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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.
[Epidemiological situation of infectious anemia in Yugoslavia].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 3 131-132 
Petrović D, Zupancić Z, Jukić B.No abstract available
Studies on equine immunoglobulins. IV. Immunoglobulins of the donkey.
Immunology    January 1, 1975   Volume 28, Issue 1 187-197 
Allen PZ, Dalton EJ.Donkey IgGa was isolated in purified form from normal and immune donkey sera by column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. Isolated donkey IgGa and mixtures of (IgGa+IgGb) were used as antigens to prepare rabbit reagents specific for equine IgGa or IgGb. Antibodies present in sera obtained from a single donkey at various times during the course of hyperimmunization with BSA were isolated by immuno-adsorption. The class or subclass of immunoglobulins present among isolated, donkey anti-BSA antibodies was determined by use of specific rabbit anti-equine immunoglobulin reagents. The homologues of h...
Studies on the dynamics of Strongyloides egg release under stud conditions.
Folia parasitologica    January 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 4 341-344 
Hiepe T, Nickel S, Siebeke F.The eggs of Strongyloides westeri were found in the faeces of the foals from the 16th day of their life, with a peak in their numbers between the 30th and 40th day of life. Egg release ceased in all foals irrespective of their date of birth in the months July-August. Parallel examinations of the mares were negative. Recommendations for the control of strongyloidosis in foals are given.
Thermography in veterinary medicine.
Bibliotheca radiologica    January 1, 1975   Issue 6 231-236 
Strömberg B.Thermography in veterinary medicine has hitherto been proven to be a method of great value in the detection of orthopaedic lesions in racehorses. Lesions of the musculo-skeletal system affecting tendons, joints, bones and skeletal muscle can be demonstrated and documented at an early stage thereby preventing the development of more serious lesions.
Molecular properties of multiple forms of acid phosphatase from horse liver.
Acta biochimica Polonica    January 1, 1975   Volume 22, Issue 3 201-209 
Wasyl Z.1. Horse liver acid phosphatase was separated into two partially purified fractions differing in molecular weight (enzyme I about 100 00, enzyme II about 25 000). 2. Enzyme I was separated into several subfractions by DEAE-cellulose chromatography and isoelectric focusing. 3. Molecular weight, sedimentation coefficient and effective molecular radii were determined for acid phosphatases I and II by gel filtration and density-gradient centrifugation.
Arteria intercarotica caudalis and its homologue in the domestic animals.
Anatomischer Anzeiger    January 1, 1975   Volume 137, Issue 1-2 110-115 
Nanda BS, Getty R.The arteria intercarotica caudalis was observed to be present in the dog, horse and cat but was reticulated in the case of cattle, sheep, goat, and pig. The latter structure was a homologue of the former and represented an important intercarotid communication present in most of vertebrate.
Abnormal flexion of the corono-pedal joint or “contracted tendons” in unweaned foals.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1975   Volume 7, Issue 1 40-45 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1975.tb03227.x
Owen JM.A condition frequently misnamed "contracted tendons" is described in unweaned foals. Various theories regarding its aetiology are examined. Overfeeding and lack of exercise are suggested as being the most likely causes, leading to excessive growth of the long bones. An effective method of treatment is described. "Contracted tendons" in yearlings are also discussed.
Equine anti-hapten antibody. IX. IgM anti-lactose antibodies.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    January 1, 1975   Volume 114, Issue 1 Pt 1 99-101 
Chua MM, Morgan DO, Karush F.The immune response to a bacterial vaccine of Streptococcus faecalis (strain N) was characterized in all of the seven horses studied by the sustained production of about 90% IgM anti-lactose antibody over a period of 44 weeks with maximum values of the total antibody ranging from 4 mg/ml of serum to 12 mg/ml of serum. With respect to the binding of a lactose-containing ligand the association constants of the antibodies purified from sera obtained between 5 and 44 weeks fell in the range of 1 times 10-5 M-1 to 2 times 10-5 M-1. Not only was there no significant indication of maturation of a-fin...
[Effect of tranquilizer doping on the muscular activity on the sport horse. I. — Acepromazine (author’s transl)].
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1975   Volume 6, Issue 2 103-116 
Courtot D, Roux L, Mouthon G, Jeanin E.Doping with tranquilizers has appeared recently in horse-back riding sports. In this paper we study the effects of acepromazine, one of the main tranquilizers used, on various physiological and biochemical aspects of muscular activity (cardiac and respiratory rhythms, seric rates of glucose, urea, protein, creatine phosphokinase, glutamate oxalacetate transaminase, alkaline phosphatase). A low dose (0.02 mg/kg) of acepromazine is injected; the evolution of the variables is studied before and after a standardized effort. After the effort and during recuperation, acepromazine administration caus...
Experimental studies on osteoporosis.
Methods and achievements in experimental pathology    January 1, 1975   Volume 7 72-108 
Krook L, Whalen JP, Lesser GV, Berens DL.Nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism (NSH) defines a spontaneous and experimental disease in most domesticated and in some wild animals, caused by dietary calcium deficiency and/or phosphorus excess. Calcium deficiency results directly in hypocalcemia, and phosphorus excess induces hyperphosphatemia which causes hypocalcemia. Secondary hyperparathyroidism thus results and the plasma parameters return to normal and are maintained but only at the expense of progressive bone loss. The bone loss is generalized but the bones are not uniformly affected. The hierarchy of bone loss is, in decreas...
The indirect measurement of arterial blood pressure in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1975   Volume 7, Issue 1 22-26 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1975.tb03224.x
Ellis PM.An accurate modified auscultatory technique for the indirect measurement of arterial pressure in the horse is described. Limitations of the method were sensitivity to external motion in nervous, conscious horses, and the failure to detect Korotkoff sounds in shocked, anaesthetized surgical cases. The apparatus required for the method is expensive and is probably impractical for routine monitoring during anaesthesia.
Cytology of tracheobronchial aspirates in horses.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 3 157-164 doi: 10.1177/030098587501200301
Beech J.Tracheobronchial aspirates were obtained from 27 normal horses and from 57 horses with respiratory disease. Aspirates from normal horses contained mainly ciliated columnar epithelial cells, mononuclear cells, a few neutrophils and mucus. Aspirates from horses with acute suppurative bronchopneumonias or chronic bronchiolitis had predominantly neutrophils and usually large amounts of mucus; in severe suppurative inflammatory diseases, many of the cells were degenerated, and there were coils of fibrinous material resembling Curschmann's spirals. Eosinophils were rarely found, even from horses wit...
Arbovirus vector ecology studies in Mexico during the 1972 Venezuelan equine encephalitis outbreak.
American journal of epidemiology    January 1, 1975   Volume 101, Issue 1 51-58 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a112070
Sudia WD, Fernandez L, Newhouse VF, Sanz R, Calisher CH.Virus vector studies were conducted in the States of Durango, Chihuahua, and Tamaulipas, Mexico, in June and July 1972. Apparently only a low level of Venzuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) virus transmission to equines occured at the time of the study, and the infection was restricted to areas which had not experienced overt activity during the preceding year. The low level of infection was associated with a scarcity of mosquitoes. The IB (epidemic) strain of VEE virus was isolated from two pools of Anopheles pseudopunctipennis (Theo.) and the blood of one symptomatic equine. The low mosquito po...
Angiographic appearance of the normal equine foot and alterations in chronic laminitis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1975   Volume 166, Issue 1 58-62 
Ackerman N, Garner HE, Coffman JR, Clement JW.The angiographic appearance of the normal equine foot was compared with the appearance of equine feet affected with chronic laminitis. The normal foot was characterized by complete filling of the terminal arch, 8 to 10 main branches between 0.1 and 0.2 cm in diameter, a symmetrical netlike vascular pattern in the corium of the hoof, and numerous fine vessels in the corium of the coronary band. The feet affected with chronic laminitis were characterized by poor filling of the terminal arch, larger and less numerous primary branches, an irregular vascular pattern in the corium of the hoof, areas...
The normal electrocardiogram of the domestic pony.
Journal of electrocardiology    January 1, 1975   Volume 8, Issue 2 167-172 doi: 10.1016/s0022-0736(75)80025-2
Buss DD, Rwalings CA, Bisgard GE.Twelve-lead electrocardiograms (ECGs) were recorded from 52 resting mature female domestic grade ponies. Evaluation of the 50 ECG's ultimately selected for analysis revealed numerous differences from accepted normal values of horses. Among these differences are shorter durations of the P and QRS complexes as well as P-R and Q-T intervals and a lower amplitude of the P wave. Pony ECG's displayed a lower incidence of wandering pacemaker and complete absence of second degree atrioventricular block, in contrast to the relatively routine occurrence of these phenomena in the horse. The existence of ...
Spongy degeneration in the central nervous system of domestic animals. Part III: Occurrence and pathogenesis hepatocerebral disease caused by hyperammonaemia.
Acta neuropathologica    January 1, 1975   Volume 31, Issue 4 343-351 doi: 10.1007/BF00687929
Hooper PT.Severe spongy degeneration of the central nervous system (CNS) was seen in 11 cattle, 19 sheep, 4 pigs and 1 goat, associated with a variety of hepatic diseases, particularly those caused by hepatotoxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids. It was also seen in a milder form in 2 of 8 horses examined, 1 dog of 5 dogs examined, and in 1 rabbit only of a large number of laboratory animals examined. This paper reports results of experiments which confirmed initially that the CNS disease cold be caused by pyrrolizidine alkaloid intoxication. This was done by poisoning lambs with lasiocarpine. As the disease was...
Epidemic Venezuelan equine encephalitis in North America in 1971: vertebrate field studies.
American journal of epidemiology    January 1, 1975   Volume 101, Issue 1 36-50 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a112069
Sudia WD, McLean RG, Newhouse VF, Johnston JG, Miller DL, Trevino H, Bowen GS, Sather G.Epidemic Venezuelan equine encephalitis in North America in 1971: vertebrate field studies. Am J Epidemiol 101:36-50, 1975.-In June 1971, epidemic Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) invaded the lower Rio Grande Valley in south Texas. The Boca Chica area of Cameron County was selected as a study site to investigate vertebrate involvement in the natural cycle of epidemic VEE on the basis of considerable evidence of VEE virus activity there in equines, humans, and mosquito vectors. Only one VEE virus isolation was made from 4739 wild and domestic non-equine vertebrates, although numerous equine...
Castration and other factors affecting the risk of equine laminitis.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1975   Volume 65, Issue 1 57-64 
Dorn CR, Garner HE, Coffman JR, Hahn AW, Tritschler LG.The characteristics of a series of equine laminitis cases were compared with that of other Equidae examined at the University of Missouri Veterinary Hospital and Clinic during May, 1965 through December, 1971. The model age for ponies with laminitis was 7-9 years and for all other cases the model age was 4-6 years. Also the predominant age for mares was 4-6 years and for males was 7-9 years. After controlling for age and breed differences, there were significantly fewer castrated males among the affected males than expected (P small than 0.02), indicating that hormonal factors may play a role ...
Cobalt metabolism in horse. Serum level and biosynthesis of vitamin B12.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1975   Volume 16, Issue 1 84-94 doi: 10.1186/BF03546698
Salminen K.The levels of serum vitamin B were determined on 16 mature partly warm-blooded, partly Finnish rural-race horses by the radioisotopic competitive inhibition assay method. The mean value from three samplings carried out in dupli- or triplicate was 1.54 ± 0.16 ng/ml. The utilization of serum inorganic cobalt for cyanocobalamin synthesis was studied on two geldings, which received a dose of 200 µCi CoGl i.v. A Sephadex G-100 gel filtration was carried out with the serum proteins from serial blood samplings at different time intervals 15 min. to 48 hrs. after administration. The gel filtration s...
[Contribution to the antigenic study of influenza viruses in animals. II.–Antibodies, antineuraminidase in horse: conditions of apparition and importance (author’s transl)].
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1975   Volume 6, Issue 4 411-420 
Fontaine M, Fontaine M.In the first part of this paper the conditions for a specific titration of antibodies against the neuraminidase (N) of each of the two horse virus subtypes are defined. The antigens used are: the H72Neq 1 recombining agent to measure the anti Neq1 antibodies and the A/Duck/Ukraine/63 strain for the anti Neq2 antibodies. The immunity response to neuraminidase appears after the natural disease; this response is studied in two foci, one due to a virus belonging to the A equi I subtype (Loire 73 strain), the other to a virus of the A equi 2 subtype (SHN 73 strain). The kinetics of apparition of an...
Cardiac output in the conscious and anaesthetised horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1975   Volume 7, Issue 1 16-21 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1975.tb03223.x
Hillidge CJ, Lees P.Cardiac output in the horse was measured before and at predetermined times during 2-hour periods of thiopentone-halothane and thiopentone-diethyl ether anaesthesia. Left ventricular stroke volume was decreased to a similar extent during anaesthesia with each volatile agent, but a greater reduction in cardiac output occurred during halothane anaesthesia. This finding reflected the differing effects of halothane and ether on heart rate, a slight bradycardia occurring with the former agent while ether produced a small degree of tachycardia. The latter effect was attributed to enhanced sympathoadr...
Double diffusion in gel tests with Paul-Bunnell antibodies of infectious mononucleosis sera.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1975   Volume 48, Issue 1 82-93 doi: 10.1159/000231294
Milgrom F, Loza U, Kano K.Double diffusion tests in gel were employed for studies of reactions between infectious mononucleosis sera and extracts of bovine, sheep and equine erythrocyte stromata. The extracts were obtained by ultrasonication of stromata prepared from trypsin-digested erythrocytes. The reaction with bovine stroma extract was composed, in many instances, of two lines. A single line was observed in reactions with sheep and equine stroma extracts. This line merged into a reaction of partial or complete identy with one of the lines formed with bovine stroma extract. Evidence was obtained that some infectioo...
[Membrane-proliferative diffuse glomerulonephritis in the horse].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 15, 1974   Volume 81, Issue 24 618-619 
Kádas I, Százados I.No abstract available
Letter: louping ill infection in the horse.
The Veterinary record    December 7, 1974   Volume 95, Issue 23 540 doi: 10.1136/vr.95.23.540-a
Timoney PJ, Donnelly WC, Clements C, Fenlon M.No abstract available
Clinical chemistry in equine practice. Examination of synovial and peritoneal fluids.
Modern veterinary practice    December 1, 1974   Volume 55, Issue 12 957-960 
Coffman JF.No abstract available
Sodium and chloride transport across the equine cecal mucosa.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1974   Volume 35, Issue 12 1511-1514 
Giddings RF, Argenzio RA, Stevens CE.No abstract available
Induction of ovulation and multiple ovulation in seasonally-anovulatory mares with equine pituitary fractions.
Theriogenology    December 1, 1974   Volume 2, Issue 6 133-141 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(74)90063-6
Douglas RH, Ginther OJ, Nuti L.No abstract available
Circulating thyroid levels in dogs, horses and cattle.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    December 1, 1974   Volume 69, Issue 12 1531-1533 
Kelley ST, Oehme FW.No abstract available
[Glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase in stallion semen and its relation to other qualities of the spermatozoa. 2. Effect of castration on GOT contenet of stallion ejaculate].
Zuchthygiene    December 1, 1974   Volume 9, Issue 4 170-171 
Hillmann KH, Treu H.No abstract available
Isolation, purification and biological properties of horse precipitating and non precipitating antibodies.
Immunochemistry    December 1, 1974   Volume 11, Issue 12 765-770 doi: 10.1016/0019-2791(74)90295-x
Cordal ME, Margni RA.No abstract available