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Topic:Veterinary Procedure

Veterinary procedures in horses encompass a range of medical and surgical interventions performed to diagnose, treat, and manage equine health conditions. These procedures are designed to address various health issues, from routine care to emergency interventions. Common veterinary procedures include vaccinations, dental care, lameness evaluations, reproductive services, and surgical interventions such as colic surgery or fracture repair. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, outcomes, and advancements in veterinary procedures for horses, providing insights into their application and efficacy in equine medicine.
Evaluation of the demand valve for resuscitation of horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1980   Volume 176, Issue 7 623-626 
Riebold TW, Evans AT, Robinson NE.Arterial blood gas values, rate of pulmonary nitrogen washout, respiratory rate, arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and cardiac output were determined during ventilation of six anesthetized horses, with a demand valve. The horses were allowed to ventilate spontaneously, or intermittent positive pressure ventilation was utilized. When compared with spontaneous ventilation, intermittent positive pressure ventilation caused a significant increase in the rate of pulmonary nitrogen washout and a significant decrease of arterial carbon dioxide. It was concluded that intermittent positive pressure ...
Negative contrast electron microscopic techniques for diagnosis of viruses of veterinary importance.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1980   Volume 70, Issue 2 125-135 
England JJ, Reed DE.Negative contrast electron microscopy (NCEM) was utilized as a routine tool in the diagnosis of viral infections of domestic and wild animals. Viruses identified by this technique were observed in infected culture systems or clinical specimens from several species including horses, cattle, sheep, dogs, cats, pigs, deer, Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep, antelope, and several avian species. Viruses were identified by NCEM based on their size, morphology, and symmetry and consisted of adenoviruses, herpesviruses, paramyxoviruses, myxoviruses, picornaviruses, parvoviruses, coronaviruses, reoviruses, ...
[Incarcerated scrotal hernia in a gelding (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    March 15, 1980   Volume 105, Issue 6 242-247 
Breukink HJ, Németh F, van Dieten JS.The clinical examination, anaesthesia and surgery in a gelding with an incarcerated scrotal hernia are described. The results of examination of the blood at regular intervals are shown in a table. Surgery was performed without enterectomy. The postoperation course was uneventful. It is concluded that the possibility of scrotal hernia should be borne in mind, even in geldings with colic. The incarcerated portion of the small intestine is usually found to be the jejuno-ileal junction. The anaesthesiological and surgical features of equine scrotal hernia are discussed.
Design of an equine mobile surgery table.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    March 1, 1980   Volume 75, Issue 3 475-479 
Lokai MD, Ford J.No abstract available
Combined dexamethasone-suppression cosyntropin-(synthetic ACTH-) stimulation test in the horse: a new approach to testing of adrenal gland function.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 3 430-434 
Eiler H, Oliver J, Goble D.No abstract available
Repair of bovine and equine mandibular fractures.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    March 1, 1980   Volume 21, Issue 3 69-73 
Murch KM.Clinical findings, surgical repair and postsurgical care of a unilateral fracture of the mandible of a bull and of a bilateral mandibular fracture in a horse are described. Compression plating limited the pain suffered by the animals and resulted in a quick return to function of the mandibles.
A perspective on forage production in Canada.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    March 1, 1980   Volume 21, Issue 3 77-81 
Gareau L.Over the past decade, the cattle industry has experienced practically a full circle. With the promising beef prices in the early 1970s, with the glut of grain and a generous assist from government incentive programs, the forage acreage and cattle population have increased at a record rate. By 1974, the tide began to turn - grain prices went up sharply and beef prices became sluggish - and by 1976 a major crisis faced the producers. The cattle industry which had been developing on a cheap grain economy was now obliged to rely more on forage for its survival. Unfortunately, the forage was not ex...
Non-surgical embryo collection in the mare and subsequent fertility of donor animals.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    March 1, 1980   Volume 58, Issue 2 357-361 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0580357
Tischner M, Bielański A.Observations were made on 14 mares which were non-surgically flushed on one or more occasions for recovery of embryos on Days 7-9 after ovulation. Flushing alone shortened the oestrous cycle by about 2.7 days but increased the number of mares failing to ovulate. Flushing followed by an injection of a prostaglandin analogue shortened the cycle by about 4.5 days and hence increased the frequency of ovulations. From a total of 70 flushings performed, 27 embryos were recovered and of 12 mares inseminated during the first oestrus after embryo collection, 6 conceived and foaled. The other 7 mares we...
[Lameness in the horse (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    February 1, 1980   Volume 105, Issue 3 90-95 
Dik KJ.No abstract available
Metrizamide myelography in the horse: clinical, radiographic, and pathologic changes.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 2 204-211 
Nyland TG, Blythe LL, Pool RR, Helphrey MG, O'Brien TR.No abstract available
Breeding trauma in a miniature Appaloosa mare.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    February 1, 1980   Volume 75, Issue 2 264 
Stolfus TA.No abstract available
A technique for intra-articular injection of the equine tarsometatarsal joint.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    February 1, 1980   Volume 75, Issue 2 265-270 
Brown MP, Valko K.No abstract available
Surgical correction of cecocolic intussusception in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1980   Volume 176, Issue 3 223-224 
Robertson JT, Johnson FM.No abstract available
Mucosal alterations in experimentally induced small intestinal strangulation obstruction in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 2 193-198 
White NA, Moore JN, Trim CM.Small intestinal strangulation obstruction (ISO) was produced in seven ponies (under pentobarbital-anesthesia) by arteriovenous ligation. Positive-pressure ventilation with room air was used to maintain arterial PCO2 at the initiation of the ISO. Biopsy materials obtained from affected intestines at various times were evaluated, using histopathologic examination and scanning electron microscopy. Mucosal and villus degeneration was graded 0 to V and compared with intestinal gross color, motility, and wall thickness. The mucosa at the tip of the villus was the first to be affected. Degeneration ...
Basilar skull fractures in three horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1980   Volume 176, Issue 3 228-231 
Stick JA, Wilson T, Kunze D.Of three horses with basilar skull fractures, two died within 48 hours. The remaining horse was euthanatized because of a locomotion deficit. Clinical signs included epistaxis followed by ataxia. In each case, the basi-occipital bone and ventral portion of the calvarium were involved in the fracture. Diagnosis was based on clinical signs or radiographic appearance of guttural pouches, or both.
Energy and current requirements for ventricular defibrillation using trapezoidal waves.
The American journal of physiology    February 1, 1980   Volume 238, Issue 2 H231-H236 doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1980.238.2.H231
Geddes LA, Bourland JD, Tacker WA.The threshold energy and current required for ventricular defibrillation was determined in dogs ranging in weight from 6.4 to 38 kg and in ponies ranging in weight from 40 to 101 kg. Trapezoidal waves, 10 ms in duration, with 10%, 50%, 70%, and 90% tilt were applied to transchest electrodes. For all values of tilt, the energy and current required increased with body weight. The energy dose (joules per kilogram of body weight) was higher for the heavier animals, whereas the current dose (peak amperes per kilogram of body weight) was essentially the same for dogs and ponies. In both species and ...
Occlusion of internal carotid artery in the horse by means of a balloon-tipped catheter: evaluation of a method designed to prevent epistaxis caused by guttural pouch mycosis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1980   Volume 176, Issue 3 232-235 
Freeman DE, Donawick WJ.A procedure developed to occlude the internal carotid artery of horses with guttural pouch mycosis was modified was modified and evaluated in nine clinically normal horses. The left internal carotid artery was ligated at its origin and occluded distally with an intraluminal balloon catheter. In four horses, the balloon-tipped catheters were left in place until these horses were euthanatized at 4 to 244 days after surgery. In the remaining horses, the catheters were removed after 10 to 14 days by a cutdown procedure, and these horses were euthanatized 1 to 60 days after catheter removal. In bot...
A technique for management of traumatic rupture of the equine suspensory apparatus.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1980   Volume 176, Issue 3 205-210 
Wheat JD, Pascoe JR.Problems involving the management of acute traumatic rupture of the equine suspensory apparatus include loss of blood flow to the foot, proper immobilization, and pressure sores from casts. A technique utilizing a board splinting device attached to the affected limb at the toe and subsequent corrective shoe support provides immobilization, prevents dropping of the fetlock, can be applied to the standing animal, and allows frequent changing of the bandages, if necessary.
Occlusion of internal carotid artery in the horse by means of a balloon-tipped catheter: clinical use of a method to prevent epistaxis caused by guttural pouch mycosis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1980   Volume 176, Issue 3 236-240 
Freeman DE, Donawick WJ.An intravascular procedure was used to occlude the internal carotid artery of two horses with epistaxis caused by guttural pouch mycosis. In each horse, the affected internal carotid artery was ligated close to its origin. A balloon-tipped catheter was introduced into the artery distal to the ligature, and its tip was advanced beyond the site of infection. The balloon was then inflated so that the infected segment of artery was isolated from the cerebral vascular system. The catheters were removed at 14 and 51 days, and both horses were returned to training and racing. Neither horse had furthe...
Swabbing procedures in the control of CEM.
The Veterinary record    January 19, 1980   Volume 106, Issue 3 45-46 doi: 10.1136/vr.106.3.45
No abstract available
Bilateral ventral accessory neurectomy in windsucking horses.
The Veterinary record    January 12, 1980   Volume 106, Issue 2 30-32 doi: 10.1136/vr.106.2.30
Firth EC.Bilateral neurectomy of the ventral branch of the spinal accessory nerve was performed in an attempt to control windsuckling. There was no permanent improvement in the eight cases described.
[Hydrocele vaginalis testis in a stallion].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1980   Volume 8, Issue 4 479-480 
Fouad K.No abstract available
[The nutritive and intraosseous arterial vessels of ossa cruris and minisci in equine foals].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    January 1, 1980   Volume 93, Issue 3 51-56 
Pohlmeyer K, Butendieck E.No abstract available
Enflurane anesthesia in the pony: a comparative study between enflurane and halothane.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1980   Volume 70, Issue 1 50-66 
Orsini JA, Taylor JI.Enflurane, a new volatile anesthetic agent, was compared with halothane as components of a commonly used clinical anesthetic regime in the pony. Enflurane provides satisfactory general anesthesia when administered at a maintenance concentration of approximately 1.5-2.5%, in combination with a 1:1 nitrous oxide-oxygen mixture. With both agents cardiac rhythm and pulse were stable, however significant arterial hypotension occurred, especially during and following induction, being anesthetic concentration dependent. Hypoventilation was induced by both agents, there being no significant quantitati...
[Arteriographic studies of the distal tibial end in relation to the pathogenesis of osteochondrosis dissecans in the horse].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    January 1, 1980   Volume 27, Issue 6 469-478 
Hertsch B, Samy MT.No abstract available
[Entrapment of the epiglottis in a 14-year-old Irish thoroughbred mare].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1980   Volume 8, Issue 1 87-90 
Minder HP.No abstract available
[Open avulsion fracture of the ischiatic tuber in a horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1980   Volume 8, Issue 1 81-85 
Kopf N, Zetner K.No abstract available
Sequential non-surgical embryo recovery in the equine in a tropical country.
Theriogenology    January 1, 1980   Volume 13, Issue 1 110 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(80)90040-0
Salazar F, Sanint D, Robledo L, Jaramillo G.No abstract available
[Rhinosporidiosis in the horse. Histological and electron microscopic study of a case].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    January 1, 1980   Volume 27, Issue 4 326-339 
Lengfelder KD, Pospischil A.No abstract available
[Displacement of the ascending colon into the spleen-kidney space in the horse (2). Hernia spatii lienorenalis coli ascendentis].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1980   Volume 8, Issue 3 327-339 
Huskamp B, Kopf N.No abstract available