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Topic:Vascular

The vascular system in horses encompasses a network of blood vessels responsible for the circulation of blood throughout the body. This system includes arteries, veins, and capillaries, which facilitate the transport of oxygen, nutrients, and waste products to and from tissues. The vascular health of horses is vital for maintaining overall physiological function and performance. Common areas of study within equine vascular research include the examination of blood flow dynamics, vascular diseases, and the impact of exercise on vascular function. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the structure, function, and clinical relevance of the vascular system in equine health.
Equine abortion (herpes) virus: properties of the hemagglutinin in virus suspensions.
Virology    November 1, 1973   Volume 56, Issue 1 164-171 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(73)90295-x
Klingeborn B, Dinter Z.No abstract available
[Isolation of acholeplasma and mycoplasma from aborted equine fetuses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 1, 1973   Volume 86, Issue 21 401-403 
Kirchhoff H, Bisping W, Floer W.No abstract available
Equine abortion (herpes) virus: evaluation of markers in a field vaccination trial.
Applied microbiology    October 1, 1973   Volume 26, Issue 4 566-569 doi: 10.1128/am.26.4.566-569.1973
Klingeborn B.Twelve mares were vaccinated with attenuated equine abortion virus (EAV) strain RAC-H. Two nonvaccinated mares served as controls. In at least three mares the vaccination appeared to coincide with a natural infection. This was indicated by characterization of the EAV isolated from nasal secretions of six vaccinated mares, a nonvaccinated control, and also from the lung, spleen, and liver of a fetus aborted by a vaccinated mare. The relative sensitivity of the isolated EAV to dithiothreitol was used to distinguish the RAC-H strain and wild-type virus. Of the 10 EAV isolates, four were recognize...
[Diagnosis of salmonella abortion in mares].
Veterinariia    September 1, 1973   Volume 9 97-98 
Kozlovskiĭ EV, Butkovskiĭ VF.No abstract available
Abortion associated with Brucella abortus (Biotype 1) in the T.B. mare.
The Veterinary record    May 5, 1973   Volume 92, Issue 18 480-481 doi: 10.1136/vr.92.18.480
Robertson FJ, Milne J, Silver CL, Clark H.No abstract available
Aetiological aspects of abortion in the thoroughbred mare.
Journal of comparative pathology    April 1, 1973   Volume 83, Issue 2 199-205 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(73)90043-1
Platt H.Abortion in the Thoroughbred mare has been studied from the standpoint of its statistical incidence and the factors that predispose to its occurrence. The pathological findings in a series of aborted foetuses submitted for autopsy are described. Some aspects of the aetiology of abortion in the mare are discussed.
[Comparative anatomy of the urterial system of the leg].
Kaibogaku zasshi. Journal of anatomy    April 1, 1973   Volume 48, Issue 2 103-117 
Naito J.No abstract available
[Identification of the equine rhinopneumonitis virus isolated from aborted fetuses].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1973   Volume 10, Issue 5 95-101 
Kharalambiev Kh, Ognianov D, Maklaklŭn P.No abstract available
Twinning as a cause of foetal and neonatal loss in the thoroughbred mare.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 1, 1973   Volume 83, Issue 1 91-106 doi: 10.1016/0021-9975(73)90032-7
Jeffcott LB, Whitwell KE.No abstract available
Ultrastructural changes in the liver of equine fetuses aborted during rhinopneumonitis.
Acta veterinaria Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae    January 1, 1973   Volume 23, Issue 4 325-342 
Kapp P.No abstract available
[Vascular stenosis due to severe transverse folding of interior surfaces of external iliac and femoral arteries–a possible cause of what is called intermittent claudication of horse].
Monatshefte fur Veterinarmedizin    November 1, 1972   Volume 27, Issue 21 831-833 
Berg R.No abstract available
Salmonella anatum from an aborted foal.
The British veterinary journal    November 1, 1972   Volume 128, Issue 11 lxiv 
Kumar S, Gupta BK.No abstract available
A premature birth associated with Leptospira pomona infection in a mare.
Australian veterinary journal    September 1, 1972   Volume 48, Issue 9 524-526 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1972.tb02316.x
Baird JD, Williams T, Claxton PD.No abstract available
Comparison of methods for diagnosing equine rhinopneumonitis virus abortion.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    August 1, 1972   Volume 67, Issue 8 895 
Trapp AL, Roberts AW, Carter GR.No abstract available
The fluorescent antibody technique in the diagnosis of equine rhinopneumonitis virus abortion. Smith IM, Girard A, Corner AH, Mitchell D.Using two known positive equine viral rhinopneumonitis (EVR) sera, conjugates were prepared with fluorescein isothiocyanate and tested for specificity using EVR infected tissue culture cells. The conjugate was then applied to selected tissues from 32 aborted fetuses and foals submitted during a natural outbreak of EVR. Antigen was detected in various tissues by immunofluorescence in 20 cases (62.5%). In 24 cases bovine fetal kidney cell monolayers were inoculated with a pool of lung and liver and EVR virus was isolated from 15 (62.5%). Histological examination of various tissues from 29 cases ...
Equine abortion (herpes) virus: strain differences in susceptibility to inactivation by dithiothreitol.
Applied microbiology    June 1, 1972   Volume 23, Issue 6 1121-1124 doi: 10.1128/am.23.6.1121-1124.1972
Klingeborn B, Dinter Z.The infectivity of equine abortion (herpes) virus (EAV) was inactivated by treatment with reduced dithiothreitol (DTT). According to their susceptibility to DTT, the EAV strains could be divided into three groups. The vaccine strain RAC-H (419) proved to be more resistant to DTT than all of the other 14 strains tested. The hemagglutinin of EAV was also inactivated by DTT; no strain differences were observed in this respect.
Amino acid composition of equine abortion (herpes) virus.
Virology    March 1, 1972   Volume 47, Issue 3 842-844 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(72)90577-6
O'Callaghan DJ, Rogers HW, Randall CC.No abstract available
[Virological studies of the central nervous system of horse fetuses and findings in mares suffering from central nervous system disease following abortion caused by equine herpesvirus 1].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    February 1, 1972   Volume 114, Issue 2 129-139 
Petzoldt K, Luttmann U, Pohlenz J, Teichert U.No abstract available
[The fluorescent antibody technic for the diagnosis of equine herpes virus abortion in comparison with conventional diagnostic methods].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1971   Volume 78, Issue 23 623-627 
Luttmann U, Weiland E, Dimitriadis I, Petzoldt K.No abstract available
Evidence for a relationship between equine abortion (herpes) virus deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis and the S phase of the KB cell mitotic cycle.
Journal of virology    June 1, 1971   Volume 7, Issue 6 736-748 doi: 10.1128/JVI.7.6.736-748.1971
Lawrence WC.Autoradiographic analyses of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis in randomly growing KB cell cultures infected with equine abortion virus (EAV) suggested that viral DNA synthesis was initiated only at times that coincided with the entry of noninfected control cells into the S phase of the cell cycle. Synchronized cultures of KB cells were infected at different stages of the cell cycle, and rates of synthesis of cellular and viral DNA were measured. When cells were infected at different times within the S phase, viral DNA synthesis was initiated 2 to 3 hr after infection. However, when cells ...
Abortion and placental lesions in the mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1970   Volume 157, Issue 11 1465-1470 
Prickett ME.No abstract available
A rapid method for the diagnosis of equine virus abortion.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    April 1, 1970   Volume 34, Issue 2 164-166 
Correa WM.Smears and imprints were made from the liver of 27 equine fetuses, believed to have aborted as a result of Equine Virus Abortion (EVA) infection. Several different fixatives and staining techniques were employed for the demonstration of typical intra-nuclear inclusion bodies in these preparations, and the following conclusions were reached. Methanol proved to be the best fixative and Pappenheim's panoptic method was the best staining technique, giving good contrast and definition of the inclusion bodies. Cytological methods provided a simple and rapid means of diagnosis, but histological secti...
Equine herpes viruses. 2. Persistence of equine herpesviruses in experimentally infected horses and the experimental induction of abortion.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1970   Volume 46, Issue 3 90-98 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1970.tb15928.x
Turner AJ, Studdert MJ, Peterson JE.No abstract available
[Comparative diagnostic investigations in fetuses and foals with rhinopneumonitis virus infection (equine virus abortion)].
Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 1, 1968   Volume 75, Issue 21 545-549 
Petzoldt K, Dieckmann W, Lindemann L.No abstract available
[Research into the inactivation effect of surface-active substances on the rhinopneumonitis virus in horses (equine abortion virus)].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 1, 1968   Volume 81, Issue 20 404-406 
Kirchhoff H.No abstract available
Kinetics of cellular and viral DNA synthesis in equine abortion (herpes) virus infection of L-M cells.
Virology    September 1, 1968   Volume 36, Issue 1 104-114 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(68)90120-7
O'Callaghan DJ, Cheevers WP, Gentry GA, Randall CC.No abstract available
An outbreak of mare abortion in Japan due to infection with equine rhinopneumonitis virus.
Bulletin - Office international des epizooties    May 1, 1968   Volume 70, Issue 1 251-256 
Shimizu T, Kawashima Y.No abstract available
[1st experiments concerning the vaccination of horses against rhino-pneumonia (viral abortion of mares) with a live vaccine from cell cultures].
Bulletin - Office international des epizooties    May 1, 1968   Volume 70, Issue 1 133-140 
Mayr A, Pette J.No abstract available
[Studies on the development of a live vaccine against rhinopneumonitis (mare abortion) of horses]. Mayr A, Pette J, Petzoldt K, Wagener K.No abstract available
[The technique of complement fixation test for the diagnosis of equine viral abortion (Rhinopneumonitis)].
Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 15, 1967   Volume 74, Issue 10 252-255 
Petzoldt K.No abstract available