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Topic:Temperature

Temperature regulation in horses involves physiological processes that maintain the animal's core body temperature within a narrow, optimal range despite external environmental changes. Horses, being homeothermic animals, rely on mechanisms such as sweating, respiration, and blood flow adjustments to dissipate excess heat or conserve warmth. These thermoregulatory processes are influenced by factors such as exercise, humidity, and ambient temperature. Variations in temperature can affect a horse's performance, health, and overall well-being. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms, effects, and implications of temperature regulation in equine physiology.
The effectiveness of gentamicin or polymyxin B for the control of bacterial growth in equine semen stored at 20 degrees C or 5 degrees C for up to forty-eight hours.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    October 1, 1993   Volume 57, Issue 4 277-280 
Vaillancourt D, Guay P, Higgins R.Semen from three stallions was used to evaluate the effectiveness of two antibiotics added to semen extender for samples stored at 20 degrees C or 5 degrees C for up to 48 hours. Each ejaculate was divided into six different treatments: semen+extender (SE); SE+gentamicin (100 micrograms/mL); SE+polymyxin B (1000 units/mL); and each of the above treatments inoculated with Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853. Sampling of diluted semen for bacteriological analysis was performed after 2, 8, 24 and 48 hours of preservation at either temperatures. The presence of nonspecific bacteria was noted after t...
Effects of sample collection and handling on concentration of osteocalcin in equine serum.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 7 1017-1020 
Hope E, Johnston SD, Hegstad RL, Geor RJ, Murphy MJ.A commercially available radioimmunoassay kit for measurement of human osteocalcin was validated for use in horses. For accurate measurement of equine serum osteocalcin, blood samples may be collected at a temperature between 20 and 25 C, then centrifuged within 90 minutes; serum may be stored at -20 C in plastic tubes for up to 26 weeks. Serum may be thawed and refrozen up to 5 times without significant change in measured equine serum osteocalcin concentration. Assay sensitivity was 0.16 ng/ml. Recovery of bovine osteocalcin standard added to equine serum was linear. Intra-assay coefficient o...
Effect of temperature, duration of storage and sampling procedure on ammonia concentration in equine blood plasma. Lindner A, Bauer S.The effect of storage duration at different storage temperatures on the plasma ammonia concentration of equine EDTA whole blood, EDTA plasma and heparin plasma samples was investigated. Further, the effect of jugular vein compression before and during blood sampling on the plasma ammonia values was evaluated. In EDTA whole blood kept at 4 degrees C there was no significant increase of ammonia content after 6 hours of storage, whereas the increase was already significant 3 hours after collection if the EDTA whole blood was kept at 20-22 degrees C. EDTA plasma samples stored at 20-22 degrees C, ...
Structural relaxation and nonexponential kinetics of CO-binding to horse myoglobin. Multiple flash photolysis experiments.
Biophysical journal    June 1, 1993   Volume 64, Issue 6 1833-1842 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(93)81554-6
Post F, Doster W, Karvounis G, Settles M.The geminate recombination kinetics of CO-myoglobin strongly deviates from single exponential behavior in contrast to what is expected for unimolecular reactions (1). At low temperatures, this result was attributed to slowly exchanging conformational states which differ substantially in barrier height for ligand binding. Above 160 K the kinetics apparently slow down with temperature increase. Agmon and Hopfield (2) explain this result in terms of structural relaxation perpendicular to the reaction coordinate, which enhances the activation energy. In their model, structural relaxation homogeniz...
Effects of intra-articularly administered endotoxin on clinical signs of disease and synovial fluid tumor necrosis factor, interleukin 6, and prostaglandin E2 values in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 3 379-386 
Hawkins DL, MacKay RJ, Gum GG, Colahan PT, Meyer JC.In each of 4 horses, sterile synovitis was induced by intra-articular injection of 3 micrograms of Escherichia coli endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) into one antebrachiocarpal joint; an equal volume (2 ml) of phosphate-buffered saline solution (PBSS) was injected into the opposite, control carpus. Blood and 1.5 ml of synovial fluid were obtained at postinjection hours (PIH) 0, 2, 4, 8, 12, 18, 42, 66, and 144. Synovial fluid sample collection was accomplished by use of an indwelling, intra-articular catheter through PIH 12, and by arthrocentesis subsequently. Joint fluid samples were analyz...
Dissipation of metabolic heat in the horse during exercise.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    March 1, 1993   Volume 74, Issue 3 1161-1170 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1993.74.3.1161
Hodgson DR, McCutcheon LJ, Byrd SK, Brown WS, Bayly WM, Brengelmann GL, Gollnick PD.Horses were exercised at 40, 65, and 90% of their maximum O2 uptake (VO2max) until moderately fatigued (approximately 38, 15, and 9 min, respectively) to assess heat loss through different routes. Approximately 4,232, 3,195, and 2,333 kcal of heat were generated in response to exercise at these intensities. Of this, approximately 7, 16, and 20% remained as stored heat 30 min postexercise. Respiratory heat loss, estimated from the temperature difference between blood in the pulmonary and carotid arteries and the cardiac output, was estimated to be 30, 19, and 23% of the heat produced during exe...
Physiological effects of hypertonic dehydration on body fluid pools in arid-adapted mammals. How do Arab-based horses compare?
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Comparative physiology    February 1, 1993   Volume 104, Issue 2 201-213 doi: 10.1016/0300-9629(93)90304-m
Sneddon JC.No abstract available
[Hemolytic properties of bacteria belonging to the Acinetobacter genus].
Medycyna doswiadczalna i mikrobiologia    January 1, 1993   Volume 45, Issue 3 317-322 
Gospodarek E.Direct and intermediate hemolytic activity of 526 strains of Acinetobacter was investigated. Their ability to produce lipase and lecithinase was also studied. Measurements were performed parallely on human, horse, sheep and bovine erythrocytes. Direct hemolytic activity was exhibited by 16% of tested strains (17 out of 24 strains of A. haemolyticus). Human, sheep and bovine erythrocytes were useful for testing the hemolytic activity of Acinetobacter. The hemolysis was occurring faster and was visible more frequently during incubation at 37 degrees C. Indirect hemolytic activity was observed in...
Effect of temperature on the transmission of western equine encephalomyelitis and St. Louis encephalitis viruses by Culex tarsalis (Diptera: Culicidae).
Journal of medical entomology    January 1, 1993   Volume 30, Issue 1 151-160 doi: 10.1093/jmedent/30.1.151
Reisen WK, Meyer RP, Presser SB, Hardy JL.The extrinsic incubation rate (inverse of the time in days from infection to median transmission) of western equine encephalomyelitis (WEE) and St. Louis encephalitis (SLE) viruses by laboratory strains of Culex tarsalis Coquillett increased as a linear function of incubation temperatures from 10 to 30 degrees C. The estimated temperatures for zero transmission thresholds (intercept of the X axis) were 10.9 and 14.9 degrees C, and the number of degree days above these thresholds required for median transmission (inverse of the slope) was 67.6 and 115.2, respectively. Although the bodies of mos...
Variability of alpha-tocopherol values associated with procurement, storage, and freezing of equine serum and plasma samples.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 12 2228-2234 
Craig AM, Blythe LL, Rowe KE, Lassen ED, Barrington R, Walker KC.Recent evidence concerning the pathogenesis of equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy indicated that low blood alpha-tocopherol values are a factor in the disease process. Variables that could be introduced by a veterinarian procuring, transporting, or storing samples were evaluated for effects on alpha-tocopherol concentration in equine blood. These variables included temperature; light; exposure to the rubber stopper of the evacuated blood collection tube; hemolysis; duration of freezing time, with and without nitrogen blanketing; and repeated freeze/thaw cycles. It was found that hemolysis...
Microwave thermography: a non-invasive technique for investigation of injury of the superficial digital flexor tendon in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 4 269-273 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1992.tb02833.x
Marr CM.Microwave thermographs were recorded from 77 normal horses. In 51% the lowest temperature was recorded in the mid-metacarpal region, and in 41% it was in the distal metacarpal region. The mean temperature of the normal limbs ranged from 25.04 to 37.4 degrees C. Maximum temperature differences between symmetrical points in both forelimbs ranged from 0 to 5.33 degrees C and differences in mean limb temperatures between both forelimbs ranged from 0 to 2.91 degrees C. In 48 horses with acute (less than 4 weeks' duration) injury of the superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT) (36 unilateral, 12 bil...
Respiratory muscle perfusion in ponies during prolonged submaximal exercise in thermoneutral environment.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1992   Volume 53, Issue 4 558-562 
Manohar M, Duren SE, Sikkes B, Day J, Baker JP.Distribution of blood flow among various respiratory muscles was examined in 8 healthy ponies during submaximal exercise lasting 30 minutes, using radionuclide labeled 15-microns diameter microspheres injected into the left ventricle. From the resting values (40 +/- 2 beats/min; 37.3 +/- 0.2 C), heart rate and pulmonary arterial blood temperature increased significantly at 5 (152 +/- 8 beats/min; 38.6 +/- 0.2 C), 15 (169 +/- 6 beats/min; 39.8 +/- 0.2 C), and 26 (186 +/- 8 beats/min; 40.8 +/- 0.2 C) minutes of exertion, and the ponies sweated profusely. Mean aortic pressure also increased progr...
Cardiorespiratory parameters in draught horses before and after short term draught work pulling loads.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    April 1, 1992   Volume 39, Issue 3 215-222 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1992.tb00175.x
Pérez R, Recabarren SE, Mora G, Jara C, Quijada G, Hetz E.In order to establish the relationship between draught force and cardiorespiratory responses to exercise heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR), arterial and venous blood gases, pH, hemoglobin concentration and temperature were measured in five draught horses during rest, immediately after exercise and 30 min post-exercise under field conditions. A wagon equipped with an odometer and a hydraulic dynamometer was used for measuring distance and draught force. The wagon was loaded with 946 kg for the low load, 1,979 kg for the medium load and 2,994 kg for the high load, and drawn for a distance o...
Hoof and distal limb surface temperature in the normal pony under constant and changing ambient temperatures.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 2 134-139 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1992.tb02798.x
Mogg KC, Pollitt CC.Forelimb surface temperatures were continuously monitored in four clinically normal ponies exposed to: (i) constant ambient temperature; (ii) a biphasic change in ambient temperature; and (iii) an incremental increase in ambient temperature. Limb surface temperatures were recorded at the hoof, metacarpus and forearm, and rectal temperature was also measured. Under constant ambient temperature, limb surface temperatures remained relatively constant. A pyrexic episode occurred in one pony under constant ambient temperature conditions and was characterised by an onset phase in which rectal temper...
[The effect of storage time and temperature on the activity of glutathione peroxidase in plasma and whole blood of horses].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    March 1, 1992   Volume 39, Issue 2 81-88 
Wahdati A, Lindner A, Sommer H.The influence of temperature and duration of storage on glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activity in plasma and whole blood samples of horses was investigated. Furthermore the relationships between the GSH-Px activities in plasma and whole blood as well as the GSH-Px values related to hematocrit and the hemoglobin content of the blood samples of 93 different horses were calculated. At 20-22 degrees C, the GSH-Px activity in plasma and whole blood samples remained stable over at least three days while it was reduced by 38% and 65% after 2 and 3 days, if the whole blood samples were kept stored a...
Interactions between sperm packaging, gas environment, temperature and diluent on fresh stallion sperm survival.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica. Supplementum    January 1, 1992   Volume 88 97-110 
Magistrini M, Couty I, Palmer E.No abstract available
Stability of equine lysozyme. I. Thermal unfolding behaviour.
Biophysical chemistry    November 1, 1991   Volume 41, Issue 2 185-191 doi: 10.1016/0301-4622(91)80018-m
Morozova L, Haezebrouck P, Van Cauwelaert F.The thermal denaturation of Ca(2+)- and apo-forms of equine lysozyme was followed by using far and near UV circular dichroism and intrinsic fluorescence methods. The difference found between the temperature dependence of the ellipticity at 222 nm and 287 nm, which show two stages in the thermal transition, and those at 228 nm and 294 nm, which indicate only one stage over a wide range of temperatures reflects that different subdivisions of the protein molecule are characterized by a different stability, cooperativity and pathway of denaturation. The first transition, reflected in the increase ...
Blood gas analyses on equine blood: required correction factors [see comment].
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 6 410-412 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03752.x
Fedde MR.Correction factors have been determined to obtain the best estimates of PO2, PCO2 and pH in equine blood with standard blood gas and pH electrodes. There was a significant difference between the PO2 readings for tonometred blood of most horses and the equilibrating gas. Thus, if the PO2 electrode is calibrated with a gas, an electrode correction factor should be obtained by tonometring a blood sample from each horse. This factor was not dependent on packed cell volume. No such correction is required for the PCO2 electrode. If the animal's temperature differs from that of the analyser, the PO2,...
The ammonia tolerance test in horses.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    June 1, 1991   Volume 62, Issue 2 48-50 
Van den Berg JS.Clinically normal horses (n = 8) with ages ranging from 5 to 8 years, were starved for 12 h and their plasma ammonia concentrations were measured. The mean fasting plasma ammonia concentration was 17.8 +/- 3.8 mumol l-1. After dosing ammonium chloride at a dose rate of 0.02 g kg-1, there was a significant increase in plasma ammonia concentration, with a maximum rise after 20 min (P less than 0.05). To investigate the influence of temperature on plasma ammonia concentrations of stored samples, 8 plasma samples were stored at -20 degrees C and 4 degrees C respectively. The plasma ammonia concent...
Vibrational modes of hemoglobin in red blood cells.
Biophysical journal    February 1, 1991   Volume 59, Issue 2 363-374 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(91)82230-5
Martel P, Calmettes P, Hennion B.Equine red blood cells were washed in saline heavy water (2H2O) to exchange the hydrogen atoms of the non-hemoglobin components with deuterons. This led to novel neutron scattering measurements of protein vibrations within a cellular system and permitted a comparison with inelastic neutron scattering measurements on purified horse hemoglobin, either dry or wetted with 2H2O. As a function of wavevector transfer Q and the frequency transfer v the neutron response typified by the dynamic structure factor S(Q, v) was found to be similar for extracted and cellular hemoglobin at low and high tempera...
Thermophilic and thermotolerant fungi of animals’ hair.
Acta microbiologica Hungarica    January 1, 1991   Volume 38, Issue 2 117-120 
Bagy MM, Abdel-Mallek AY.Nine thermophilic genera and 17 species in addition to one variety of Aspergillus flavus, Malbranchea pulchella and Humicola grisea were collected from hair samples in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia at 45 degrees C. Fifty-one hair specimens of rabbit, sheep, camel and horse were examined for the presence of thermophilic fungi. The most frequent species were Aspergillus fumigatus, Aspergillus niger, Thermoascus aurantiacus and Malbranchea pulchella var. sulfurea. In low frequency, Aspergillus flavus, Aspergillus quadrilineatus, Paecilomyces variotii, Paecilomyces aerugineus, Mucor pusillus and Rhizopus s...
The effects of increase testicular temperature on spermatogenesis in the stallion.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 127-134 
Freidman R, Scott M, Heath SE, Hughes JP, Daels PF, Tran TQ.Stallions can experience an increase in testicular temperature from bouts of fever or from injury to the testes. In species other than the horse, increased temperature models have been used to study testicular degeneration. This study was undertaken to examine the effects of increased testicular temperature on spermatogenesis in the stallion as measured by semen evaluation. The results of this investigation demonstrate that increased testicular temperature is associated with significant transitory alterations in the routine semen evaluation of the stallion. The duration of increased testicular...
Metabolic changes in thoroughbred and pony foals during the first 24 h post partum.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 561-570 
Ousey JC, McArthur AJ, Rossdale PD.Metabolic rates, rectal temperatures and respiratory quotients (RQ) were determined during the first 24 h post partum in Thoroughbred and pony foals and in relation to environmental temperature. Both breeds had high metabolic rates (greater than 200 W/m2) during the first hour post partum when they were wet and shivering; by 4 to 24 h values were fairly steady at about 153 and 105 W/m2 for Thoroughbred and pony foals, respectively. At birth, rectal temperature was lower in Thoroughbred foals than in pony foals; values increased during the first hour, and then decreased. At 24 h of age, both br...
Diurnal changes in lactic and pyruvic acid levels and pH values in foals during the first 13 weeks of their life and in their lactating mothers.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. A, Comparative physiology    January 1, 1991   Volume 99, Issue 1-2 113-117 doi: 10.1016/0300-9629(91)90244-7
Flisińska-Bojanowska A, Gill J, Komosa M.1. The diurnal changes in the levels of lactic (LA) and pyruvic (PA) acids and values of pH were studied in standard-bred mares and their foals, for 13 weeks of foal life, throughout 2 years. 2. The studies began when a foal was 7 days old and were repeated every 2 weeks until foals reached 13 weeks of age. 3. Blood samples were taken every 4 hr for one day, each second week. 4. In the LA, PA levels and pH values no diurnal rhythm was stated in lactating mares during study periods. 5. In foals the diurnal rhythm in LA and PA occurred in the 3rd month of their life, with the acrophase at night ...
Cultivation of tissue from the matrix of the stratum medium of the equine and bovine hoof walls.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 11 1852-1856 
Ekfalck A, Rodriguez-Martinez H, Obel N.Explants from the matrix of the stratum medium of the wall of the equine and bovine hoof each were cultured on a microporous membrane, using a standard culture medium. After incubation at 37 C, the outgrowth was a mixture of keratinocytes and fibroblasts, with predominance of the latter. After incubation at 34 C, the keratinocytes dominated, covering the lateral surfaces of the explant as well as the basal surface. Lateral outgrowth of keratinocytes was observed at the borderline of the original epidermis and at the borderline of the explant's contact with the membrane. Epithelial outgrowth fr...
Cold housing effects on growth and nutrient demand of young horses.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1990   Volume 68, Issue 10 3152-3162 doi: 10.2527/1990.68103152x
Cymbaluk NF.Housing temperature effects on growth, feed utilization and feed digestion of 12, 7-mo-old Standardbred colts were evaluated for 22 wk beginning in late November. Colts were assigned to one of two treatments: housed in a barn heated at 10 degrees C (warm) or housed in a barn with no external heat supply (cold). All horses were allowed outdoors for 4 h daily. Mean temperatures of the warm and cold barn from November to April were 10.9 +/- .66 and -5.2 +/- 1.72 degrees C, respectively. Hair coat weight of cold-housed colts was 1.4- to twofold (P less than .05) that of warm-housed colts from Dece...
Respiratory and metabolic responses in the horse during moderate and heavy exercise.
Pflugers Archiv : European journal of physiology    September 1, 1990   Volume 417, Issue 1 73-78 doi: 10.1007/BF00370771
Hodgson DR, Rose RJ, Kelso TB, McCutcheon LJ, Bayly WM, Gollnick PD.Thoroughbred horses were exercised to fatigue on a treadmill at 62% and 100% of their VO2max. Hypoxemia occurred at the onset of exercise under both exercise conditions. This hypoxemia persisted to fatigue during the heavy exercise but progressively diminished as the exercise continued and had disappeared by the end of exercise at the lighter load. As a result of the hypoxemia the oxygen content of arterial blood during exercise at VO2max was 17% below its carrying capacity. However, under both experimental conditions the CaO2 still exceeded that of rest owing to an elevation in hemoglobin con...
[The horses of Giara: variation of the thyroid activity and certain blood parameters between winter and summer].
Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale    September 1, 1990   Volume 66, Issue 9 849-856 
Floris B, Bini PP, Nuvole P, Di Meglio FG.The changes of some parameters in the blood serum of six Giara horses (3 males and 3 females) were checked weekly, in relation to the environmental temperature throughout a one winter and summer. T3, total lipids, triglycerides, urea nitrogen, creatinine, total protein, albumin, beta and gamma globulin showed significant difference between winter and summer and, with the exception of triglycerides, urea nitrogen and total protein were correlated to the environmental temperature. T4, glucose, uric acid and alpha globulin showed no difference between the two seasons and no correlation with the t...
[The cardiotropic, hypometabolic and hypothermic activity of peptide fractions from the tissues of hibernating cold-adapted animals].
Zhurnal evoliutsionnoi biokhimii i fiziologii    September 1, 1990   Volume 26, Issue 5 623-629 
Sukhova GS, Ignat'ev DA, Akhremenko AK, Levashova VG, Mikhaleva II, Sviriaev VI, Anufriev AI, Ziganshin RKh, Kramarova LI, Gnutov DIu.From tissues of hibernating and active long-tailed ground squirrels and from the brain of cold-adapted Yakut horses, low molecular peptide fractions were obtained which, after injection to albino mice, decreased oxygen consumption and rectal temperature in them. The same fractions exhibited negative chrono- and inotropic effects on isolated hearts of ectothermic and endothermic animals. Fractions from the brain of ground squirrels and the brain of horse exhibited similar pattern of the activity. The activity of fractions was subjected to seasonal changes and depended on the degree of their pur...
The influence of photoperiod on gonadotrophin-releasing hormone stimulated luteinising hormone release in the anoestrous mare.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 5 356-358 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04289.x
Nequin LG, King SS, Matt KS, Jurak RC.The transition from anoestrus to oestrus in mares is controlled by photoperiod. The present study examined whether additional daylength would accelerate the mares' response to gonadotrophin-releasing-hormone (GnRH). Nine anoestrous mares were placed under ambient or artificial long lighting on 7th January. The four month experimental period was divided into a three-day sequence which was repeated at 21 day intervals. Ovaries were palpated rectally on Day 1; saline was injected (1 ml intravenously [iv]) on Day 2; GnRH was administered (0.59 microgram/kg bodyweight iv) on Day 3. Blood was taken ...
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