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Topic:Scanning Electron Microscopy

Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) is a powerful imaging technique used to examine the surface morphology and microstructural details of samples, including those from equine subjects. In equine research, SEM provides high-resolution images that reveal the intricate surface structures of tissues, cells, and materials related to horse health and performance. This technique is particularly useful for studying the ultrastructure of equine tissues such as skin, hooves, and dental surfaces, as well as evaluating the microarchitecture of bone and cartilage. SEM can also be applied to analyze the surface properties of equine equipment and materials, such as saddle pads and horseshoes, to assess wear and material interactions. This page gathers peer-reviewed research articles and studies that utilize Scanning Electron Microscopy to explore various aspects of equine biology, health, and material science.
The blood vessel system in the periodontal ligament of the equine cheek teeth–part II: The micro-architecture and its functional implications in a constantly remodelling system.
Annals of anatomy = Anatomischer Anzeiger : official organ of the Anatomische Gesellschaft    December 5, 2006   Volume 188, Issue 6 535-539 doi: 10.1016/j.aanat.2006.06.007
Masset A, Staszyk C, Gasse H.The micro-vasculature of the equine periodontal ligament (PDL) was investigated using corrosion casts for scanning electron microscopy. Specimens from eight healthy warm-blooded horses were examined. Specific vascular features such as large ampullae with a diameter of up to 300 microm and blind vascular casts were found in the specimens of the equine PDL. The ampullae-shaped venules occurred only in the peripheral layer, where they were formed at the confluence of several vessels. Two types of blind stumps were identified. The first was developed in all three layers, while the second was found...
Articular calcified cartilage canals in the third metacarpal bone of 2-year-old thoroughbred racehorses.
Journal of anatomy    December 22, 2004   Volume 205, Issue 6 491-500 doi: 10.1111/j.0021-8782.2004.00354.x
Boyde A, Firth EC.We describe morphological aspects of the articular calcified cartilage mineralizing front 'tidemark' in the distal joint surface of the third metacarpal bone from 14 horses. Compositional backscattered electron scanning electron microscopy and confocal scanning light microscopy were conducted on polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA)-embedded medio-lateral slices. After maceration, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to study the calcified cartilage surface in the 'wedges' intervening between the slices. An anatomically reproducible clustering of canals in the calcified cartilage was found at o...
Scanning electron microscopy of the endometrium of mares infused with gentamicin. Al-Bagdadi FK, Eilts BE, Richardson GF.Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to study the endometrium of nine 1-year-old thoroughbred mares after twice intrauterine infusions of gentamicin, on 2 consecutive days. Five mares were infused on 2 consecutive days with 40 ml gentamicin (50 mg/ml) mixed with 80 ml of normal saline. Four mares served as controls and were infused with 120 ml of saline on 2 consecutive days. Endometrial biopsies were obtained from all mares 3 days after the second intrauterine infusion. Each biopsy was processed for SEM by standard methods. The endometrial epithelium of the gentamicin-infused mares had...
Characterization and localization of membrane vesicles in ejaculate fractions from the ram, boar and stallion.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    June 9, 2004   Volume 39, Issue 3 173-180 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0531.2004.00499.x
Ghaoui Rel-H, Thomson PC, Evans G, Maxwell WM.Membrane vesicles, separated by differential centrifugation from the seminal plasma, were detected in the sperm-rich ejaculate fractions of four boars and three stallions, and in the whole ejaculates of seven rams. The volume and percentage of vesicles, determined by a stereological technique, were higher in the sperm-rich than in the post-sperm-rich fractions of the boar and stallion ejaculates, and no vesicles were detected in the pre sperm-rich fractions. Vesicles were examined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). For boar, stallion and ram semen...
The effect of three types of rasps on the occlusal surface of equine cheek teeth: a scanning electron microscopic study.
Journal of veterinary dentistry    April 28, 2004   Volume 21, Issue 1 8 
Wilson G.No abstract available
Tritrichomonas foetus: a scanning electron microscopy study of erythrocyte adhesion associated with hemolytic activity.
Veterinary research    April 22, 2004   Volume 35, Issue 1 123-130 doi: 10.1051/vetres:2003042
De Carli GA, Tasca T, Pires Borges F.The in vitro hemolytic activity of Tritrichomonas foetus was investigated. The parasite was tested against human erythrocytes of groups A, B, AB, and O, and against erythrocytes of nine adult animals of different species (the rabbit, rat, chicken, cat, dog, swine, horse, bovine, and sheep). The results showed that T. foetus strains (ATCC KV1, K, PAL, 5022, RJ, 90) did not present any hemolytic activity against any human erythrocyte group nor against rabbit, rat, chicken, cat, dog and swine erythrocytes. T. foetus strains, however, lysed horse, bovine, and sheep erythrocytes. No hemolysin relea...
Adhesion and proliferation of human dermal fibroblasts on collagen matrix.
Journal of biomaterials applications    February 12, 2004   Volume 18, Issue 3 209-222 doi: 10.1177/0885328204039692
Croce MA, Silvestri C, Guerra D, Carnevali E, Boraldi F, Tiozzo R, Parma B.The purpose of this study was to evaluate adhesion and growth of human dermal fibroblasts on a 0.150 mm-thick matrix of reconstituted collagen isolated from horse tendon. Collagen was extracted and polymerized according to the standard procedures (Opocrin, Corlo, Modena, Italy). By light microscopy, the bottom surface of the matrix appeared linear and compact, whereas the superficial one was indented and less homogeneous. By scanning electron microscopy, the collagen fibrils had different diameters and the great majority of them was oriented parallel to the surface of the gel. By transmission ...
Embryogenesis and the first-stage larva of Thelazia lacrymalis.
Journal of helminthology    August 5, 2003   Volume 77, Issue 3 227-233 doi: 10.1079/JOH2003167
Dongus H, Beelitz P, Schöl H.The female reproductive system of Thelazia lacrymalis (Nematoda: Thelaziidae) was investigated by light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with regard to the developmental stages and the stage deposited by the gravid nematode. Female T. lacrymalis have a didelphic and opisthodelphic type of reproductive system with paired ovaries, oviducts and uteri and a single vagina and vulva. Round and spindle-shaped primary oocytes are documented within the ovaries and oviducts, respectively. The distal part of each uterus provides a fertilization chamber filled with spermatozoa, followed by a sphinct...
Osteon pullout in the equine third metacarpal bone: effects of ex vivo fatigue.
Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society    April 23, 2003   Volume 21, Issue 3 481-488 doi: 10.1016/S0736-0266(02)00232-2
Hiller LP, Stover SM, Gibson VA, Gibeling JC, Prater CS, Hazelwood SJ, Yeh OC, Martin RB.An important concept in bone mechanics is that osteons influence mechanical properties in several ways, including contributing to toughness and fatigue strength by debonding from the interstitial matrix so as to "bridge" developing cracks. Observations of "pulled out" osteons on fracture surfaces are thought to be indicative of such behavior. We tested the hypothesis that osteon pullout varies with mode of loading (fatigue vs. monotonic), cortical region, elastic modulus, and fatigue life. Mid-diaphseal beams from the dorsal, medial, and lateral regions of the equine third metacarpal bone were...
Cellular architecture of the synovium in the tendon sheath of horses: an immunohistochemical and scanning electron microscopic study.
The Japanese journal of veterinary research    March 7, 2003   Volume 50, Issue 2-3 125-139 
Kohama M, Nio J, Hashimoto Y, Iwanaga T.The intimal lining cells of the synovium in joints have been studied morphologically and histochemically and shown to consist of macrophagic cells (type A) and fibroblast-like cells (type B). It is believed that the structure of the synovium in the tendon sheath is similar to that in the joint, but there have been only a few morphological studies of the tendon sheath. The present study revealed the cellular architecture of synovium in the tendon sheath of horses by histochemistry and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Like the joint, the inner surface of the tendon sheath was covered with a c...
Equine cortical bone exhibits rising R-curve fracture mechanics.
Journal of biomechanics    January 28, 2003   Volume 36, Issue 2 191-198 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9290(02)00362-7
Malik CL, Stover SM, Martin RB, Gibeling JC.Previous studies of the fracture properties of cortical bone have suggested that the fracture toughness increases with crack length, which is indicative of rising R-curve behavior. Based on this indirect evidence and the similarity of bone to ceramic matrix composites, we hypothesized that bone would exhibit rising R-curve behavior in the transverse orientation and that the characteristics of the R-curves would be regionally dependent within the cortex due to variations in bone microstructure and toughening mechanisms. To test these hypotheses, we conducted R-curve experiments on specimens fro...
Effects of P2Y(1) and P2Y(12) receptor antagonists on ADP-induced shape change of equine platelets: comparison with human platelets.
Platelets    August 22, 2002   Volume 13, Issue 5-6 285-292 doi: 10.1080/0953710021000007258
Mateos-Trigos G, Evans RJ, Heath MF.Platelet activation by adenosine 5' -diphosphate (ADP) is via both P2Y(1 )and P2Y(12) receptors and leads to shape change and aggregation. The effects on ADP-induced platelet shape change of two P2Y(1) antagonists, adenosine 3'-phosphate, 5'-phosphosulfate (A3P5PS) and 2-deoxy-N(6)-methyladenosine 3', 5'-diphosphate (MRS-2179) and a P2Y(12) antagonist 2-propylthio-D-beta,gamma-dichloromethylene-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (AR-C67085MX) were determined by turbidimetric aggregometry and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) on equine and human platelets. The platelet aggregation was inhibited during ...
Three-dimensional architecture of the myosalpinx in the mare as revealed by scanning electron microscopy.
The Anatomical record    July 13, 2002   Volume 267, Issue 3 235-241 doi: 10.1002/ar.10105
Germanà A, Cassata R, Cristarella S, Scirpo A, Muglia U.The three-dimensional architecture of the myosalpinx in the mare was investigated by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) after removal of interstitial connective tissue with NaOH digestion. In the extramural portion of the tubo-uterine junction (TUJ), isthmus, and ampulla, the myosalpinx architecture is represented by a unique muscular structure which runs from the mesosalpinx to the base of the inner mucous folds. This unique muscular structure consists mainly of bundles of muscular fibers independent of one another, which show a multiple spatial arrangement and form a complex network...
Mucosal microvasculature of the gastric pars nonglandularis and margo plicatus in the horse: a scanning electron microscopic study on corrosion casts.
Annals of anatomy = Anatomischer Anzeiger : official organ of the Anatomische Gesellschaft    June 9, 2001   Volume 183, Issue 3 255-259 doi: 10.1016/S0940-9602(01)80228-4
Staszyk C, Jackowiak H, Godynicki S, Gasse H.The microvascularisation of the equine non-glandular gastric mucosa was investigated using corrosion casts for scanning electron microscopy. Specimens from 11 healthy horses were examined. Corresponding to the high incidence of gastric lesions in the margo plicatus, special attention was paid to the differentiation between the pars nonglandularis and the margo plicatus as a distinct area of the aglandular mucosa. In both areas, the blood vessels of the lamina propria mucosae were arranged in three vascular layers; i. e. I) a basal, II) an intermediate, and III) a subepithelial horizontal level...
The distribution of intratubular dentine in equine incisors: a scanning electron microscopic study.
Equine veterinary journal    February 24, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 1 65-69 doi: 10.2746/042516401776767395
Muylle S, Simoens P, Lauwers H.The distribution of intratubular (peritubular) dentine was studied by scanning electron microscopy in 12 equine incisor teeth. High levels of intratubular dentine were found in the peripheral regions of the dentine. In these areas, a marked asymmetry occurred, as intratubular dentine was predominantly deposited onto the side of the dentinal tubular walls nearest to the dentino-enamel junction. The quantity and asymmetry of intratubular dentine were reduced towards the centre of the tooth. The significance of these variations in the amount and distribution of intratubular dentine between the di...
The dentinal structure of equine incisors: a light and scanning electron-microscopic study.
Cells, tissues, organs    October 3, 2000   Volume 167, Issue 4 273-284 doi: 10.1159/000016790
Muylle S, Simoens P, Lauwers H.This paper gives an anatomical overview of the dentinal structure in equine incisor teeth with special reference to the three-dimensional organization, the number and the diameter of the dentinal tubules. The spatial arrangement of equine dentine was examined by scanning electron microscopy of occlusal surfaces and longitudinally fractured teeth and by light microscopy of both decalcified and ground sections. The dentinal tubules of the peripherally situated primary dentine were directly continuous with those of the circumpulpal secondary dentine. The tubules had numerous side branches along t...
Tubular contents of equine dentin: a scanning electron microscopic study.
Journal of veterinary medicine. A, Physiology, pathology, clinical medicine    September 29, 2000   Volume 47, Issue 6 321-330 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0442.2000.00295.x
Muylle S, Simoens P, Lauwers H.The dentinal tubules of 20 permanent equine incisors were investigated by scanning electron microscopy. Occlusal surfaces and longitudinal fracture planes of both etched and undecalcified teeth were examined. Three different types of structure were observed inside the dentinal tubular lumen. Odontoblastic processes could only be visualized in the circumpulpal parts of the tubules. The more peripheral parts were empty or housed cylindrical structures that probably correspond to the laminae limitantes. Collagen fibres were frequently observed in the tubular lumina and were most numerous in the c...
Scanning electron microscopy of the microcotyledonary placenta of the horse (Equus caballus) in the latter half of gestation.
Placenta    August 15, 2000   Volume 21, Issue 5-6 565-574 doi: 10.1053/plac.2000.0510
Macdonald AA, Chavatte P, Fowden AL.Scanning electron microscopy was used to examine the microstructure of the maternal and fetal placenta from 25 pregnant ponies (Equus caballus) throughout the second half of gestation. Samples of placenta, 2-6 cm(2)in area, were collected from the antimesometrial region of the pregnant horn at 105 days (n=1), 165-219 days (n=5), 260 days (n=3), 270-277 days (n=3), 313-337 days (n=11) and immediately after spontaneous delivery at term (n=2). The maternal microcaruncle appears to be created from a clustering of about 16 uterine crypts encapsulated in a connective tissue sheath. There is a gestat...
Light and scanning electron microscopic studies of the nasal turbinates of the horse.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    August 10, 2000   Volume 29, Issue 2 103-109 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0264.2000.00244.x
Kumar P, Timoney JF, Southgate HH, Sheoran AS.The nasal turbinates of 5 young horses were studied by light and scanning electron-microscopy. Stratified cuboidal epithelium lined the rostral part of the dorsal and ventral nasal turbinates of the vestibular region. The polyangular microvillus cells of this region were separated by linear depressions. The mid and caudal parts of the dorsal and ventral nasal turbinates and the rostral part of the ethmoturbinates were lined by pseudostratified columnar ciliated respiratory epithelium. Numerous cilia with dilated blebs on the ciliated cells concealed adjacent non-ciliated supporting cells and g...
Ultrastructure of the horse tongue: further observations on the lingual integumentary architecture.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    May 23, 2000   Volume 29, Issue 1 37-43 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0264.2000.00232.x
Pfeiffer CJ, Levin M, Lopes MA.This investigation examined primarily epidermal specializations of the adult horse tongue by light, scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Samples were collected from seven regions of the normal tongue of various breeds of horse. The filiform papillae, present on the dorsal and lateral aspects but not the ventral aspect of the tongue, were short, slender and finger-like structures with variable-shaped terminae. The epidermal thickness and height of dermal ridges were reduced on fungiform and vallate papillae, but tissue architecture and keratinocyte ultrastructure of most of the lingua...
The structural morphology and epithelial association of spermatozoa at the uterotubal junction: a descriptive study of equine spermatozoa in situ using scanning electron microscopy.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 2000   Issue 56 415-421 
Scott MA, Liu IK, Overstreet JW, Enders AC.Uterotubal junction tissues (n=12) recovered from young nulliparous mares 4 h after insemination were examined for spermatozoa in situ using scanning electron microscopy. Mares were inseminated before ovulation with semen containing 66-85% morphologically abnormal spermatozoa and approximately 1 x 10(9) progressively motile spermatozoa. Spermatozoa were found in all the tissues and displayed a variety of relationships to the epithelium, depending on regional location, spatial constraints and epithelial surface characteristics. Spermatozoa were most abundant in the epithelial folds on the uteri...
[Hypothesis concerning the anatomical basis of cauda equina syndrome and transient nerve root irritation after spinal anesthesia].
Revista espanola de anestesiologia y reanimacion    May 6, 1999   Volume 46, Issue 3 99-105 
Reina MA, López A, de Andrés JA.Cauda equine syndrome is a rare neurological complication associated with subarachnoid anesthesia, and particularly with the use of 5% hyperbaric lidocaine and small gauge catheters. Our aim was to study a possible anatomical factor that might impede adequate dilution of local anesthetic and explain the development of cauda equine syndrome and transitory radicular irritation. Methods: The spinal dura matters and their contents from two male human cadavers were examined after organs had been extracted for transplantation. Both men had recently died at ages 56 and 65 years of age. Samples were f...
Three dimensional structure of the distal condyles of the third metacarpal bone of the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    April 23, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 2 122-129 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03805.x
Boyde A, Haroon Y, Jones SJ, Riggs CM.This study examined the three-dimensional (3D) microarchitecture of regions of the equine third metacarpal bone (McIII) commonly involved in distal condylar fractures. Limbs were obtained from Thoroughbred horses (neonates to age 24 years) destroyed for inoperable fractures and a variety of other conditions. Beams, blocks and sections were cut in the principal axes, some embedded in PMMA and others examined unembedded. Several methods were used to study the 3D structure, including conventional and confocal optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and radiography. The mineralised ...
Pathology of the distal condyles of the third metacarpal and third metatarsal bones of the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    April 23, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 2 140-148 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03807.x
Riggs CM, Whitehouse GH, Boyde A.This study examined material from Thoroughbred horses, the majority of which had been in race training, for evidence of pathology in the third metacarpal (McIII) and third metatarsal (MtIII) bones which might be related to the occurrence of distal condylar fractures. Whole bone samples were studied and documented by macrophotography prior to macroradiography and computed tomographic (CT) imaging. Microradiographs were made from 100 microm thick mediolateral sections cut perpendicular to the dorsal and palmar/plantar articular surfaces of distal condylar regions of McIII and MtIII. Blocks were ...
Scanning electron microscopic study of the vascular supply of the equine hoof.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 26, 1998   Volume 60, Issue 7 855-858 doi: 10.1292/jvms.60.855
Nasu T, Yamanaka T, Nakai M, Ogawa H.The blood supply in the equine hoof was studied by a microvascular casting corrosion technique and scanning electron microscopy in combination with observations of sections of the decalcificated digit. The dermal lamella was observed at the hoof wall and the dermal papilla at the other parts of the hoof. The microvascular architecture of the dermal lamella differed from that of dermal papilla. The vascular cast in the dermal papillar regions indicated that each papilla contained two central vessels (artery and vein), which ran parallel to each other, and the capillary plexus surrounding these ...
[Scanning electron microscopic investigations on the anatomy of the fetlock joint in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    July 1, 1997   Volume 25, Issue 4 363-369 
Breit S, Stiglhuber A, König HE.Striking synovial structures were taken and their surface was investigated by scanning electron microscopy. Depending where the probes were taken from, the stratum synovial was arranged in a different way. The synovial intima seems to miss under the tendon of the long/commune extensor muscle, the collateral ligaments and the sesamoidean collateral ligaments. That is why the subsynovial tissue forms the superficial layer. The surface of the probes taken sidewards to the tendon of the extensor muscle and of the synovial fold, which is situated between the metacarpus/metatarsus and the proximal p...
Minor constituents of sabulous material in equine urine.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1996   Volume 60, Issue 3 238-242 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(96)90046-6
Díaz-Espiñeira M, Escolar E, Bellanato J, Rodriguez M.The secondary constituents accompanying calcite and vaterite (crystalline forms of calcium carbonate) in the sabulous deposits from 140 vesical samples and one renal sample of equine urine were studied by infrared spectroscopy (IR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX). Apatitic calcium phosphate, present in 12 per cent of the samples, generally appeared in the form of spherulites with smooth and rough surfaces. Calcium sulphate, clearly detected by IR in 12.7 per cent of the samples, did not have a characteristic structure under SEM, although EDX detec...
A scanning electron-microscopic analysis of the morphology of equine lower lip sinus hair.
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1995   Volume 154, Issue 3 196-204 doi: 10.1159/000147769
von Rotz A, Friess AE.Sinus hairs, which are tactile organs of most mammals, are differentiated into cavernous and sinus types. The horse has the cavernous type. Horse lower lips were perfused in diluted Karnovsky's fixative and sinus hair processed for scanning electron microscopy. Anastomosing trabeculae of different thickness and shape originate from the internal connective tissue layer and extend to the external layer, thus forming a dense meshwork suspending the hair root like a net. However, many of the distal trabeculae do not reach the external wall of the blood sinus but end in a finger-like knob within th...
Ultrastructure and mineral composition of urinary calculi from horses.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 10 1357-1367 
Neumann RD, Ruby AL, Ling GV, Schiffman P, Johnson DL.Urinary calculi from 17 horses with urolithiasis were examined to study their mineral content and ultrastructure. Among the analytic methods used were X-ray diffractometry, scanning electron microscopy, and electron microprobe analysis. The calculi initially were observed by use of a stereoscopic dissecting microscope and generally were found to have nodular surfaces surrounding a banded or granular-to-chalky interior. Observation by scanning electron microscopy revealed an intricate pattern of irregularly concentric, fine bands and spherules. These had a round, finely banded, globular texture...
Morphologic characteristics of equine endometrium classified as Kenney categories I, II, and III, using light and scanning electron microscopy.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 8 1060-1065 
Ferreira-Dias G, Nequin LG, King SS.Pathologic changes in the endometrium of mares may be rated according to Kenney's method of classification. Category I endometrium contains healthy tissue with no or few widely scattered pathologic changes. At the opposite end, severe widespread pathologic changes are associated with category III. Uterine biopsy specimens were collected aseptically from 16 mares during the estrous and diestrous stages of the cycle. Pathologic changes were evaluated, using light microscopy, and endometrium was classified as Kenney's category I, II, or III. Endometrial tissue of category I (n = 5 mares in estrus...