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Topic:Veterinary Care

Veterinary care in horses encompasses the medical and preventive measures taken to maintain and improve the health and well-being of equine patients. It includes a wide range of practices such as routine health examinations, vaccinations, dental care, parasite control, and management of injuries and diseases. Veterinary care also involves diagnostic procedures, surgical interventions, and therapeutic treatments tailored to the specific needs of horses. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various aspects of equine veterinary care, including advancements in diagnostic techniques, treatment protocols, and health management strategies to support the well-being and performance of horses.
Effect of endotoxin administration on equine digital hemodynamics and starling forces.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 11 1703-1707 
Hunt RJ, Allen D, Moore JN.Using a pump-perfused extracorporeal isolated digital preparation, the effects of a 30-minute infusion of either saline solution (control) or endotoxin on equine digital hemodynamics and microvascular function were determined. Digital blood flow and arterial, venous, and capillary pressures were recorded at 15-minute intervals for 150 minutes. From these data, total vascular resistance and pre- and postcapillary resistances were calculated. Isogravimetric capillary filtration coefficient, vascular compliance, and the osmotic reflection coefficient were determined after the last hemodynamic mea...
Displacement of the large colon associated with nonsurgical correction of large-colon entrapment in the renosplenic space in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 9 1190-1192 
Sivula NJ, Trent AM, Kobluk CN.Nonsurgical correction of a renosplenic entrapment of the large colon was attempted in a mare, using a rolling technique. After correction, the mare had initial improvement in clinical signs, but later developed signs of abdominal discomfort. A ventral midline celiotomy was performed, and a pelvic flexure impaction and large intestinal volvulus were found and corrected.
Vascular injury associated with naturally occurring strangulating obstructions of the equine large colon.
Veterinary surgery : VS    November 1, 1990   Volume 19, Issue 6 446-455 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1990.tb01232.x
Snyder JR, Pascoe JR, Olander HJ, Hinds DM, Young R, Tyler WS.Ten horses were euthanatized before, during, or after surgery to correct severe volvulus of the large colon. At surgery, the colonic serosa changed from blue-gray, blue or purple toward a more normal pink in seven horses after the volvulus was corrected. The mucosa consistently remained black or dark red. Results of postmortem colonic microangiography revealed perfusion of the serosa and the circular and longitudinal muscle layers, but mucosal perfusion was limited by thrombosis in the muscularis mucosae and submucosa. There was evidence of thrombosis of the mesenteric colic vessels in six hor...
Pleural effusion secondary to thoracic metastatic mammary adenocarcinoma in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 9 1193-1195 
Foreman JH, Weidner JP, Parry BW, Hargis A.A 17-year-old Quarter Horse mare was examined nearly 3 years after excision and cryotherapy of a papillary mammary gland adenocarcinoma. The mare had been used for pleasure riding since surgery, but had recently developed progressive dyspnea. The mare had clinical evidence of pleural effusion, but died before further clinical examination and treatment were instituted. Necropsy revealed deep mammary masses with similar nodules in the deep inguinal, renal, and mediastinal lymph nodes and in the lungs, pericardium, visceral and parietal pleurae, and left ovary. The masses were identified as papil...
Treatment of equine leg wounds using skin grafts: Thirty-five cases, 1975-1988.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    November 1, 1990   Volume 31, Issue 11 761-765 
French DA, Fretz PB.A retrospective study was conducted on 35 equine patients with lower leg wounds that were managed utilizing skin graft procedures. Two pinch graft, five punch graft, seven tunnel graft, eight split-thickness mesh graft and thirteen full-thickness mesh expansion graft procedures were performed in the initial treatment. The average wound size was 188 cm(2). Twentyfour cases had pregrafting complications: 10 wounds developed sequestra; three wounds were grossly contaminated and infected; and 11 cases developed granulation tissue complications prior to grafting. Graft failure following the initial...
Left ventricular volume determination in the horse by two-dimensional echocardiography: an in vitro study.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 6 398-402 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04303.x
Vörös K, Holmes JR, Gibbs C.This study was designed to evaluate the accuracy of two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) in determining the left ventricular volume (LVV) of the horse in vitro. After examining the shape of the left ventricular silicon rubber casts of four equine hearts, two modified Simpson's rule methods (Model A and Model B) as combinations of conical shapes and one biplane area-length method as a single cone (Model C) were chosen for volume calculations. One long axis and three short axis planes were used for linear and area 2DE measurements, respectively. The ventricular length (L) was calculated from t...
Clostridium perfringens enterotoxaemia in two young horses.
The Veterinary record    October 27, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 17 431 
Stubbings DP.No abstract available
Beechmast poisoning in ponies.
The Veterinary record    October 27, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 17 435 
Wilkens WM, Cranwell MP.No abstract available
Equine topics. Cushioning the effects of anesthesia.
The Veterinary record    October 20, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 16 394 
Vogel C.No abstract available
Idiopathic granulomatous disease involving the skin in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 8 1033-1036 
Heath SE, Bell RJ, Clark EG, Haines DM.Clinical signs of generalized granulomatous disease in a horse included depression, generalized lymphadenopathy, scaly skin, and dependent edema. Diagnosis was confirmed histopathologically by diffuse granulomas in more than one organ system (lymph nodes and skin), and by ruling out etiologic agents. Response to treatment with corticosteroids was favorable. The clinical features and response to treatment in this horse were different from classic textbook descriptions of equine generalized granulomatous disease. Equine granulomatous disease appears to be comparable to human sarcoidosis. To avoi...
Distribution of equine infectious anemia in equids in southeastern United States.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 8 1018-1020 
Loftin MK, Levine JF, McGinn T, Coggins L.State veterinarians in 11 southeastern states completed a questionnaire designed to determine the proportion of equids in the region that were seropositive for equine infectious anemia (EIA). Cases of EIA were diagnosed in each of the states surveyed. Distinct geographic clusters of cases were apparent in Tennessee and Kentucky adjacent to the Mississippi River, in the Piedmont of North Carolina at the Virginia border, in north central Georgia, and throughout the Florida peninsula. It is suggested that the national EIA program could be improved by standardization and wider application of unifo...
Prophylactic use of dantrolene associated with prolonged postanesthetic recumbency in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 8 1051-1053 
Valverde A, Boyd CJ, Dyson DH, Pascoe PJ.Dantrolene, a drug used in the prevention and treatment of malignant hyperthermia, was believed responsible for prolonged postanesthetic recumbency in a horse. Prophylactically, dantrolene was given orally before induction of anesthesia. Dantrolene has been recommended for use in horses at risk of developing postanesthetic myopathy. Side effects, including ataxia, may result from dantrolene administration.
Cardiac arrhythmias identified in horses with duodenitis/proximal jejunitis: six cases (1985-1988).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 8 1054-1059 
Cornick JL, Seahorn TL.During a 3 1/2-year period, cardiac arrhythmias were identified in 6 of 67 horses diagnosed with duodenitis/proximal jejunitis (DPJ). Arrhythmias were detected by auscultation of irregular cardiac rhythm and subsequently were characterized by electrocardiographic evaluation. Arrhythmias included frequent second-degree atrioventricular block, ventricular ectopic depolarizations, and atrioventricular conduction disturbance. In 4 horses, arrhythmias resolved with recovery from the primary problem. One horse died suddenly 66 hours after admission, and another was euthanatized at 72 hours after adm...
Use of a liquid diet as the sole source of nutrition in six dysphagic horses and as a dietary supplement in seven hypophagic horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 8 1030-1032 
Sweeney RW, Hansen TO.Six horses with dysphagia (attributable to botulism, glossitis, or guttural pouch mycosis) were given a commercially available liquid diet as the sole source of nutrition. Seven horses with hypophagia caused by severe bacterial pleuropneumonia or peritonitis were given the liquid diet to supplement food consumed voluntarily. The liquid diet was administered through a nasogastric tube 2 or 3 times daily. Body weight did not change significantly, and pertinent laboratory values remained at satisfactory concentrations throughout the feeding period. Serious complications were not encountered. Thre...
Confirmation by Doppler echocardiography of valvular regurgitation in a horse with a ruptured chorda tendinea of the mitral valve.
The Veterinary record    October 13, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 15 376-379 
Marr CM, Love S, Pirie HM, Northridge DB.Regurgitation of blood through the left atrioventricular valve owing to the rupture of one of the chordae tendineae of the valve was diagnosed in a horse with sudden-onset respiratory distress and a holosystolic cardiac murmur. Severe regurgitation was confirmed with Doppler echocardiography and prolapse of part of the valve leaflet was identified with B-mode ultrasonography. The rupture of one of the chordae tendineae of a right accessory cusp of the left atrioventricular valve was confirmed post mortem. Bronchiolitis, multifocal haemorrhages and haemorrhagic fibrous plaques were found in the...
Peritonitis in adult horses.
The Veterinary record    October 13, 1990   Volume 127, Issue 15 387-388 
van den Bogaard AE.No abstract available
Intra-osseous pressure and pressure pulse gradients along the equine third metatarsal bone.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1990   Volume 80, Issue 4 317-328 
Stolk PW, Firth EC.Intra-osseous pressure measurements in the third metatarsal bone of anesthetised young and mature ponies demonstrated that a pressure gradient exists along the bone, the pressure being highest at the level of the nutrient foramen and decreasing distally and proximally from this point. The height of the intra-osseous pressure pulse also decreased toward the bone ends. It is concluded that the sites of measurement of the intra-osseous pressure in clinical and experimental studies should be standardized.
A review of horse-drawn buggy accidents.
Pennsylvania medicine    October 1, 1990   Volume 93, Issue 10 22-24 
Ives W, Brotman S.No abstract available
Histological and ultrastructural appearance of severe Sarcocystis fayeri infection in a malnourished horse. Cawthorn RJ, Clark M, Hudson R, Friesen D.No abstract available
A mycological evaluation and in vivo toxicity evaluation of feed from 41 farms with equine leukoencephalomalacia. Wilson TM, Nelson PE, Marasas WF, Thiel PG, Shephard GS, Sydenham EW, Nelson HA, Ross PF.No abstract available
Two autosomal trisomies in the horse: 64,XX,-26,+t(26q26q) and 65,XX,+30.
Genome    October 1, 1990   Volume 33, Issue 5 679-682 doi: 10.1139/g90-101
Bowling AT, Millon LV.The phenotypic effects in a yearling Arab filly of a newly described equine autosomal trisomy syndrome for chromosome 30 (65,XX,+30) consisted of small size and severe angular deviation of front legs accompanied by mild polydactyly, but no mental dullness. This case was associated with advanced maternal age. Additional banding studies of a second trisomy case confirmed the assignment to chromosome 26 (64,XX,-26,+t(26q26q)) and evidence of her fertility was presented.
“Steal phenomenon” proposed as the cause of blindness after arterial occlusion for treatment of guttural pouch mycosis in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1990   Volume 197, Issue 7 811-812 
Freeman DE, Ross MW, Donawick WJ.No abstract available
Incidence and management of poisoning in companion animals.
Veterinary and human toxicology    October 1, 1990   Volume 32, Issue 5 477-478 
Sundlof SF.No abstract available
Effect of inositol hexakisphosphate on the spectroscopic properties of the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse and bovine hemoglobin.
Journal of inorganic biochemistry    October 1, 1990   Volume 40, Issue 2 157-162 doi: 10.1016/0162-0134(90)80049-4
Ascenzi P, Coletta M, Desideri A, Polizio F, Condò SG, Giardina B.The effect of inositol hexakisphosphate (IHP) on the spectroscopic (EPR and absorbance) properties of the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse and bovine hemoglobin (Hb) has been investigated. In the absence of IHP, the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse Hb shows spectroscopic properties similar to those of the corresponding derivative of ferrous human Hb that are generally taken as typical of the high affinity state of tetrametric hemoproteins. Similar to human Hb, the addition of IHP to the nitric oxide derivative of ferrous horse Hb induces a transition toward a species characteri...
Culture of 5-day horse embryos in microdroplets for 10 to 20 days.
Theriogenology    October 1, 1990   Volume 34, Issue 4 643-653 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(90)90020-t
Hinrichs K, Schmidt AL, Memon MA, Selgrath JP, Ebert KM.Embryos were recovered from the uteri of mares 5 d after ovulation. Six embryos, all morulae, were placed singly in 200-ul droplets of Ham's F-12 with 10% fetal calf serum and cultured at 37 degrees C in a 5% CO(2) atmosphere. The embryos expanded to form blastocysts by the third day of culture. The blastocysts hatched from their zona pellucida, rather than the zona thinning and flaking off, as occurs in vivo. Hatching from the zona pellucida began on the third day of culture and was complete in five of six embryos by the sixth day. The embryonic capsule, normally present in equine embryos aft...
[Epidemiology, chemotherapy, anthelmintics-resistance and prevention of Strongylidae infections in horses].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    October 1, 1990   Volume 115, Issue 19 891-907 
Eysker M, Vercruysse J.The epidemiology, chemotherapy and control of strongylus infections in the horse are discussed. The annual cycle of various species are stated. In addition the anthelmintics available for treatment and control and the occurrence of anthelmintic resistance are referred to. Finally the options for control under various management conditions (little if any grazing; extensive grazing; intensive grazing) are discussed.
[Several physiologic aspects of the reactions of foals in the first three days after weaning].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 1, 1990   Volume 103, Issue 10 348-351 
Dusek J, Skalický J.Changes have been observed in nine foals, six months of age, after weaning for the time of three days, namely in the intake of drinking water, hematocrit, sedimentation of erythrocytes and three minerals Na+, K+ and Cl-. Foals respond to weaning immediately, lowering significantly their consumption of drinking water and increasing high significance of Na+ and Cl-. Changes of level K+, hematocrit and sedimentation don't show any significant variations. The results reached are to be considered as an introductory information for further inquiry on the more extensive methodical basis.
Equine motor neuron disease; a preliminary report.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1990   Volume 80, Issue 4 357-379 
Cummings JF, de Lahunta A, George C, Fuhrer L, Valentine BA, Cooper BJ, Summers BA, Huxtable CR, Mohammed HO.A spontaneous motor neuron disease or neuronopathy was identified in 10 horses from the northeastern United States. Signs of generalized weakness, muscle fasciculations, muscle atrophy and weight loss progressed over 1 to several months in young and old horses of various breeds. Pathologic studies revealed that degeneration and loss of motor neurons in the spinal cord and brain stem resulted in axonal degeneration in the ventral roots and peripheral and cranial nerves and denervation atrophy of skeletal muscle. Many spinal neurons were swollen, chromatolytic and contained neurofilamentous accu...
Two rare cutaneous neoplasms in horses: apocrine gland adenocarcinoma and carcinosarcoma.
The Cornell veterinarian    October 1, 1990   Volume 80, Issue 4 339-345 
Anderson WI, Scott DW, Crameri FM.Two rare equine cutaneous neoplasms, an apocrine gland adenocarcinoma and a carcinosarcoma were diagnosed in a 17-year-old pony and a 14-year-old mare, respectively. The apocrine gland adenocarcinoma was present on the prepuce. Histologically, papillary projections of low cuboidal to columnar epithelial cells were generally well differentiated, and surrounded dilated acini. Stromal invasion was present, but vascular and lymphatic invasion was not seen. The carcinosarcoma was present in the right flank of the mare. Two discrete cell populations were characterized histologically. One portion of ...
Neospora caninum (Apicomplexa) in an aborted equine fetus.
The Journal of parasitology    October 1, 1990   Volume 76, Issue 5 732-734 
Dubey JP, Porterfield ML.Tachyzoites of Neospora caninum were found in sections of lung of an equine fetus aborted 2 mo before term. Individual tachyzoites were approximately 3-5 x 2-3 microns, divided by endodyogeny, and stained positively with anti-N. caninum serum but not with anti-Toxoplasma gondii serum. Toxoplasma gondii antibody was not found in the mare's serum. This is the first report of N. caninum in a horse and indicates that N. caninum can be transmitted transplacentally in equids.