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Topic:Veterinary Medicine

Veterinary medicine for horses encompasses the study and application of medical practices to diagnose, treat, and prevent diseases in equine species. This field involves a comprehensive understanding of equine anatomy, physiology, pathology, and pharmacology. Veterinary practitioners employ a range of diagnostic tools and therapeutic interventions to address health issues in horses, including lameness, gastrointestinal disorders, respiratory conditions, and infectious diseases. Preventative care, such as vaccination and deworming programs, is also a significant aspect of equine veterinary medicine. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various aspects of veterinary medicine as it pertains to horses, including advancements in diagnostic techniques, treatment protocols, and preventive health strategies.
The musculus cleidotransversarius of the horse.
Acta veterinaria Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae    January 1, 1979   Volume 27, Issue 3 275-285 
Gyürü F.No abstract available
Body composition of the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 1 39-47 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01295.x
Webb AI, Weaver BM.Seventeen horses were dissected and their organs and tissues weighed. The results of these dissections are presented together with comparisons of the data with that already available in the literature. Predictive equations for organs and tissue weights are also given which were derived by comparison of linear and allometric regression models using 4 different body weight indices.
Pathology of blister beetle (Epicauta) poisoning in horses.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1979   Volume 16, Issue 1 18-31 doi: 10.1177/030098587901600102
Schoeb TR, Panciera RJ.No abstract available
Arabian horses with severe combined immunodeficiency — evaluation of functional thymic hormones.
Developmental and comparative immunology    January 1, 1979   Volume 3, Issue 2 359-363 doi: 10.1016/s0145-305x(79)80031-2
Splitter GA, Incefy GS, Dardenne M, Iwata T, McGuire TC.No abstract available
Serum and liver lipid composition and lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase in horses, Equus caballus.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1979   Volume 62, Issue 2 185-193 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(79)90309-2
Yamamoto M, Tanaka Y, Sugano M.1. The lipid composition of serum and liver and some properties of serum lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase of the horse were investigated. 2. Phospholipids and cholesterol were the major components of serum lipids and the concentration of triglyceride was considerably low. The concentration of liver lipids was comparable with that of other mammals. 3. Fatty acid composition of serum cholesterol ester resembled that of the 2-position of lecithin, except palmitic acid. 4. The activity of serum cholesterol esterifying enzyme was found to be 0.03-0.09 mumol/hr per ml. There was an equimolar de...
Alteration of seasonal reproductive patterns in mares following superior cervical ganglionectomy.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 87-93 
Sharp DC, Vernon MW, Zavy MT.Oestrous behaviour, ovarian follicular development, ovulation and changes in hair coat were observed in Pony mares which were unoperated, sham-ganglionectomized control or bilaterally superior cervical ganglionectomized. Surgery was performed during the winter anoestrus (1975--1976). Reproductive patterns in all groups were similar during the first breeding season (1976) after operation but in ganglionectomized mares the onset of the next breeding season (date of first ovulation in 1977), the pattern of follicular development, date of first oestrus and pattern of hair coat changes were all sig...
Induction of follicular development and ovulation in seasonally acyclic mares using gonadotrophin-releasing hormones and progesterone.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 113-121 
Evans MJ, Irvine CH.Deeply acyclic (seasonally anovulatory) mares were treated with GnRH or a GnRH analogue to induce follicular development and ovulation. Courses of GnRH (3--4) were administered at approximately 10-day intervals to reproduce the gonadotrophin surges which precede ovulation in the normal cycle. Exogenous progesterone was administered in an attempt to reproduce the luteal phase pattern. Induced serum FSH concentrations were comparable to those causing follicular development in the normal cycle, but induced LH levels were lower and of shorter duration than those of the periovulatory surge. Three o...
Progesterone patterns observed with multiple injections of a PGF-2 alpha analogue in the cyclic mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 237-244 
Kiefer BL, Roser JF, Evans JW, Neely DP, Pacheco CA.No abstract available
The nature of the prealbumin ‘esterases’ of horse serum.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1979   Volume 10, Issue 3 181-184 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1979.tb01024.x
Matthews AG.Evidence is presented to suggest that the acidic prealbumin esterases in horse serum represent a protease-inhibitory protein. The esterase activity may arise from residual enzymic activity of the bound protease.
[Methods of studying the biology and physiology of the digestive processes in agricultural animals].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1979   Volume 16, Issue 6 3-8 
Ganovski Kh.No abstract available
Episodic LH secretion patterns in the mare during the oestrous cycle.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 143-150 
Evans JW, Hughes JP, Neely DP, Stabenfeldt GH, Winger CM.Jugular blood samples were obtained from 8 mares at 5- and/or 20-min intervals for 2 to 5 days during various phases of the oestrous cycle for plasma LH determination. An episodic release pattern was observed in 1 of 3 mares sampled during the ovulatory period. One mare had one secretory burst and the other mare had several periods of fluctuating plasma LH concentration. During dioestrus, episodic secretions were observed in 2 mares sampled 11 to 13 days before and, in 1 mare, 9 days after ovulation. During the 2 to 5-day period before ovulation, episodic secretion was not observed (3 mares) b...
Ovulation and the movement of the conceptus in the first 35 days of pregnancy in thoroughbred mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 447-452 
Butterfield RM, Matthews RG.Data from 937 Thoroughbred mares, when analysed as a single population, showed no significant difference between the activity of the right and left ovaries and the frequency of location of 35-day pregnancies in the right and left uterine horns. Nor were any differences shown when the data were analysed in years or sire groups. However, significantly more ovulations occurred in the right ovary in September and December and in the left ovary in October and November. Whereas the left and right ovulations were equal in lactating and dry mares, there was a highly significant increase in the number ...
Oestrogens and androgens in blastocoelic fluid and cultures of cells from equine conceptuses of 10-22 days gestation.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 413-420 
Flood PF, Betteridge KJ, Irvine DS.Six samples of blastocoele fluid recovered between 10 and 22 days gestation were tested in human clinical radioimmunoassay systems measuring total oestrogens and total androgens. The results were erratic but in 5 cases measurements for oestrogen equivalent to between 1000 and 70,000 pg/ml and for androgen between 1000 and 85,000 pg/ml were recorded. Cells from two blastocysts were cultured in medium 199 with and without horse serum. When the used media were assayed, values equivalent to at least 8000 pg oestrogen/ml were obtained on 7 of 11 occasions. In 9 of 11 samples the androgen concentrat...
A precursor role for DHA in a feto-placental unit for oestrogen formation in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 493-497 
Raeside JI, Liptrap RM, McDonell WN, Milne FJ.Plasma levels of total oestrogens and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHA) were measured by radioimmunossay in samples taken from various blood vessels in both maternal and fetal compartments in 11 Pony mates. High concentrations of oestrogens (greater than 100 ng/ml of plasma), expressed as oestrone equivalents, were found in the fetal circulation. On both the fetal and maternal sides, oestrogen concentrations were lower in blood going to than from the placenta. DHA concentrations, on the other hand, were higher in blood flowing to the placenta from the fetus. The fetal gonads were seen as the source...
Isolation of Klebsiella pneumoniae from the urogenital tract of experimentally infected mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 317-320 
Stratton LG, Corstvet R, Brown J, Corley L.K. pneumoniae capsule type 68 infused into the uterus of 4 mares was recovered up to 15 weeks after inoculation. The insertion of a tampon for 10 min was more effective than a swab technique in detecting the organism in the uterus. The clitoral fossa and the urethral orifice when sampled by the swab technique were also found to be infected for a comparable period. K. pneumoniae was isolated from the clitoral specimens more often and more consistently than from either urethral or uterine specimens.
[Structure and topography of the nucleus intermediomedialis in the equine spinal cord].
Polskie archiwum weterynaryjne    January 1, 1979   Volume 22, Issue 1 125-135 
Boratyński Z, Flieger S, Eustachiewicz R, Sławomirski J.In this paper, structure and position of the centers of the parasympathetic nervous system in the horse spinal cord were presented. Studies were carried out on 2 horse spinal cordis. After sampling, the material was dehydrated in alcohol, embedded in paraffin and cut into 15 micron thick sections. The sections were stained according to Nissl's method. Every third section was studied. Nucleus intermediomedialis in the horse spinal cord is an intermittent tract of nervous cells passing from the I cervical neuromere to the V sacral segment. The cells of this nucleus form round, horizontally--oval...
Effect of successive ejaculation on stallion seminal characteristics.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 7-12 
Squires EL, Pickett BW, Amann RP.Five ejaculates were collected at hourly intervals from 32 sexually rested stallions. Gel volume, total seminal volume, sperm concentration and spermatozoa per ejaculate declined (P less than 0.01) from the first to the second or third ejaculate. Gel-free seminal volume or percentage of motile spermatozoa did not vary (P less than 0.05) among ejaculates. Ejaculates from 2- to 3-year-old stallions contained less volume and fewer spermatozoa than those from 9- to 16-year-old stallions. Regardless of the stallion's age the first, first 2, first 3 and first 4 ejaculates represented 50, 74, 86 and ...
Behavior of ovarian and testicular interstitial cells during ontogenesis in the horse. Morphological and histochemical studies “in vivo” and “in vitro”.
Basic and applied histochemistry    January 1, 1979   Volume 23, Issue 2 85-91 
Aureli G, Lauria A.The results of a study on interstitial cells of the horse gonads from foetal life to puberty are reported. The morphological (also ultrastructural) histochemical, histophysical and histoenzymological findings both in the organ and in monolayer cultures, clarify the problem of the ontogenesis of these cells showing that: --foetal interstitial cells give origin to "xanthochrome" cells; --"xanthochrome" cells in the prepuberal gonad are continuously renewed; --the same type of cells which in th prepuberal period undergo lipochromic degeneration, differentiate at puberty into Leydig cells in the t...
Treatment of ringworm in horses with natamycin.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 1 36-38 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01294.x
Oldenkamp EP.A suspension based on the antibiotic, natamycin, was applied by sponging to 83 horses of various breeds and ages with signs of clinical ringworm. A number of different causative agents were involved of which Trichophyton equinum was the most common. Treatment successfully eliminated the disease within 4 weeks. After treatment the recovered animals did not show any evidence of re-infection for up to 6 months. The mycological clearance rate was 97 per cent and apart from the efficacy against ringworm, the preparation had the advantage of being non-irritant and odourless. It was also useful for t...
Aspects of lower respiratory tract disease in the horse.
New Zealand veterinary journal    January 1, 1979   Volume 27, Issue 1-2 1-4 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1979.34584
Pearce HG.No abstract available
[Therapy of tetanus in agricultural animals].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1979   Volume 16, Issue 7 91-94 
Arsov R, Vodas K, Georgieva N.No abstract available
Sacroiliac luxation.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1979   Volume 60, Issue 1 44-46 
Rooney JR.No abstract available
Prostaglandins in maternal and fetal plasma and in allantoic fluid during the second half of gestation in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 531-539 
Silver M, Barnes RJ, Comline RS, Fowden AL, Clover L, Mitchell MD.The concentrations of the primary prostaglandins (PG) F-2alpha and E-2 and the metabolite 13,14-dihydro-15-oxo-prostaglandin (PGFM) in maternal and fetal plasma and in allantoic fluid were measured in chronically catheterized mares and fetuses. A gradual rise in all 3 PGs occurred with increasing gestational age. PGE-2 and PGF-2 alpha levels were highest in the allantoic fluid and lowest in the maternal plasma, whereas PGFM concentrations were greatest in maternal plasma. Significant venous-arterial plasma differences in PGFM concentration were detected across the uterine circulation between 1...
[Appearance in domestic animals of Corynebacterium diphtheriae and other Corynebacterium strains pathogenic for man].
Przeglad epidemiologiczny    January 1, 1979   Volume 33, Issue 2 269-276 
Kraszewska A, Anusz Z.No abstract available
An enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for progesterone in horse plasma.
Journal of immunological methods    January 1, 1979   Volume 28, Issue 3-4 211-217 doi: 10.1016/0022-1759(79)90188-1
Seeger K, Thurow H, Haede W, Knapp E.A simple enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for the measurement of progesterone is described. Antibody against 11-OH-hemisuccinate-BSA is bound to polystyrene tubes. 11-OH-hemisuccinyl-beta-D-galactosidase is used as enzyme-coupled antigen and methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-galactoside as substrate. Concentrations down to 0.156 ng/ml plasm or amounts of 93 pg/tube are detectable. Probit analysis gave a linear relationship between log concentration and percentage of binding. A comparison of EIA and radioimmunoassay gave a correlation coefficient of 0.81. The assay is sufficiently sensitive to estimate progest...
Hybridization of bovine papilloma virus type 1 and type 2 DNA to DNA from virus-induced hamster tumors and naturally occurring equine tumors.
Intervirology    January 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 4 227-233 doi: 10.1159/000149038
Lancaster WD, Theilen GH, Olson C.DNAs from bovine papilloma virus(BPV)-induced hamster tumors and from equine connective tissue tumors of unknown etiology were examined for BPV DNA sequences by molecular hybridization. DNA from two distinct classes of BPV (type 1 and type 2) was labeled in vitro and used as probes. Analysis of DNA-DNA reassociation kinetics indicated that both virus types were capable of tumor induction in the hamster. DNA isolated from 6 of 7 equine tumors accelerated the reassociation of the BPV DNA probes. BPV type 1 or type 2 DNA hybridized extensively to DNA from 3 tumors, while 3 other tumors contained ...
The bacteriological culture of equine uterine contents, in-vitro sensitivity of organisms isolated and interpretation.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1979   Issue 27 307-315 
Shin SJ, Lein DH, Aronson AL, Nusbaum SR.A total of 19 pathogenic bacterial species was isolated from uterine swabs of 498 out of 1539 mares over 4 years. The swabs were taken by 5 veterinary clinicians using 2 different techniques. Bacterial contamination during swabbing was minimized by scrupulous attention to cleansing of the external genitalia and the perineal area, and in the handling of the culture specimen. The most prevalent organisms isolated were beta-haemolytic streptococcus (39%), Escherichia coli (27%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (7%). Interpretation of microbiological findings correlated well with clinical findings when n...
Radiographic evidence of impaired pulmonary function in laterally recumbent anaesthetised horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 1 24-32 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01290.x
McDonell WN, Hall LW, Jeffcott LB.Studies in conscious and anaesthetised ponies demonstrated that starvation, anaesthesia and changes in body position influence the radiographic appearance of the lungs in the lateral and dorsoventral views. Radiographic appearances could not be closely correlated with blood gas values, but they suggested that the volume of the lowermost lung of the laterally recumbent animal is greatly reduced.
Resistance of animal helminths to anthelmintics.
Advances in pharmacology and chemotherapy    January 1, 1979   Volume 16 89-128 doi: 10.1016/s1054-3589(08)60243-4
Kelly JD, Hall CA.This chapter discusses the resistance of animal helminths to anthelmintics. Resistance is defined as a significant increase in the ability of individuals within a strain to tolerate doses of a compound, which would prove lethal to the majority of individuals in a normal population of the same species. The introduction of phenothiazine and the benzimidazole broad-spectrum anthelmintics, has unfortunately led to the selection of drug-resistant strains of important parasitic helminths. The emergence of an increasing number of resistant helminths is associated with the widespread use and misuse of...
On the fracture toughness of equine metacarpi.
Journal of biomechanics    January 1, 1979   Volume 12, Issue 6 415-421 doi: 10.1016/0021-9290(79)90026-5
Alto A, Pope MH.No abstract available