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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.
Heterogeneity of horse transferrin: the role of carbohydrate moiety.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1984   Volume 15, Issue 2 89-101 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1984.tb01104.x
Stratil A, Tomásek V, Bobák P, Glasnák V.Homozygous horse transferrin (Tf O) is highly heterogeneous. In starch gel electrophoresis it gives at least 9 zones. Two main components (2a and 4b) were purified by rivanol and ammonium sulphate precipitation, DEAE-Sephadex chromatography and SP-Sephadex chromatography. Molecular weights of 75 200 and 80 500 for components 2a and 4b, respectively, were determined by sedimentation equilibrium ultracentrifugation. Amino acid compositions of the two components were similar, and there were no differences in the N-terminus (glutamic acid followed by glutamine) and the C-terminus (valine). Differe...
Efficacy of ivermectin in injectable and oral paste formulations against eight-week-old Strongylus vulgaris larvae in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 1 183-185 
Klei TR, Torbert BJ, Chapman MR, Turk MA.A controlled test method was used to evaluate the efficacy of injectable micelle and oral paste formulations of ivermectin (22,23-dihydroavermectin B1) against 8-week-old Strongylus vulgaris larvae in experimentally infected pony foals. The dosage level of the drug in both formulations tested was 0.2 mg/kg. Ponies were euthanatized and necropsied 5 weeks after treatment. Based on the recovery of live vs dead S vulgaris from mesenteric arteries, both formulations were greater than 99% effective. Increased weight gains and marked reductions in the severity of arterial lesions were observed in tr...
[An attempt at demonstrating the participation of autoaggressive processes in the pathogenesis of periodic eye inflammation in horses].
Polskie archiwum weterynaryjne    January 1, 1984   Volume 24, Issue 2 155-164 
Pomorski Z, Pinkiewicz E, Grzebuła S.In the studies attempts were to demonstrate the occurrence of immunological reactivity against antigens of the lens and tunica vascularis of the eye in periodical inflammation of eyes in horses. For this purpose antigens from the lens and tunica vascularis of the eye, prepared in our laboratory, were used in the experiments. The reactivity of horses with monthly symptoms of blindness against the above antigens was determined in vivo (skin tests and PCA) and in vitro (ID reaction). The results obtained mainly in skin tests account for its occurrence in some percentage of diseased animals, becau...
Investigations of the in situ bag technique and a comparison of the fermentation in heifers, sheep, ponies and rabbits.
Journal of animal science    January 1, 1984   Volume 58, Issue 1 213-221 doi: 10.2527/jas1984.581213x
Udén P, Van Soest PJ.Fiber fermentation using the in situ bag technique was studied in a hay-fed cow. Entry of fine particles into bags of varying pore size, the effect of sample size, rumen contractions, bag porosity and rumen contraction (bags suspended in vitro or in situ) and obstruction of liquid flow through the bag cloth were investigated (Exp. 1). In Exp. 2 fiber degradation in vitro and in situ with 5- and 37-micron pore size bags was measured utilizing six fistulated heifers (four large: 610 kg and two small: 243 kg), two sheep and two goats (30 kg), three ponies (130 kg) and four rabbits (3.2 kg). Degra...
[Monoclonal antibodies directed against equine blood group antigens].
Developments in biological standardization    January 1, 1984   Volume 57 77-83 
Metenier L, Grosclaude J, Meriaux JC.The chief application of blood typing in domestic animals is in the verification of parentage. However, the acquisition of good standardized reagents in sufficient quantity remains an obstacle for the development of this work. The production of monoclonal antibodies directed against blood group determinants offers an attractive means of improving both the quality and quantity of serological reagents, and could facilitate the definition of new specificities. Fusions between a mouse myeloma line and splenocytes from mice immunized with horse red cells have resulted in four hybridomas producing a...
Quantitation of serum phospholipase A2 by enzyme-diffusion in lecithin agar gels. A comparative study in man and animals.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1984   Volume 25, Issue 2 229-241 doi: 10.1186/BF03547267
Westermarck E, Lindberg LA, Sandholm M.A sensitive gel-diffusion assay for determination of phospholipase A was developed. PLA standards, serum, faecal and pancreas homogenate samples with PLA-activity were allowed to diffuse from wells into agar-gels containing lecithin-membranes. The turbidity cleared radially upon PLA-activity. The diameters of the cleared zones showed a linear relationship with the log of the enzyme concentration. Serum samples resulted in some turbidity within the cleared zones. This interference originating from serum lipoproteins could be abolished by hydrophobic absorption. The gel-diffusion method was comp...
Studies on ticks of veterinary importance in Nigeria. VIII. Differences observed in the biology of ticks which fed on different domestic animal hosts.
Folia parasitologica    January 1, 1984   Volume 31, Issue 1 53-61 
Dipeolu OO, Adeyefa CA.Ticks of the species Amblyomma variegatum (Fabr.), Boophilus decoloratus (Koch), Boophilus geigyi Aeschl. et Morel, and Hyalomma rufipes Koch were detached from cattle, sheep and horses and the influence of these various hosts on the biology of ticks was investigated. No A. variegatum was found in horses. The parameters studied were preoviposition and oviposition periods, ovipositional capacity, eclosion period, hatching patterns, egg sizes and temperature effect. Although the preoviposition and eclosion periods were similar in each tick species irrespective of the host from which the adults w...
The mechanism of Na+-L-lactate cotransport by brush-border membrane vesicles from horse kidney. Analysis by isotopic exchange kinetics of a sequential model and stoichiometry.
The Journal of biological chemistry    December 25, 1983   Volume 258, Issue 24 15071-15078 
Mengual R, Leblanc G, Sudaka P.The present study determines the characteristics of isotopic Na and lactate exchange under equilibrium conditions in horse kidney brush-border membrane vesicles. The influence of one solute (Na+ or lactate) on the isotopic exchange of the co-transported species (lactate or Na) was analyzed in detail. Analysis of the data suggests that Na and lactate interact sequentially with the carrier. The observed apparent symmetry between the activating effect of low Na concentrations and the inhibiting effect of high Na concentrations on the lactate exchange process suggests that the carrier functions ac...
Toxic hepatic failure in newborn foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 12 1407-1413 
Divers TJ, Warner A, Vaala WE, Whitlock RH, Acland HA, Mansmann RA, Palmer JE.Eight foals, 2 to 5 days of age, with similar clinical signs and laboratory and pathologic findings, died from hepatic failure. The predominant clinical signs were depression and icterus. Abnormally high values were found for plasma ammonia content, aromatic-to-branch-chain amino acid ratio, total serum bilirubin content, gamma glutamyl transferase activity, alkaline phosphatase activity, and PCV; partial thromboplastin time and prothrombin time were prolonged. Some foals had high sorbitol dehydrogenase activity. These laboratory findings were suggestive of subacute hepatic disease and failure...
A distinct environment for iron (III) in the complex with horse spleen apoferritin observed by x-ray absorption spectroscopy.
The Journal of biological chemistry    December 10, 1983   Volume 258, Issue 23 14076-14079 
Sayers DE, Theil EC, Rennick FJ.Cell-specific variations in apoferritin structure correlate with variations in iron metabolism that suggest functional specificity of the protein shell. Using EPR spectroscopy, we previously showed that vanadyl binds to specific sites on apoferritin, and that VO2+ binding is reduced by Fe(II) and Fe(III) (the natural substrates) and by metals known to influence iron storage (Chasteen, N. D., and Theil, E. C. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 7672-7677). Such observations suggest that the metal-binding site is important to apoferritin function and may define a location where the influence of cell-spec...
[Heart auscultation in the horse (evaluation and description of a new stethoscope)].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 5, 1983   Volume 90, Issue 12 521-523 
Kaemmerer H.No abstract available
[Therapy of dermatomycoses in the horse].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1983   Volume 96, Issue 12 458-459 
Mayer H.No abstract available
Isolation and partial characterization of equine alveolar macrophages.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 12 2379-2384 
Dyer RM, Liggitt HD, Leid RW.A device was constructed from an equine nasogastric tube, polyethylene tubing, and a 3-way stopcock and used to lavage the lungs of anesthetized ponies. The technique was safe and atraumatic in that 6.4 to 19.7 X 10(7) purified alveolar macrophages were removed from the lungs without harm to the ponies or contamination of the samples with blood. Studies of these highly purified cell suspensions revealed a mean viability of 85% as assessed by eosin dye exclusion with a mean recovery (+/- SD) of 12.5 +/- 4.8 X 10(7) pulmonary alveolar macrophages/pony.
Adverse reactions to antimicrobial agents in the horse.
Veterinary research communications    December 1, 1983   Volume 7, Issue 1-4 207-210 doi: 10.1007/BF02228620
English PB, Roberts MC.No abstract available
Morphological and functional aspects of experimental gentamicin nephrotoxicity in young beagles and foals.
Veterinary research communications    December 1, 1983   Volume 7, Issue 1-4 211-213 doi: 10.1007/BF02228621
Riviere JE, Hinsman EJ, Coppoc GL, Carlton WW, Traver DS.No abstract available
[Leptospirosis on the Island of Reunion. II. Animal leptospiroses].
Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique et de ses filiales    December 1, 1983   Volume 76, Issue 5 Pt 2 736-743 
Debarbat F, Mollaret HH, Mailloux M.Bovine leptospirosis is a typical form in the island of Reunion. It appears during the second part of the rain season. The clinical picture of equine leptospirosis is acute hepatonephritis. About 10 serogroups are found in bovines, with greater frequency for Sejroë and Hebdomadis. In horses, the prevailing serogroups are Autumnalis, Ballum, Icterohaemorrhagiae, Australis, Grippotyphosa.
Differential sensitivity of human, avian, and equine influenza A viruses to a glycoprotein inhibitor of infection: selection of receptor specific variants.
Virology    December 1, 1983   Volume 131, Issue 2 394-408 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(83)90507-x
Rogers GN, Pritchett TJ, Lane JL, Paulson JC.Human and animal (avian and equine) influenza A virus isolates of the H3 serotype exhibit marked differences in their ability to bind specific sialyloligosaccharide sequences that serve as cell surface receptor determinants (G. Rogers and J. Paulson, 1983, Virology 127, 361-373). Whereas human isolates of this subtype strongly agglutinate enzymatically modified human erythrocytes containing the terminal SA alpha 2,6Gal sequence, avian and equine isolates preferentially agglutinate erythrocytes bearing the SA alpha 2, 3Gal sequence. As shown in this report, a glycoprotein found in horse serum, ...
Succinylcholine infusion associated with hyperthermia in ponies anesthetized with halothane.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 12 2280-2284 
Hildebrand SV, Howitt GA.Succinylcholine was administered by infusion to halothane-anesthetized ponies to determine dosage requirements for surgical relaxation up to 3 hours' duration. This was not possible to do, since 4 of 6 ponies studied developed severe reactions characterized by prolonged muscle fasciculations after the initial succinylcholine dose, muscle rigidity, hyperthermia, hypercapnia, tachycardia, increasing pulse pressure, and metabolic acidosis. The reactions resembled those associated with malignant hyperthermia, a disease recognized in persons and swine. Two ponies showed signs of the phase II or des...
Myelopathy and vitamin E deficiency in six Mongolian wild horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 11 1266-1268 
Liu SK, Dolensek EP, Adams CR, Tappe JP.Degenerative myelopathy was diagnosed in six Mongolian wild horses. Three of the horses had a history of ataxia dating from birth to 3 months of age. The clinical signs were uncoordinated movement of the hindlimbs and an abnormally wide-based gait and stance. The other 3 horses had mild ataxia. There were no gross lesions in the brain, vertebrae, or spinal cord. Histologic examination revealed degeneration of the neural processes in the ventral and lateral funiculi of all 6 horses. Myelin sheaths were dilated and vacuolated, and there were swollen, fragmented, or lysed axons. Neuronal degenera...
Studies on prolactin: conformational comparison of human, equine, and porcine pituitary prolactins.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    December 1, 1983   Volume 227, Issue 2 618-625 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(83)90491-5
Bewley TA, Li CH.The conformations of human, equine, and porcine pituitary prolactins, as evidenced by various optical properties, have been compared. The alpha-helix contents of all three proteins are essentially identical to each other (60 +/- 5%), as well as to prolactins isolated from other mammalian species. Direct absorption (zero and second-order), difference absorption, fluorescence emission, and circular dichroism spectra suggest that the majority of tyrosine and tryptophan side chains in these three proteins exist in very similar microenvironments within the folded forms of the hormones. Thus, the ge...
Effectiveness of fenbendazole against later 4th-stage Strongylus vulgaris in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 12 2285-2289 
Slocombe JO, McCraw BM, Pennock PW, Baird JD.Twelve pony foals (reared worm-free) were inoculated with Strongylus vulgaris. Approximately 8 weeks later, 4 of the foals were given fenbendazole (10% suspension) at a dosage rate of 10 mg/kg of body weight daily for 5 days and 4 foals were given the suspension at a dosage rate of 50 mg/kg daily for 3 days; the remaining foals were given a placebo. All treatments were administered by stomach tube. Fenbendazole was 99.6 and 97.9% effective in the 2 treatment groups, respectively, in eliminating later 4th-stage S vulgaris larvae located near the origin of major intestinal arteries. On microscop...
[Antiluteolytic activity of embryos in various animal species].
Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale    November 30, 1983   Volume 59, Issue 11 1755-1761 
Zarrilli A, Lacalandra GM, Minoia P.In mare, sheep and bitch the action of PGF2 alpha have been studied in the early pregnancy. Prostin F2 alpha (Upjohn) and Gabbrostim (Vetem ) are commercial names of PGF2 alpha used at doses which are luteolytic in the non pregnant female. Seric progesterone showed a temporaneous decrease but after four or five days the initial values were restored and none of the experimental females aborted. In the opinion of authors, embryo per se and/or with its adnexa might have interacted blocking the mechanism of luteolysis induced by the administration of PGF2 alpha.
A common code of practice for the control of contagious equine metritis and other equine reproductive diseases for the 1984 covering season in France, Ireland and the United Kingdom.
The Veterinary record    November 26, 1983   Volume 113, Issue 22 512-515 doi: 10.1136/vr.113.22.512
No abstract available
Saprophytic fungi isolated from the hair of domestic and laboratory animals with suspected dermatophytosis.
Mycopathologia    November 21, 1983   Volume 83, Issue 2 65-73 doi: 10.1007/BF00436886
Aho R.Hair samples from domestic and laboratory animals with suspected dermatophytosis were examined for the presence of saprophytic fungi. A nutritionally poor base medium, developed by the author, was used in the isolation and identification of the saprophytes. Three hundred and ninety-four specimens were examined of which 246 were from dogs, 75 from cats, 30 from horses, 19 from cows, 12 from guinea pigs, 5 from rats, 2 from parakeets, 2 from chinchillas and one each from a goat, a mink and a lesser panda (Ailurus fulgens). Moulds classified in 32 genera were isolated. The commonest in order of f...
Role of the common house fly (Musca domestica) in the spread of ulcerative lymphangitis.
The Veterinary record    November 19, 1983   Volume 113, Issue 21 496-497 doi: 10.1136/vr.113.21.496
Addo PB.No abstract available
Abortion due to histoplasmosis in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 10 1097-1099 
Saunders JR, Matthiesen RJ, Kaplan W.No abstract available
Fibromatosis in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 10 1100-1102 
Ihrke PJ, Cain GR, Stannard AA.No abstract available
Black walnut toxicosis in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 10 1095 
Ralston SL, Rich VA.No abstract available
Congenital jejunal diverticulum in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 10 1092 
Yovich JV, Horney FD.No abstract available
Disseminated intravascular coagulation in six horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1983   Volume 183, Issue 10 1067-1072 
Morris DD, Beech J.Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) was diagnosed as a secondary disease in 6 horses. Four horses had localized and/or systemic sepsis, one horse had disseminated neoplasia, and one had idiopathic ulcerative enteropathy. The diagnosis of DIC was based on the finding of at least 3 of 4 abnormalities: thrombocytopenia, prolonged prothrombin time, prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time, and a high concentration of fibrinolytic degradation products. The most common clinical signs other than those attributable to the primary disease process were abnormal hemorrhage (4 hours) and v...