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Topic:Serology

Serology in horse research involves the study and analysis of blood serum to detect the presence of antibodies or antigens associated with infectious diseases and other health conditions. It is a diagnostic tool used to identify immune responses to pathogens, vaccination status, and exposure to specific diseases. Serological tests in equine research can include enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA), complement fixation tests, and virus neutralization tests. These tests help in understanding the epidemiology of diseases, monitoring herd health, and informing vaccination strategies. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, applications, and implications of serological testing in equine medicine.
Natural and Experimental Infection of Egyptian Equines with West Nile Virus.
Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology    December 1, 1963   Volume 57 415-427 doi: 10.1080/00034983.1963.11686194
SCHMIDT JR, ELMANSOURY HK.No abstract available
Serological Survey of Equine Rhinopneumonitis Virus Infection Among Horses in Japan.
The Japanese journal of experimental medicine    April 1, 1963   Volume 33 133-147 
SHIMIZU T, ISHIZAKI R, MATUMOTO M.No abstract available
Isolation, Structure, and Serological Properties of Mucoprotein from Horse Erythrocytes.
Archivum immunologiae et therapiae experimentalis    January 1, 1962   Volume 10 908-928 
LISOWSKA E.No abstract available
[Titration of serum of horses hyperimmunized against influenza by inhibition of hemagglutination and seroneutralization in ovo. Comparative results of the 2 methods].
Revue d'immunologie et de therapie antimicrobienne    October 1, 1961   Volume 25 358-364 
FONTAINE J, MACKOWIAK C.No abstract available
[Blood groups of horses. Comparative study of standard sera].
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur    June 1, 1960   Volume 98 861-867 
PODLIACHOUK L, SIRBU Z, KOWNACKI M, SZENIAWSKA D.No abstract available
The use of the gel-precipitation technique in the identification of horse dandruff allergen, and in the study of the serological relationship between horse dandruff and horse serum proteins.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1957   Volume 11, Issue 3-4 170-191 doi: 10.1159/000228413
STANWORTH DR.No abstract available
Eastern equine encephalomyelitis in Massachusetts; report of two cases, diagnosed serologically, with complete clinical recovery.
The New England journal of medicine    August 9, 1956   Volume 255, Issue 6 267-270 doi: 10.1056/NEJM195608092550604
DE WEBSTER HF.No abstract available
Serological differentiation of the equine abortion virus from the human and swine influenza, mumps, and Newcastle disease viruses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1956   Volume 17, Issue 63 262-266 
DOLL ER, MCCOLLUM WH, BRYANS JT, CROWE EW.No abstract available
Serological response to Japanese B encephalitis vaccine of children and horses immune to St. Louis virus. HAMMON WM, SATHER GE, LENNETTE EH, REEVES WC.No abstract available
Neutralization of bovine papilloma virus with serums from cattle and horses with experimental papillomas.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1955   Volume 16, Issue 61 Part 1 517-520 
SEGRE D, OLSON C, HOERLEIN AB.No abstract available
Thermal, hematological, and serological responses of weanling horses following inoculation with equine abortion virus: its similarity to equine influenza.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1954   Volume 44, Issue 2 181-190 
DOLL ER, WALLACE E, RICHARDS MG.Manninger and Csontos reported that mares inoculated with equine abortion virus developed a transient fever 2 to 4 days after pharyngeal or intravenous inoculation and that an uninoculated horse in contact with the experimentally inoculated mares contracted a febrile disease resembling equine influenza. Also, mares that had aborted virus-infected fetuses were resistant to inoculation with equine influenza virus. From these observations, they proposed that virus abortions were a manifestation of infection of pregnant mares by the equine influenza virus. In reports on equine virus abortions, Kre...
[Ninhydrin and antigen-antibody reactions. III. Attempted interpretation of the action of ninhydrin on rabbit and horse immune serums].
Bulletin de la Societe de chimie biologique    January 1, 1953   Volume 35, Issue 11-12 1325-1334 
TAYEAU F, FAURE F.No abstract available
The incidence of Brucella agglutinins in horses and their relationship to periodic ophthalmia.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1950   Volume 40, Issue 4 364-366 
DAVIS GR, WOOD RM, GADD JD, KENNEDY RE.No abstract available
The correlation of periodic ophthalmia with leptospira agglutinins in horses.
American journal of ophthalmology    June 1, 1950   Volume 33, Issue 6 961-962 doi: 10.1016/0002-9394(50)91617-5
WOOD RM, DAVIS GR.No abstract available
Nature of the heterogenetic hapten reacting with hemagglutinins in horse serum sickness.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    December 1, 1948   Volume 69, Issue 3 562-565 doi: 10.3181/00379727-69-16787
TOMCSIK J, SCHWARZWEISS H.1. From beef stroma pretreated at room temperature with acetone and alcohol, a fraction was isolated with boiling 100% alcohol which, in a dilution of 1:500,000, combines with the sheep blood agglutinin of human serum produced during serum sickness. Using the terminology of Schiff, this fraction corresponds to the heterogenetic serum sickness antigen; it could be separated to a large extent from the heterogenetic mononucleosis antigen which also occurs in beef stroma. 2. The so-called serum sickness antigen also occurs heterogenetically in guinea pig kidney and it could also be isolated from ...
[Evaluation of agglutination titers in parathyphus abortus equi infection in horses].
Tierarztliche Umschau    November 1, 1948   Volume 3, Issue 21-22 351-354 
FRITZSCHE K.No abstract available
[A serological method for the detection of two different types of antitoxin in diphtheria immunization in horses]. SEEMULLER H.No abstract available
[On the question of the introduction of the horse piroplasmosis].
Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 1, 1947   Volume 54, Issue 17-18 133 
DIERKS .No abstract available
Complement-fixing and neutralizing antibodies against Japanese B virus in the sera of Okinawan horses.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    March 22, 1946   Volume 103, Issue 2673 357-359 
HODES HL, THOMAS L, PECK JL.No abstract available
Intraperitoneal and Intracerebral Routes in Serum Protection Tests with the Virus of Equine Encephalomyelitis: I. A Comparison of the Two Routes in Protection Tests.
The Journal of experimental medicine    July 31, 1938   Volume 68, Issue 2 173-189 doi: 10.1084/jem.68.2.173
Olitsky PK, Harford CG.Young (12 to 15 day old) mice are approximately as susceptible to the virus of equine encephalomyelitis, Eastern or Western strain, when it is given intraperitoneally as are adult mice when the virus is injected intracerebrally. With this susceptibility by the intraperitoneal route as a basis, the injection of immune serum-virus mixtures intraperitoneally was found to result in protection in dilutions which give rise to infection after intracerebral inoculation. The difference of protective power by the two indicated routes was shown not to depend on the amount of inoculum nor on the age of th...
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