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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.
Effect of bile acid on hepatic excretion and storage of bilirubin in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1976   Volume 37, Issue 1 47-50 
Engelking LR, Gronwall R, Anwer MS.Endogenous bilirubin uptake from plasma and biliary bilirubin excretion were determined in ponies with chronic biliary T-tube fistulas. Excreted bile was quantitatively recovered. Uptake was calculated from the plasma disappearance of 14C-labeled bilirubin. Biliary bilirubin excretion was determined directly in excreted bile. When bile acid excretion was low (during continuous drainage without bile acid replacment), bilirubin excretion was 37% less than uptake. Uptake and excretion were essentially identical when taurocholic acid was infused to replace bile acids. After depletion of the bile a...
Studies of possible movement of Venezuelan encephalitis virus from an enzootic focus in Guatemala during 1971-1974.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    January 1, 1976   Volume 25, Issue 1 163-172 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1976.25.163
Ordonez JV, Scherer WF, Dickerman RW.During the wet seasons of 1972 and possibly 1971, sentinel horses became infected by Venezuelan encephalitis (VE) virus in a temporally and geographically progressive manner inland from an enzootic marsh focus of virus on the Pacific couast of southeastern Guatemala. During the wet seasons of 1972 and 1973, VE virus was detected by sentinel horses (and a sentinel hamster in 1972) in a small woods 10 km north of the marsh, but virus was undetectable there during the dry seasons of 1973 and 1974 and the wet season of 1974. Culex (Melanoconion) mosquitoes were found in this woods and at the marsh...
Cardiac monitoring during exercise tests in the horse. 2. Heart rate responses to exercise.
Australian veterinary journal    January 1, 1976   Volume 52, Issue 1 1-5 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1976.tb05358.x
Hall MC, Steel JD, Stewart GA.Data on resting heart rates, pre-exercise heart rates, the anticipatory rises before exercise, the influence of speed of work and recovery heart rates have been presented. Some observations on differences in the heart rate response on slow and fast working days are also recorded. In conformity with other workers, a linear relationship between heart rate and working speed within the range of 400-800 metre/min was observed. When the speed of work was between 400-800 metre/min, horses with resting ECG's classed as abnormal had significantly higher heart rates than those regarded as normal. It was...
Treatment of horses with chronic diarrhea: immunologic status.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1976   Volume 37, Issue 1 29-33 
Targowski SP.All chronically diarrheal horses given (orally) 2 series of treatments with normal horse serum recovered in 2 to 4 weeks. However, mild diarrhea sometimes persisted several months in the group of horses with severe diarrhea. Weight gains were approximately 35% in horses with severe diarrhea and approximately 10% in horses with mild diarrhea. Serum specimens from 12 diarrheal and 20 normal horses were examined for immunoglobulins by single radial immunodiffusion technique. Concentration of immunoglobulin A in serum of diarrheal horses was approximately 50% lower than that in serum of normal hor...
[Comparative morphological studies on the vascular systems of testes in cattle, swine, horse and dog under functional conditions].
Archiv fur experimentelle Veterinarmedizin    January 1, 1976   Volume 30, Issue 5 669-685 
Heinze W, Ptak W.The metacrylate and latex corrosion techniques were used to establish that the vascular system of testes is based on one coherent principle in common domestic mammals. The cone-shaped Plexus pampiniformis consists of numerous venous rami, between 0.25 mm and 1.0 mm in thickness and forming a dense vascular network, which practically encase the spiral-shaped A. spermatica interna (cooling coil principle). The testicular veins and arteries in the Tunica albuginea constitute a somewhat voluminous layer of vessels for dissipation of heat, with rami branching off radially into the testicular parenc...
Mycotoxic nephropathy.
Advances in veterinary science and comparative medicine    January 1, 1976   Volume 20 147-170 
Krogh P.No abstract available
[Effect of air ionization on the immunobiological reactivity of producer horses].
Veterinariia    January 1, 1976   Issue 1 36-38 
Khrenov NM, Ostrenskiĭ ES, Litovchenko VB, Felitsin AA, Kalinichenko LM.No abstract available
Trypanosomiasis of domesticated animals of South America.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene    January 1, 1976   Volume 70, Issue 2 125-126 doi: 10.1016/0035-9203(76)90171-1
Clarkson MJ.No abstract available
[Esential comparative, morphological and topographical differences and characteristics of the cecum in man and domestic animals].
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1976   Volume 94, Issue 2 299-310 
Simić V, Ilić A.The caecum in man as a part of the large colon (intestinum crassum) differs morphologically and topographically from the caecum of domestic mammals. The caecum in domestic mammals differs not only from the human caecum but also comparatively morphologically and topographically among the domestic mammals. The appendix vermiformis does not exist in domestic mammals, which represents the main difference between the human caecum and that of domestic mammals. There are certainly some differences in the physiological function of the caecum in man and the caecum in domestic mammals, which are carnivo...
[Calculation of the quantity of drug preparations according to the body surface as one of the methods of determination of equally effective doses in animals and man].
Farmakologiia i toksikologiia    January 1, 1976   Volume 39, Issue 1 123-128 
Vladimirov VG.No abstract available
Suppression of synthesis of an IgG subclass in a persistent viral infection.
Immunology    January 1, 1976   Volume 30, Issue 1 17-24 
McGuire TC.Comparison of immunoglobulin levels of nine horses before and after infection with equine infectious anaemia (EIA) virus demonstrated a significant depression of serum IgG(T) at 2 months (P less than 0-001) and at 1 year (P less than 0-01) after infection. In contrast, the levels of IgGa were significantly increased at both times after infection. Another sixteen horses with EIA for 1-4 months were examined and there was also significant depression (P less than 0-001) of IgG(T) when compared to pre-infection levels. No significant changes in IgG(T), IgGa and IgM were noted in fourteen normal ho...
[Results of a 60-year study of melioidosis. II. Pathogenesis and pathologic anatomy].
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    January 1, 1976   Issue 3 15-22 
Kovalev GK.No abstract available
Presumptive quaternary ammonium intoxication in a pony.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1976   Volume 168, Issue 1 60 
Skand DL.No abstract available
Tumours of the prostate and penis.
Bulletin of the World Health Organization    January 1, 1976   Volume 53, Issue 2-3 247-256 
Hall WC, Nielsen SW, McEntee K.Tumours of the male genital tract, excluding the testes, are relatively rare in the six major domestic animals. The most important tumours are prostate carcinoma and transmissible venereal tumour of the penis in dogs, fibropapilloma of the penis in bulls, squamous papilloma and squamous cell carcinoma in horses, and squamous papilloma in pigs. Four histological types of canine prostate carcinoma exist: alveolar papillary, acinar, organoid, and poorly differentiated. The biological behaviour of prostate carcinomas is similar to that in man, with frequent metastasis to the regional pelvic nodes,...
[Comparative study of tracheal epithelium of different mammals].
Acta anatomica    January 1, 1976   Volume 94, Issue 2 262-282 
Pavelka M, Ronge HR, Stockinger G.Tracheal epithelia of ten different mammals were investigated with the light and the electron microscope. Characteristic differences were found concerning the thickness of the epithelia, the length of the cilia, the density of the cells in the epithelia, the numerical distribution of the different cells and their ultrastructure. Special attention was paid to the morphology of the kinetosomes. Brush cells and chromaffin cells, which are sparsely distributed in the different tracheal epithelia, were discussed.
Behaviour of the heart rate of horses with auricular fibrillation during exercise and after treatment.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1976   Volume 8, Issue 1 26-29 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1976.tb03278.x
Buntenkötter S, Deegen E.Cardioversion through varying quinidine sulphate treatments was achieved in 3 riding horses with auricular fibrillation. The horses were subjected to continual telemetric ECG registration before and after reversion in a uniform exercise-tolerance-test. A comparison of the heart rate curves showed a strong decline of the heart beat frequency during the exercise phase after synchronisation. The decrease in heart rate during exercise was greater than 30% in all 3 patients. Anti-arrhythmic treatment is, therefore, recommended for horses with auricular fibrillation and without concurrent heart dise...
Bacillus piliformis infection (Tyzzer’s disease) in two foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1976   Volume 168, Issue 1 58-60 
Harrington DD.No abstract available
N-acetylserine in horse muscle acylphosphatase.
International journal of peptide and protein research    January 1, 1976   Volume 8, Issue 3 269-273 
Cappugi G, Chellini PC, Nassi P, Ramponi G.A ninhydrin-negative peptide fraction obtained from tryptic digest of carboxymethyl acylphosphatase was isolated by chromatography on a column of PA 28 Beckman resin and analysed for the amino acid composition. Degradation with carboxypeptidase B and A indicated that the sequence of this peptide was: X-Thr-Ala-Arg. The amino-terminal residue was identified as N-acetylserine by high voltage electrophoresis. It is therefore suggested that the sequence of the NH2-terminal portion of CM-acylphosphatase is N-acetyl-Ser-Thr-Ala-Arg. Digestion with carboxypeptidase A and B indicated also that the COO...
Intra-articular treatment of arthritis in race-horses with sodium hyaluronate.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1976   Volume 17, Issue 4 379-394 doi: 10.1186/BF03547893
Asheim A, Lindblad G.Forty-five race-horses with arthritis of non-in-fectious type in 54 joints were treated with sodium hyaluronate intra-articularly. All joints had previously been treated without lasting success by conventional methods, such as firing, blistering or intraarticular injection of cortisone. In most cases only 1 injection of 2 ml (20 mg) sodium hyaluronate was needed. To avoid subjective evaluation, the effects of the treatment were based on the joint’s capacity of withstanding extreme stress, which means that the horse should be able to train and race again. The treatment was concentrated on the...
Vaccination by the non-parenteral route of virus disease in the veterinary field.
Developments in biological standardization    January 1, 1976   Volume 33 33-40 
Menassé I.After a brief reference to the importance of the non-parenteral route of vaccination of domestic animals in general, the author deals, for each animal species separately, with the most important vaccines utilised by this method of administration. On the basis of bibliographical data, he describes the history of this use, discusses the results of the application in the field and draws the relative conclusions.
[Activator of potassium permeability and peroxidase inhibitor in the serum of horses subjected to physical stress].
Nauchnye doklady vysshei shkoly. Biologicheskie nauki    January 1, 1976   Issue 11 28-30 
Alekseev MIu, Fedotcheva NI, Mironova GD, Kondrashova MN.No abstract available
Evaluation of mebendazole in paste formulation in the horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    January 1, 1976   Volume 71, Issue 1 97-100 
McCurdy HD, Sharp ML, Sweeny WT.No abstract available
Intravenous nutrition in the treatment of tetanus in horses.
The Veterinary record    December 20, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 25-26 498 
Greatorex JC.No abstract available
Erythrocyte enzyme activities and glutathione levels of the horse, cat, dog and man.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    December 15, 1975   Volume 52, Issue 4 507-510 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(75)90226-6
Harvey JW, Kaneko JJ.No abstract available
[Studies on the incidence and life cycle of a sarcosporidian species of the horse (Sarcocystis equicanis n. spec)].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 15, 1975   Volume 88, Issue 24 468-471 
Rommel M, Geisel O.No abstract available
[Deep-frozen sperm insemination in the horse: a study under practice stud conditions].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 15, 1975   Volume 88, Issue 24 465-468 
Blobel K, Klug E.No abstract available
Equine serum lipids: serum lipids and glucose in Morgan and Thoroughbred horses and Shetland ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 11, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 12 1705-1708 
Robie SM, Janson CH, Smith SC, O'Connor JT.Concentrations of serum phospholipids, triglycerides, total cholesterol, nonesterified fatty acids, and glucose were determined for 9 months (September, 1972, to May, 1973) in 19 fasting horses and ponies (8 Morgan horses, 7 Thoroughbred horses, and 4 Shetland Ponies). Morgan horses had higher concentrations of total lipid than did Thoroughbreds, although the relative proportions of each type of lipid were similar in the 2 breeds. Shetland Ponies had higher nonesterified fatty acid and lower glucose concentrations than did either breed of horse. In both breeds of horses, concentrations of seru...
Oxibendazole: critical anthelmintic trials in equids.
The Veterinary record    December 6, 1975   Volume 97, Issue 23 442-444 
Kates KC, Colglazier ML, Enzie FD.The efficacy of oxibendazole against gastrointestinal parasites of horses was evaluated by the critical test method. Naturally infected ponies of various ages were given single oral doses of 5, 10, or 15 mg-kg of bodyweight. The drug was highly effective against adult large strongylids (Strongylus vulgaris, S edentatus, S equins), adult small strongylids (especially species of the genera Cylicostephanus, Cylicocyclus, Cyaathostomum, and Triodontophorus), and adult and larval stages of the large pinworm, Oxyuris equi. There was no apparent dose-related differences in efficacy. Oxibendazole was ...
[Contribution to the management of fractures of the head in horses –II. Stylohyoid fractures].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 5, 1975   Volume 82, Issue 12 480-483 
Hertsch B, Wissdorf H.No abstract available
[Microsporum equinum as a cause of dermatophytosis in the horse].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    December 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 10 833-841 
Otcenásek M, Krivanec K, Dvorák J, Komárek J, Cerná A.No abstract available