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Topic:Shetland Ponies

Shetland Ponies are a distinct category within the equine species with unique characteristics and uses. Shetland Ponies are a small, hardy breed originating from the Shetland Islands in Scotland, known for their strength, intelligence, and adaptability to harsh climates. This topic explores the comparative anatomy, physiology, and behavioral traits of Shetland Ponies, as well as their respective roles in equestrian activities and agriculture. Included are peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate genetic, nutritional, and health aspects specific to each group, providing insights into their care and management.
Congenital hyperlipaemia in a Shetland pony foal.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 6 498-500 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03704.x
Gilbert RO.No abstract available
Comparison of two control systems for cyathostome infections in the horse and further aspects of the epidemiology of these infections.
Veterinary parasitology    November 1, 1986   Volume 22, Issue 1-2 105-112 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(86)90012-9
Eysker M, Jansen J, Kooyman FN, Mirck MH, Wensing T.The small strongylid infections of two groups of three yearling female Shetland ponies and one yearling Shetland tracer pony were studied. One group was set stocked from April to November and was treated monthly with 5 mg kg-1 albendazole from two days before turnout until July. The other group grazed similar pasture until July, was treated with 5 mg kg-1 albendazole and subsequently removed to pasture grazed by sheep from April to July. The tracer ponies were added to both groups in September. The efficacy of both methods was not completely satisfactory probably because of low efficacy of ant...
Histochemical staining characteristics of normal horse skeletal muscle.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1986   Volume 47, Issue 8 1843-1852 
Andrews FM, Spurgeon TL.The histologic and histochemical staining characteristics of the triceps brachii (long head), extensor carpi radialis, gluteus medius, vastus lateralis, biceps femoris, semimembranosus, semitendinosus, and extensor digitorum longus muscles of 8 Thoroughbreds, 2 Quarter Horses, 1 Arabian, 1 Paso Fino, and 1 Shetland Pony are described. Muscle fiber morphology, staining distribution and intensity, amount of IM connective tissue, number of IM blood vessels and IM nerves, calcium-activated adenosine triphosphatase activity (CaATPase), percentage of fibertype population, percentage of relative fibe...
Normal motility of the cecum and right ventral colon in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1986   Volume 47, Issue 8 1756-1762 
Ross MW, Donawick WJ, Sellers AF, Lowe JE.To study the normal motility of the cecum and right ventral colon (RVC) in 3 mature Shetland ponies, a 6-part, indwelling, intraluminal catheter system was used to measure intraluminal pressure changes. Three catheters were placed in the cecum at 10, 25, and 40 cm from the cecocolic orifice, and 3 catheters were placed in the RVC at 10, 20, and 30 cm from the cecocolic orifice. Recordings were made during the interdigestive period beginning 2 weeks after surgical operation was done. Frequent, low-amplitude peaks (0.35 +/- 0.13 coordinated peaks/min) were seen involving the cecal body and cauda...
Exogenous corticosteroids increase serum iron concentrations in mature horses and ponies.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1986   Volume 188, Issue 11 1296-1298 
Smith JE, DeBowes RM, Cipriano JE.Corticosteroid preparation was administered to 7 Shetland Ponies and 10 Quarter Horses. Serum iron concentration increased dramatically for 48 to 72 hours after the steroid treatment, whereas serum iron-binding capacity and serum ferritin concentration did not. An increase in available iron may allow bacteria to proliferate when ponies or horses are stressed or treated inappropriately with corticosteroids.
Control of strongylosis in horses by alternate grazing of horses and sheep and some other aspects of the epidemiology of Strongylidae infections.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1986   Volume 19, Issue 1-2 103-115 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(86)90037-3
Eysker M, Jansen J, Mirck MH.Alternate grazing of horses and sheep as a control measure for gastrointestinal helminthiasis was studied in three grazing experiments in 1981, 1982 and 1983. Each year a group of three mare yearling Shetland ponies, which were kept on a small pasture from spring to autumn, were compared with a similar group which grazed a similar or the same pasture until July and were subsequently removed to a similar pasture which had been grazed by sheep from April to July. In addition both groups were treated with an anthelmintic when the latter group was removed to the sheep pasture. Pasture larval count...
Rapid emergence of novel antigenic and genetic variants of equine infectious anemia virus during persistent infection.
Journal of virology    January 1, 1986   Volume 57, Issue 1 71-80 doi: 10.1128/JVI.57.1.71-80.1986
Salinovich O, Payne SL, Montelaro RC, Hussain KA, Issel CJ, Schnorr KL.Previous results from our laboratory have demonstrated that equine infectious anemia virus displays structural variations in its surface glycoproteins and RNA genome during passage and chronic infections in experimentally infected Shetland ponies (Montelaro et al., J. Biol. Chem. 259:10539-10544, 1984; Payne et al., J. Gen. Virol. 65:1395-1399, 1984). The present study was undertaken to obtain an antigenic and biochemical characterization of equine infectious anemia virus isolates recovered from an experimentally infected pony during sequential disease episodes, each separated by intervals of ...
The distribution of inhibited early third stage Cyathostominae larvae in the large intestine of the horse.
Zeitschrift fur Parasitenkunde (Berlin, Germany)    January 1, 1986   Volume 72, Issue 6 815-820 doi: 10.1007/BF00925101
Eysker M, Mirck MH.The distribution of inhibited early third stage Cyathostominae larvae in different parts of the large intestine of the horse was studied in 20 Shetland ponies necropsied in autumn 1982, 1983 and 1984. The location of the larvae in the large intestinal wall was studied by histological examination of the intestines of the eight ponies from 1984. Inhibited larvae were located predominantly and more or less equally in the caecum and the ventral colon. Generally fewer early L3 were in the dorsal colon. In 1984 a considerable proportion (mean 17%, range 9.7-36.9%) of the inhibited larvae was found i...
Use of oxibendazole for control of cambendazole-resistant small strongyles in a band of ponies: a six-year study.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 12 2507-2511 
Drudge JH, Lyons ET, Tolliver SC, Swerczek TW.Oxibendazole (OBZ; 10 mg/kg of body weight) was administered to ponies at 8-week intervals to control strongylosis in a breeding band of Shetland-type ponies (n = 29 to 50) from October 1978 through September 1984. A similar use of cambendazole (CBZ; 20 mg/kg of body weight) in this band of ponies during the preceding 4-year period resulted in the survival of a CBZ-resistant population (S) of small strongyles. Effectiveness of OBZ treatments was monitored by pre- and posttreatment counts of the number of strongyle eggs per gram of feces (epg) and of the number of strongyle larvae per gram of f...
In vivo bone strain in the equine tibia before and after transection of the peroneus tertius muscle.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1985   Volume 39, Issue 2 139-144 
Schamhardt HC, Hartman W, Lammertink JL.The present study was undertaken to determine the influence of the peroneus tertius muscle on the loading regime of the tibia in the horse. Strain gauge rosettes were bonded to the cranial and caudal cortices of the left and right tibiae in six Shetland ponies. In vivo bone strain recordings were made before and after unilateral transection of the peroneus tertius muscle. Relatively large individual variations in response to transection were observed in both the experimental and the contralateral control limbs. The principal strain values on the cranial and caudal cortices increased during the...
Distribution of enzymes of purine metabolism in lymphocytes of horse, Equus caballus.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1985   Volume 81, Issue 2 459-465 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(85)90342-6
Magnuson NS, Perryman LE, Mason PH, Marta KM.A microassay requiring as few as 2 X 10(5) cells per assay was developed for systematic analysis of 9 purine enzymes in lymphocytes from equine peripheral blood, spleen, lymph node, thymus and bone marrow. The activities of adenosine deaminase (ADA), purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), adenosine kinase (AK), deoxyadenosine kinase (dAK), deoxycytidine kinase (dCK), 5'-nucleotidase (5'-N), AMP deaminase, hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRT or HPRT), and adenine phosphoribosyl transferase (APRT) were measured by this microassay in lymphocytes from peripheral blood from four ...
Equine lymphocyte antigens in four major Belgian horse populations. Contribution to serology and antigen distribution.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1985   Volume 16, Issue 3 217-228 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1985.tb01472.x
Varewyck H, Bouquet Y, Lazary S, Guérin G, Van de Weghe A, Van Zeveren A.158 Belgian Saddlebreds, 130 Belgian Trotters, 108 Belgian Draft horses and 92 Shetland ponies have been typed for serologically defined antigens at the ELA and ELY systems. Gene frequencies were estimated in each breed for the internationally established ELA, ELY-1 and ELY-2 alleles as well as for locally assigned additional ELA markers and for subtypes of ELA-W3, W9 and W11. The distribution of ELA alleles was in agreement with the expected Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium for the 4 horse breeds described here. Differences in gene frequencies between these main Belgian horse populations were obser...
Three-year study on trace mineral concentration in the blood plasma of Shetland pony mares.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. A, Comparative physiology    January 1, 1985   Volume 82, Issue 3 651-660 doi: 10.1016/0300-9629(85)90447-5
Gromadzka-Ostrowska J, Zalewska B, Jakubów K, Gozlinski H.Changes in some trace minerals concentrations (calcium, inorganic phosphorus, magnesium, zinc, iron, copper, sodium and potassium) in blood plasma were investigated during a three-year period in Shetland pony mares. Blood plasma mineral concentrations were determined by the atomic absorption method and colorimetric method. The three-year averages were in micrograms/ml; Na 4630 +/- 168; K 277 +/- 3.8; Ca 171 +/- 3.8; P 31.5 +/- 0.74; Fe 1.92 +/- 0.14; Zn 1.07 +/- 0.04 and Cu 1.06 +/- 0.02. Two trace minerals (magnesium in inorganic phosphorus) showed only long-term tendency changes--upward or d...
Gluconeogenesis from caecal propionate in the horse.
The British journal of nutrition    January 1, 1985   Volume 53, Issue 1 55-60 doi: 10.1079/bjn19850010
Ford EJ, Simmons HA.The production of propionate in the caecum of the horse has been measured in two Shetland-type ponies fitted with caecal and colonic cannulas and fed on hay or on hay and wheat bran. A continuous intracaecal infusion of 14C-labelled sodium propionate was used and samples were obtained from a cannula at the origin of the right ventral colon. A simultaneous intravenous infusion of [2-3H]glucose was used to measure total glucose entry. On a hay diet which provided 177 kJ/kg body-weight per d, mean caecal propionate production was 19.6 (range 17.2-21.2) mg/h per kg body-weight and on a hay and whe...
Inhibited development of cyathostominae in the horse in the early third stage.
Research in veterinary science    November 1, 1984   Volume 37, Issue 3 355-356 
Eysker M, Jansen J, Mirck MH.Inhibited early third stage larvae of Cyathostominae were found in the digested mucosa of the large intestine of 12 yearling, female Shetland ponies, which were used in two grazing experiments. The ponies were killed in late autumn. In some ponies the inhibited larvae were very abundant and in most animals the majority of the Cyathostominae populations consisted of these early third stage larvae, suggesting that the phenomenon has an epidemiological significance.
Micronema deletrix infection in a Shetland pony stallion.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 5 471-475 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01987.x
Keg PR, Mirck MH, Dik KJ, Vos JH.No abstract available
Alternate grazing of horses and sheep as control for gastro-intestinal helminthiasis in horses.
Veterinary parasitology    October 1, 1983   Volume 13, Issue 3 273-280 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(83)90064-x
Eysker M, Jansen J, Wemmenhove R, Mirck MH.Gastro-intestinal helminth infections of a group of three yearling mare Shetland ponies, which were set-stocked on a small pasture from February until September, were compared with those of a similar group of ponies, which grazed a similar pasture from February to July and subsequently was removed to a pasture which had been grazed by sheep from April to July. In addition both groups were treated with cambendazole when the latter group was removed to the sheep pasture. Pasture larval counts and worm counts demonstrated that the group grazed after the sheep acquired considerably smaller burdens...
Fracture of the femoral neck in a Shetland pony.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 3 283-284 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01795.x
Denny HR, Watkins PE, Waterman A.No abstract available
Hypoglycemic seizures in a Shetland pony.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1983   Volume 73, Issue 2 151-169 
Ross MW, Lowe JE, Cooper BJ, Reimers TJ, Froscher BA.A 12-year-old, 195 kg Shetland pony broodmare had eight seizures between May 29 and August 7, 1979. Plasma glucose levels during three of these seizures were markedly depressed (16, 18 and 19 mg/100 ml). Serum insulin levels were elevated during two of the seizures (86.0 and 97.7 microU/ml). Although a fasting hypoglycemia was not demonstrated, plasma glucose values during a normal day were abnormal; a plasma glucose level of 42 mg/100 ml was noted eight hours post-feeding. Serum insulin values obtained during an oral glucose tolerance test and intravenous glucagon tolerance test were consiste...
Equine marker genes: polymorphism for plasminogen.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1983   Volume 14, Issue 3 219-223 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1983.tb01075.x
Weitkamp LR, Costello-Leary P, Guttormsen SA.Polymorphism for two autosomal alleles of equine plasminogen, PLG1 and PLG2, was demonstrated in plasma by isoelectric focusing and immunofixation, with a goat anti-human plasminogen antibody. The frequency of PLG2 was 0.16 in 150 Standardbreds, 0.20 in 96 Thoroughbreds, and 0.39 in 32 Shetland ponies. No evidence for linkage of PLG with any of 13 marker loci was found.
Virulence and in vitro growth of a cell-adapted strain of equine infectious anemia virus after serial passage in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 9 1556-1560 
Orrego A, Issel CJ, Montelaro RC, Adams WV.Five serial passages of a cell-adapted strain of equine infectious anemia (EIA) virus were conducted in Shetland ponies. The 13 recipient ponies became agar-gel immunodiffusion test-positive by 25 days after they were inoculated. The virulence of the cell-adapted strain of EIA virus markedly increased through 3 serial passages, although individual variation within passages was high. The 1st serial-passage recipient remained afebrile through 200 days, whereas a febrile episode occurred about every 185, 44, 35, and 33 days in the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th serial-passage recipients, respectively. Se...
Glucose utilization in the horse.
The British journal of nutrition    July 1, 1982   Volume 48, Issue 1 111-117 doi: 10.1079/bjn19820093
Ford EJ, Evans J.1. Total entry, irreversible loss and recycling rates of glucose were measured in four non-pregnant female Shetland ponies before and after a 24 h fast by the continuous intravenous infusion of a mixture of [U-14C]glucose and [2-3H]glucose. 2. The post-fasting fall in the concentration of glucose and the rise in the concentration of ketones in plasma were not significant. 3. After fasting the total entry rate fell from 1.44 +/- 0.11 (n4) to 1.19 +/- 0.12 mg/min per kg body-weight (P less than 0.01) and irreversible loss fell from 1.36 +/- 0.10 (n4) to 1.05 +/- 0.10 mg/min per kg body-weight (P...
Effect of diethylcarbamazine on Strongylus vulgaris infection in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 2 341-345 
Hofing GL, Bennett DG.Shetland ponies (n = 4) were given diethylcarbamazine orally at a dose level of 22 mg/kg/day for 1 week before they were inoculated with 800 third-stage larvae of Strongylus vulgaris. Treatment was continued for 86 (1 pony) or 200 days (3 ponies) after the inoculation. As compared with the changes seen in a similarly inoculated group of ponies (group 2) which were not treated, diethylcarbamazine did not prevent the clinical or pathologic changes due to the migrating larvae. Fewer adult parasites were recovered at necropsy from treated ponies than from nontreated (group 2) ponies, even when tre...
Chlamydia psittaci induced pneumonia in a horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1982   Volume 72, Issue 1 92-97 
McChesney SL, England JJ, McChesney AE.An agent lethal to embryonated chicken eggs was isolated from lung tissues of a quarter horse mare with a fatal respiratory disease. The lesions induced in embryonated chicken eggs, the tinctoral properties, the ultrastructural morphology, the resistance of the organism to sodium sulfadiazine, and the presence of a chlamydial complement fixing antigen, identify this isolate as a member of the family Chlamydiaceae and suggest the agent to be Chlamydia psittaci. Two Shetland ponies experimentally infected with the isolated agent developed subclinical infection as demonstrated by an increase in c...
Toxicity of Cassia occidentalis in the horse.
Veterinary and human toxicology    December 1, 1981   Volume 23, Issue 6 416-417 
Martin BW, Terry MK, Bridges CH, Bailey EM.Three Shetland ponies were given a single oral dose of ground Cassia occidentalis seeds in aqueous suspension. The clinical signs observed resembled those seen in naturally occurring and experimental cases in cattle. The syndrome was characterized by an afebrile course, incoordination, recumbency and death. Elevations of blood alkaline phosphatase, CPK, LDH, and SGOT were observed. Although muscle lesions were not seen grossly, microscopic lesions included segmental necrosis of skeletal muscle fibers. The findings were regarded as sufficiently characteristic of C. occidentalis poisoning to be ...
Collection and cultivation in vitro of equine mammary macrophages.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 11 1956-1958 
Anderson LW, Banks KL.Equine macrophages were obtained from female Shetland ponies by injection of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide through the lactiferous ducts of the mammary gland. After 6 to 11 days, balanced salt solution was injected into the mammary gland to wash out accumulated cells. Harvested cells contained a mixture of macrophages, lymphocytes, and neutrophils, with the majority of the cells of mononuclear type. In culture, cells adherent after 24 hours were characterized as macrophages by morphologic features, nonspecific esterase staining, and by the presence of complement and immunoglobulin recept...
Controlled evaluation of ivermectin in Shetland ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 8 1422-1424 
Craig TM, Kunde JM.Ivermectin was injected IM into 12 yearling Shetland ponies. The following reactions in percentages of parasites recovered from ponies given 200 microgram/kg or 300 microgram/kg, as compared with the parasitic population in those given the vehicle at 1 week after injection, were as follows: Otobius megnini nymphs--no reduction; Gasterophilus intestinalis--100% and 99.9%; G nasalis--100% and 99.9%; Parascaris equorum adults--100% and 96%; Strongylus vulgaris adults--100% and 100%; S edentatus adults--100% and 100%; cyathostome adults of the genera Gyalocephalus, Cylicocyclus, Cyathostomum, Cyli...
Klossiella equi in the kidneys of a horse.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    May 1, 1981   Volume 22, Issue 5 159-161 
Austin RJ, Dies KH.The protozoan, Klossiella equi was found in the kidneys of an aged Shetland mare raised in the Fredericton area of New Brunswick. This is the first published report of K. equi in a horse in Canada. The microscopic appearance of the parasite in the kidney is described. A brief discussion of other conditions seen in the horse is also presented.
The effects of Clostridium perfringens type A enterotoxin in Shetland ponies–clinical, morphologic and clinicopathologic changes.
Veterinary pathology    November 1, 1980   Volume 17, Issue 6 738-747 doi: 10.1177/030098588001700609
Ochoa R, Kern SR.Severe abdominal pain, classic colic signs and hemorrhagic gastro-entero-cecocolitis were induced in three conventional Shetland ponies by intravenous injection with Clostridium perfringens Type A enterotoxin. Histological examination showed marked congestion, edema and hemorrhage of the large and small intestine and sloughing of the tips of the intestinal villi. Marked vacuolar degeneration of hepatocytes with dilatation of the spaces of Disse also was found. Clinical changes consisted of severe hypoglycemia, markedly increased aspartate aminotransferase levels and leukopenia that occurred ra...
Plasma concentration of iditol dehydrogenase (sorbitol dehydrogenase) in ponies treated with aflatoxin B1.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 6 925-927 
Asquith RL, Edds GT, Aller WW, Bortell R.Twelve clinically normal Shetland ponies were allocated to one of four treatment groups. Aflatoxin B1 was administered at the dosage level of 2 mg/kg of body weight to group A, 1 mg/kg to group B, and 0.5 mg/kg to group C; a placebo was given to group D (controls). Plasma samples were assayed at 4-hour intervals for iditol dehydrogenase (ID) (sorbitol dehydrogenase) concentrations as an indicator of hepatic damage. One of the ponies in group A died 68 hours after dosing; another pony in group A died 76 hours after dosing. All other animals survived the experiment. The means of peak ID values w...