Analyze Diet

Topic:Veterinary Science

Veterinary science and horses encompass the study and application of medical, surgical, and therapeutic practices to maintain and improve the health and welfare of equines. This field addresses a wide range of topics, including disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment, as well as nutrition, reproduction, and behavior. Research in veterinary science for horses often involves understanding the pathophysiology of equine-specific diseases, developing advanced diagnostic techniques, and improving treatment protocols. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various aspects of veterinary science related to horses, providing insights into the latest advancements and methodologies in equine healthcare.
The development of microcracking and failure in bone depends on the loading mode to which it is adapted.
The Journal of experimental biology    February 4, 1999   Volume 202, Issue Pt 5 543-552 doi: 10.1242/jeb.202.5.543
Reilly GC, Currey JD.During locomotion, the anterior cortex of the equine radius is loaded predominantly in tension, the posterior predominantly in compression. The anterior cortex is relatively strong in tension, the posterior in compression. We investigated the pattern of failure of specimens from the two cortices using laser scanning confocal microscopy. All specimens were loaded in four-point bending to increasingly higher loads. We quantified the amount of diffuse microcracking on the tensile side of these specimens by observing the amount of light emitted under laser illumination. The amount of light emitted...
[The bringing of the latest technology to the evolution of horse shoeing, from its origin to our time].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    February 3, 1999   Volume 141, Issue 1 3-9 
Chuit P.No abstract available
Sarcoplasmic reticulum responses to repeated sprints are affected by conditioning of horses.
Journal of animal science    February 3, 1999   Volume 76, Issue 12 3065-3071 doi: 10.2527/1998.76123065x
Wilson JA, Kronfeld DS, Gay LS, Williams JH, Wilson TM, Lindinger MI.Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) responses to repeated sprints and to physical conditioning were studied in 10 Quarter Horses. Exercise tests (four repeated sprints on a treadmill) were conducted before and after 12 wk of sprint conditioning. Muscle samples from the middle gluteal muscle were taken before and after each exercise test, and SR vesicles were isolated. Calcium uptake was determined spectrophotometrically using antipyrylazo III, and Ca2+-ATPase activity was determined using an enzyme-linked optical assay. Conditioning increased calcium uptake rate and Ca2+-ATPase activity by 14 and 38%,...
Variability of oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) in different animal species.
Free radical research    January 30, 1999   Volume 29, Issue 5 399-408 doi: 10.1080/10715769800300441
Ninfali P, Aluigi G.The oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) was measured both in whole (ORAC-T) and deproteinized (ORAC-AS) plasma samples of human, pig, cow, rabbit, dog, cat, sheep, horse, dolphin, turkey, guinea-hen and chicken. In the 12 species, ORAC-T data, expressed as micromoles of peroxyl radicals trapped by 11 of sample, were found scattered between 8,600 and 23,000 micromol/l. The species with the highest ORAC-T values were cat among mammals and chicken among avies. ORAC-AS values ranged between 600 and 2000 micromol/l, with the highest values found in dolphin and sheep among mammals, while chick...
Two SINE families associated with equine microsatellite loci.
Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society    January 29, 1999   Volume 10, Issue 2 140-144 doi: 10.1007/s003359900959
Gallagher PC, Lear TL, Coogle LD, Bailey E.BLAST searches of 61 equine microsatellite sequences revealed two related families of retroposons. The first family included seven markers, all of which showed significant homology to the Equine Repetitive Element-1 (ERE-1) Short Interspersed Nucleotide Element (SINE) sequence. Length of homology ranged from 76 to 171 bases with identities to the ERE-1 consensus sequence ranging from 71% to 83%. The second family referred to as Equine Repetitive Element-2 (ERE-2) has a consensus sequence that showed homology to ERE-1 over approximately 60 bases. These 60 bases comprised subunit I. Sequence com...
Eight new equine dinucleotide repeat microsatellites at the NVHEQ26, NVHEQ29, NVHEQ31, NVHEQ40, NVHEQ43, NVHEQ90, NVHEQ98 and NVHEQ100 loci.
Animal genetics    January 12, 1999   Volume 29, Issue 6 470 
Røed KH, Midthjell L, Bjørnstad G.No abstract available
Fourteen new polymorphic equine microsatellites.
Animal genetics    January 12, 1999   Volume 29, Issue 6 469-470 
George LA, Miller LM, Valberg SJ, Mickelson JR.No abstract available
Mitochondrial control region and 12S rRNA variation in Przewalski’s horse (Equus przewalskii).
Animal genetics    January 12, 1999   Volume 29, Issue 6 456-459 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.1998.296380.x
Oakenfull EA, Ryder OA.Variation in the control region and the 12S rRNA gene of all surviving mitochondrial lineages of Przewalski's horse was investigated. Variation is low despite the present day population being descended from 13 individuals probably representing animals from three different regions of its range. Phylogenetic comparison of these sequences, with sequences for the domestic horse, does not resolve the ancestral status of either horse.
Performance and management of draught animals in agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa: a review.
Tropical animal health and production    January 9, 1999   Volume 30, Issue 5 309-324 doi: 10.1023/a:1005059308088
Pearson RA, Vall E.Use of animal power generally enables farmers in sub-Saharan Africa to increase agricultural production and improve the quality of life. Effective use of working animals depends on an understanding of the capabilities of the animals for work, their husbandry requirements and the factors which can influence their performance. These issues are reviewed in this paper in the context of the use of animal power in agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa. The type of animal used for work determines power available to the farmer. The performance of donkeys, horses and cattle have been compared in work tests...
Availability of equine medicines.
The Veterinary record    January 9, 1999   Volume 143, Issue 23 643 
Mantell JA.No abstract available
Exercise affects digestibility and rate of passage of all-forage and mixed diets in thoroughbred horses.
The Journal of nutrition    December 30, 1998   Volume 128, Issue 12 Suppl 2704S-2707S doi: 10.1093/jn/128.12.2704S
Pagan JD, Harris P, Brewster-Barnes T, Duren SE, Jackson SG.Most digestibility studies in horses have been conducted with idle horses confined to metabolism stalls. The values obtained from such studies are used for all classes of horses, including the performance horse. It has not been clearly established whether exercise affects digestibility. Olsson and Ruudvere (1955), summarizing a number of earlier studies, suggested that digestion may be affected in horses by work or exercise in such a way that it is improved by light exercise and inhibited by heavy work. Orton et al. (1985) reported reduced retention time of a particulate marker in yearling ...
[New drugs for horses and agriculturally useful animals and changes in the pharmaceutical market since 1996].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    December 19, 1998   Volume 26, Issue 6 301-306 
Kluge K, Ungemach FR.No abstract available
Observations on African horse sickness in Saudi Arabia.
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    December 16, 1998   Volume 17, Issue 3 777-780 doi: 10.20506/rst.17.3.1132
al-Afaleq AI, Abu Elzein EM, Hassanein MM.The present epidemiological status of African horse sickness in Saudi Arabia, as shown by seroconversion, virus isolation and clinical observation of sentinel horses is described. No African horse sickness virus activity was detected throughout the duration of the study (from November 1992 to March 1995). These findings support previous reports that African horse sickness is not endemic in Saudi Arabia.
A review of leptospirosis in farm animals in Portugal.
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    December 16, 1998   Volume 17, Issue 3 699-712 doi: 10.20506/rst.17.3.1128
Rocha T.This paper presents a review of Leptospira infection in farm animals in Portugal which is based mainly on serological results obtained in the National Veterinary Research Laboratory between January 1987 and December 1993. Serum samples were tested by the microscopic agglutination test, at a minimum dilution of 1:100. Positive titres were obtained in 15.3% of the 9,543 bovine samples examined. Sejroe, Pomona, Hebdomadis, Tarassovi and Icterohaemorrhagiae were the principal serogroups which reacted in the tests. A total of 3,195 pigs were tested, of which 20.2% showed positive reactions. The mai...
The 2.03 signal as an indicator of dinitrosyl-iron complexes with thiol-containing ligands.
Nitric oxide : biology and chemistry    December 16, 1998   Volume 2, Issue 4 224-234 doi: 10.1006/niox.1998.0180
Vanin AF, Serezhenkov VA, Mikoyan VD, Genkin MV.The parameters of EPR signal from dinitrosyl-iron complexes (DNIC) with bovine serum albumin (BSA), horse hemoglobin (Hb), and apometallothionein (apo-Mt) of horse kidney incorporating one (BSA, Hb) or two thiol-containing ligands (apo-Mt) were compared. The EPR signal from DNIC-BSA was characterized by the rhombic symmetry of g tensor at room temperature of signal recording (ambient temperature) or at 77K in the solution frozen in the presence of glycerol. In freezing of the solution in the absence of glycerin, under the exposure of DNIC-BSA to negatively charged sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) ...
Phylogenetic relationships within the genus Equus and the evolution of alpha and theta globin genes.
Journal of molecular evolution    December 16, 1998   Volume 47, Issue 6 772-783 doi: 10.1007/pl00006436
Oakenfull EA, Clegg JB.Sequences of the alpha1, alpha2 and theta globin genes from six equid species have been determined to investigate relationships within the genus Equus. Analyses using standard phylogenetic methods, or an approach designed to account for the effects of gene conversion between the alpha genes, gave broadly similar results and show that the horses diverged from the zebra/ass ancestor approximately 2.4 million years ago and that the zebra and ass species arose in a rapid radiation approximately 0.9 million years ago. These results from the alpha genes are corroborated by theta gene data and are in...
Angular kinematic patterns of limbs in elite and riding horses at trot.
Equine veterinary journal    December 9, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 6 528-533 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04529.x
Morales JL, Manchado M, Vivo J, Galisteo AM, Agüera E, Miró F.Normal speed videography was used to determine the angular parameters of 28 Spanish Thoroughbreds at trot. Horses were divided into 3 groups: Group UT, comprising 9 animals (provided by the VII National Stud, Cordoba, Spain) which had undergone no specific training programme and which were hand led at the trot; Group T, formed by 19 horses considered to be highly bred and trained, and which were also hand led; and Group RT, comprising the same horses as the latter group but this time trotted by a rider. Each animal was filmed 6 times from the right-hand side, using a Hi8 (25 Hz) video camera. ...
Macroscopic ‘degeneration’ of equine superficial digital flexor tendon is accompanied by a change in extracellular matrix composition.
Equine veterinary journal    December 9, 1998   Volume 30, Issue 6 534-539 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04530.x
Birch HL, Bailey AJ, Goodship AE.Injuries to the superficial digital flexor tendon are common in horses required to gallop and jump at speed. Partial rupture of this tendon usually occurs in the central core of the midmetacarpal region and may be preceded by localised degenerative changes. Post mortem examination of apparently normal equine flexor tendons has revealed an abnormal macroscopic appearance in the central core, characterised by a reddish discolouration. We have previously shown that there is also physical damage to the collagen fibres. In the present study we tested the hypothesis that the abnormal appearance is a...
Animals and man: a complex relationship examined.
The Veterinary record    December 5, 1998   Volume 143, Issue 19 515-517 
No abstract available
Serologic and molecular characterization of an abortigenic strain of equine arteritis virus isolated from infective frozen semen and an aborted equine fetus.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 5, 1998   Volume 213, Issue 11 1586-1570 
Balasuriya UB, Evermann JF, Hedges JF, McKeirnan AJ, Mitten JQ, Beyer JC, McCollum WH, Timoney PJ, MacLachlan NJ.A virus isolated from an aborted equine fetus was determined to be antigenically distinct from several other strains of equine arteritis virus (EAV) by use of a neutralization assay with a large panel of neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. The virus was readily neutralized by polyclonal equine anti-EAV serum. Comparative nucleotide and amino acid sequence analyses indicated that the virus (WA97) isolated from the aborted fetus was virtually identical to a virus (S1971) isolated from imported semen used to inseminate another mare on the farm. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the WA97/S1971 ...
Theriogenology question of the month. Toxicosis associated with fescue grass infected with the endophyte Neotyphodium coenophialum (formerly Acremonium coenophialum).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 26, 1998   Volume 213, Issue 10 1405-1406 
Mirza MH, Costa LR, Paccamonti D, Seahorn TL.No abstract available
Prevalence of traumatic myiasis in Hungary: a questionnaire survey of veterinarians.
The Veterinary record    November 21, 1998   Volume 143, Issue 16 440-443 doi: 10.1136/vr.143.16.440
Farkas R, Hall MJ.Veterinarians in Hungary were asked to complete a questionnaire on traumatic myiasis; of the 664 veterinarians contacted, 247 replied (37.2 per cent) and of these 209 (84.6 per cent) reported myiasis to be a problem among the livestock they treated. Infestation levels of > 10 per cent of animals were reported in sheep, cattle and horses. The myiasis season lasted from March to November with most cases reported in July and August. Significantly more respondents reported that fly larvae were present deep in wounds rather than superficially, consistent with infestations due to the obligate parasi...
Intestinal lesions in a horse associated with eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus infection.
Veterinary pathology    November 21, 1998   Volume 35, Issue 6 535-538 doi: 10.1177/030098589803500608
Poonacha KB, Gregory CR, Vickers ML.The primary lesions of eastern equine encephalomyelitis (EEE) virus infection in the horse are limited to the brain and spinal cord. Intestinal lesions in addition to the changes in the central nervous system were found in a 6-month-old male Tennessee Walking Horse. One week prior to death, this colt was vaccinated for EEE virus, western equine encephalomyelitis virus, influenza virus, equine rhinopneumonitis virus, and tetanus. The clinical signs consisted of ataxia and rear-end weakness, with a body temperature of 102.8 F. Gross lesions consisted of yellowish discoloration, swelling, edema, ...
The influence of speed and height at the withers on the kinematics of sound horses at the hand-led trot.
Veterinary research communications    November 12, 1998   Volume 22, Issue 6 415-423 doi: 10.1023/a:1006105614177
Galisteo AM, Cano MR, Morales JL, Vivo J, Miró F.The influence of speed and height at the withers on some biokinematic stride parameters (linear, temporal and angular) was measured in 15 Spanish Thoroughbreds (Andalusian Purebred) trotted hand-led along a track; analysis was made of the correlation between speed and height at the withers and of some biokinematic parameters of equine locomotion. Both height at the withers and speed were positively and significantly correlated to the linear parameters examined. Temporal parameters did not reveal a significant correlation with the height at the withers. The correlations with the angular paramet...
Flow cytometric determination of oxidative burst activity of equine peripheral blood and bronchoalveolar lavage-derived leucocytes.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    November 7, 1998   Volume 156, Issue 2 117-126 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(05)80037-1
Raidal SL, Bailey GD, Love DN.Flow cytometric techniques were developed for the evaluation of oxidative burst activity in equine peripheral blood neutrophils and lymphocytes, as well as bronchoalveolar lavage derived pulmonary alveolar macrophages and lymphocytes. The oxidation of dichlorofluorescin was measured by the increased fluorescence of cells stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate or a variety of other stimulants. Flow cytometry was a suitable method for the evaluation of the intracellular oxidation in all cell populations evaluated. Analysis was rapid and cell separation before analysis was not required. Hetero...
Polymorphism of Old Kladruber horses, a surviving but endangered baroque breed.
European journal of immunogenetics : official journal of the British Society for Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics    November 7, 1998   Volume 25, Issue 5 357-363 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2370.1998.00117.x
Horín P, Cothran EG, Trtková K, Marti E, Glasnák V, Henney P, Vyskocil M, Lazary S.Analysis of MHC class I and class II polymorphism, as well as data from other polymorphic systems (non-MHC lymphocyte alloantigen, blood groups systems, biochemical polymorphisms and microsatellite loci), was used to characterize the extent and distribution of the genic polymorphism of Kladruber horses. A breed-characteristic distribution of the MHC polymorphism was found. The repertoire of defined MHC class I specificities was restricted, especially in the grey subpopulation and in stallions, but a high frequency of blanks suggests the possible existence of undetected specificities. Despite t...
The flow cytometric evaluation of phagocytosis by equine peripheral blood neutrophils and pulmonary alveolar macrophages.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    November 7, 1998   Volume 156, Issue 2 107-116 doi: 10.1016/s1090-0233(05)80036-x
Raidal SL, Bailey GD, Love DN.Flow cytometry was used to assess the phagocytosis of fluorescent-labelled bacteria by equine peripheral blood neutrophils and pulmonary alveolar macrophages. Cell populations were prepared from venous blood following ammonium chloride lysis and from washed bronchoalveolar lavage derived samples. Discrete clusters of cells, corresponding to different leucocyte groups, were readily identified on the basis of differing light scattering properties and could thus be discriminated, negating the need for prior cell separation. Cells able to associate with fluorescent-labelled bacteria (by attachment...
Pathogenicity of Vibrio alginolyticus for cultured gilt-head sea bream (Sparus aurata L.).
Applied and environmental microbiology    October 31, 1998   Volume 64, Issue 11 4269-4275 doi: 10.1128/AEM.64.11.4269-4275.1998
Balebona MC, Andreu MJ, Bordas MA, Zorrilla I, Moriñigo MA, Borrego JJ.The in vivo and in vitro pathogenic activities of whole cells and extracellular products of Vibrio alginolyticus for cultured gilt-head sea bream were evaluated. The 50% lethal doses ranged from 5.4 x 10(4) to 1.0 x 10(6) CFU/g of body weight. The strains examined had the ability to adhere to skin, gill, and intestinal mucus of sea bream and to cultured cells of a chinook salmon embryo cell line. In addition, the in vitro ability of V. alginolyticus to adhere to mucus and skin cells of sea bream was demonstrated by scanning electron microscopy. The biological activities of extracellular produc...
Accuracy of different methods of estimating the weight of horses.
The Veterinary record    October 31, 1998   Volume 143, Issue 12 335-336 doi: 10.1136/vr.143.12.335
Ellis JM, Hollands T.Six hundred horses of different ages, heights and breeds were weighed on a weighbridge and had their weights estimated by two weigh tapes, 1 and 2, by a formula, and by a visual estimate. For the population as a whole, the most accurate method was the formula (mean [sd] 98.6 [10.6] per cent) closely followed by weigh tape 2 (98.1 [8.1] per cent). Tape 1 and the visual estimate were the least accurate (112.0 [9.3] and 88.3 [20.1] per cent respectively). When the population was divided into two height groups, the formula and weigh tape 2 were the most accurate for horses or = 15 hh weigh tape 1...
[Branding of horses].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 30, 1998   Volume 105, Issue 9 361 
Meyer H.No abstract available