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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.
Cytochemical and electrophoretic study of the stallion epididymal glycoproteins.
Journal of submicroscopic cytology and pathology    July 6, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 1 117-130 
Retamal C, Urzúa J, Alves EW, López ML.It has been suggested that proteins produced in specific regions of the epididymis, mostly androgen dependent glycoproteins, are involved in the sperm maturation process. In the present work, the glycoconjugated distribution pattern and the electrophoretic characteristics of the stallion epididymal proteins were examined using lectin probes. The identification in the luminal fluid of some new proteins, probably synthesized and secreted by the epididymis, is an important initial step to investigate their interaction with the stallion sperm membrane. The binding of FITC-lectins (ConA, WGA, LPA, ...
The effect of high intensity exercise on the functional capacity of equine pulmonary alveolar macrophages and BAL-derived lymphocytes.
Research in veterinary science    July 6, 2000   Volume 68, Issue 3 249-253 doi: 10.1053/rvsc.1999.0373
Raidal SL, Love DN, Bailey GD, Rose RJ.The effect of strenuous exercise on the functional capacity of pulmonary alveolar macrophages (PAM) and bronchoalveolar lavage-derived lymphocytes was determined in eight horses prior to and after 7 weeks of training. Strenuous exercise had no effect on the total cell count or the percentage of live cells in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples prior to or following training. However, training was associated with a significant increase in the total cell count of pre-exercise BAL samples and a significant reduction in the percentage of live cells in post-exercise samples. Strenuous exercise was...
Haematological responses of repeated large volume blood collection in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    July 6, 2000   Volume 68, Issue 3 275-278 doi: 10.1053/rvsc.2000.0376
Malikides N, Mollison PJ, Reid SW, Murray M.The haematological response of regular, repeated blood harvesting was investigated in 40 Thoroughbred and non-Thoroughbred horses that donate 8 litres of blood every 3 weeks for the purposes of commercial blood production. When this volume of blood was removed on five occasions over 12 weeks, no adverse effect on packed cell volume (PCV), haemoglobin (HB), and red blood cell count (RCC) was observed. Although PCV, RCC and Hb values decreased during the first week after blood collection, followed by a gradual increase in values until the next harvest time, all values remained within published r...
[The problem mare part 1: pathogenesis and clinical investigation].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    July 6, 2000   Volume 125, Issue 11 346-354 
Bergman HJ, de Kruif A, van Dessel S.A review is given of treatment for 'problem' mares that do not become pregnant. To determine the best therapy, it is necessary to understand the defence mechanisms of the uterus and the pathogenesis of not getting in foal. A thorough clinical examination is absolutely necessary to come to a correct diagnosis. This examination will be explained in a practical way. In the second article the different therapies for treating problem mares are discussed. The therapeutic possibilities vary widely. They can be classified in: anatomical corrections, anti-infectious therapy, and treatment to enhance th...
Prospects for controlling animal parasitic nematodes by predacious micro fungi.
Parasitology    June 30, 2000   Volume 120 Suppl S121-S131 doi: 10.1017/s0031182099005739
Larsen M.Resistance against anthelmintics is widespread, particularly in parasitic nematode populations of small ruminants. Several new techniques or supplements have been developed or are under investigation. Biological control (BC) is one of these new methods. The net-trapping predacious fungus Duddingtonia flagrans produces thick walled resting spores, chlamydospores, which are able to survive passage through the gastrointestinal tract of cattle, horses, sheep and pigs. Under Danish climatic conditions it has been shown that the number of parasite larvae on pasture and the worm burden of the grazing...
Histology in recovered cases of grass sickness.
The Veterinary record    June 29, 2000   Volume 146, Issue 22 645-646 doi: 10.1136/vr.146.22.645
Doxey DL, Johnston P, Hahn C, Reynolds J.No abstract available
Induction of apoptosis by equine arteritis virus infection.
Virus genes    June 29, 2000   Volume 20, Issue 2 143-147 doi: 10.1023/a:1008122715387
Archambault D, St-Laurent G.Equine arteritis virus (EAV) is the etiological agent of equine viral arteritis, a contagious viral disease of equids. EAV is the prototype virus of the arteriviruses, a group of small enveloped viruses with positive single-stranded RNA genomes. Because apoptosis or programmed cell death is believed to play an important role in the biogenesis of several cytopathogenic viruses, we examined whether EAV was able to induce cell apoptosis in vitro. To do this, Vero cells were infected with EAV at a multiplicity of infection of 0.1 tissue culture infectious dose (TCID50) per cell, and analyzed at va...
Development of analytical methods for the detection of metaraminol in the horse.
Journal of analytical toxicology    June 29, 2000   Volume 24, Issue 4 281-288 doi: 10.1093/jat/24.4.281
Hill DW, Hyde WG, Kind AJ, Greulich D, Hopkins S.Aramine (metaraminol bitartrate) has been found in the possession of horse trainers and veterinarians who have been investigated for possible inappropriate drug administration to racing horses. Metaraminol (3-hydroxyphenylisopropanolamine) is a sympathomimetic amine that directly and indirectly affects adrenergic receptors, with alpha effects being predominant. Because it has the potential to affect the performance of a racing horse, its use is prohibited. In the present study, methods for the detection of metaraminol were developed. Metaraminol was found to be extracted with poor recovery ( 9...
Evidence for a seasonal variation in the ability of exogenous melatonin to suppress prolactin secretion in the mare.
Domestic animal endocrinology    June 28, 2000   Volume 18, Issue 4 395-408 doi: 10.1016/s0739-7240(00)00058-8
Fitzgerald BP, Davison LA, McManus CJ.In seasonally breeding species photoperiodic information is thought to be conveyed to the reproductive and prolactin axis via changes in circulating concentrations of melatonin. For some species, a constant melatonin stimulus is perceived as a short day, whereas in others no photoperiodic information is provided. In the mare, a preliminary study demonstrated that constant administration of melatonin did not modify prolactin secretion, suggesting that this treatment regimen failed to provide photoperiodic information. To further investigate this proposal and to investigate an alternative explan...
Evaluation of samarium-153 for synovectomy in an osteochondral fragment-induced model of synovitis in horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    June 28, 2000   Volume 29, Issue 3 252-263 doi: 10.1053/jvet.2000.5611
Yarbrough TB, Lee MR, Hornof WJ, Schumacher HR, O'Brien TR.To determine the effects of intraarticular administration of Samarium-153 (153Sm) bound to hydroxyapatite microspheres (153SmM) on an osteochondral chip-induced synovitis. Methods: Sixty days after implantation of autogenous osteochondral fragments in the middle carpal and metacarpophalangeal joints, 153SmM was administered into 1 joint of each type. The contralateral joints were used as untreated controls. Methods: Fifteen horses without preexisting joint disease were randomly divided into 2 groups (7 in the carpal group, 8 in the metacarpophalangeal group). Methods: Horses had osteochondral ...
Comparison of bone healing by demineralized bone matrix and autogenous cancellous bone in horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    June 28, 2000   Volume 29, Issue 3 218-226 doi: 10.1053/jvet.2000.5601
Kawcak CE, Trotter GW, Powers BE, Park RD, Turner AS.The purpose of this study was to compare bone healing induced by equine demineralized bone matrix (DBM) to autogenous cancellous bone graft (ACB) or no graft (control) in a rib-defect model in horses. Methods: The osteogenic properties of ACB and DBM were evaluated in bilateral 19-mm circular defects created in the outer cortex of the 6th and 8th ribs of each horse. Methods: Eight mature horses. Methods: Three rib defects in each horse were randomly treated with each of the 3 treatment groups, and the fourth rib defect received a random treatment. Rib sections, including the defects, were harv...
MRI of the equine digit with a dedicated low-field magnet.
The Veterinary record    June 28, 2000   Volume 146, Issue 21 616-617 doi: 10.1136/vr.146.21.616
Choquet P, Sick H, Constantinesco A.No abstract available
Occurrence of Thelazia lacrymalis (Nematoda, Spirurida, Thelaziidae) in native horses in Italy.
Parassitologia    June 28, 2000   Volume 41, Issue 4 545-548 
Giangaspero A, Lia R, Vovlas N, Otranto D.A survey on the prevalence of Thelazia spp. in the province of Bari (Apulia region, Italy) in slaughtered native horses was conducted from June 20, 1995 to April 3, 1996. Both eyes from 409 ten-month- to 4-year-old native animals were examined. Sixty horses (14.7%) were found parasitized by Thelazia lacrymalis. Three hundred-sixty one parasite specimens (220 females, 99 males and 42 larvae) were collected with a mean count burden of 6.0-5.1 (range 1 to 20) per head. T. lacrymalis specimens were found free in the conjunctiva and behind the nictitancte, in the excretory ducts of the Harderian gl...
Tissue culture of the enteric nervous system from equine ileum.
Veterinary research communications    June 27, 2000   Volume 24, Issue 5 299-307 doi: 10.1023/a:1006439904937
Hudson NP, Pearson GT, Mayhew IG.Ileal samples were harvested fresh from euthanized adult horses. The tissues were microdissected to prepare wholemount preparations for immunohistochemistry and for either explant or dissociated culture systems of the enteric nervous system. Explant culture systems were established using whole-mounts of either the submucous plexus or the muscularis externa (including the myenteric plexus). Dissociated cell cultures could only be obtained from the submucous plexus. Culture systems were maintained for up to 5 days. Immunoreactivity for a neuronal marker (Pan-N) and for glial cell markers (GFAP a...
Oxytocin release and its relationship to dihydro-15-keto PGF2alpha and arginine vasopressin release during parturition and to suckling in postpartum mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    June 24, 2000   Volume 119, Issue 2 347-357 
Vivrette SL, Kindahl H, Munro CJ, Roser JF, Stabenfeldt GH.Pituitary blood was collected from the intercavernal sinus in five mares before and during parturition, and in nine mares immediately after parturition to investigate oxytocin patterns during parturition and early lactation, and to determine the relationship between oxytocin, prostaglandin and arginine vasopressin during parturition. In four mares in which sample collection began at least 6 h before rupture of the chorioallantois, a significant increase (P < 0.05) in PGF(2alpha) concentration was detected before a significant increase in oxytocin concentration. Cross-correlation analysis of...
Effects of different activation treatments on fertilization of horse oocytes by intracytoplasmic sperm injection.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    June 24, 2000   Volume 119, Issue 2 253-260 
Li X, Morris LH, Allen WR.The effects of four reagents on the activation and subsequent fertilization of equine oocytes, and the development of these after intracytoplasmic sperm injection, were investigated. Cumulus-oocyte complexes collected from equine ovaries obtained from an abattoir were matured in vitro for 40-44 h in TCM199 medium before being injected, when in metaphase II, with an immobilized stallion spermatozoon. The cumulus-oocyte complexes were then subjected to one of five activation treatments: (a) 10 micromol ionomycin l(-1) for 10 min; (b) 7% (v/v) ethanol for 10 min; (c) 100 micromol thimerosal l(-1)...
Effect of administering a crude equine gonadotrophin preparation to mares on follicular development, oocyte recovery rate and oocyte maturation in vivo.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    June 24, 2000   Volume 118, Issue 2 351-360 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1180351
Brück I, Bézard J, Baltsen M, Synnestvedt B, Couty I, Greve T, Duchamp G.In mares, the shortage of oocytes and the variability in nuclear maturation at a certain time of the oestrous cycle hinders the optimization of methods for in vitro maturation and in vitro fertilization. Increasing the number of small-to-medium-sized follicles available for aspiration in vivo may increase the overall oocyte yield. The aims of the present study were to investigate whether administration of crude equine gonadotrophins affects follicular development, oocyte recovery rate, in vivo oocyte maturation and follicular concentrations of meiosis-activating sterols. During oestrus, all fo...
Gonadotroph-lactotroph associations and expression of prolactin receptors in the equine pituitary gland throughout the seasonal reproductive cycle.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    June 24, 2000   Volume 119, Issue 2 223-231 
Gregory SJ, Brooks J, McNeilly AS, Ingleton PM, Tortonese DJ.An interaction between gonadotroph and lactotroph cells of the pituitary gland has long been recognized in several species. The current study was conducted to investigate whether an association between gonadotrophs and lactotrophs occurs in mares and whether prolactin receptors are expressed within the pituitary gland of this species. The effects of both reproductive state and season on these variables were examined in pituitary glands obtained from sexually active mares in July (breeding season), sexually active mares in November (non-breeding season) and anoestrous mares in November. Pituita...
Clinical, bacteriologic, serologic, and pathologic features of infections with atypical Taylorella equigenitalis in mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 23, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 12 1945-1948 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.1945
Katz JB, Evans LE, Hutto DL, Schroeder-Tucker LC, Carew AM, Donahue JM, Hirsh DC.To characterize clinical, serologic, bacteriologic, cytologic, and pathologic endometrial responses of mares to 2 donkey-origin atypical bacterial isolates resembling Taylorella equigenitalis. Methods: Prospective in vivo study. Methods: 10 healthy mares. Methods: Mares in estrus (2/group) were inoculated by intrauterine infusion with 2 isolates of classic T equigenitalis or 2 isolates of atypical Taylorella sp or were sham-inoculated. Bacteriologic, serologic, clinical, uterine, cytologic, and pathologic endometrial responses were assessed 4, 11, 21, 35, and 63 days after inoculation and on d...
Theriogenology question of the month. Bacterial placentitis attributable to a gram-positive filamentous branching bacillus organism.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 23, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 12 1915-1916 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.1915
Wolfsdorf KE, Williams NM, Donahue JM.No abstract available
Morphology and amplitude values of the electrocardiogram of Spanish-bred horses of different ages in the Dubois leads system.
Veterinary research    June 23, 2000   Volume 31, Issue 3 347-354 doi: 10.1051/vetres:2000124
Ayala I, Gutierrez-Panizo C, Benedito JL, Prieto F, Montes A.The aim of this work was to record the modifications of the form and amplitude of the electrocardiographic tracings during growth using the Dubois system and to study its sensibility to these physiological changes. This work was carried out on 179 healthy, young and adult Spanish-bred horses (98 females and 81 males). One electrocardiogram (ECG) was obtained from each horse using the Dubois leads system. The bifid shape deflection of the P wave was generally more frequent than the simple one in animals at 4 months of age or older. Amplitudes of the P2 component and of the simple positive wave ...
Concrete use of the joint coordinate system for the quantification of articular rotations in the digital joints of the horse.
Veterinary research    June 23, 2000   Volume 31, Issue 3 297-311 doi: 10.1051/vetres:2000102
Degueurce C, Chateau H, Pasqui-Boutard V, Pourcelot P, Audigié F, Crevier-Denoix N, Jerbi H, Geiger D, Denoix JM.A method is detailed allowing the computation of three-dimensional (3D) joint angles. Each joint of the equine digit is modelled as a sequence of three single axis rotary joints. The Joint Coordinate System was used; it involves a specific sequence of cardanic angles. The decomposition of the angles was chosen so that the three elementary angles coincide with the flexion/extension, passive abduction/adduction and lateral/medial rotations. The algorithms and kinematic procedures were described for the equine front digital joints. This method was tested in vitro on four forelimbs. For each limb,...
Long-term outcome of horses with a slab fracture of the central or third tarsal bone treated conservatively: 25 cases (1976-1993).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 23, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 12 1949-1954 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.1949
Murphey ED, Schneider RK, Adams SB, Santschi EM, Stick JA, Ruggles AJ.To determine clinical features of horses with a slab fracture of the central or third tarsal bone and to report outcome of horses in which treatment did not include surgery. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: 25 horses (14 Standardbreds, 6 Thoroughbreds, 5 Quarter Horses). Methods: Medical records of horses with a slab fracture of the central (n = 9) or third (16) tarsal bone were reviewed. Only horses for which treatment consisted of confinement to a stall were included in this study. Clinical features and radiographic findings were recorded and summarized. Outcome was determined for raci...
Anesthesia case of the month. Diaphragmatic hernia making it difficult to ventilate a horse during anesthesia.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 23, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 12 1918-1919 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.1918
Branson KR, Kramer J.No abstract available
Pneumothorax in horses: 40 cases (1980-1997).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 23, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 12 1955-1959 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.1955
Boy MG, Sweeney CR.To characterize pneumothorax in horses and to describe clinical signs, diagnostic testing, and clinical outcome of horses with pneumothorax. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: 40 horses. Methods: Medical records of horses with pneumothorax were reviewed to obtain information on signalment, history, clinical signs, diagnostic testing, treatment, and clinical outcome. Results: Horses developed pneumothorax secondary to pleuropneumonia (17 horses), open wounds of the thorax (9), closed trauma to the thorax (7), surgery on the upper portion of the respiratory tract (3), and surgery involving t...
Assessing equine sperm-membrane integrity.
Andrologia    June 23, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 3 163-167 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0272.2000.00351.x
Lagares MA, Petzoldt R, Sieme H, Klug E.The swelling of cells in a hypo-osmotic medium has been described as an important criterion for assessing the functional integrity of the sperm plasma membrane. The resistance of equine spermatozoa to osmolarity changes was studied by extending 98 semen samples collected from nine stallions in media at five osmolarities (300, 200, 150, 100, and 50 mOsmol l(-1)). The response of the cells was measured by the spermatocrit technique and eosin staining. Spermatocrit determines the increase on spermatozoal volume under hypo-osmotic conditions, a sign of functional integrity of sperm plasma membrane...
Photoperiodic versus metabolic signals as determinants of seasonal anestrus in the mare.
Biology of reproduction    June 22, 2000   Volume 63, Issue 1 335-340 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod63.1.335
Fitzgerald BP, McManus CJ.The objectives of this study were to compare the timing and mechanisms controlling the onset of anestrus in young and mature mares treated either continuously with melatonin and in those that remained untreated. Changes in body weight, subcutaneous body fat measured to provide an estimate of total body fat, and circulating concentrations of leptin were compared throughout the 1-yr experimental period. The results demonstrate that in young mares the timing of anestrus occurs significantly earlier in the year than in mature mares and that mature mares are more likely to exhibit continuous reprod...
Neurocalcin-immunoreactive neurons in the mammalian dorsal root ganglia, including humans.
The Anatomical record    June 22, 2000   Volume 259, Issue 3 347-352 doi: 10.1002/1097-0185(20000701)259:3<347::AID-AR110>3.0.CO;2-D
Galeano R, Germanà A, Abbate F, Calvo D, Naves FJ, Hidaka H, Germanà G, Vega JA.Neurocalcin (NC) is a recently characterized EF-hand calcium-binding protein present in a discrete population of sensory neurons and their peripheral mechanoreceptors, but its presence in peripheral nervous system neurons other than in the rat is still unknown. The present study was designed to investigate the occurrence of NC in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of several mammalian species (horse, buffalo, cow, sheep, pig, dog, and rat), including humans. DRG were fixed, embedded in paraffin, and processed for immunohistochemistry using a polyclonal antibody against NC. The size of the immunorea...
First comprehensive low-density horse linkage map based on two 3-generation, full-sibling, cross-bred horse reference families.
Genomics    June 22, 2000   Volume 66, Issue 2 123-134 doi: 10.1006/geno.2000.6207
Swinburne J, Gerstenberg C, Breen M, Aldridge V, Lockhart L, Marti E, Antczak D, Eggleston-Stott M, Bailey E, Mickelson J, Røed K, Lindgren G....Two 3-generation full-sibling reference families have been produced and form a unique resource for genetic linkage mapping studies in the horse. The F(2) generations, now comprising 61 individuals, consist of 28- to 32-day-old embryos removed nonsurgically from two pairs of identical twin mares. The same stallion sired all F(2)s such that the two full-sibling families are half-sibling with respect to each other. The families are crossbred to maximize levels of heterozygosity and include Arabian, Thoroughbred, Welsh Cob, and Icelandic Horse breeds. Milligram quantities of DNA have been isolated...
Equine glaucoma: a retrospective study of 13 cases presented at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine from 1992 to 1999.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 17, 2000   Volume 41, Issue 6 470-480 
Cullen CL, Grahn BH.The prevalence of equine glaucoma seen by the ophthalmology service at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine (WCVM) was 6.5%. The majority of cases (11/13) were associated with clinical manifestations of uveitis. Congenital glaucoma was documented in 1 case, and primary glaucoma was diagnosed in a 12-year-old quarter horse. There were no breed or sex predilections evident. Affected horses were middle-aged to old (average age = 9.5 years, ranging from 2 weeks to 23 years). The clinical manifestations of equine glaucoma included blindness, diffuse corneal edema, corneal vascularization, bup...