Analyze Diet

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.
Update on equine ICSI and cloning.
Theriogenology    June 30, 2005   Volume 64, Issue 3 535-541 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.05.010
Hinrichs K.Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) has recently become efficient enough to be considered for clinical use. With ICSI, one spermatozoa is injected into a mature oocyte. Harvesting of an oocyte ex vivo, followed by ICSI and transfer of the fertilized oocyte to the oviduct, may be applicable when semen quality is insufficient for standard insemination. Sperm injection, followed by in vitro embryo culture to the blastocyst stage, may be used in cases where multiple oocytes are to be fertilized (e.g. when oocytes are collected post-mortem). Nuclear transfer (cloning) of horses is possible but ...
Ultrafast events in the folding of ferrocytochrome c.
Biochemistry    June 29, 2005   Volume 44, Issue 26 9359-9367 doi: 10.1021/bi050384b
Kumar R, Prabhu NP, Bhuyan AK.Laser flash photolysis and stopped-flow methods have been used to study the dynamic events in the micro- to millisecond time bin in the refolding of horse ferrocytochrome c in the full range of guanidine hydrochloride concentration at pH 12.8 (+/-0.1), 22 degrees C. Under the absolute refolding condition, the earliest relaxation time of the unfolded protein chain is less than 1 micros. The chain then undergoes diffusive dynamics-mediated contraction and expansion, in which intrapolypeptide ligands make transient contacts with the heme iron, giving rise to two distinct kinetic phases of approxi...
Immunologic testing of xeno-derived osteochondral grafts using peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy human donors.
BMC musculoskeletal disorders    June 29, 2005   Volume 6 36 doi: 10.1186/1471-2474-6-36
Hetherington VJ, Kawalec JS, Dockery DS, Targoni OS, Lehmann PV, Nadler D.One means of treating osteoarthritis is with autologous or allogeneic osteochondral grafts. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the innate immunological response in humans toward xeno-derived osteochondral grafts that have been partially or entirely treated by the photooxidation process. Methods: The antigens tested included bovine, porcine, ovine and equine osteochondral samples that have been treated in successive steps of photooxidation. ELISPOT assays were used to evaluate the production of IL-1, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12 and TNF-alpha by human monocytes in response to the antigens. R...
Adiponectin and leptin are related to fat mass in horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    June 29, 2005   Volume 172, Issue 3 460-465 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2005.05.002
Kearns CF, McKeever KH, Roegner V, Brady SM, Malinowski K.Plasma concentrations of adiponectin and leptin were measured in 23 mature Standardbred mares (age: 10+/-3 years) and 12 weanling fillies (10 Quarter Horse/Belgian crossbreds and two Quarter Horses; aged: 4+/-3 months) to test the hypothesis that adipocytokines are proportional to adiposity in horses. Rump fat thickness was measured using B-mode ultrasound and percent body fat (% fat) calculated using a published formula for the estimation of fatness in horses. Plasma adiponectin and leptin were determined using radioimmunoassay. In the absence of purified equine adiponectin or leptin, results...
Early detection of dominant Env-specific and subdominant Gag-specific CD8+ lymphocytes in equine infectious anemia virus-infected horses using major histocompatibility complex class I/peptide tetrameric complexes.
Virology    June 28, 2005   Volume 339, Issue 1 110-126 doi: 10.1016/j.virol.2005.05.025
Mealey RH, Sharif A, Ellis SA, Littke MH, Leib SR, McGuire TC.Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) are critical for control of lentiviruses, including equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV). Measurement of equine CTL responses has relied on chromium-release assays, which do not allow accurate quantitation. Recently, the equine MHC class I molecule 7-6, associated with the ELA-A1 haplotype, was shown to present both the Gag-GW12 and Env-RW12 EIAV CTL epitopes. In this study, 7-6/Gag-GW12 and 7-6/Env-RW12 MHC class I/peptide tetrameric complexes were constructed and used to analyze Gag-GW12- and Env-RW12-specific CTL responses in two EIAV-infected horses (A2164 an...
Successful treatment of cryptococcal pneumonia in a pony mare.
Australian veterinary journal    June 28, 2005   Volume 82, Issue 11 686-692 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2004.tb12155.x
Begg LM, Hughes KJ, Kessell A, Krockenberger MB, Wigney DI, Malik R.A 20-year-old Welsh Mountain Pony (212 kg) mare was initially presented for a chronic cough, fever, weight loss and low grade abdominal pain. She later developed dyspnoea, tachypnoea and exercise intolerance. The presence of multiple masses (up to 17 cm diameter) in the pulmonary parenchyma was established using lateral thoracic radiography and transthoracic ultrasonography. Encapsulated, budding yeasts were observed in smears made from transtracheal washings and needle aspirates of the pulmonary lesions. Cryptococcus gattii (synonym: Cryptococcus neoformans variety gattii; Cryptococcus bacill...
A tumor necrosis factor receptor family protein serves as a cellular receptor for the macrophage-tropic equine lentivirus.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    June 28, 2005   Volume 102, Issue 28 9918-9923 doi: 10.1073/pnas.0501560102
Zhang B, Jin S, Jin J, Li F, Montelaro RC.Characterization of cellular receptors for human, simian, and feline immunodeficiency viruses that are tropic for lymphocytes and macrophages have revealed a common theme of a sequential binding of viral envelope proteins with two coreceptors to mediate virus infection of target cells. In contrast to these dual tropic immunodeficiency viruses, the ungulate lentiviruses, including equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV), exclusively infect cells of the monocyte-macrophage lineage to cause progressive degenerative diseases without clinical immunodeficiency. EIAV causes a uniquely dynamic disease t...
Muscle distribution of sylvatic and domestic Trichinella larvae in production animals and wildlife.
Veterinary parasitology    June 28, 2005   Volume 132, Issue 1-2 101-105 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2005.05.036
Kapel CM, Webster P, Gamble HR.Only a few studies have compared the muscle distribution of the different Trichinella genotypes. In this study, data were obtained from a series of experimental infections in pigs, wild boars, foxes and horses, with the aim of evaluating the predilection sites of nine well-defined genotypes of Trichinella. Necropsy was performed at 5, 10, 20 and 40 weeks post inoculation. From all host species, corresponding muscles/muscle groups were examined by artificial digestion. In foxes where all Trichinella species established in high numbers, the encapsulating species were found primarily in the tongu...
Analysis of the strongylid nematodes (Nematoda: Strongylidae) community after deworming of brood horses in Ukraine.
Veterinary parasitology    June 28, 2005   Volume 131, Issue 3-4 283-290 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2005.05.010
Kuzmina TA, Kharchenko VA, Starovir AI, Dvojnos GM.Communities of intestinal helminths in horses are commonly studied post mortem. The study objectives were here to examine the species composition of the strongylid community in brood horses in Ukraine after deworming with an aversectin drug Univerm. The site distribution of the strongylid species was analysed according to dynamics of their expulsion in faeces. Forty-four horses of different ages from Poltavska oblast (22 horses), Kyivska oblast (17 horses) and Sumska oblast (5 horses) of Ukraine were included in the study. Horses were treated with Univerm anthelmintic (0.2% aversectin) at a do...
Control of endoparasites in horses with a gel containing moxidectin and praziquantel.
The Veterinary record    June 28, 2005   Volume 156, Issue 26 835-838 doi: 10.1136/vr.156.26.835
Holm-Martin M, Levot GW, Dawson KL.A gel formulation containing moxidectin (20 g/kg) and praziquantel (125 g/kg) reduced the geometric mean faecal strongyle egg count in horses to below 100 eggs per gram of faeces (epg) for at least 12 weeks despite their being exposed continuously to reinfection from pasture grazed by treated and untreated horses. The geometric mean egg count of horses treated with a proprietary paste containing abamectin (3.7 g/kg) and praziquantel (46.2 g/kg) increased steadily from six weeks after the treatment, peaking at over 820 epg after 12 weeks. Relative to the efficacy of the abamectin/praziquantel t...
Endometritis in the mare: a diagnostic study comparing cultures from swab and biopsy.
Theriogenology    June 28, 2005   Volume 64, Issue 3 510-518 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.05.034
Nielsen JM.The objective of this study was to compare results from endometrial culture swabs with results from culturing of endometrial biopsies. The culture results were related to cytological findings (polymorphonuclear; PMN-cells) and histological observations (PMN-cells). Biopsy and swab samples were smeared on the surface of a blood agar petri dish, and examined for growth of bacteria. Cytology samples were obtained from endometrial biopsies, stained and examined under microscopy for the presence of PMN-cells. Endometrial biopsies were examined for the presence of PMN-infiltration of the endometrial...
Post-breeding inflammation and endometrial cytology in mares.
Theriogenology    June 28, 2005   Volume 64, Issue 3 580-588 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.05.041
Card C.Endometritis has been reported to be the third most common medical condition of horses. Timely diagnosis and treatment of endometritis in mares increases the chance of pregnancy. Exfoliative endometrial cytology is often used as a clinical tool to evaluate endometrial inflammation through detection of neutrophils. There is a lack of information on the time frame for changes in endometrial cytologic parameters following breeding. The main objectives of this article are to use current information to describe systematic analysis of endometrial cytology using standardized methods for sample collec...
Myosin heavy chain isoforms in equine gluteus medius muscle: comparison of mRNA and protein expression profiles.
The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society    June 27, 2005   Volume 53, Issue 11 1383-1390 doi: 10.1369/jhc.4A6609.2005
Eizema K, van den Burg MM, de Jonge HW, Dingboom EG, Weijs WA, Everts ME.The major structural protein in skeletal muscle, myosin heavy chain (MyHC), is primarily transcriptionally controlled. We compared the expression of MyHC isoforms on the mRNA and protein level in biopsies from the m. gluteus medius from adult untrained horses. In transverse sections, the majority of fibers showed qualitatively identical mRNA and protein expression patterns. However, coexpression of 2a and 2d/x MyHCs was substantially more common at the protein than at the mRNA level, suggesting a fine-tuning of these two genes in normal muscle not subjected to any training protocol. Because tr...
Effect of withholding macromolecules on the duration of intestinal permeability to colostral IgG in foals.
Australian veterinary journal    June 24, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 1-2 78-81 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb12202.x
Raidal SL, McTaggart C, Penhale J.To quantify absorption of colostral IgG by healthy neonatal foals and to test the hypothesis that delayed ingestion of macromolecules prolongs the duration of intestinal permeability to immunoglobulins (Ig) in newborn foals. Methods: Thirteen mixed breed foals. Methods: Foals were randomly assigned to two treatment groups, which were fed either a glucose-electrolyte solution or a commercial milk replacer for 12 h after birth, before being fed a known amount of colostral IgG. A control group was fed a known amount of colostral IgG from birth. The efficiency of IgG absorption was calculated foll...
Role of endothelium and nitric oxide in modulating in vitro responses of colonic arterial and venous rings to vasodilatory neuropeptides in horses. Moore RM, Sedrish SA, Holmes EP, Koch CE, Venugopal CS.The objective of this study was to determine and compare the in vitro responses of equine large colon arterial and venous rings to vasodilatory neuropeptides; calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP); substance P (SP); vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP); and acetylcholine (ACh), a standard nonpeptide endothelium-dependent vasodilator. Responses of vessel rings to graded concentrations (10(-11) M to 10(-5) M) of each drug were determined in endothelium-intact, denuded, and Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 10(-5) M)-treated rings that were pre-contracted with norepinephrine. Perc...
Interaction of saddle girth construction and tension on respiratory mechanics and gas exchange during supramaximal treadmill exercise in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    June 24, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 1-2 62-67 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb12199.x
Bowers J, Slocombe RF, Sides RH, Bayly WM, Kingston JK.To determine the effect of girth construction and tension on respiratory mechanics and gas exchange during supramaximal treadmill exercise in horses. Methods: Six healthy detrained Thoroughbred horses were exercised on a treadmill inclined at 10% at 110% VO2max. Horses were instrumented for respiratory mechanics and gas exchange studies, and data were recorded during incremental exercise tests. The animals were exercised for 2 min at 40% VO2max, and samples and measurements were collected at 1 min 45 sec. After 2 min, speed was increased to that estimated at 110% VO2max and data was collected ...
The surgical management of oesophageal obstruction in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    June 24, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 1-2 51-53 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb12192.x
Maxwell JA.No abstract available
Comparison of girth materials, girth tensions and their effects on performance in racehorses.
Australian veterinary journal    June 24, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 1-2 68-74 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb12200.x
Bowers J, Slocombe RF.To compare the effect of girth materials and commonly used girth tensions on athletic performance of race-horses and to test the length tension properties of commercially available girths. Methods: Seven horses were exercised at speeds to produce 95% of maximal heart rates on 15 occasions using a randomised block design, and girthed with 5 different girths at 3 nominal tensions of 6, 12 or 18 kg. The girths used were a standard elastic race girth, an 'American' elastic race girth, an elastic race girth twice the normal width, a standard canvas race girth and a canvas race girth at twice the no...
Volvulus of the ascending colon and caecum in a horse secondary to absence of dorsal mesenteric attachments.
Australian veterinary journal    June 24, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 1-2 60-61 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb12197.x
Alzidjali T, Dowling BA, Dart AJ.No abstract available
Temperature changes in dental pulp associated with use of power grinding equipment on equine teeth.
Australian veterinary journal    June 24, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 1-2 75-77 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb12201.x
Wilson GJ, Walsh LJ.To quantify the temperature changes in the dental pulp associated with equine dental procedures using power grinding equipment. Methods: A matrix experimental design with replication on the same sample was followed to allow the following independent variables to be assessed: horse age (young or old), tooth type (premolar or molar), powered grinding instrument (rotating disc or die grinder), grinding time (15 or 20 seconds) and the presence or absence of water coolant. Methods: Sound premolar and molar teeth from a 6-year-old horse and a 15-year-old horse, which had been removed postmortem, wer...
The effects of halothane and isoflurane on cardiovascular function in laterally recumbent horses.
British journal of anaesthesia    June 24, 2005   Volume 95, Issue 3 317-325 doi: 10.1093/bja/aei180
Raisis AL, Blissitt KJ, Henley W, Rogers K, Adams V, Young LE.Experimental studies in adult horses have shown that general anaesthesia maintained with isoflurane is associated with less depression of cardiovascular function compared with halothane anaesthesia. Adverse effects of intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV) have also been demonstrated. Nevertheless, the haemodynamic effects of these agents and the effects of differing modes of ventilation have not been assessed during clinical anaesthesia in horses undergoing surgery. Methods: The haemodynamic effects of isoflurane or halothane anaesthesia during spontaneous or IPPV were studied non-...
Hendra virus under the microscope.
Australian veterinary journal    June 24, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 1-2 2 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2005.tb12169.x
Thornley M.No abstract available
Evidence to support horses as natural intermediate hosts for Sarcocystis neurona.
Veterinary parasitology    June 23, 2005   Volume 133, Issue 1 27-36 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2005.05.016
Mullaney T, Murphy AJ, Kiupel M, Bell JA, Rossano MG, Mansfield LS.Opossums (Didelphis spp.) are the definitive host for the protozoan parasite Sarcocystis neurona, the causative agent of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM). Opossums shed sporocysts in feces that can be ingested by true intermediate hosts (cats, raccoons, skunks, armadillos and sea otters). Horses acquire the parasite by ingestion of feed or water contaminated by opossum feces. However, horses have been classified as aberrant intermediate hosts because the terminal asexual sarcocyst stage that is required for transmission to the definitive host has not been found in their tissues despite...
Anaphylaxis after a horse bite.
Allergy    June 23, 2005   Volume 60, Issue 8 1088-1089 doi: 10.1111/j.1398-9995.2005.00837.x
Guida G, Nebiolo F, Heffler E, Bergia R, Rolla G.No abstract available
Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease in a horse.
Acta neuropathologica    June 22, 2005   Volume 110, Issue 2 191-195 doi: 10.1007/s00401-005-1033-5
Pumarola M, Vidal E, Trens JM, Serafín A, Marquez M, Ferrer I.Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID) is reported in a 16-year-old Pure Spanish breed female horse suffering from progressive ataxia and motor deficiencies. The neuropathological study revealed NIIs throughout the central nervous system, although mainly in the brain stem and spinal cord. This distribution did not correlate with neuron loss, which was marked in the hippocampus and moderate in the neocortex, particularly in the occipital cortex. As in humans, NIIs in the horse were hyaline autofluorescent inclusions composed of non-membrane-bound aggregates of filaments and fine granule...
Frozen semen management in equine breeding programs.
Theriogenology    June 22, 2005   Volume 64, Issue 3 480-491 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.05.028
Loomis PR, Squires EL.Success with frozen semen requires attention to detail and a basic understanding of the techniques for properly handling and thawing and inseminating frozen semen. Practitioners should also be familiar with strategies used for managing mares for insemination with thawed semen. This manuscript will review those techniques and also present fertility data collected in a commercial setting. Factors that affect pregnancy rates for mares inseminated with frozen-thawed semen such as timing and frequency of insemination were examined for two separate data sets consisting of 332 and 536 mare cycles col...
Prevalence of gastrointestinal parasites in horses.
The Veterinary record    June 21, 2005   Volume 156, Issue 25 815 doi: 10.1136/vr.156.25.815
Torgerson P.No abstract available
Transmission of a Venezuelan equine encephalitis complex Alphavirus by Culex (Melanoconion) gnomatos (Diptera: Culicidae) in northeastern Peru.
Journal of medical entomology    June 21, 2005   Volume 42, Issue 3 404-408 doi: 10.1093/jmedent/42.3.404
Yanoviak SP, Aguilar PV, Lounibos LP, Weaver SC.Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) complex alphaviruses are serious health threats in the Americas and regularly infect humans living in or near Amazonian rain forests. As part of a larger surveillance program, we placed six hamster-baited mosquito traps in a disturbed white sand forest of northeastern Peru for 3 d. Virus isolations from hamster serum and trapped mosquito pools demonstrated that a VEE subtype IIIC alphavirus was transmitted to a hamster by the mosquito Culex (Melanoconion) gnomatos Sallum, Hutchings & Ferreira. This species, like the other seven proven VEE complex alphavirus...
Effect of the in vitro maturation medium on equine oocytes: comparison of follicular fluid and oestrous mare serum.
Acta veterinaria Hungarica    June 18, 2005   Volume 53, Issue 2 241-248 doi: 10.1556/AVet.53.2005.2.9
Gil L, Saura S, Echegaray A, Martinez F, de Blas I, Akourki A, Gonzalez N, Espinosa E, Josa A.The present study evaluated the effect of supplementing the medium used to mature equine oocytes in vitro with oestrous mare serum (EMS) or horse follicular fluid (HFF). To this end, 144 ovaries were obtained from mares aged 16-21 months and transported to the laboratory in Dulbecco's phosphate buffered saline (D-PBS) at 30 degrees C. Oocytes were harvested from the ovaries by slicing, and then selected for in vitro maturation (IVM) according to the number of cumulus cell layers and the characteristics of the cytoplasm. The selected oocytes were washed three times in TCM199 medium plus HEPES (...
Diagnostic applications of ultrasonography to stallion’s reproductive tract.
Theriogenology    June 18, 2005   Volume 64, Issue 3 505-509 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.05.007
Pozor M.Although ultrasound evaluation of the reproductive tract of stallions was introduced to veterinary practice long ago, this examination is not always conducted during routine breeding soundness evaluation. The objective of this study was to investigate the clinical relevance of routine ultrasound evaluation of the stallion's reproductive tract. Breeding soundness evaluation of 113 stallions was performed, including ultrasonography of external and internal genitalia. Various pathological conditions were detected using this technique, with the most frequent being varicocele, thickened vaginal tun...