were attributable to Conidiobolus coronatus. Therapeutic success was documented by clinical examination of the horse 4 years after treatment by surgical extirpation and intralesional and topical use of amphotericin B.
Effects of altered ambient temperature on metabolic rate during CO2 inhalation.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    May 1, 1985   Volume 58, Issue 5 1592-1596 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1985.58.5.1592
Kaminski RP, Forster HV, Bisgard GE, Pan LG, Dorsey SM, Barber BJ.The purpose of this study was to determine if the changes in O2 consumption (VO2) during CO2 inhalation could in part be due to stimulation of thermogenesis for homeothermy. Twelve ponies were exposed for 30-min periods to inspired CO2 (PIco2) levels of less than 0.7, 14, 28, and 42 Torr during the winter at 5 (neutral) and 23 degrees C ambient temperatures (TA) and during the summer at 21 (neutral TA), 30, and 12 degrees C. Elevating TA in both seasons resulted in an increased pulmonary ventilation (VE) and breathing frequency (f) (P less than 0.01) but no significant increase in VO2 (P great...
[An overview of environment-related lung diseases in domestic animals].
Therapeutische Umschau. Revue therapeutique    May 1, 1985   Volume 42, Issue 5 138-148 
Stünzi H, von Fellenberg R, Grünig G, Hauser B.No abstract available
Equine influenza reactions.
The Veterinary record    April 27, 1985   Volume 116, Issue 17 478 doi: 10.1136/vr.116.17.478
Eagles BW, Higgins AJ.No abstract available
An outbreak of equine influenza at a harness horse racetrack.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1985   Volume 75, Issue 2 277-288 
Kemen MJ, Frank RA, Babish JB.An outbreak of an influenza-like illness affected approximately 1/3 of the 1050 race horses stabled at a standardbred racetrack and resulted in a 3-day suspension of racing. A/Equi-2 influenza virus was isolated from 1 affected horse and 8 of 10 horses sampled seroconverted. Threshold protective levels of HI antibody against A/Equi-2 influenza virus were not demonstrated in unaffected horses. Resistance in unaffected horses was assumed to result from other factors following previous exposure. Few of the horses had been vaccinated against equine influenza. It was felt that an outbreak of this m...
Effects of aerosolized histamine and carbachol in the conscious horse.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    April 1, 1985   Volume 49, Issue 2 211-218 
Mirbahar KB, McDonell WN, Bignell W, Eyre P.Pulmonary function tests were performed in seven conscious, standing horses. Changes in pulmonary mechanics and ventilation volumes were measured after inhalation challenge with saline (baseline), histamine (1% w/v solution for 5 min) and carbachol (0.5% w/v solution for 3 min). Comparisons between baseline and posthistamine values revealed a significant (P less than 0.05) increase in nonelastic work of breathing (Wb), maximum change in transpulmonary pressure (max delta Ppl), and pulmonary resistance (RL), while dynamic compliance (Cdyn) decreased (P less than 0.05). Tripelennamine completely...
Intravenous histamine administration in ponies with recurrent airway obstruction (heaves).
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 4 774-777 
Derksen FJ, Scott D, Robinson NE, Slocombe RF, Armstrong PJ.Pulmonary function and airway reactivity to IV histamine were measured in a group of ponies with a history of recurrent airway obstruction (heaves) and their age-, weight-, and gender-matched controls. Ponies were studied during a period of clinical remission (period A), after exposure to a barn environment (period B), and twice during a 2-week recovery phase (periods C and D). At periods A, C, and D, PaO2, dynamic compliance (Cdyn), pulmonary resistance, tidal volume, respiratory frequency, and the log dose of histamine required to reduce Cdyn to 65% of base-line value (log ED65Cdyn) of princ...
Clinical and radiographic findings in Corynebacterium equi pneumonia of foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 6 593-599 
Falcon J, Smith BP, O'Brien TR, Carlson GP, Biberstein E.Thirty-nine foals with pneumonia were admitted to the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital at the University of California, Davis. Corynebacterium equi was recovered from each of them on bacteriologic culture of transtracheal aspiration specimens or lung specimens at necropsy. The foals were divided into 2 groups. Group I consisted of 20 foals that died because of C equi pneumonia and were subsequently necropsied. Group II consisted of 19 foals that were treated and discharged from the hospital. Radiography was performed on all foals. Clinical signs included increased respiratory rate, fever, ...
Endoscopic and virological observations on respiratory disease in a group of young Thoroughbred horses in training.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1985   Volume 17, Issue 2 99-103 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1985.tb02059.x
Burrell MH.A group of racehorses in training was examined on several occasions with a fibreoptic endoscope and monitored for viral infection. Only equine herpes virus-2 (EHV-2) infection was detected. Pharyngeal lymphoid hyperplasia (PLH) was present in all horses and decreased in severity with age. There was no association between PLH severity and antibody titres to EHV-1, or with the isolation of EHV-2. Finishing position in races was not affected by PLH severity. Exercise induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) was evident on 23 out of 49 (47 per cent) examinations after maximal speed training exercise. ...
Inclusions in equine cytologic specimens.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 15, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 4 359-364 
Freeman KP, Roszel JF, Slusher SH.Inclusions and cellular changes were seen in cytologic specimens from 1 healthy horse, 6 horses hospitalized because of respiratory problems, and 1 horse hospitalized because of colic and hepatitis. Two bronchial aspirates contained detached ciliated cytoplasmic tufts and cytoplasmic inclusions characteristic of the specific degenerative process called ciliocytophthoria. These changes and inclusions resembled those seen in bronchial aspirates from human beings with parainfluenza virus infection. Four bronchial aspirates and 2 serous fluid specimens had nuclear inclusions resembling those seen ...
Tracheal compression secondary to abscessation of cranial mediastinal lymph nodes in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 3 283-284 
Rigg DL, Ramey DW, Reinertson EL.Respiratory distress and laryngeal paralysis were found to be caused by a Streptococcus equi abscess of cranial mediastinal lymph nodes, putting pressure on the trachea at the thoracic inlet. Surgical drainage was required to relieve the compression, and long-term antibiotic therapy was used to treat the bacterial infection. The trachea returned to normal diameter but left laryngeal hemiplegia persisted. Peritracheal abscesses should be considered in the differential diagnosis of inspiratory dyspnea of the horse.
[Vaccination of animals and human health].
Zentralblatt fur Bakteriologie, Mikrobiologie und Hygiene. 1. Abt. Originale B, Hygiene    February 1, 1985   Volume 180, Issue 2-3 175-189 
Mayr A.Prophylactic immunization of animals against obligat and nonobligat pathogenic zoonoses benefit human health in many ways both directly and indirectly. Typical examples of a direct protective effect are the vaccinations of dogs, cats and foxes against rabies as well as the vaccinations against respiratory diseases in cows, horses, dogs and cats to which the most varied species of pathogens of noncompulsory zoonoses contribute. A considerable contribution to the protection of human health is made by the vaccination against salmonellosis and leptospirosis, against vesicular stomatitis, American ...
The isolation of organisms resembling rickettsiae from respiratory tracts of horses.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    January 1, 1985   Volume 32, Issue 1 46-54 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1985.tb01936.x
Moorthy AR, Spradbrow PB. Summary: During a survey in Queensland in 1974—77 four strains of rickettsia-like organisms were isolated from the respiratory tract of horses, of which two, NS7 and NS68 were isolated from nasal swabs of clinically normal horses and two, KSDH 91 and NSDH 100, from lung samples of slaughtered horses showing gross pathological lesions in the form of acute bronchiolitis and subacute interstitial pneumonia, respectively. The isolates are characterised as rickettsia-like organisms on the basis of their morphology, tinctorial property, growth in chicken embryos, inability to grow on bacteria...
Diagnostic procedures, prognosis and therapeutic approaches of chronic respiratory diseases in horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1985   Volume 26, Issue 1 33-35 
Viel L.No abstract available
Respiratory disease in thoroughbreds.
The Veterinary record    December 1, 1984   Volume 115, Issue 22 583 doi: 10.1136/vr.115.22.583
Burrell MH.No abstract available
Isolation of Streptococcus pneumoniae type 3 from equine species.
Journal of clinical microbiology    December 1, 1984   Volume 20, Issue 6 1028-1030 doi: 10.1128/jcm.20.6.1028-1030.1984
Benson CE, Sweeney CR.Streptococcus pneumoniae type 3 was isolated from seven tracheobronchial aspirates and one pleural tap of seven adult horses and one foal. There was no direct evidence in these horses that isolation of the pneumococcus was related to a specific disease syndrome. Presenting complaints included two horses with chronic cough, two horses with decreased exercise tolerance, one horse with exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage, and three horses with pneumonia. Antibiotic therapy resolved the primary clinical complaint. This is the first report of the isolation of S. pneumoniae type 3 from adult horse...
Therapeutic strategies involving antimicrobial treatment of the upper respiratory tract in large animals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1984   Volume 185, Issue 10 1203-1205 
Baker GJ.No abstract available
Collection and evaluation of tracheobronchial washes in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 6 499-508 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb02000.x
Whitwell KE, Greet TR.A flexible endoscope was used to obtain 223 tracheal washes from 191 horses in three clinical categories. Total cell counts, cytological and bacteriological examinations are reported and the features of the main cell types encountered described. The presence and degree of inflammatory airway disease was determined by a semiquantitative assessment of the neutrophil response and was an important consideration in the interpretation of the bacteriological results. Potential pathogens were isolated from approximately 30 per cent of samples. Cytological changes suggestive of lungworm infestation, vi...
Pharmacokinetic disposition of theophylline in horses after intravenous administration.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 11 2272-2275 
Kowalczyk DF, Beech J, Littlejohn D.The pharmacokinetics of theophylline were determined in 6 healthy horses after a single IV administration of 12 mg of aminophylline/kg of body weight (equivalent to 9.44 mg of theophylline/kg). Serum theophylline was measured after the IV dose at 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 15 hours. Serum concentration plotted against time on semilogarithmic coordinates, indicated that theophylline in 5 horses was best described by a 2-compartment open model and in 1 horse by a 1-compartment open model. The following mean pharmacokinetic values were determined; elimination half-life = 11.9 hours, distri...
Functional and ultrastructural changes in neutrophils from mares and foals experimentally inoculated with a respiratory tract strain of equine herpesvirus-1.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 10 1972-1975 
Coignoul FL, Bertram TA, Cheville NF.Neutrophils isolated from venous blood of adult and foal ponies inoculated with equine herpesvirus-1 were evaluated by in vitro function tests and by electron microscopy. Foals had fever and severe neutropenia 24 hours after inoculation; increased neutrophil random migration under agarose and decreased antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity were significant at 24 hours, but values had returned to preinoculation levels by 72 hours. Mares had fever and leukopenia of less severity, increases in neutrophil migration, and longer persistence of primary granule release than were seen in foals....
Inspiratory airway CO2 loading in the pony.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    October 1, 1984   Volume 57, Issue 4 1097-1103 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1984.57.4.1097
Shirer HW, Orr JA, Loker JL.To determine if CO2-sensitive airway receptors are important in the control of breathing, CO2 was preferentially loaded into the respiratory airways in conscious ponies. The technique involved adding small amounts of 100% CO2 to either the latter one-third or latter two-thirds of the inspiratory air in an attempt to raise CO2 concentrations in the airway dead space independent of the arterial blood. Arterial blood gas tensions (PCO2 and PO2) and pH, as well as respiratory output (minute volume, tidal volume, and respiratory rate), were measured in a series of 20 experiments on 5 awake ponies. ...
Effect of Rhodococcus equi on equine polymorphonuclear leukocyte function.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    October 1, 1984   Volume 7, Issue 3-4 315-324 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(84)90089-8
Ellenberger MA, Kaeberle ML, Roth JA.A procedure was developed for isolating large numbers of purified polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) from the peripheral blood of horses. Equine PMN function was evaluated by three procedures: 1) Staphylococcus aureus ingestion, 2) nitroblue tetrazolium reduction, and 3) iodination. Four preparations of R. equi were added to polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) in each test system. Live bacteria, heat-killed bacteria, the washed pellet from heat-killed bacteria, and the supernatant fluid from heat-killed bacteria were evaluated for effects on equine PMN function. None of the R. equi preparatio...
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