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Topic:Veterinary Research

Veterinary research in horses encompasses the study of diseases, health management, and medical treatments specific to equine species. This field investigates various aspects of horse health, including infectious diseases, metabolic disorders, and musculoskeletal conditions. Researchers focus on understanding the pathophysiology of equine ailments, developing diagnostic tools, and evaluating therapeutic interventions. The study of horse health also involves examining preventive measures such as vaccination protocols and nutritional management to promote overall well-being. This page collects peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the diverse areas of veterinary science related to horses, providing insights into disease mechanisms, treatment strategies, and advancements in equine healthcare.
Multicentric mast cell tumors in a horse.
Veterinary clinical pathology    April 24, 2010   Volume 39, Issue 3 365-370 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-165X.2010.00229.x
Millward LM, Hamberg A, Mathews J, Machado-Parrula C, Premanandan C, Hurcombe SD, Radin MJ, Wellman ML.A 6-year-old female Rocky Mountain horse was presented for evaluation of draining tracts and distal limb subcutaneous edema on the left front and left hind limbs that had been present for 2 weeks. Direct smears of fluid collected by fine-needle aspiration of subcutaneous fluid from both limbs were highly cellular with a predominance of eosinophils accompanied by numerous, moderately atypical, variably granulated mast cells. The cytologic diagnosis was mast cell tumor (MCT) with prominent eosinophilic infiltration with a differential diagnosis of eosinophilic granuloma. Histologic evaluation of...
Identification of cellular proteins interacting with equine infectious anemia virus S2 protein.
Virus research    April 24, 2010   Volume 151, Issue 2 235-239 doi: 10.1016/j.virusres.2010.04.007
Covaleda L, Gno BT, Fuller FJ, Payne SL.The macrophage-tropic lentivirus, equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV), encodes the small auxiliary protein S2 from a short open reading frame that overlaps the amino terminus of env EIAV S2 is dispensable for virus replication in cultured cells but is required for disease production. S2 is approximately 7 kDa and has no overall amino acid sequence homology to other cellular or viral proteins. Therefore it is likely that S2 plays a role as an adaptor protein. To further investigate S2 function we performed a yeast-2-hybrid screen to identify cellular proteins that interact with EIAV S2. The s...
Determination of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs residues in animal muscles by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Analytica chimica acta    April 24, 2010   Volume 672, Issue 1-2 85-92 doi: 10.1016/j.aca.2010.04.031
Jedziniak P, Szprengier-Juszkiewicz T, Olejnik M, Zmudzki J.A confirmatory method for the determination of residues of nine non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and one metabolite in animal muscles has been developed. After enzymatic hydrolysis samples were extracted with acetonitrile and cleaned up using alumina and C(18) SPE cartridges. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry was used for the separation and determination of analytes. The method was validated in bovine muscles, according to the Commission Decision 2002/657/EC criteria. Applicability of the method in the analysis of swine, horse and chicken muscles was checked by precision and ...
Comparison of the antioxidant effects of synovial fluid from equine metacarpophalangeal joints with those of hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate.
American journal of veterinary research    April 22, 2010   Volume 71, Issue 4 399-404 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.71.4.399
Müller AJ, Letelier ME, Galleguillos MA, Molina-Berríos AE, Adarmes HH.To evaluate the antioxidant effects of synovial fluid (SF) pooled from metacarpophalangeal joints of healthy horses and horses with various pathological conditions, and to compare then with the antioxidant effects of hyaluronic acid (HA) and chondroitin sulfate (CS). Methods: SF from 1 metacarpophalangeal joint was obtained from 42 horses immediately after humane slaughter. Samples were classified into 3 groups on the basis of origin: healthy joints or joints with chronically damaged cartilage or vascularly congested synovial membranes as detected via macroscopic evaluation. Methods: Antioxida...
Heat shock protein 70 gene expression in equine blastocysts after exposure of oocytes to high temperatures in vitro or in vivo after exercise of donor mares.
Theriogenology    April 22, 2010   Volume 74, Issue 3 374-383 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.02.020
Mortensen CJ, Choi YH, Ing NH, Kraemer DC, Vogelsang MM, Hinrichs K.Heat above homeothermy can be detrimental to embryonic development, and cells may produce heat shock proteins to try to mitigate these effects. The authors examined the developmental competence of equine oocytes after a single heat exposure (42 degrees C, 2 or 4 h) during early or late stages of in vitro maturation. Rates of nuclear maturation, cleavage after intracytoplasmic sperm injection, and advanced embryonic development (morula or blastocyst) were compared to those for unexposed controls. Concentrations of heat shock protein 70 (HSPA1A) mRNA were determined by real-time RT-PCR in result...
Treatment efficacy of trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole, pentoxifylline and altrenogest in experimentally induced equine placentitis.
Theriogenology    April 22, 2010   Volume 74, Issue 3 402-412 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.02.023
Bailey CS, Macpherson ML, Pozor MA, Troedsson MH, Benson S, Giguere S, Sanchez LC, Leblanc MM, Vickroy TW.The objective was to determine if long-term treatment with trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole (antimicrobial), pentoxifylline (anti-inflammatory/anti-cytokine) and altrenogest (synthetic progestin), would improve pregnancy outcome in mares with experimentally induced placentitis. Seventeen normal, pregnant pony mares were enrolled in the study at 280-295 d of pregnancy. Placentitis was induced in all mares by intra-cervical inoculation of Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus (10(7) CFU). Five mares served as infected, untreated control animals (Group UNTREAT). Twelve mares (Group TREAT) were inf...
Fat-suppressed spoiled gradient-recalled imaging of equine metacarpophalangeal articular cartilage. Olive J, D'Anjou MA, Girard C, Laverty S, Theoret C.The purpose was to evaluate the capacity of 1.5 T magnetic resonance (MR) imaging to assess articular cartilage in racehorses with naturally occurring metacarpophalangeal joint osteoarthritis. A sagittal, three-dimensional spoiled gradient-recalled echo (SPGR) with fat saturation (FS) sequence was acquired ex vivo on 20 joints. Following joint dissection, specific areas on the third metacarpal condyle were designated for subsequent sampling for histologic cartilage thickness measurement and modified Mankin scoring. Cartilage thickness was measured and cartilage signal intensity was also graded...
Severe anthrax outbreaks in Italy in 2004: considerations on factors involved in the spread of infection.
The new microbiologica    April 21, 2010   Volume 33, Issue 1 83-86 
Fasanella A, Garofolo G, Galante D, Quaranta V, Palazzo L, Lista F, Adone R, Jones MH.Anthrax is a disease of humans and animals caused by the encapsulated, spore-forming Bacillus anthracis. In Italy, anthrax is normally a sporadic disease. During the summer 2004, anthrax broke out in the Basilicata, in southern Italy, a region with a low prevalence of anthrax in which vaccination had been suspended since 1998. The disease involved several animals in few weeks and in a large area. Over 41 days, 81 cattle died, as well as 15 sheep, 9 goats, 11 horses and 8 deer. The Multiple-locus Variable-Number Tandem Repeats Analysis (MLVA) showed that all the 53 isolates belonged to the Clus...
Preface. International Committee of the Equine Reproduction Symposium.
Animal reproduction science    April 21, 2010   Volume 121, Issue 1-2S ix doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2010.04.177
Evans MJ.No abstract available
Histopathological characteristics of an ossifying fibroma formed in the maxilla of a racehorse.
Journal of equine science    April 21, 2010   Volume 21, Issue 1 7-10 doi: 10.1294/jes.21.7
Kodaira K, Muranaka M, Naito H, Ode H, Oku K, Nukada T, Katayama Y.A 1-year-old male thoroughbred racehorse experienced swelling of the left upper lip. The swelling was attributable to enlargement around the incisive bone of the interdental space posterior to the third incisor in the left maxilla. Even after two operations to reduce the bulk of the mass, it continued to increase in size. Dyspnea caused by stenosis of the nasal cavity forced us to perform euthanasia, and a pathological examination was conducted. Macroscopic examination of a section of the mass revealed the formation of multiple areas of solid fibrous tissue, and trabeculae within the incisive ...
Morphometry and abnormalities of the feet of Kaimanawa feral horses in New Zealand.
Australian veterinary journal    April 21, 2010   Volume 88, Issue 4 124-131 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2010.00554.x
Hampson BA, Ramsey G, Macintosh AM, Mills PC, de Laat MA, Pollitt CC.The present study investigated the foot health of the Kaimanawa feral horse population and tested the hypotheses that horses would have a large range of foot morphology and that the incidence of foot abnormality would be significantly high. Methods: Abnormality was defined as a variation from what the two veterinarian assessors considered as optimal morphology and which was considered to impact negatively on the structure and/or function of the foot. Fifteen morphometric variables were measured on four calibrated photographic views of all four feet of 20 adult Kaimanawa feral horses. Four morp...
A pendulum test as a tool to evaluate viscous friction parameters in the equine fetlock joint.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    April 21, 2010   Volume 188, Issue 2 204-209 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2010.03.016
Noble P, Lumay G, Coninx M, Collin B, Magnée A, Lecomte-Beckers J, Denoix JM, Serteyn D.An equine fetlock joint pendulum test was studied and the influence of post mortem time and intra-articular lipid solvent on the viscous frictional response examined. Fresh equine digits (group 1, n=6 controls; group 2, n=6 lipid solvent) were mounted on a pendulum tribometer. Assuming that pendular joint damping could be modelled by a harmonic oscillator fluid damping (HOFD), damping time (τ), viscous damping coefficient (c) and friction coefficient (μ) were monitored for 5h under experimental conditions (400N; 20°C). In all experiments, pendular joint damping was found to follow an expone...
[Usual values in veterinary haematology].
Revue francophone des laboratoires : RFL    April 18, 2010   Volume 2010, Issue 420 27-42 doi: 10.1016/S1773-035X(10)70419-6
Bellier S, Cordonnier N.The goal of this article is to present the technical aspects and the applications of the blood cells examination and haemostasis in dogs and cats. Technical realisation of blood counts, cytology of normal and abnormal blood cells and significance of the pathologic cell counts are successively treated. Distinctive features of cytology and cell counts in herbivores, horses and cattle, are detailed in a separate chapter.Difficulties of veterinary haematology lie in qualitative and quantitative differences between blood cells of various animal species.Bone marrow cells exploration is not performed...
Babesiosis in equines in Pakistan: a clinical report.
Veterinaria italiana    April 15, 2010   Volume 45, Issue 3 391-395 
Rashid A, Mubarak A, Hussain A.Equine babesiosis is a tick-borne haematological disease of equidae that can affect acutely, subacutely and chronically. The disease is manifested by intermittent fever, anaemia, icterus and haemoglobinuria. The authors describe the clinical, haematological and therapeutic aspects of babesiosis in equines at two units in Kotley and at two units in Jehlum of the Remount Veterinary and Farms Corps (RVFC). Animals on these units showed the signs of illness. On clinical examination, intermittent temperature, increased respiratory rate, anaemia, lacrimation, conjunctivitis and pale mucous membranes...
Do horses suffer from irritable bowel syndrome?
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 836-840 doi: 10.2746/042516409x474284
Hunter JO.Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) in man is not a single entity but has several causes. One of the most common forms has similarities with colic and laminitis in horses. Undigested food residues may pass from the small intestine into the colon where bacterial fermentation produces chemicals that lead to disease. In horses the consequences may be disastrous, but in healthy humans such malabsorption may not be harmful. After events such as bacterial gastroenteritis or antibiotic treatment, an imbalance of the colonic microflora with overgrowth of facultative anaerobes may arise, leading to malferme...
Effects of endotoxaemia and carbohydrate overload on glucose and insulin dynamics and the development of laminitis in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 852-858 doi: 10.2746/042516409x479027
Tóth F, Frank N, Chameroy KA, Bostont RC.Insulin resistance (IR) is a risk factor for pasture-associated laminitis in equids and alimentary carbohydrate overload may trigger laminitis. Whether glucose metabolism responses to carbohydrate overload are more pronounced in insulin-resistant horses requires further study. Objective: Horses pretreated with endotoxin to alter insulin sensitivity differ significantly in their glucose and insulin responses to carbohydrate overload. Methods: Horses (n=24) were divided into 3 groups. A lipopolysaccharide (LPS; n=8) group that received endotoxin as an 8 h 7.5 ng/kg bwt/h i.v. continuous rate inf...
Impact of reproductive efficiency over time and mare financial value on economic returns among Thoroughbred mares in central Kentucky.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 889-894 doi: 10.2746/042516409x456059
Bosh KA, Powell D, Neibergs JS, Shelton B, Zent W.There have been no studies reporting the impact of reproductive efficiency and mare financial value on economic returns. Objective: To explore the economic consequences of differences in reproductive efficiency over time in the Thoroughbred mare. Methods: Complete production records for 1176 mares were obtained. Production history and drift in foaling date were calculated. Multiple logistic regression was used to identify factors influencing the probability of producing a registered foal in 2005. The 'net present value' and 'internal rate of return' were calculated for economic scenarios invol...
Abnormal umbilical cord attachment sites in the mare: a review illustrated by three case reports.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 930-939 doi: 10.2746/042516409x471728
Wilsher S, Ousey J, Allen WR.Abnormal cord attachment can be a manifestation of an inappropriate fixation position of the conceptus in the uterus, or it may result from disorientation of the conceptus post fixation. The potential for this resulting in fetal and neonatal compromise is reviewed in the light of previous reports and to which 3 cases within the authors' experience are added.
Ultrasound B-scan image simulation, segmentation, and analysis of the equine tendon.
Medical physics    April 14, 2010   Volume 37, Issue 3 1038-1046 doi: 10.1118/1.3292633
Meghoufel A, Cloutier G, Crevier-Denoix N, de Guise JA.The hypothesis is that an imaging technique based on decompression and segmentation of B-scan images with morphological operators can provide a measurement of the integrity of equine tendons. Methods: Two complementary approaches were used: (i) Simulation of B-scan images to better understand the relationship between image properties and their underlying biological structural contents and (ii) extraction and quantification from B-scan images of tendon structures identified in step (i) to diagnose the status of the superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT) by using the proposed imaging technique...
Diabetes in the horse: a condition of increasing clinical awareness for differential diagnosis and interpretation of tests.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 841-843 doi: 10.2746/042516409x471412
Menzies-Gow N.No abstract available
Computed tomography of the upper cheek teeth in horses with infundibular changes and apical infection.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 872-876 doi: 10.2746/042516409x452143
Veraa S, Voorhout G, Klein WR.Infundibular changes are frequently encountered computed tomographic studies of the equine maxillary cheek teeth but the possible importance of this finding is not known. Infundibular caries is a possible cause for pulpitis and apical infection in some horses. Objective: To study the relationship between the 2 pathologies and the frequency of changes. Methods: The maxillary cheek teeth 108-208, 109-209 and 110-210 of 25 horses were evaluated using computed tomography and both the prevalence of infundibular and apical infection changes as the possible link with apical infection evaluated statis...
Epiphyseal cartilage canal blood supply to the metatarsophalangeal joint of foals.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 865-871 doi: 10.2746/042516409x437762
Olstad K, Ytrehus B, Ekman S, Carlson CS, Dolvik NI.It is presently unknown whether cartilage ischaemia plays any part in the pathogenesis of osteochondral fragmentation within the equine metatarsophalangeal joint, as no detailed studies on microcirculation in the area have been reported. Objective: To describe the developmental pattern of the blood supply to the epiphyseal growth cartilage in the metatarsophalangeal joint of foals. Methods: Eight Standardbred foals were sacrificed between birth and age 7 weeks to undergo a barium perfusion procedure to demonstrate vessels within growth cartilage canals of one hindlimb. The metatarso-phalangeal...
Reproductive performance measures among Thoroughbred mares in central Kentucky, during the 2004 mating season.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 883-888 doi: 10.2746/042516409x456068
Bosh KA, Powell D, Shelton B, Zent W.To improve efficiency at the farm level, a better understanding of how farm management factors impact reproductive performance is important. Objective: To assess reproductive efficiency and effectiveness among Thoroughbred mares in central Kentucky. Methods: A cohort of 1011 mares on 13 farms in central Kentucky was followed during the 2004 mating and 2005 foaling season. Information on farm level practices was collected via interviews with farm managers. Reproductive records were collected for each mare mated to obtain information on mare characteristics. The influence of mare age and status ...
Occult metastatic intestinal adenocarcinoma resulting in pathological fracture of the proximal humerus.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 915-917 doi: 10.2746/042516409x471421
Jann HW, Breshears MA, Allison RW, Pechman RD, Day J, Hart JC, Moorman VJ.Intestinal adenocarcinomas are rare but have been described in the literature. The present case is unusual in both its clinical presentation and in the distribution of metastatic lesions. The sequestrum formation and pathological fracture present are most commonly associated with osteomyelitis in horses and the details of the case highlight the need for differential diagnosis in these particular circumstances and of which clinicians should be aware.
Radiographic anatomy of the articular process joints of the caudal cervical vertebrae in the horse on lateral and oblique projections.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 895-902 doi: 10.2746/042516409x434107
Withers JM, Voûte LC, Hammond G, Lischer CJ.Plain radiography is the standard imaging technique for investigation of diseases associated with the articular process joints (APJ) of the caudal neck; however, the radiographic anatomy of these structures on both lateral and oblique radiographic projections has not previously been described in detail. Objective: To determine the optimal technique for obtaining oblique radiographs of the APJ of the caudal cervical vertebrae (C4-5, C5-6 and C6-7) and to provide a detailed description of their normal radiographic appearance, on both lateral and oblique radiographic projections. Methods: Radiopa...
Stabling causes a significant increase in the pH of the equine airway.
Equine veterinary journal    April 14, 2010   Volume 41, Issue 9 940-943 doi: 10.2746/042516409x474383
Whittaker AG, Love S, Parkin TD, Duz M, Hughes KJ.Regulation of pH homeostasis in the equine lung is poorly understood. Measurement of exhaled breath condensate (EBC) pH provided a simple, highly repeatable and noninvasive method for the longitudinal investigation of changes in airway pH in response to environmental changes. Stabling of horses was found to lead to a small (approximately 100-200 parts/billion) but significant (P < 0.001) increase in ambient ammonia concentration when compared to pasture. This increase in exposure to ambient ammonia concentration was associated with significant (P = 0.002) increases in EBC pH and exhaled amm...
A historical perspective of laminitis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 13, 2010   Volume 26, Issue 1 1-11 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2009.12.004
Heymering HW.The causes of laminitis are many-often interrelated, sometimes direct opposites. The history of laminitis has been a search for the cause or causes of laminitis and for effective treatment. Going in and out of fashion, many treatments have lasted for centuries, some for millennia, but very few have been proven.
80 causes, predispositions, and pathways of laminitis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 13, 2010   Volume 26, Issue 1 13-19 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2009.12.003
Heymering HW.For most of history, the causes of laminitis have been based on observations. In the last 30 years or so, however, the number of theories has exploded, with only a few being confirmed by experiments. This article highlights these theories.
Black walnut extract: an inflammatory model.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 13, 2010   Volume 26, Issue 1 95-101 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2009.12.007
Belknap JK.The black walnut extract (BWE) model was developed after the discovery that horses bedded on shavings from black walnut trees commonly developed laminitis. The first investigators that consistently induced laminitis with black walnut shavings established that it was only the heartwood of the tree that induced laminitis. The BWE model of laminitis has allowed investigators to determine many of the early pathologic signaling events likely to occur in the developmental and acute clinical stages of the disease process, and has brought inflammatory injury to the forefront of laminitis research. The...
Carbohydrate alimentary overload laminitis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 13, 2010   Volume 26, Issue 1 65-78 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2010.01.006
Pollitt CC, Visser MB.In acute laminitis, the suspensory apparatus of the distal phalanx fails at the lamellar dermal/epidermal interface. A grading system for the histopathology of laminitis is based on the consistent pattern of histologic changes to the secondary epidermal lamellae, basal cells, and basement membrane that occur as carbohydrate-induced laminitis develops. The actual trigger factors of carbohydrate-induced laminitis remain unidentified.