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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.
Ameloblastic ondontoma in a foal.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 2 91-93 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02229.x
Roberts MC, Groenendyk S, Kelly WR.A 4 month old foal with right sided maxillary enlargement and considerable upper airway obstruction had an ameloblastic odontoma in the right maxillary sinus. This odontogenic tumour, probably congenital in nature, had extensively distorted the structure and contours of the sinus, and displaced the adjacent turbinates and nasal septum.
The surgical treatment of equine fractures.
The Veterinary record    April 1, 1978   Volume 102, Issue 13 273-277 doi: 10.1136/vr.102.13.273
Denny HR.The current trends in equine fracture treatment are reviewed. Surgical approach, method of fixation, the advantages of Association for the Study of Internal Fixation (ASIF) implants and the complications of treatment are discussed with reference to 21 fracture cases. Normal limb function was restored in four horses with fractures of the olecranon and one with a mid shaft fracture of the tibia following stabilisation of the fracture with plates. A horse with a chip fracture of the distal radius and three other animals with fractures of the lateral condyle of the third metacarpal bone were also ...
Unusual cause of lameness in a pony.
The Veterinary record    March 18, 1978   Volume 102, Issue 11 247 doi: 10.1136/vr.102.11.247
Aitken DC, Simpson JW.No abstract available
Surgical implications of extensibility of the skin of the equine carpus.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 3 387-392 
Cartee RE, Cowles WR.To determine the lines of maximum extensibility of the skin over the equine carpus, round puncture wounds were made 2.0 cm apart over the carpal area of 5 horses (7 carpi). The direction of elongation of the round puncture wound was observed and photographed. Lines of maximum extensibility that occurred over the surfaces of the equine carpus were determined to be proximal to distal, except in a small area over the accessory carpal bone where a state of anisotropism existed. In an immobilized carpus, direction of a surgical incision was not as important as it was in a mobile carpus, in which th...
Retrospective study of 350 cases of equine cryptorchidism.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 343-346 
Stickle RL, Fessler JF.Equine cryptorchidism was examined by a review of the literature and a retrospective study of 350 horses over a 14-year period. The incidence of left vs right testis retention was nearly equal. On the left side, 75.2% of the retained testes were retained abdominally and 24.8% inguinally; on the right side, 41.8% of the retained testes were retained abdominally and 58.2% inguinally. Preoperative diagnosis by rectal palpation of the vaginal rings was considered a valuable technique, with 87.9% accuracy in 190 horses. Invasive and nonivasive surgical techniques for abdominal cryptorchidectomy and...
Cervical esophagostomy to permit extraoral feeding of the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 314-320 
Freeman DE, Naylor JM.An indwelling stomach tube was placed through a cervical esophagostomy in 5 clinically normal horses and in 3 horses requiring artificial alimentation. In all but one case, surgery was performed on conscious horses following tranquilization and infiltration of the surgical sites with a local anesthetic. Six horses were fed liquid rations through the indwelling tubes, which were left in place from 3 to 26 days. After the tubes were removed, the stomas healed rapidly and with minimal complications. Cervical esophagostomy proved to be a safe, easy, and effective method for the provision of extrao...
Arthroscopy in the diagnosis of equine joint disease.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 263-268 
McIlwraith CW, Fessler JF.No abstract available
Enflurane and isoflurane anesthesia: a summary of laboratory and clinical investigations in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 367-373 
Steffey EP.No abstract available
Selection, care, and maintenance of endoscopic equipment for use in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 374-376 
Johnson JH, Moore JN, Coffman JR, Garner HE, Tritschler LG, Traver DS.No abstract available
Metrizamide myelography in two horses.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    February 1, 1978   Volume 73, Issue 2 177-183 
Stowater JL, Kneller SK, Froehlich PS.No abstract available
Microculture method for mixed lymphocyte cultures in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 2 337-339 
McClure JJ, Muscoplat CC, Johnson DW, Senogles DR.A miniaturized method for the mixed lymphocyte culture test in the horse is described. The test is performed in either round- or flat-bottom microtitration tissue culture plates. Concentrations of responsing and stimulating cells are varied, depening on the experiment. Significant discrimination between isogeneic and allogenic mixtures is possible after 120 hours' culture when cells are labeled ([3H]thymidine) for the last 16 to 18 hours of the test.
Retrospective comparison of two surgical techniques for correction of angular deformities in foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 281-286 
Fretz PB, Turner AS, Pharr J.No abstract available
Clinically important structures of the equine hock.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 277-280 
Sack WO, Ferraglio S.A study method has been devised to review clinically important structures of the equine hock joint on a fresh specimen. The review can be done alone; dissection takes about 2 hours; special tools or materials are not required.
Navicular disease in the hindlimbs of the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 291-292 
Valdez H, Adams OR, Peyton LC.Of 124 horses determined to have navicular disease during a 5-year period, 6 had clinical and radiographic signs of the disease in both hindlimbs. These 6 were all castrated males, ranging in age from 3 to 12 years, and were used for work of similar nature: roping, cutting, and pleasure. Treatment consisted of posterior digital neurectomy and corrective shoeing in 2 cases, posterior digital neurectomy alone in 2 cases, and corrective shoeing alone in 2 cases. Following treatment, lameness subsided, and all 6 horses were returned to full use.
Evaluation of inferior check ligament desmotomy for treatment of acquired flexor tendon contracture in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 293-298 
McIlwraith CW, Fessler JF.The usefulness of inferior check ligament desmotomy as a treatment for acquired tendon contracture in horses was evaluated in 13 cases of deep digital flexor (DDF) contracture and in 3 cases of combined superficial digital flexor (SDF) and DDF contracture. In 8 of 9 cases of DDF contracture in which the dorsal surface of the hoof had not passed beyond being vertical to the ground, the surgical procedure was successful in returning the limb to a normal position and function. Compared with DDF tenotomy, inferior check ligament desmotomy was a superior treatment technique because of decreased pos...
Studies related to the metabolism of anabolic steroids in the horse: a gas chromatographic mass spectrometric method to confirm the administration of 19-nortestosterone or its esters to horses.
Biomedical mass spectrometry    February 1, 1978   Volume 5, Issue 2 170-173 doi: 10.1002/bms.1200050213
Houghton E, Oxley GA, Moss MS, Evans S.A method is described to confirm the presence of 19-nortestosterone metabolites in urine after the administration of veterinary preparations of this anabolic steroid to horses. The method is based upon the detection, by gas chromatography mass spectrometry or selected ion monitoring, of an isomer of estrane-3,17-diol in the urine.
Repair of physeal fractures of the tuber olecranon in the horse, using a tension band method.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1978   Volume 172, Issue 3 287-290 
Monin T.Physeal fractures of the tuber olecranon of 4 horses were treated, using the tension band method of compression fracture repair. A cortical bone screw and Steinmann pin were placed through the proximal fragment into the distal parent bone parallel to the palmar border of the olecranon. The tension band was placed dorsal to the Steinmann pin and anchored in a hole through the shaft of the ulna 10 cm distal to the tuber olecranon. Of the 4 foals, 2 became pasture sound, 1 is now being worked under saddle, and the 4th showed no signs of lameness 5 months after surgery.
Isolation of CEM organism.
The Veterinary record    January 21, 1978   Volume 102, Issue 3 67 doi: 10.1136/vr.102.3.67
Atherton JG.No abstract available
Dental problems in horses.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1978   Volume 59, Issue 1 67-68 
No abstract available
Surgical treatment of acute epistaxis associated with guttural pouch mycosis.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    January 1, 1978   Volume 73, Issue 1 67-69 
McIlwraith CW.No abstract available
The effect of acetylpromazine medication on red blood cell metabolism in the horse.
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1978   Volume 9, Issue 1 17-24 
Courtot D, Mouthon G, Mestries JC.No abstract available
Artifact production with micromanometers used to record intracardiac pressure and sound.
Catheterization and cardiovascular diagnosis    January 1, 1978   Volume 4, Issue 3 275-282 doi: 10.1002/ccd.1810040309
Brown CM, Holmes JR.In horses experimental right and left heart catheterization using a catheter with two microtransducers 9 cm apart, usually in a transvalval position produced pressure and sound artifacts that confounded the diagnosis. Most were probably due to malpositioning resulting in movement through a valve during recording or impingement on the valve cusps or the chordae tendineae or lodgement in the apex of the heart. The recognition of these artifacts is particularly important in studies of large animals in which catheter siting cannot be monitored by radiography.
The mini-pig as a model for penetration of penicillins.
Scandinavian journal of infectious diseases. Supplementum    January 1, 1978   Issue 14 135-142 
Bergan T, Versland I.To be active, antimicrobials must reach the bacteria in the infectious foci in adequate concentrations. Direct measurements of levels in the various foci are difficult to perform, but a number of animal models with artificial extravascular foci have been developed. In many ways, the physiology of pigs resemble that of humans. Consequently, it was thought that pigs might also parallel humans in the handling of penicillins. General pharmacokinetics of ampicillin and flucloxacillin and the penetration of the substances to subcutaneously implanted teflon tistisue chambers were investigated. Ampici...
Osteochondrosis in the horse. I. A clinical and radiologic investigation of osteochondritis dissecans of the knee and hock joint.
Acta radiologica. Supplementum    January 1, 1978   Volume 358 139-152 
Strömberg B, Rejnö S.The clinical and radiologic features of osteochondritis dissecans in the knee and hock joint of horses are described. The material includes 91 horses, of which 43 had the lesion in one or both knee joints, and 48 in one or both hock joints. It was found that osteochondritis dissecans of the knee joint was more common than the one in the hock joint in thoroughbreds and halfbreds, while the lesion in the hock joint was most common in standardbred trotters. In the knee the lesion was most often located to the lateral trochlear ridge. In the hock joint the predilection site was the intermediate ri...
General anesthesia in pleasure horses.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1978   Volume 68 Suppl 7 276-283 
Short CE, Brunson DB.Anesthetic management of the pleasure horse consists of the appropriate selection and administration of pre-anesthetic medications including anticholinergics, tranquilizers and narcotics followed by appropriate techniques of anesthetic induction. The anesthetic induction must vary somewhat for the pleasure horse practice since many of the procedures are completed on farms and ranches. As a result the inducing of anesthesia will frequently be with the same agent which will be used to maintain anesthesia. Noticeably will be the reduction and duration of anesthesia and surgical time. The inductio...
The lightcast system of limb immobilisation.
New Zealand veterinary journal    December 1, 1977   Volume 25, Issue 12 372 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1977.34460
Horney FD.No abstract available
Indirect mean blood pressure in the anesthetized pony.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 12 2055-2057 
Geddes LA, Chaffee V, Whistler SJ, Bourland JD, Tacker WA.No abstract available
Corneoconjunctival foreign body in a horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    December 1, 1977   Volume 72, Issue 12 1870-1871 
Peiffer RL.No abstract available
Veterinary examination for three-day-events.
New Zealand veterinary journal    December 1, 1977   Volume 25, Issue 12 391-392 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1977.34464
Oulaghan KA.No abstract available
Regional blood flow to the stomach and small intestine in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1977   Volume 38, Issue 12 2047-2048 
Reddy VK, Kammula RG, Randolph A, Graham TC, Srungaram SK.Studies on regional blood flow to the stomach and small intestine were performed in 9 anesthetized ponies. Carbonized microspheres (15 +/- 5 micron in diameter) labeled with 85Sr were injected into the left atrium to determine blood flow distribution. In 4 ponies, the regional flows to mucosal-submucosal layers of the stomach and the small intestine were also measured. The nonglandular region of the stomach received the least blood per 100 g of tissue, and the duodenum received the greatest. The regional blood flow to the duodenum was significantly higher than that to the glandular stomach reg...