Analyze Diet

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.
The effect of semen extenders and sperm number on mare fertility.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 95-98 
Pickett BW, Voss JL.No abstract available
Plasma progestagens in the pregnant mare in the first and last 90 days of gestation.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 435-439 
Burns SJ, Fleeger JL.Plasma progestagens were measured in eighteen pregnant mares to establish normal levels in the first and last 90 days of gestation. Progestagens increased from 25 ng/ml at 90 days before birth to 60 ng/ml at 10 days before birth, decreased to 58 ng/ml at 5 days before, and were 3 ng/ml or less by 5 days after perturition. During the first 90 days of pregnancy, progestagens reflected luteal activity with an increase in plasma levels from Day 30 to Day 60.
A review of the influence of nutrition upon the oestrous cycle and early pregnancy in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 167-169 
Belonje PC, van Niekerk CH.Attention is drawn to the beneficial effect of improved nutrition during winter and early spring on the ovarian activity of mares. Furthermore, the necessity of an adequate plane of nutrition during early pregnancy to prevent embryonic resorption is stressed.
Pelviscopy in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 319-321 
Heinze H.A method of endoscopic examination of the internal genital (pelvic) organs of the mare is described. Special emphasis is placed on the induction of artificial pneumoperitoneum and the installation of an endoscopic peritoneal fistula device for prolonged observation. The potential of pelviscopy in the mare as a diagnostic aid, a new device for research in equine reproduction and as an auxillary aid to teaching is discussed.
Proceedings: Influence of etorphine acepromazine and diprenorphine on respiratory function in ponies.
British journal of pharmacology    October 1, 1975   Volume 55, Issue 2 269P 
Hillidge CJ, Lees P.No abstract available
The effect of HCG on duration of oestrus, ovulation time and fertility in mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 297-301 
Voss JL, Sullivan JJ, Pickett BW, Parker WG, Burwash LD, Larson LL.Two experiments were conducted to determine the effects of HCG on duration of oestrus, dioestrus, the length of the oestrous cycle, the time of ovulation and fertility in non-lactating mares. In the first experiment, the injection of HCG was repeated for three successive cycles. Mares injected with 2000 i.u. HCG on Day 2 of oestrus during their first cycle had a shorter oestrus and ovulated sooner than untreated control mares, but in the third cycle, treated mares had a longer oestrus and ovulated longer after the onset of oestrus than controls. In the second experiment, one intramuscular inje...
Plasma progestagens in pregnant mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 419-424 
Holtan DW, Nett TM, Estergreen VL.Peripheral plasma progestagens were quantified by a competitive protein-binding assay throughout pregnancy. The level of progesterone increased significantly between Days 0 and 8 (P less than 0-05) and again between Days 28 and 44 and reached a maximum on Day 64. Subsequently, it fell slowly until about Day 300 and then rose again during the last 30 days before reaching a minimum on the day after foaling. Very low concentrations of 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone were found except between Days 40 and 120 and during the last 30 days before birth. Two unidentified compounds, one eluting slightly bef...
Aspects of respiration in anaesthetized newborn foals.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 681-684 
Littlejohn A.The arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) in clinically normal newborn foals at 1300 m above sea-level is considerably lower (less than 60 mmHg) than in similarly aged foals at lower altitudes. This figure is further reduced to less than 50 mmHg without adverse effect in newborn foals at 1300 m maintained under pentobarbitone anaesthesia for prolonged periods. Measurement of O2 dissociation curves indicates that haemoglobin becomes saturated at a lower blood O2 tension in newborn foals than adult horses.
Early embryonic development in the horse.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 495-498 
van Niekerk CH, Allen WR.No abstract available
The use of Gn-RH for controlling the oestrous cycle of the mare (preliminary report).
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 275-277 
Heinze H, Klug E.Clinical tests with synthetic gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (Hoechst) were made during the breeding seasons of 1973 and 1974, using 128 mares injected with 1-0 to 4-0 mg of the substance intramuscularly. The mares were placed in one of five groups based on ovarian condition determined by clinical evidence. Some success was obtained in the induction of ovulation in mares with inactive and sub-normally active ovaries and in a small group having cystic ovaries. A large proportion of mares having a mature follicle responded within 48 hr, but others with atretic follicles failed to respond. The u...
Follicular and luteal development in pregnant mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 429-433 
Squires EL, Ginther OJ.Examination of the ovaries of mares at various stages of pregnancy and after hysterectomy, together with measurement of progesterone concentrations in the peripheral plasma of pregnant and hysterectomized mares and in uterine and ovarian venous plasma of pregnant mares, demonstrated that the primary CL of pregnancy remains functional until at least Day 160 of gestation. The results showed that primary and secondary CL, and the placenta or uterus, all contribute to the total progesterone pool in mares during pregnancy. Similarities and differences in ovarian function observed between pregnant a...
The influence of intrauterine saline infusion on luteal function and cyclical activity in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 235-239 
Neely DP, Hughes JP, Stabenfeldt GH, Evans JW.Intrauterine saline infusion in the dioestrous mare shortened the ovulatory interval by inducing premature luteolysis. Plasma progestagen levels began to decrease approximately 1 day after the infusion and had declined to less than 1-0 ng/ml in 4 days. The CL, including others formed from ovulations during dioestrus, must be 4 to 5 days old before intrauterine saline will induce luteolysis. Of 10 mares infused on Day 4 or 5 after ovulation, only six had a shortened ovulatory interval. Of 10 mares infused on Day 6 or 7 after ovulation, seven had a shortened ovulatory interval and three failed t...
[Causative agents of dermatomycosis in horses].
Veterinariia    October 1, 1975   Issue 10 49-51 
Petrovich SV.No abstract available
Studies on fetal, neonatal and maternal cortisol metabolism in the mare.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 625-630 
Nathanielsz PW, Rossdale PD, Silver M, Comline RS.Fetal plasma cortisol concentrations (mean +/- S.E.M.) in ten animals with indwelling umbilical catheters ranged from 13-9 +/- 1-5 ng/ml (227 to 244 days) to 18-1 +/- 2-2 ng/ml (290 to 310 days). Maternal values did not change over this period (15-9 +/- 1-7 ng/ml). Fetal cortisol production rates in two fetuses were 3-6 and 3-8 mg/kg/day at 291 days; there was little placental transfer of cortisol. In three fetuses (319 to 321 days) plasma cortisol values 1 to 10 days before birth were higher (30 to 50 ng/ml) than in any other group, and at birth the values were comparable with those found in ...
Some aspects of endometrial cup formation and PMSG production.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 415-418 
Spincemaille J, Bouters R, Vandeplassche M, Bonte P.Two females of heterosexual pairs of chimaeric horse twins were fertilized by their co-twin brother and PMSG production examined during gestation. Four pregnancies developed in one mare and two in the other. The levels of PMSG were high in both mares and remained detectable in the peripheral blood until 220 and 265 days of gestation. The fetal membranes of one mare contained remnants of cup secretion with PMSG activity at term. The findings support the thesis of Allen & Moor (1972) that the endometrial cups are of fetal origin and that they are destroyed by immunological mechanisms.
Ejaculatory disorders of the stallion.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 123-128 
Rasbech NO.Ejaculatory disorders of the stallion seem to occur more frequently than hitherto accepted. The condition is manifested differently in individual stallions from normal copulation without ejaculation to an abnormal pattern of copulation without or with occasional ejaculation. The condition is probably caused by a functional disturbance of the nervous mechanism which controls the ejaculatory process, and may be caused by environmental or other factors. Eleven cases of ejaculatory disorders in normal healthy stallions were investigated and three of these animals recovered after simple correction ...
Ultrastructural development of the equine placenta.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 575-578 
Samuel CA, Allen WR, Steven DH.Microcotyledons, which are a distinctive feature of the mature equine placenta, are fully formed by Day 150 of gestation. The fetal component of each microcotyledon is developed from several primary folds of trophoblast which become elaborately subdivided as gestation proceeds. These changes are reflected in the structure of the maternal crypts, which receive the fetal villi. Between Days 60 and 150 of gestation the maternal epithelium is greatly reduced in height. No such change occurs on the fetal side of the placenta, but between Days 100 and 250 a progressive indentation of the epithelium ...
Plasma progestagens and oestrogens in fetus and mother in late pregnancy.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 617-623 
Barnes RJ, Nathanielsz PW, Rossdale PD, Comline RS, Silver M.Normal Thoroughbred and catheterized Pony mares and their fetuses were used. Fetal oestrogen and progestagen concentrations in late gestation were much higher than maternal values. A major feature of the umbilical steroid concentrations was a large venous-arterial difference in progestagens and total oestrogens throughout late gestation which may indicate a metabolic cycle in the fetus between progesterone and other steroid metabolites. Metabolites of 20alpha-dihydroprogesterone were present in high concentrations in maternal and fetal plasma. In Thoroughbreds, and to a lesser extent in Pony m...
The influence of fetal genotype upon endometrial cup development and PMSG and progestagen production in equids.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 405-413 
Allen WR.The influence of fetal genotype upon gonadotrophin (PMSG) and progestagen production in mares and donkeys during the first half of pregnancy was examined. The production of PMSG was greatly reduced in mares carrying mule conceptuses and greatly increased in donkeys carrying hinny conceptuses. Fetal genotype had no obvious influence upon progestagen production in mares, but donkeys carrying hinny conceptuses showed extremely high peripheral plasma progestagen concentrations when serum PMSG levels were elevated. Fetal genotype profoundly influences the intensity and rate of success of the matern...
Early pregnancy testing and its relationship to abortion.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 485-488 
Irwin CF.A total of 487 Standardbred and Thoroughbred mares at two studs were manually tested for pregnancy at 20 to 24, 30 to 34, and greater than 42 days after service and the abortion rate compared to that obtained in previous years when only the greater than 42-day test was performed. The results indicated that early manual pregnancy testing does not increase the abortion rate if undertaken carefully and enables non-pregnant mares to be re-mated earlier in the same season.
Immature germ cells in the semen of thoroughbred stallions.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 135-137 
Swerczek TW.Small but significant numbers of primary and secondary spermatocytes and spermatids have been observed in the semen of some Thoroughbred stallions. Extensive histological examination of the testes of affected animals has not been undertaken but in one young stallion which died as the result of a leg injury, the premature dehiscence of these cells seemed to be related to segmental defects within the seminiferous tubules. The causes of lesions leading to premature shedding of germ cells are discussed.
Effects of acetylpromazine on ventilatory variables in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 10 1439-1442 
Muir WW, Hamlin RL.The influence of breathing various concentrations of carbon dioxide and oxygen upon minute volume, tidal volume, and respiratory rate were examined in acetylpromazine-tranquilized horses. Responses in the horses before (control period) and after tranquilization were qualitatively similar to increases in carbon dioxide and to alterations in oxygen. The quantitative responses to these changes were less in tranquilized horses than in the same horses studied in the untranquilized state. Tranquilization had its most prominent effect upon respiratory rate in horses breathing room air.
The effect of a corticosteroid (dexamethasone), progesterone, oestrogen and prostaglandin F2alpha on gestation length in normal and ovariectomized mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 637-640 
Alm CC, Sullivan JJ, First NL.Dexamethasone (100 mg/day) injected from Days 318 to 324 of pregnancy induced parturition. Progesterone (500 mg/day) administered daily from Day 318 of pregnancy also shortened gestation while oestrogen (50 mg/day) administered on the same schedule as progesterone had no such effect. Dexamethasone treatment superimposed on the oestrogen or progesterone treatments shortened gestation. Prostaglandin F2alpha alone did not induce parturition, unlike PGF2alpha with dexamethasone, or PGF2alpha given to ovariectomized mares.
Factors influencing foaling percentages in Australian mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 477-483 
Osborne VE.Foaling figures for Thoroughbred mares in Australia show a puzzling disparity between conception and foaling rates in the second half of the 22 years of official data collection between 1950 and 1972. In the first 9 years of the survey, the live foal percentages rose in parallel with conception rates, but then a divergence of the figures occurred with the conception rate continuing to improve by 6-25% while the foaling rate improved by only 0-01% over the same period. An hypothesis supported by data from two studs is considered that stress factors additional to those experienced by mares in th...
Neuropathology of the convulsive foal syndrome.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 691-694 
Palmer AC, Rossdale PD.Brains from eighteen Thoroughbred foals suffering from the convulsive foal syndrome were examined neuropathologically and compared with brains from nine foals dying from different causes. In the brains of nine convulsive foals there was necrosis of the cerebral cortex, accompanied in three by severe necrosis of the diencephalon and brain stem; haemorrhage into the cerebral cortex was also present in most of this group. In the other nine brains from convulsive foals there was haemorrhage, often severe, especially in the white and grey matter of the cerebral cortex and in the cerebellum. Minimal...
Carbohydrate oxidation and antibody function in equine anti-diphtheria immunoglobulin T.
Immunochemistry    October 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 10 795-800 doi: 10.1016/0019-2791(75)90142-1
Buchowicz I, Zakrzewski K.No abstract available
Endometritis, a common cause of infertility in mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 353-356 
Varadin M.Infertility, resulting from failure to conceive during the preceding breeding season, was caused by various forms of endometritis in forty-four mares of Highland and Arabian breeds in Yugoslavia. Chronic mucopurulent and latent catarrhal endometritis occurred most frequently. Douching of the uterus on alternate days for 9 days with warm and cold sterile salt solutions (ranging from 7% to 1% w/v) in the early autumn resulted in conception in 47-7% of mares at an average of 15-2 days after the onset of treatment, and another 36-7% becoming pregnant in the following spring. Mating at the wrong st...
[Production of antirickettsial sera by immunizing horses. II. Obtaining and testing an immune serum to D. sibericus].
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    October 1, 1975   Issue 10 27-31 
Barban PS, Gol'din RB, Misenzhnikov AV, Prusakova ZM, Pantiukhina AN.The authors present the results of immunization of horses-producers with a commercial antigen and the yolk culture of the living R. sibericus (strain K1) for the purpose of obtaining specific immune sera for many purposes. It was shown that the original combined scheme of immunization and reimmunization of horses, successfully approved in the preparation of immune sera to Rickettsia prowazeki also proved to be highly effective for obtaining the antisera to R. sibericus. Sera obtained after the primary immunization of horses could be successfully used as diagnostic sera, but they were of no use...
Evaluation of xylazine as a sedative and preanesthetic agent in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 10 1421-1429 
McCashin FB, Gabel AA.Xylazine administered intramuscularly (IM) to horses at the dose level of 2 mg/kg was an effective sedative and preanesthetic for thiamylal sodium narcosis or thiamylal sodium and halothane anesthesia. Evaluation of response of cardiovascular, respiratory, and hepatic function did not indicate serious untoward effects, although cardiac and respiratory rate decreased, calculated vigor of left ventricular contraction decreased, calculated peripheral vascular resistance increased, and transient innocuous cardiac arrhythmias occurred. Effects of the anesthetics used on respiratory function (blood ...
Infection of the horse fetus.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 605-610 
Platt H.Many infections of the equine placenta and fetus result from ascending spread along the cervical canal. Most abortions due to infection occur during the later stages of pregnancy and the possible effects of intrauterine infection on the developing fetus and young foal are discussed.