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Topic:Tissue

Tissue in horses refers to the various types of biological material that make up the body of the animal, including muscle, connective, epithelial, and nervous tissues. Each type of tissue has specific functions and characteristics, contributing to the overall physiology and health of the horse. Muscle tissue is responsible for movement and locomotion, connective tissue provides structural support and protection, epithelial tissue covers body surfaces and lines cavities, and nervous tissue is involved in transmitting signals for communication and coordination within the body. The study of equine tissue encompasses aspects such as growth, repair, and response to injury or disease. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the structure, function, and pathology of different tissue types in horses, offering insights into their role in equine health and disease management.
In vitro transport of L-alanine by equine cecal mucosa.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 12 2138-2144 
Freeman DE, Kleinzeller A, Donawick WJ, Topkis VA.When sheets of mucosa from the cecum of clinically normal horses were incubated in vitro with radiolabeled L-alanine, they could accumulate this amino acid against an apparent concentration gradient after 60 to 150 minutes of incubation. The active transport system for L-alanine was on the serosal surface of the mucosal sheet only. L-Alanine accumulation at 60 minutes was partly inhibited by 20 mM glycine (P less than 0.01), 0.5 mM ouabain (P less than 0.05), and Na deprivation (P less than 0.02). Anoxia for 60 minutes increased L-alanine accumulation, but had adverse effects on cell structure...
[The hypometabolic action of a 1- to 10-kD fraction from the brain tissues of the Yakut horse].
Zhurnal evoliutsionnoi biokhimii i fiziologii    November 1, 1989   Volume 25, Issue 6 786-787 
Akhremenko AK, Sofronova VE, Anufriev AI, Nikolaeva RN.No abstract available
Immunohistochemical localisation of alpha 2-macroglobulin in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    November 1, 1989   Volume 47, Issue 3 393-396 
Winder NC, Pellegrini A, von Fellenberg R.A peroxidase antiperoxidase technique was used to identify alpha 2-macroglobulin in formalin-fixed sections of normal equine lung and liver and in tissue sections and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from horses with various lung diseases. Equine peripheral blood leucocytes and bronchoalveolar lavage samples from clinically normal horses were negative for alpha 2-macroglobulin. It was concluded that liver and pulmonary macrophages may be potential sources of alpha 2-macroglobulin. Although alpha 2-macroglobulin may play a role in various chronic bronchointerstitial pneumonias of the horse, it is d...
Immunohistochemical investigation of the distribution of immunoglobulins G, A and M within the anterior uvea of the normal equine eye.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 6 438-441 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02191.x
Matthews AG.Distribution of the immunoglobulin (Ig) classes G, A and M within the anterior uvea of eight clinically normal equine eyes was examined using indirect immunoperoxidase labelling. Increased staining intensity of stromal IgG and IgA was observed within the ciliary processes, the iris stroma being relatively free of immunoglobulin. This may reflect anatomical variation in the permeability of the uveal microvasculature to lipid insoluble plasma macro-molecules. Intracellular IgG and IgA were observed within the non-pigmented ciliary epithelium in seven and four of the eight eyes respectively, alth...
Carbon dioxide laser removal of a verrucous sarcoid from the ear of a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1989   Volume 195, Issue 8 1125-1127 
Palmer SE.A verrucous sarcoid was removed from the ear of a horse, using a carbon dioxide laser. The use of carbon dioxide laser excision and ablation enabled complete removal of tumor cells, with minimal damage to underlying normal cartilage. Cosmetic healing was observed with minimal disfigurement. Recurrence of the tumor was not observed after 11 months.
Isolation and characterization of equine microvascular endothelial cells in vitro.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 10 1800-1805 
Bochsler PN, Slauson DO, Chandler SK, Suyemoto MM.The use of cultured tissue has not yet become widespread in research involving equine disease, and this may be attributable in part to the scarcity of published reports concerning tissue culture methods for this species. We report here the isolation of equine microvascular endothelium (EMVE) from fresh omental tissue of horses and ponies. Fresh donor tissue was minced, subjected to collagenase digestion, and filtered. Cells were layered on 5% bovine serum albumin for gravity sedimentation, the bottom layer was collected, and the cells were plated onto fibronectin-coated flasks. Medium consiste...
Neochondrogenesis in free intra-articular, periosteal, and perichondrial autografts in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 10 1787-1794 
Vachon A, McIlwraith CW, Trotter GW, Norrdin RW, Powers BE.Periosteal autografts were obtained from the medial aspect of the proximal portion of the tibia, and perichondrial autografts were obtained from the sternum. Using arthroscopic visualization, each autograft was placed as a loose body into 1 tarsocrural joint in 6 young horses (2 to 4 years old). Horses were hand-walked daily, starting the day after surgery, for a total of 6 h/wk for 8 weeks. Eight weeks after autograft implantation, radiographs were taken of each tarsocrural joint and were interpreted with regard to mineralization in the transplanted autografts. Autografts were then surgically...
Plasma and tissue histamine in equine grass sickness.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    September 1, 1989   Volume 12, Issue 3 340-343 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1989.tb00682.x
Hodson NP, Wright JA, Causon RC, Hunt JM.No abstract available
Ultrastructure and lectin histochemistry of equine cutaneous histiolymphocytic lymphosarcomas.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1989   Volume 26, Issue 5 409-419 doi: 10.1177/030098588902600506
Detilleux PG, Cheville NF, Sheahan BJ.Tissues from subcutaneous lymphosarcomas and regional lymph nodes were examined by light and electron microscopy and by lectin histochemistry. Tumors were composed of two major cell types: small lymphocytes with few organelles and pleomorphic histiocytic cells with undulant surfaces, large numbers of cytoplasmic vacuoles, and many mitochondria with large crystalline inclusions. A large gram-positive coryneform bacterium was isolated from tumor nodules but was not identified morphologically in tumor tissues. Evaluation of sections of tumors with lectins as histochemical probes revealed three st...
Lymphoid nodules in skin biopsies from dogs, cats, and horses with nonneoplastic dermatoses.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1989   Volume 79, Issue 3 267-272 
Scott DW.In a retrospective histopathologic study of nonneoplastic dermatoses, lymphoid nodules were found in 0.3% of 3,408 canine, 5.1% of 469 feline, and 4.5% of 325 equine skin biopsies. In all 3 species, the majority of cases wherein lymphoid nodules were found were diseases of presumed immune-mediated nature. In cats and horses, the majority of cases were also diseases characterized by tissue eosinophilia.
The effect of exercise on the healing of articular cartilage defects in the equine carpus.
Veterinary surgery : VS    July 1, 1989   Volume 18, Issue 4 312-321 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1989.tb01091.x
French DA, Barber SM, Leach DH, Doige CE.Arthroscopic surgery was performed on 12 horses (2-4 years of age) to create a 7 x 14 mm full-thickness cartilage defect in one radial carpal bone and in the contralateral third carpal bone. Six horses remained confined to a small paddock and six horses underwent a program of increasing exercise consisting of walking, trotting, and cantering for 13 weeks. All lesions showed evidence of healing at week 6 that progressed to more complete healing at week 13. There was no difference in the amount of repair tissue covering the defect. Histologically, the lesions healed with a combination of fibrous...
Distribution and density of neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive nerve fibres and cells in the horse urinary bladder.
Journal of the autonomic nervous system    July 1, 1989   Volume 27, Issue 2 173-180 doi: 10.1016/0165-1838(89)90099-4
Prieto D, Benedito S, Rodrigo J, Martínez-Murillo R, García-Sacristán A.The distribution and density of neuropeptide Y (NPY)-immunoreactive nerve fibres and cells were determined in the urinary bladder of the horse by using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) immunohistochemical method. Numerous undulating NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibres were found throughout the vesical wall, sometimes forming nerve bundles which ramified repeatedly as they coursed through the connective tissue septa to give rise to smaller bundles or single fibres which projected into the muscle fascicles forming muscular nerve plexuses, mainly in the bladder base. In the submucosa of this regio...
Tubuloreticular inclusions in equine connective tissue neoplasms.
Journal of comparative pathology    May 1, 1989   Volume 100, Issue 4 449-452 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(89)90011-x
Madewell BR, Munn RJ.Abnormal irregularly branched and anastomosing tubules within cisternae of endoplasmic reticulum were observed by transmission electron microscopy in tumour cells comprising connective tissue neoplasms (sarcoids) from three horses and a mule. These tubuloreticular inclusions were also observed in cultured tumour cells from one of these horses examined, but were not detected in fibroblasts (fibrocytes), epidermis, or vascular endothelial cells in skin biopsy specimens from five clinically healthy horses, nor in one additional equine connective tissue neoplasm.
Distribution of histological lesions in the equine endometrium.
The Veterinary record    March 18, 1989   Volume 124, Issue 11 271-273 doi: 10.1136/vr.124.11.271
Waelchli RO, Winder NC.The distribution of histopathological lesions in the equine endometrium was examined to investigate the representativeness of a single biopsy specimen in terms of the whole endometrium. Five sections from each of 110 uteri obtained from slaughtered mares were evaluated microscopically and classified according to a four-category grading system used for endometrial biopsies. Depending on the extent of agreement between the categories of the homologous sections, the uteri were considered to show either good agreement (81 uteri; 73.6 per cent), moderate agreement (26 uteri; 23.6 per cent) or poor ...
Immunocytochemical component of endocrine cells in pancreatic islets of horses.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    February 1, 1989   Volume 51, Issue 1 35-43 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.51.35
Furuoka H, Ito H, Hamada M, Suwa T, Satoh H, Itakura C.The endocrine cell components in the pancreatic islets of the following 4 pancreatic regions of the horse were investigated by immunohistochemical methods: lobus pancreatis sinister (left lobe); lobus pancreatis dexter (right lobe); and 2 regions of Corpus pancreatis (body), the duodenal lobe which lies along the cranial duodenal flexure and descending duodenum, and the intermediate lobe which is situated around the portal vein. The islets in the left and intermediate lobes contained a central mass of glucagon cells surrounded by insulin cells, a few somatostatin cells and sporadic pancreatic ...
Tissue blood content in anaesthetised sheep and horses.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. A, Comparative physiology    January 1, 1989   Volume 94, Issue 3 401-404 doi: 10.1016/0300-9629(89)90113-8
Weaver BM, Staddon GE, Pearson MR.The blood content of tissue in eight anaesthetized sheep and three anaesthetized horses was measured using chromium labelled autologous red blood cells. 2. Approximately half the total blood volume was found to be distributed within the body tissues and, with the exception of the spleen and fat, the distribution was similar in these two species.
Age dependent changes in metallothionein and accumulation of cadmium in horses.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. C, Comparative pharmacology and toxicology    January 1, 1989   Volume 93, Issue 2 327-332 doi: 10.1016/0742-8413(89)90242-9
Jeffery EH, Noseworthy R, Cherian MG.1. Analysis of livers and kidneys from 28 horses for cadmium, zinc and metallothionein showed low cadmium content in liver. There was a gradual increase in cadmium content in kidney with age. 2. Metallothionein values varied with zinc content in the liver and with cadmium content in the kidney; copper values did not vary in either tissue. 3. Metallothionein was localized mainly in the cytoplasms in liver and kidney of horses by immunohistochemistry.
Immunocytochemical localization of carbonic anhydrase isozyme III in equine thymus.
Histochemistry    January 1, 1989   Volume 91, Issue 1 39-42 doi: 10.1007/BF00501908
Nishita T, Matsushita H.Sections of equine thymus were examined for the presence of carbonic anhydrase (CA) isozymes by an immunohistochemical method. Carbonic anhydrase III, a major enzyme of skeletal muscle, was localized in some of the epithelial-reticular cells of the equine thymus. This finding suggests the presence of a new type of cell in the thymic cortex. The concentration of CA-III in the thymus was 17 micrograms/g wet tissue. CA-I and CA-II were not found in equine thymus.
Fibrinogen response to surgical tissue trauma in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 6 441-443 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01570.x
Allen BV, Kold SE.No abstract available
Use of immunohistochemical methods for diagnosis of equine pythiosis.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 11 1866-1868 
Brown CC, McClure JJ, Triche P, Crowder C.Excisional biopsy specimens were received from 8 horses with lesions suspected of being caused by Pythium sp. Pythium sp was isolated from all specimens. An indirect peroxidase technique was applied to formalin-fixed tissues from the biopsy material and there was distinct staining of hyphal cell walls in all specimens. Sections containing hyphae, other than those of Pythium sp, failed to stain. The indirect peroxidase technique could be used for confirmation of suspected cases of pythiosis.
A comparison of three methods of end-to-end anastomosis in the equine small colon.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1988   Volume 78, Issue 4 325-337 
Bristol DG, Cullen J.Six animals were used to compare simple interrupted, simple continuous, and stapled techniques for end-to-end rotated small colon anastomoses. Three ponies were evaluated three days after surgery for adhesion formation and luminal diameter at each anastomosis site. Two ponies and one horse were evaluated 14 days after surgery for adhesion formation. All anastomosis sites were examined histologically for alignment of tissue planes, and evidence of inflammation. No single technique was superior in all areas examined. While only three of the nine anastomoses had mild fibrinous adhesions at three ...
Brain cholinesterase activity in animals and birds.
Veterinary and human toxicology    August 1, 1988   Volume 30, Issue 4 329-331 
Blakley BR, Skelley KW.Normal cholinesterase activity in brain tissue was measured in various mammalian and avain species. The cholinesterase activity in the cerebrum of cattle, swine, sheep and horses was approximately 2-3 umoles/min/g of tissue in each instance. The whole brain cholinesterase activity of small feral mammals was approximately 2 to 5 fold greater than the domestic animals. Considerable interspecies variability was present in the feral mammals. Similar variability was also observed in the avian brain cholinesterase determinations. The avian whole brain cholinesterase activities ranged from 9.78 to 21...
The arrangement of the muscle layers at the equine ileocaecal junction.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    June 1, 1988   Volume 59, Issue 2 67-72 
Kotzé SH.The muscle layers of the ileocaecal junctions of horses (n = 18), plains zebras (Equus burchelli antiquorum) (n = 3), mountain zebras (Equus zebra zebra) (n = 2), and a donkey were examined macroscopically and microscopically. The muscular tunic of the ileocaecal papilla was made up of 3 layers: an innermost circular layer which was a continuation of the circular muscle of the ileum, a central longitudinal layer which was a continuation of one part of the longitudinal layer of the ileum and an outermost layer, composed of two collateral semicircular lips, formed by the circular layer of the ca...
Epidermal cell renewal in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 4 520-521 
Barker BB, Stannard AA, Maibach HI.Epidermal cell labeling index and cell renewal time were estimated in 8 adult horses, using autoradiography after [3H]thymidine was given intradermally. The mean labeling index was 1.45 +/- 0.47%, and the mean cell renewal time of the viable epidermis was approximately 17 days.
Histological evaluation of wound healing in horses treated with the protein-free hemodialysate Solcoseryl and its hexosylceramide fraction.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    February 1, 1988   Volume 35, Issue 2 84-95 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1988.tb00472.x
Liebich HG, Hamm D, Jöchle W.No abstract available
AA amyloid-associated gastroenteropathy in a horse.
Journal of comparative pathology    February 1, 1988   Volume 98, Issue 2 195-204 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(88)90018-7
Hayden DW, Johnson KH, Wolf CB, Westermark P.Systemic amyloidosis involving the digestive tract is described in an 11-year-old Morgan stallion. The disease was characterized clinically by weight loss, ptyalism, anaemia, persistent mature neutrophilia, hypoalbuminaemia and hypergammaglobulinaemia. The D-xylose absorption test indicated malabsorption. Necropsy revealed oral, oesophageal and gastric ulcers and reddened segments of small bowel mucosa with scant haemorrhages. Microscopically, amyloid deposits were found throughout all tissue layers of the digestive tract, except the serosa. Deposits of amyloid were most apparent in the small ...
Wound healing by epidermal-derived factors: experimental and preliminary clinical studies.
Progress in clinical and biological research    January 1, 1988   Volume 266 291-302 
Eisinger M, Sadan S, Soehnchen R, Silver IA.No abstract available
Exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage in the horse: results of a detailed clinical, post mortem and imaging study. IV. Changes in the bronchial circulation demonstrated by C.T. scanning and microradiography.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 5 405-410 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02631.x
O'Callaghan MW, Pascoe JR, Tyler WS, Mason DK.The purpose of this study was to use radiographic contrast techniques and special imaging methods to identify and high-light bronchial arterial involvement in lung lesions associated with exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) in horses. The lungs from four horses with histories of EIPH were prepared for computerised tomographic scanning and microradiography by perfusing the broncho-oesophageal artery with a mixture of red latex and either barium or iodine contrast materials while the pulmonary supply received only blue latex. Computerised tomographic scan slices of the prepared inflate...
Distribution of cephapirin into a tissue chamber implanted subcutaneously in horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    September 1, 1987   Volume 10, Issue 3 241-247 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1987.tb00535.x
Short CR, Beadle RE, Aranas T, Pawlusiow J, Clarke CR.The pharmacokinetics of cephapirin sodium and its distribution into a tissue chamber implanted subcutaneously in the neck of mature horses are described. Cephapirin was administered as an intravenous bolus dose of 20 mg/kg. The serum concentration vs time curve was best described by a two-compartment open model. Cephapirin disappeared from serum rapidly (t1/2 beta = 18.8 min), and had only a modest volume of distribution (Vd(area) approximately equal to 346 mg/kg, Vd(ss) approximately equal to 204 ml/kg). Total clearance was also rapid (approximately equal to 13 ml/min.kg). Concentrations of t...
The histological features of the immune system of the equine respiratory tract.
Journal of comparative pathology    September 1, 1987   Volume 97, Issue 5 575-586 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(87)90008-9
Mair TS, Batten EH, Stokes CR, Bourne FJ.The distribution of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue along the equine respiratory tract was surveyed in light microscopical sections. Intra-epithelial lymphocytes and similar cells scattered in the lamina propria were identified in all sites from the nasal vestibule to bronchioles of 2 to 4 mm diameter. Isolated lymphoid patches, occasionally with nodules, were common in bronchioles, but the density of this bronchiole-associated lymphoid tissue (BRALT) varied between individual horses. Bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue (BALT) was infrequently encountered. In the upper respiratory tract, nod...
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