Analyze Diet

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.
Hormonal responses to exercise and training.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1985   Volume 1, Issue 3 477-496 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30746-0
Thornton JR.Current knowledge and understanding of the hormonal response to exercise are limited, whether in relation to horses, humans, or other species. The changes in plasma concentration of some hormones occur early in exercise, apparently owing to a neuronal stimulation, whereas others, being pituitary dependent, require hormonal stimulation. Also, although it is possible to observe changes in plasma concentrations of hormones, the mechanism by which this is achieved is not always understood, and unless the nonprotein-bound, or active, form of the hormone is also determined, changes in plasma concent...
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...
[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
Survival of contagious equine metritis organisms (CEMO) in different transport media as influenced by storage time, temperature and contaminating flora.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    July 1, 1985   Volume 32, Issue 6 454-459 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1985.tb01982.x
Engvall A.No abstract available
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...
The blood rheology of man and various animal species.
Quarterly journal of experimental physiology (Cambridge, England)    January 1, 1985   Volume 70, Issue 1 37-49 doi: 10.1113/expphysiol.1985.sp002895
Amin TM, Sirs JA.A comparative study has been made of the blood rheology, and its component factors, in horse, sheep, cattle, goat, camel, pig, dog, rabbit and man. The erythrocyte flexibility of horse red cells is high relative to man, that of pig, dog, camel and rabbit comparable, but less flexible, and sheep, cattle and goat relatively inflexible. The erythrocyte flexibility of horse, sheep, cattle and goats does not vary with the plasma fibrinogen level, as occurs with human and rabbit cells. Washing erythrocytes and then suspending them in isotonic saline makes the erythrocytes of all species relatively i...
Oxygen radical production by horse and pig neutrophils induced by a range of crystals.
The Journal of rheumatology    December 1, 1984   Volume 11, Issue 6 735-740 
Higson FK, Jones OT.The exposure of animal neutrophils to crystals implicated in joint inflammation induces superoxide and peroxide generation in a concentration and temperature dependent fashion. Active crystals were urate, hydroxyapatite, pyrophosphate and brushite; diamond and cholesterol were inactive. Cytochalasin B increased superoxide yield after addition of brushite, and inhibitors of the PMA induced respiratory burst blocked the crystal induced response. Addition of urate to anaerobic neutrophils causes the reduction of a b-type cytochrome, a likely component of the neutrophil superoxide generating syste...
Extenders for preservation of canine and equine spermatozoa at 5 degrees C.
Theriogenology    October 1, 1984   Volume 22, Issue 4 409-415 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(84)90461-8
Province CA, Amann RP, Pickett BW, Squires EL.Two experiments were conducted to evaluate the effects of six extenders and three glycerol levels on the motility of sperm stored at 5 degrees C. Using a split-ejaculated design, semen from 10 dogs and 12 stallions was extended with egg-yolk-tris (EYT), egg-yolk-bicarbonate (EGB), Beltsville F-3 (BF-3), Cornell University (CUE), caprogen (CAP) and heated skim milk (SM) extenders. After cooling to 5 degrees C, additional extender containing 0% to 12% glycerol was added to provide a final concentration of 0%, 3% or 6% glycerol. Regardless of glycerol level, a higher (P<0.05) percentage of can...
Kinetics of electron transfer between mitochondrial cytochrome c and iron hexacyanides.
Journal of inorganic biochemistry    August 1, 1984   Volume 21, Issue 4 295-310 doi: 10.1016/0162-0134(84)85052-7
Eley CG, Ragg E, Moore GR.The reduction of horse and Candida krusei cytochromes c by ferrocyanide has been studied by 1H NMR spectroscopy and the reaction found to involve a precursor complex of ferrocyanide bound to ferricytochrome c (pH* 7.4, 2H2O, I = 0.12, and 25 degrees C). The electron transfer rate constants for the reduction of the two ferricytochromes by associated ferrocyanide were found to be the same at 780 +/- 80 sec-1 but the association constants for binding of ferrocyanide to ferricytochrome c were significantly different: horse, 90 +/- 20 M-1 and Candida, 285 +/- 30 M-1. The different association const...
Ascorbate reduction of horse heart cytochrome c. A zero-energy reduction reaction.
The Journal of biological chemistry    July 10, 1984   Volume 259, Issue 13 8144-8150 
Myer YP, Kumar S.The ascorbate reduction of horse heart ferricytochrome c in 0.05 M phosphate + 0.25 M sodium sulfate, at pH 7.3, as a function of temperature, 12-36 degrees C, and at alkaline pH 8.4 using stopped flow technique has been examined. The data have been analyzed in terms of a two-step mechanism, binding followed by reduction (Myer, Y.P., Thallam, K.K., and Pande, A. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 9666-9673). At neutral pH and up to about 26 degrees C, the first order reduction constant is independent of temperature, i.e. with zero or near-zero activation energy. At higher temperatures, it becomes temp...
Management of thermal injuries in large animals.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Large animal practice    March 1, 1984   Volume 6, Issue 1 91-105 doi: 10.1016/s0196-9846(17)30251-3
Geiser DR, Walker RD.The pathophysiology and histopathology of thermal burns in large animals is very similar to that in humans. Burns are classified as first degree, superficial and deep second degree, third degree, and fourth degree, depending upon the depth of thermal injury. Most severe burns will produce a local and a systemic response--both of which must be properly treated to increase the patient's chances for survival. The systemic response is mainly characterized by hypovolemia, fluid and electrolyte loss, protein loss, pulmonary edema, increased caloric requirements, and depressed immune responses. The l...
The effects of temperature on the activity of testicular steroidogenic enzymes.
Steroids    March 1, 1984   Volume 43, Issue 3 325-331 doi: 10.1016/0039-128x(84)90050-3
Munabi AK, Cassorla FG, D'Agata R, Albertson BD, Loriaux DL, Lipsett MB.Decreased sperm counts and impaired sperm motility are present in a substantial proportion of men with varicocele. Elevations in the temperature of the affected testis, and increased spermatic vein estradiol (E2) concentrations have been found in some of these patients. To investigate the possibility that increases in temperature lead to a pattern of testicular steroidogenesis that results in increased E2 synthesis, we have examined the effects of temperature changes on the activities of four important testicular steroidogenic enzymes. 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3 beta-HSD), 17-hydro...
Survey of resting blood pressure values in clinically normal horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 1 53-58 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb01853.x
Parry BW, McCarthy MA, Anderson GA.Resting coccygeal blood pressure values were measured, indirectly, on 296 horses (97 Thoroughbreds, 97 Standardbreds and 102 hacks). Blood pressure was found to vary with the class of horse examined; on average Thoroughbreds had significantly higher values than Standardbreds and hacks, whereas blood pressures of the last two groups were not significantly different. There was no demonstrable effect of sex, height or heart rate on blood pressure, but temperature and age did influence the value recorded. Mean (+/- sd) (n = 296) coccygeal uncorrected values (systolic pressure/diastolic pressure) w...
Studies on ticks of veterinary importance in Nigeria. VIII. Differences observed in the biology of ticks which fed on different domestic animal hosts.
Folia parasitologica    January 1, 1984   Volume 31, Issue 1 53-61 
Dipeolu OO, Adeyefa CA.Ticks of the species Amblyomma variegatum (Fabr.), Boophilus decoloratus (Koch), Boophilus geigyi Aeschl. et Morel, and Hyalomma rufipes Koch were detached from cattle, sheep and horses and the influence of these various hosts on the biology of ticks was investigated. No A. variegatum was found in horses. The parameters studied were preoviposition and oviposition periods, ovipositional capacity, eclosion period, hatching patterns, egg sizes and temperature effect. Although the preoviposition and eclosion periods were similar in each tick species irrespective of the host from which the adults w...
Horse red blood cells frozen with 20% (w/v) glycerol and stored at -150 C for five years.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 11 2200-2202 
Valeri CR, Valeri DA, Gray A, Contreras TJ, Lindberg JR.When equine RBC were frozen with 20% (w/v) glycerol and stored at -150 C for as long as 5 years, there were no adverse effects on freeze-thaw or freeze-thaw-wash recovery or oxygen transport function. The manner in which the glycerol was added to, and removed from, the equine RBC was shown to be an important consideration in ensuring optimal freeze-thaw-wash recovery values.
Segmental epidural and subarachnoid analgesia in conscious horses: a comparative study.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 10 1870-1876 
Skarda RT, Muir WW.Six adult horses were used to compare the effects of segmental epidural analgesia (SEA) and segmental subarachnoid analgesia (SSA). A 17-gauge Huber point directional needle was used to place a catheter with stylet into the epidural space or the subarachnoid space at the lumbosacral intervertebral junction and to catheterize the thoracolumbar epidural or subarachnoid space. The position of the catheter was confirmed radiographically. A 2% solution of mepivacaine hydrochloride was used at average doses of 80 mg (4 ml) to produce SEA and 30 mg (1.5 ml) to produce SSA. Onset of analgesia in respo...
Equine anhidrosis: a review of pathophysiologic mechanisms.
Veterinary research communications    September 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 4 249-264 doi: 10.1007/BF02214921
Warner A, Mayhew IG.Anhidrosis is loss of the ability to sweat. The problem is seen in horses kept in a hot humid climate, and it may cause severe impairment of thermoregulation in the equine athlete. British Thoroughbreds imported to her tropical colonies are the earliest recorded cases, and since then the syndrome has come to be described as one of Thoroughbreds, usually performance athletes, undergoing acclimatization to heat and humidity. A recent epidemiologic study of cases in Florida has shown, however, that many different breeds, and long time inhabitants of a hot climate, may be affected. Equine sweat gl...
The isolation and preliminary characterization of a rhabdovirus in Australia related to bovine ephemeral fever virus.
Veterinary microbiology    June 1, 1983   Volume 8, Issue 3 221-235 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(83)90075-5
Cybinski DH, Zakrzewski H.CSIRO 368 virus was isolated from blood collected in the Northern Territory from a healthy cow and electron microscope studies showed that the isolate had rhabdovirus morphology. Fluorescent antibody studies and complement fixation tests related the virus to bovine ephemeral fever (BEF) virus. Neutralization tests in both suckling mice and Vero cells showed that the virus was not BEF virus. Antibodies to CSIRO 368 virus were found in cattle sera from northern and eastern Australia and Papua New Guinea. Antibodies were found in 16 out of 45 buffalo, some of which also had antibodies to BEF viru...
Effect of ambient temperature upon the surface temperature of the equine limb.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 6 1098-1101 
Palmer SE.Ten clinically healthy adult horses were examined with the portable infrared thermometer at ambient temperatures of 5, 15, and 25 C to evaluate the thermal response of limbs of the horse to variations of ambient temperature. Limb surface temperature varied in direct proportion to changes in the ambient temperature, with considerable variation occurring among individual horses, especially at the lower temperatures. Areas of proximal parts of the limbs were more resistant to temperature variation than were distal parts. Ambient temperature had a statistically significant, but clinically unimport...
Thermographic evaluation of horses with podotrochlosis.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 4 535-539 
Turner TA, Fessler JF, Lamp M, Pearce JA, Geddes LA.The distal forelimbs of 10 clinically normal horses with hair clipped on 1 limb were thermographically scanned before and after exercise. The thermal patterns, temperature distribution, and temperature changes after exercise were determined and compared with those of 8 horses with podotrochlosis. Clipping the hair did not cause changes in the thermal patterns, but the clipped limbs were warmer than the unclipped limbs. The temperature of the limbs of horses with podotrochlosis did not increase as much after exercise as did the limbs of normal horses. The failure of skin temperature increase co...
Morphometry of equine neutrophils isolated at different temperatures.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1982   Volume 19, Issue 5 534-543 doi: 10.1177/030098588201900508
Bertram TA, Coignoul FL.Equine neutrophils were evaluated ultrastructurally and by morphometric analysis. Homogeneous populations of neutrophils were isolated from peripheral blood at 4 degrees and 22 degrees C by centrifugation on two sequential Ficoll-Hypaque density gradients. Isolation procedures at both temperatures resulted in neutrophil degranulation but not cell swelling. Degranulation was more extensive in cells isolated at 22 degrees C. Isolation temperature affected the neutrophil content of secondary granules more than primary granules. A granule similar to immature specific granules of human neutrophils ...
Effects of amikacin sulfate on the motility of stallion and bull spermatozoa at different temperatures and intervals of storage.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1982   Volume 54, Issue 6 1105-1110 doi: 10.2527/jas1982.5461105x
Arriola J, Foote RH.Because microfloral content of stallion semen tends to be high, and strains may be resistant to commonly used antibiotics, amikacin was tested with stallion semen and compared with bull semen. Nine ejaculates to stallion semen were incubated at 37 C in egg yolk-tris extender for 0, 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 h in the presence of amikacin concentrations of 0, 50, 100, 250, 500, 1,000 and 10,000 microgram/ml, with penicillin and penicillin-streptomycin as controls. Averaged over all incubations, spermatozoal motility was 44, 48, 49, 46, 45, 45 and 19%, for increasing concentrations of amikacin, compared ...
Live temperature-sensitive equine influenza virus vaccine: generation of the virus and efficacy in hamsters.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 5 869-874 
Brundage-Anguish LJ, Holmes DF, Hosier NT, Murphy BR, Massicott JG, Appleyard G, Coggins L.Temperature-sensitive (ts) reassortants of an equine influenza virus, subtype A-1, were produced by mating a human influenza ts donor virus with an equine influenza A/Cornell/16/74 wild-type virus and by isolating a ts reassortant virus possessing the equine hemagglutinin and neuraminidase surface antigens. Two equine its reassortant clones, 8B1 and 71A1, were produced which had an in vitro shutoff temperature for plaque formation of 38 and 37 C, respectively. The human ts donor virus had ts mutation(s) on the polymerase 3 (P3) and nucleoprotein genes so that a ts equine reassortant virus coul...
Urinary production in the healthy horse and in horses deprived of feed and water.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 4 735-737 
Rumbaugh GE, Carlson GP, Harrold D.Total daily 24-hour urinary output was obtained from 11 healthy horses fed alfalfa hay with free access to salt during periods of high environmental temperatures. Daily urinary volume averaged 15.6 L, with mean specific gravity of 1.028, osmolality of 1,040 mOsm/kg, and urinary flow rate of 1.24 ml/kg/hr. Total 24-hour sample collections of urine were also obtained from horses held without access to feed or water for periods of 24, 48, and 72 hours during high environmental temperatures. Average urine production under these conditions was 6.3 L during the 1st day; 3.2 L, the 2nd day; and 3.0 L...
Isolation and characterization of beta- and gamma-caseins from horse milk.
The Biochemical journal    April 1, 1982   Volume 203, Issue 1 131-139 doi: 10.1042/bj2030131
Visser S, Jenness R, Mullin RJ.Three groups of casein components were isolated from horse milk. Group I is almost insoluble at acid and neutral pH, and is rather heterogeneous on alkaline gels with or without sodium dodecyl sulphate. Group II shows strong similarity to beta-casein from other species, as concluded from its amino acid composition and its N- and C-terminal sequences. This group consists of five electrophoretically distinguishable forms, all containing ester phosphate groups but no carbohydrate. Group III is composed of C-terminal fragments of the beta-like (group II) fraction and probably arises from the actio...
Equine anhidrosis: a survey of affected horses in Florida.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 1982   Volume 180, Issue 6 627-629 
Warner AE, Mayhew IG.No abstract available
Effects of enkephalins versus opiates on locomotor activity of the horse.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    March 1, 1982   Volume 35, Issue 3 405-419 
Nugent TE, Combie JD, Weld JM, Burns P, Tobin T.The enkephalins are small, pentapeptide neurotransmitter molecules which have reportedly been used in racing horses. In our experiments, D-Ala2-Metenkephalinamide and leucine enkephalin were administered to horses intravenously (IV) and intracisternally (IC). Leucine enkephalin had little effect on locomotor activity by either route at doses of 0.01 mg/Kg or less. Methionine enkephalinamide, an enzyme resistant enkephalin analog, had no significant effect when given IV (0.002 and 0.008 mg/kg). Other experiments involving intracisternal dosing with this long acting form at higher levels (0.005-...
[Effect of weather on susceptibility of horses to colic].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1982   Volume 10, Issue 2 203-208 
Barth R.No abstract available
Changes in plasma progesterone levels during storage of heparinized whole blood from cow, horse, dog and pig.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1982   Volume 23, Issue 1 1-8 doi: 10.1186/BF03546815
Oltner R, Edqvist LE.Progesterone concentrations in heparinized plasma harvested immediately after blood collection were compared with levels obtained after storage of the corresponding whole blood for 2 h, 4 h, 6 h, 1 day, 2 days and 5 days at room temperature and in a refrigerator. The blood was taken during the luteal phase from 4 dogs, 4 horses, 4 pigs and 8 cows. For 4 cows the storage time was extended to 9 and 20 days. No significant effect of whole blood storage time on plasma progesterone concentrations could be shown for dogs or pigs. For the horse a slight but significant decrease was demonstrated when ...
Sweating in the intact horse and isolated perfused horse skin.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. C: Comparative pharmacology    January 1, 1982   Volume 73, Issue 2 259-264 doi: 10.1016/0306-4492(82)90118-6
Johnson KG, Creed KE.1. In intact horses, heat-induced sweating occurred initially as pulses, then as a continuous, synchronously fluctuating discharge. 2. I.V. adrenaline (Adr) induced sweating immediately; isoprenaline (Isop) elicited sweating after a delay; and phenylephrine (PhE) had no sudorific effect. 3. In isolated perfused skin, PhE induced an immediate small sweat discharge, Isop a slower sustained output and Adr a biphasic discharge. alpha- and beta-adrenergic antagonists blocked the first and second phases, respectively, of Adr-induced sweating. 4. The observed sweating patterns are consistent with ind...