79 results on '"Foreman JH"'
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2. Analysis of Tokyo 2020 Olympic modern pentathlon equestrian jumping results.
- Author
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Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Horses, Animals, Tokyo, Female, Male, Humans, Sports
- Abstract
Modern Pentathlon (MP) includes an equestrian Jumping discipline, with horses drawn blindly by unfamiliar riders. At the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games, concerns regarding inadequate horsemanship generated adverse publicity for MP. Conventional stadium Jumping in Tokyo provided an opportunity for comparison of the two closest Olympic equestrian Jumping disciplines. The objectives of this study were to complete an objective analysis of the Tokyo MP riding phases, and to test the hypothesis that MP riding faults in women's and men's Tokyo competitions combined were more frequent than in the Individual Jumping Qualifier (JQ). Types of faults for Tokyo MP (n = 71 riders) and JQ (n = 73 riders) were tabulated from published official results and detailed observation of online videos of each competition. Fault distributions were compared using Chi-square analysis (significance at P < .05). MP riders had more jumping faults (15.4 %) than JQ (7.8 %, P < .0001). Both MP and JQ riders had more faults at oxers (17.1 %, P < .0001 and 9.7 %, P = .0171, respectively) than verticals (14.5 % and 6.2 %). JQ (9.8 %, P = .0093) but not MP (15.7 %, p = .5166) riders had more faults in the second half of the course compared to the first half (5.7 % and 15.0 %, respectively). Double clear rounds (no jumping or time faults) were 4.9 times more likely in JQ (34.2 %) than in MP (6.9 %: P < .0001). Proposed solutions to decrease MP fault frequency include lower maximum fence heights, fewer jumping efforts, and a more liberal re-ride policy., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The author has no financial or personal relationship that could inappropriately influence or bias the content of the paper. The author was a member of the AAEP task force charged with studying and making recommendations to the AAEP President and Board of Directors regarding horse safety in pentathlon after Tokyo 2020., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Acute phase protein concentrations following serial procaine penicillin G injections in horses.
- Author
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Gordon DL, Foreman JH, Connolly SL, Schnelle AN, Fan TM, and Barger AM
- Subjects
- Horses, Animals, Prospective Studies, Injections, Intramuscular veterinary, Serum Amyloid A Protein, Penicillin G Procaine metabolism, Acute-Phase Proteins
- Abstract
Background: Acute phase protein (APP) measurement is used to detect inflammation. Intramuscular (IM) injections could cause tissue injury and induce an acute phase response (APR)., Objectives: To evaluate the effects of IM procaine penicillin G (PPG) injections on APP concentrations in horses., Study Design: Prospective longitudinal design., Methods: PPG was administered intramuscularly to six horses, twice daily, for 5 days. Plasma fibrinogen (FIB), serum amyloid A (SAA), haptoglobin (HAP), creatine kinase (CK), and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) were quantified daily for 5 days before the first injection, during the course of administration, and for 4 days after the final dose. Analytes were quantified every other day for the remaining 16 days. Data were compared using a parametric or non-parametric repeated measures ANOVA and a Tukey's or Mann-Whitney rank sum test, respectively. Significance was set at p < 0.05., Results: CK was increased over baseline (mean ± SD: 200 ± 74 IU/L) on Days 1-6 (p < 0.001 to p = 0.02, mean ± SD: 723-1177 ± 355-544 IU/L) and AST was increased above baseline (mean ± SD: 233 ± 58 IU/L) on Days 2-7 and 10 (p < 0.001 to p = 0.05, mean ± SD: 307-437 ± 79-146 IU/L). Increased FIB was noted over baseline (mean ± SD: 177 ± 30 mg/dl) on Days 6-8 and 10 (p = 0.02 to p = 0.03, mean ± SD: 234-252 ± 33-49 mg/dl). SAA was increased above baseline (mean ± SD: 4.7 ± 2.9) on Day 6 (p = 0.02, mean ± SD: 113 ± 186 μg/ml). There was no change in HAP., Main Limitations: Healthy horses were used, small sample size, and a lack of a negative control group., Conclusions: Serial intramuscular procaine penicillin G (IM PPG) injections may result in increased positive APP concentrations in horses and this must be considered when these test results are interpreted., (© 2022 The Authors. Equine Veterinary Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of EVJ Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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4. A case of equine piroplasmosis in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.
- Author
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Aida H, Foreman JH, Ochi A, Takizawa Y, and Yamanaka T
- Abstract
Equine piroplasmosis is an infectious disease caused by Babesia caballi and Theileria equi. A competition horse that had been imported to the Equestrian Park for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and had a fever over 40°C and severe anemia was diagnosed with equine piroplasmosis by blood smear and direct polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests for Theileria equi. Treatment with protozoan anthelmintics and whole blood transfusion diminished the fever, improved the anemia, and allowed the horse to return home safely. Preparation for routine cases of this infection should include the development of a system that allows accurate and prompt international dissemination of information and implementation of quarantine measures., (©2023 The Japanese Society of Equine Science.)
- Published
- 2023
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5. Plasma Creatine Kinase and Aspartate Aminotransferase Activities Before, During, and After 5 Days of Intramuscular Penicillin Administration in Sedentary Horses.
- Author
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Foreman-Hesterberg CR and Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Horses, Aspartate Aminotransferases, Penicillin G Procaine, Creatine Kinase
- Abstract
Muscle damage can result in leakage of intracellular enzymes such as creatine kinase (CK) and aspartate transaminase (AST) into plasma. There are no controlled documentations of the effects of intramuscular antibiotic drug administration on plasma CK and AST activities in horses. The objective of this experiment was to test the hypothesis that 5 days of intramuscular procaine penicillin G injection in normal horses would result in increased plasma activities of CK and AST. Nine healthy adult horses were sampled for 7 days preceding, 5 days during, and 32 days following procaine penicillin G (22,000 IU/kg) administration intramuscularly twice daily. Heparinized jugular venous blood samples were obtained daily before treatment and were analyzed the same day for plasma activities of CK and AST. Repeated measures ANOVA and post hoc Tukey's Test were used to identify days where CK or AST were elevated compared to control means at a significance level of P < .05. Beginning the day after first injection, plasma CK increased above the reference range, peaking at 2,046 ± 627 U/L after 3 days, and returned to 227 ± 57.3 U/L (within the reference range) 9 days after treatment began. Beginning the day after first injection, plasma AST increased, peaking at 703 ± 135 U/L on the day after the last injection. Plasma AST did not return to the reference range in all individual horses until 29 days after the last injection (mean 247 ± 33 U/L). Compared to the control period, plasma CK and AST elevations lasted for 8 and 28 days, respectively, after the onset of treatment (P < .001 to P = .03) and lasted for 4 and 24 days, respectively, after the last day of treatment (P < .001 to P = .03)., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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6. How Illinois increased students' clinical exposure by 50.
- Author
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Constable PD, Barger AM, Stewart MC, and Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Illinois, Education, Medical, Undergraduate, Students, Medical
- Published
- 2022
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7. Hyponatremia in horses with septic pneumopathy.
- Author
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Migliorisi A, Barger A, Austin S, Foreman JH, and Wilkins P
- Subjects
- Animals, Fibrinogen, Horses, Inflammation complications, Inflammation veterinary, Sodium, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome complications, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome veterinary, Horse Diseases, Hyponatremia complications, Hyponatremia veterinary, Lung Diseases complications, Lung Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Background: Hyponatremia is common in horses with bacterial pleuropneumonia, but no further characterization of this abnormality has been reported., Objectives: Describe admission plasma sodium concentration ([Na]) in horses with septic pneumopathy and evaluate any association of plasma [Na] with markers of systemic inflammation., Animals: Medical records of horses >1 month of age that between 2008 and 2021 had a transtracheal aspirate (TTA) performed, abnormal TTA cytology, positive TTA culture, pulmonary disease on ultrasonography, radiography or both, and plasma [Na] assessed by direct ion-selective-electrode (dISE). Horses with concurrent diarrhea or azotemia were excluded., Methods: Clinical and clinicopathological variables of interest between hypo- and normonatremic horses were compared. Spearman correlation and Fisher exact tests were used to identify significant associations (P < .05)., Results: Twenty of 35 horses had hyponatremia (median, 132 mmol/L; 25-75th interquartile range [IQR], 129.7-133.1 mmol/L; reference range, 134.2-138.4 mmol/L). A higher proportion of horses with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) had hyponatremia (P = .01). Hyponatremic patients had higher mean plasma fibrinogen concentration (461 ± 160.5 mg/dL; P = .01) and higher rectal temperature (38.8 ± 0.7°C; P = .02) than normonatremic horses. Negative correlations were found between plasma [Na] and fibrinogen (P = .001; ρ = -0.57) concentrations and between plasma [Na] and rectal temperature (P = .001; ρ = -0.51). Presence or absence of pleural effusion did not influence severity of hyponatremia. Mean duration of hospitalization was longer (P = .04) in hyponatremic horses (9.8 ± 6.6 days)., Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Hyponatremia at admission is associated with the presence of inflammation, SIRS, and with longer duration of hospitalization., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.)
- Published
- 2022
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8. Development and Evolution of the Clinical Skills Learning Center as an Integral Component of the Illinois Veterinary Professional Curriculum.
- Author
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Morin DE, Arnold CJ, Hale-Mitchell LK, McNeil LK, Lanzo S, Soder H, Williams D, Foreman JH, and Whiteley H
- Subjects
- Animals, Clinical Competence, Curriculum, Humans, Illinois, Schools, Veterinary, Education, Veterinary, Veterinarians
- Abstract
The University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine opened a clinical skills laboratory in August 2009, making it one of the earliest North American veterinary schools to do so. The Clinical Skills Learning Center has been an integral component of the Illinois veterinary professional curriculum since its inception. However, its role in the curriculum has changed over time, which has had an impact on its size, scope, and staffing. In this article, we describe the development and growth of the Clinical Skills Learning Center, with an emphasis on its evolving curricular role and the lessons we have learned over nine years.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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9. Effect of feeding on the pharmacokinetics of oral minocycline in healthy adult horses.
- Author
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Echeverria KO, Lascola KM, Giguère S, and Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Anti-Bacterial Agents blood, Biological Availability, Fasting, Female, Horses, Injections, Intravenous, Male, Minocycline administration & dosage, Minocycline blood, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacokinetics, Eating, Minocycline pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Minocycline is commonly used to treat bacterial and rickettsial infections in adult horses but limited information exists regarding the impact of feeding on its oral bioavailability. This study's objective was to compare the pharmacokinetics of minocycline after administration of a single oral dose in horses with feed withheld and with feed provided at the time of drug administration. Six healthy adult horses were administered intravenous (2.2 mg/kg) and oral minocycline (4 mg/kg) with access to hay at the time of oral drug administration (fed) and with access to hay delayed for 2 hr after oral drug administration (fasted), with a 7-day washout between treatments. Plasma concentration versus time data was analyzed based on noncompartmental pharmacokinetics. Mean ± SD bioavailability (fasted: 38.6% ± 4.6; fed: 15.7% ± 2.3) and C
max (fasted: 1.343 ± 0.418 μg/ml; fed: 0.281 ± 0.157 μg/ml) were greater in fasted horses compared to fed horses (p < .05 both). Median (range) Tmax (hr) in fasted horses was 2.0 (1.5-3.5) and in fed horses was 5.0 (1.0-8.0) and was not significantly different between groups. Overnight fasting and delaying feeding hay 2 hr after oral minocycline administration improve drug bioavailability and thus plasma concentrations., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2018
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10. Metastatic myxosarcoma in a Quarter Horse gelding.
- Author
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Samuelson JP, Echeverria KO, Foreman JH, Fredrickson RL, Sauberli D, and Whiteley HE
- Subjects
- Animals, Euthanasia, Animal, Horses, Male, Myxosarcoma pathology, Retroperitoneal Neoplasms pathology, Horse Diseases pathology, Myxosarcoma veterinary, Retroperitoneal Neoplasms veterinary
- Abstract
A 22-y-old Quarter Horse gelding was presented to the University of Illinois Veterinary Teaching Hospital for evaluation of increased heart rate and mild colic signs. Rectal examination revealed a large left perirenal mass. Abdominal ultrasonography further confirmed this finding. Thoracic ultrasonography indicated multifocal irregularities on the pleural surface suggestive of consolidation and possibly masses in the lungs. The animal was euthanized. Autopsy findings included a large, firm, expansile, gelatinous retroperitoneal mass that surrounded both kidneys, as well as nodules with similar morphology in the lungs, liver, intestinal mesentery, cecum, and caudal mesenteric artery. Histologically, the masses were composed of neoplastic stellate-to-spindloid cells in abundant mucinous stroma. Neoplastic cells exhibited strong immunoreactivity for vimentin and were negative for pancytokeratin (A1/A3), CD3, CD20, melan A, and synaptophysin. Mucinous stroma was strongly positive with alcian blue and weakly positive with periodic acid-Schiff histochemical staining. These findings are consistent with metastatic myxosarcoma. Myxosarcoma is a rare neoplasm in horses, and metastasis to tissues other than sentinel lymph nodes has not been described previously to our knowledge.
- Published
- 2018
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11. Pulmonary disposition and pharmacokinetics of minocycline in adult horses.
- Author
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Echeverria KO, Lascola KM, Giguère S, Foreman JH, and Austin SA
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Biological Availability, Bronchoalveolar Lavage, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Half-Life, Horses, Lung, Male, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacokinetics, Minocycline pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine pharmacokinetics and pulmonary disposition of minocycline in horses after IV and intragastric administration. ANIMALS 7 healthy adult horses. PROCEDURES For experiment 1 of the study, minocycline was administered IV (2.2 mg/kg) or intragastrically (4 mg/kg) to 6 horses by use of a randomized crossover design. Plasma samples were obtained before and 16 times within 36 hours after minocycline administration. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was performed 4 times within 24 hours after minocycline administration for collection of pulmonary epithelial lining fluid (PELF) and BAL cells. For experiment 2, minocycline was administered intragastrically (4 mg/kg, q 12 h, for 5 doses) to 6 horses. Plasma samples were obtained before and 20 times within 96 hours after minocycline administration. A BAL was performed 6 times within 72 hours after minocycline administration for collection of PELF samples and BAL cells. RESULTS Mean bioavailability of minocycline was 48% (range, 35% to 75%). At steady state, mean ± SD maximum concentration (Cmax) of minocycline in plasma was 2.3 ± 1.3 μg/mL, and terminal half-life was 11.8 ± 0.5 hours. Median time to Cmax (Tmax) was 1.3 hours (interquartile range [IQR], 1.0 to 1.5 hours). The Cmax and Tmax of minocycline in the PELF were 10.5 ± 12.8 μg/mL and 9.0 hours (IQR, 5.5 to 12.0 hours), respectively. The Cmax and Tmax for BAL cells were 0.24 ± 0.1 μg/mL and 6.0 hours (IQR, 0 to 6.0 hours), respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Minocycline was distributed into the PELF and BAL cells of adult horses.
- Published
- 2017
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12. Veterinary Curriculum Transformation at the University of Illinois, 2006-2016.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Morin DE, Graves TK, Mitchell MA, Zuckermann FA, and Whiteley HE
- Subjects
- Accreditation, Education, Veterinary standards, Humans, Illinois, Organizational Innovation, Schools, Veterinary standards, Clinical Clerkship, Curriculum trends, Education, Veterinary organization & administration, Schools, Veterinary organization & administration
- Abstract
The organization and delivery of a curriculum is the responsibility of the faculty in educational institutions. Curricular revision is often a hotly debated topic in any college faculty. At the University of Illinois, a 2006 mandate for curriculum modernization from the American Veterinary Medical Association Council on Education provided impetus for a long-discussed curricular revision. After two iterations and a lengthy development process, a new curriculum was gradually implemented at Illinois with the August 2009 matriculation of the Class of 2013. The goals of the revision included earlier clinical exposure for veterinary students through introductions to clinical rotations in years 1 to 3 and an integrated body systems approach in lecture/laboratory courses. A new Clinical Skills Learning Center facilitates development of clinical skills earlier in the curriculum and promotes the development of those skills throughout all 4 years of the curriculum. New outcomes assessments include comprehensive written examinations and Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCEs) in years 2 and 3. Curriculum management, including grading of clinical rotations in all 4 years, is achieved through a commercially available software package. For the past 5 years, when candidates were asked why they chose to apply to Illinois, the new curriculum (27.4%) was the most common answer given during interviews. The Illinois revision has resulted in measurably increased veterinary student self-confidence (p<.001) at graduation.
- Published
- 2017
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13. Comparison of radiographic and computed tomographic images of the lungs in healthy neonatal foals.
- Author
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Schliewert EC, Lascola KM, O'Brien RT, Clark-Price SC, Wilkins PA, Foreman JH, Mitchell MA, Hartman SK, and Kline KH
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn physiology, Blood Gas Analysis veterinary, Female, Lung diagnostic imaging, Lung growth & development, Male, Posture, Radiography, Thoracic veterinary, Reference Values, Tomography, X-Ray Computed veterinary, Horses physiology, Lung physiology
- Abstract
Objective: To compare CT and radiographic images of the lungs in sedated healthy foals positioned in sternal recumbency and to investigate whether a relationship exists between CT-derived measurements of lung attenuation and Paco2 and Pao2., Animals: 6 healthy Standardbred foals < 14 days of age., Procedures: Thoracic CT images were acquired followed by radiographic views with each foal sedated and positioned in sternal recumbency. For each foal, both CT and radiographic images were evaluated for severity and extent of changes by lung regions on the basis of a subjective scoring system by 3 investigators. Quantitative analysis of CT images was also performed. Assessments of Pao2 and Paco2 were performed before sedation, following sedation prior to CT, and after CT prior to radiography., Results: Interobserver agreement for CT and radiographic image scoring was strong (0.73) and fair (0.65), respectively; intraobserver agreement was near perfect for CT (0.97) and radiographic (0.94) image scoring. Increased CT attenuation and radiographic changes were identified for all foals and were preferentially distributed in the caudoventral portion of the lungs. Radiographic scores were significantly lower than CT image scores. A positive correlation (r = 0.872) between lung attenuation and CT image score was identified. A significant increase in Paco2 was not considered clinically relevant. Significant changes in Pao2 were not observed., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Results suggested that interpretation of CT images may be less subjective, compared with interpretation of radiographic images. These findings may aid in the evaluation of CT and radiographic images of neonatal foals with respiratory tract disease.
- Published
- 2015
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14. Efficacy of intramuscular meperidine hydrochloride versus placebo in experimental foot lameness in horses.
- Author
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Foreman JH and Ruemmler R
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal therapeutic use, Foot Diseases veterinary, Horse Diseases drug therapy, Horses, Pain veterinary, Lameness, Animal drug therapy, Meperidine
- Abstract
Reasons for Performing Study: There are no peer reviewed, blinded controlled studies regarding the skeletal analgesic efficacy of intramuscularly administered meperidine in horses., Objectives: Using an adjustable heart bar shoe model of equine foot pain, the objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that meperidine (pethidine) administered intramuscularly would prove more efficacious in alleviating lameness than a saline placebo., Study Design: Crossover pharmacodynamic experiment., Methods: Eight healthy adult Thoroughbred horses randomly underwent weekly i.m. treatments 1 h after lameness induction: saline placebo (1 ml/45 kg bwt) or meperidine hydrochloride (1 mg/kg bwt i.m.). Heart rate (HR) and lameness score (LS) responses were assessed by a blinded observer every 20 min for 5 h after lameness induction and then hourly through 12 h after treatment. Jugular venous blood samples were obtained at -1, 0, 0:05, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 h and were subsequently analysed for drug concentrations (lower limit of detection, 1 ng/ml). Repeated measures ANOVA and post hoc Tukey's test were used to identify analgesic effects at a significance level of P<0.05., Results: Mean (± s.e.) HR were lower in meperidine trials at 2.3, 3.3 and 3.7 h post administration (P<0.05). Mean LS were lower in meperidine trials at 2.0, 2.3 and 3.3 h post administration (P<0.05). Mean plasma (meperidine) peaked at 227 ± 52 ng/ml at 1 h post administration and decreased to 2.7 ± 0.3 ng/ml at 12 h post administration. In 3 of 8 subjects, plasma (meperidine) was below the lower limit of detection at 12 h after administration., Conclusions: Intramuscular meperidine was more effective than the saline placebo but only for 2.0-3.7 h post administration compared with the 8-12 h durations of efficacy reported previously using this same model when horses were treated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Meperidine may be a suitable nonNSAID alternative analgesic for acute foot pain with efficacy lasting from 2-3 h after a single i.m. dose., (© 2013 EVJ Ltd.)
- Published
- 2013
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15. The effects of hyperglycemia and endotoxemia on coagulation parameters in healthy adult horses.
- Author
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McGovern KF, Lascola KM, Smith SA, Clark-Price SC, Wilkins PA, Schaeffer DJ, and Foreman JH
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- Animals, Antithrombin III physiology, Endotoxemia blood, Female, Fibrinogen analysis, Hyperglycemia blood, Male, Partial Thromboplastin Time veterinary, Peptide Hydrolases physiology, Prothrombin Time veterinary, Random Allocation, Thrombelastography veterinary, Blood Coagulation physiology, Endotoxemia veterinary, Horses blood, Hyperglycemia veterinary
- Abstract
Background: Hyperglycemia and endotoxemia have been associated with coagulation abnormalities in horses. Studies in humans suggest greater disturbances in coagulation with hyperglycemia and concurrent endotoxemia., Objectives: To compare coagulation parameters in horses administered with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) with and without concurrent hyperglycemia., Animals: Twelve healthy adult horses., Methods: Hyperglycemia (180-240 mg/dL) was maintained for 6 hours in 6 horses (GLU-LPS) using 140 mg/kg IV bolus of dextrose followed by a 20% dextrose constant rate infusion. A similar volume of saline was administered to an additional 6 horses (SAL-LPS). LPS (20 ng/kg) was administered to each horse. Fibrogen concentration, prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), thrombin antithrombin concentration (TAT), and thromboelastometry were measured at baseline and after 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 6, and 22 hours. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to examine temporal changes., Results: Increases in PT (P = .001) and TAT (P = .027) were observed in the GLU-LPS group. Changes in thromboelastometry parameters including increased clot formation time (In-TEM, P = .006; Ex-TEM, P = .002) and decreased alpha angle (Ex-TEM, P = .04) and maximal clot firmness (Ex-TEM, P = .014) were observed in the SAL-LPS group. Differences between SAL-LPS and GLU-LPS groups were limited to increased maximal clot firmness (Ex-TEM) at 3, 6, and 22 hours (P < .001) in the SAL-LPS group., Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Minor alterations in coagulation parameters identified for each group are most likely not clinically relevant. Observed differences between groups do not suggest that concurrent hyperglycemia and endotoxemia are associated with greater coagulation abnormalities in horses., (Copyright © 2013 by the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.)
- Published
- 2013
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16. Current therapeutic approaches to equine protozoal myeloencephalitis.
- Author
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Dirikolu L, Foreman JH, and Tobin T
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- Animals, Central Nervous System Protozoal Infections drug therapy, Central Nervous System Protozoal Infections pathology, Horse Diseases pathology, Horses, Antiprotozoal Agents therapeutic use, Central Nervous System Protozoal Infections veterinary, Horse Diseases drug therapy
- Published
- 2013
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17. Dose titration of the clinical efficacy of intravenously administered flunixin meglumine in a reversible model of equine foot lameness.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Bergstrom BE, Golden KS, Roark JJ, Coren DS, Foreman CR, and Schumacher SA
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- Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal administration & dosage, Clonixin administration & dosage, Clonixin therapeutic use, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Foot Diseases drug therapy, Heart Rate, Horses, Pain drug therapy, Pain veterinary, Pressure, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal therapeutic use, Clonixin analogs & derivatives, Foot Diseases veterinary, Horse Diseases drug therapy, Lameness, Animal drug therapy
- Abstract
Reasons for Performing Study: There are no refereed controlled documentations of the skeletal analgesic efficacy of different dosages of flunixin meglumine (FM)., Objectives: The objective of this experiment was to compare the efficacy of various dosages of FM with a negative control. The hypothesis was that higher doses would result in improved efficacy in a dose-dependent manner when tested in a reversible model of foot lameness., Methods: Ten horses shod with adjustable heart bar shoes had weekly modified AAEP grade 4.0/5.0 lameness induced by tightening a set screw against the heart bar. Heart rate (HR) and lameness score (LS) were monitored by one double-blinded investigator at rest; every 20 min after lameness induction for 5 h and hourly for another 8 h. One hour after lameness induction, treatments were administered i.v. in a randomised order: negative control (isotonic saline: SAL) or FM at 0.55 (half-dose), 1.1 (single-dose) or 2.2 (double-dose) mg/kg bwt. Results were compared using RM ANOVA and Student-Newman-Keul's test with the level of significance set at P < 0.05., Results: Compared to SAL, half-dose FM reduced HR at 2.33, 2.67, 4.0-8.0, and 10.0 h and LS at 1.33-12.0 h (P < 0.05). Single- and double-dose FM reduced HR from 0.67 to 12.0 h and LS from 1.0 to 12.0 h post administration (P < 0.05). Compared with half-dose FM, single- and double-dose LS were further decreased from 1.67 to 12.0 h post administration (P < 0.05). Mean peak and decaying plasma FM concentrations were different between dosages in a dose-dependent manner through 6 h post administration (P < 0.05)., Conclusions: Flunixin meglumine administration affected dependent variables in a dose-dependent manner with half-dose FM clinically effective for a shorter period. Higher dosages did not perform differently from one another., Potential Relevance: Practitioners must be aware that half-doses of FM are less efficacious than single doses but double doses are not more efficacious and yet are potentially more toxic.
- Published
- 2012
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18. Phenylbutazone and flunixin meglumine used singly or in combination in experimental lameness in horses.
- Author
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Foreman JH and Ruemmler R
- Subjects
- Animals, Clonixin administration & dosage, Clonixin blood, Clonixin pharmacokinetics, Clonixin therapeutic use, Cross-Over Studies, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Foot Diseases drug therapy, Foot Diseases veterinary, Heart Rate, Horses, Male, Pain drug therapy, Phenylbutazone administration & dosage, Phenylbutazone blood, Phenylbutazone pharmacokinetics, Time Factors, Clonixin analogs & derivatives, Horse Diseases drug therapy, Lameness, Animal drug therapy, Pain veterinary, Phenylbutazone therapeutic use
- Abstract
Reason for Performing Study: Using an adjustable heart bar shoe model of foot pain, the objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that the combined use of phenylbutazone (PBZ) and flunixin meglumine (FM) would prove more efficacious in alleviating lameness than either drug alone., Materials and Methods: One hour after induction of lameness at weekly intervals, 8 healthy adult Thoroughbred horses randomly underwent one of 4 i.v. treatments: saline (SAL) placebo (1 ml/45 kg bwt), PBZ (4.4 mg/kg bwt), FM (1.1 mg/kg bwt) or PBZ+FM (at the same dosages as given individually). Heart rate (HR) and lameness score (LS) responses were assessed in a blinded manner every 20 min for 5 h after lameness induction and then hourly for 12 h after treatment. Jugular venous blood samples were obtained at -1, 0, 0.05, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 h and subsequently analysed for drug concentrations. Repeated measures ANOVA and post hoc Tukey's test were used to identify analgesic effects at a significance level of P<0.05., Results: Heart rate was lower in all nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID)-treated trials from 2 h to 10 h post treatment (P<0.05). Analgesic effects of FM and PBZ+FM, as evidenced by decreases in HR, lasted for 12 h post treatment (P<0.05). Lameness score decreased earlier in PBZ and PBZ+FM trials than in FM trials (P<0.05) and the analgesic effect on LS lasted for 12 h post treatment for all NSAID trials (P<0.05). Peak PBZ plasma concentration was 73.7 ± 6.0 and 77.9 ± 5.5 µg/ml. Peak FM concentration was 12.0 ± 0.8 and 13.7 ± 1.0 µg/ml., Conclusions: It was concluded that the combination of PBZ+FM was not more effective than either PBZ or FM alone. These data do not support the hypothesis that the combination is more efficacious at these dosages than either drug alone in this model of acute foot pain., (© 2011 EVJ Ltd.)
- Published
- 2011
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19. The relationship between serum calcium concentration and outcome in horses with renal failure presented to referral hospitals.
- Author
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LeRoy B, Woolums A, Wass J, Davis E, Gold J, Foreman JH, Lohmann K, and Adams J
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- Animals, Horses, Hospitals, Animal, Hypercalcemia blood, Hypercalcemia complications, Renal Insufficiency blood, Renal Insufficiency complications, Renal Insufficiency mortality, Calcium blood, Horse Diseases pathology, Hypercalcemia veterinary, Renal Insufficiency veterinary
- Abstract
Background: Hypercalcemia is common in horses with renal failure, but it is not known whether it impacts prognosis., Hypothesis/objectives: The primary objective of this study was to determine whether hypercalcemia was associated with decreased likelihood of survival to discharge in horses with renal failure. Secondary objectives were to determine whether hypercalcemia was more common in acute (ARF) or chronic renal failure (CRF), whether feeding alfalfa was associated with hypercalcemia, and whether serum creatinine concentration was associated with survival., Animals: Medical records of 63 horses presented to referral hospitals for renal failure were evaluated. Cases were classified as ARF or CRF based on historical and clinical findings., Methods: The distribution of hypocalcemic, normocalcemic, and hypercalcemic cases in the ARF and CRF groups was determined. Mean serum calcium and creatinine concentrations for survivors and nonsurvivors, and for ARF and CRF cases, were compared. Mean serum calcium concentrations for cases fed alfalfa or not fed alfalfa were compared., Results: Hypercalcemia was significantly more common in CRF than ARF cases. CRF cases fed alfalfa were significantly more likely to be hypercalcemic. There was no significant difference in serum calcium concentration between survivors and nonsurvivors. Serum creatinine concentration was significantly higher in nonsurvivors and in ARF cases., Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Horses with CRF are more likely to be hypercalcemic than horses with ARF. Hypercalcemia was not associated with outcome in renal failure cases in this study. Additional research on the impact of dietary calcium on long-term well-being in horses with CRF is warranted., (Copyright © 2011 by the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.)
- Published
- 2011
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20. Transient diabetes mellitus in a neonatal Thoroughbred foal.
- Author
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Navas de Solis C and Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Coronavirus isolation & purification, Coronavirus Infections complications, Coronavirus Infections diagnosis, Coronavirus Infections drug therapy, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 diagnosis, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 drug therapy, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 virology, Diagnosis, Differential, Feces virology, Horse Diseases drug therapy, Horse Diseases virology, Horses, Illinois, Insulin therapeutic use, Male, Treatment Outcome, Coronavirus Infections veterinary, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 veterinary, Horse Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the clinical presentation, treatment, and outcome of a neonatal foal diagnosed with transient Type 1 diabetes mellitus., Case Summary: A 3-day-old Thoroughbred foal presented with a 24-hour history of diarrhea and depression. Coronavirus particles were observed in the feces via electron microscopy. During hospitalization the foal developed hyperglycemia concomitantly with low insulin concentration and an adequate response to exogenous insulin therapy supported a diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes mellitus. The foal required SC insulin for 26 days, but developed complications associated with insulin therapy that resolved with appropriate care. On follow up assessment the foal was found to be a healthy euglycemic animal with normal insulin concentration at 11 months of age., New or Unique Information Provided: To our knowledge this is the first report of Type 1 diabetes in this age group and the first report of transient neonatal diabetes mellitus in horses. Type 1 diabetes mellitus should be considered a differential diagnosis for hyperglycemia in equine neonates and that it can be transient and managed successfully., (© Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society 2010.)
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- 2010
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21. Efficacy of single-dose intravenous phenylbutazone and flunixin meglumine before, during and after exercise in an experimental reversible model of foot lameness in horses.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Grubb TL, Inoue OJ, Banner SE, and Ball KT
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal administration & dosage, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal therapeutic use, Clonixin administration & dosage, Clonixin therapeutic use, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Horse Diseases etiology, Horses, Phenylbutazone administration & dosage, Shoes adverse effects, Clonixin analogs & derivatives, Horse Diseases drug therapy, Lameness, Animal drug therapy, Phenylbutazone therapeutic use, Physical Conditioning, Animal
- Abstract
Reasons for Performing Study: Objective blinded efficacy data during exercise are lacking on the use of single-dose i.v. nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) before, during and after exercise., Hypothesis: Single i.v. doses of either phenylbutazone (PBZ) or flunixin meglumine (FM) would prove more efficacious than negative saline control (SAL) before, during and after exercise in a reversible model of foot lameness., Methods: Six Quarter Horse mares had lameness induced by tightening a set screw against a heart bar shoe 1 h prior to treatment. Randomised blinded treatments included PBZ (4.4 mg/kg bwt i.v.), FM (1.1 mg/kg bwt i.v.), and SAL (1 ml/45 kg i.v.). Heart rate and lameness score (LS) were recorded at rest; every 20 min after lameness induction for 5 h and at the end of 2 min treadmill workloads of 2 and 4 m/s. Heart rate was also recorded from 0.5-60 min post exercise. Results were compared using RM ANOVA and Student-Newman-Keul's test (HR) and Wilcoxon signed rank test (%ΔLS) with significance set at P < 0.05., Results: Pre-exercise mean HR was decreased for both NSAIDs compared to SAL from 1:20-4 h post treatment (P < 0.05). Pre-exercise mean %ΔLS was decreased for PBZ (1:20-4 h) and FM (1-4 h) compared to SAL (P < 0.01). With exercise, there were no HR differences between treatments (P > 0.05), but mean %ΔLS was decreased for both NSAIDs compared to SAL (P < 0.01). Mean recovery HR was decreased for PBZ and FM from 1-60 min compared to SAL (P < 0.05)., Conclusions: PBZ and FM demonstrated definitive clinical efficacy after single i.v. doses before, during and after exercise. Use of single i.v. doses during competition may mask lameness and may affect the ability of judges in determining the soundness of horses in competition., (© 2010 EVJ Ltd.)
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- 2010
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22. Validation and comparison of two methods of measuring lactate in equine plasma.
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Butudom P, Foreman JH, Kline KH, and Whittem EL
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- Animals, Blood Chemical Analysis instrumentation, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Blood Chemical Analysis veterinary, Horses blood, Lactic Acid blood
- Abstract
Reasons for Performing Study: Some methods of lactate (LA) measurement have not been validated appropriately for use in horses., Objectives: To validate 2 LA analysers (YSI 2300 Stat Plus and TDx Lactic Acid Assay) for use with equine plasma and to compare plasma [LA] determined by the 2 methods., Methods: Both instruments were evaluated for linearity, parallelism, recovery and precision using serial dilutions of standard LA solutions and equine plasma and then comparing results with linear regression or paired t tests. Plasma [LA] results were compared in 275 blood samples collected from horses exercising at various intensities using Bland-Altman analysis. Level of significance was P < 0.05., Results: YSI exhibited good linearity for both LA standards and equine plasma (P < 0.05) at 0-30 mmol/l. TDx had good linearity at 0-12 mmol/l (P < 0.05); with LA standard solutions >12 mmol/l and with equine plasma, linearity was decreased. YSI exhibited good parallelism between LA standards and equine plasma LA measurements throughout the 0-30 mmol/l range (P > 0.05). Parallelism was poor with TDx (P < 0.05). Mean ± s.d. % recovery was 101.7 ± 3.4% for YSI (acceptable) and 110.6 ± 8.4% for TDx (unacceptable). Within-run and mean between-run coefficients of variation (CV) for plasma samples tested from 3.3-29.5 mmol/l were 0.4-3.0% for YSI. CVs for samples tested from 2.8-8.0 mmol/l were 17.4-24.1% for TDx. In 275 plasma samples, [LA] ranged from 0.1-42.7 mmol/l and 0.3-50.6 mmol/l for the YSI and TDx methods, respectively. The difference in plasma [LA] determined by the 2 methods was -1.0 ± 3.2 mmol/l, documenting that the TDx overestimated the YSI results by a mean value of 1 mmol/l., Conclusions: It was concluded that the YSI method was a reliable method for measuring equine plasma [LA] from 0-30 mmol/l. The TDx method was found not to be suitable for use with equine plasma due to greater variability in measurements (high CV)., (© 2010 EVJ Ltd.)
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- 2010
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23. Multicenter case-control study of signalment, diagnostic features, and outcome associated with cervical vertebral malformation-malarticulation in horses.
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Levine JM, Scrivani PV, Divers TJ, Furr M, Mayhew IJ, Reed S, Levine GJ, Foreman JH, Boudreau C, Credille BC, Tennent-Brown B, and Cohen ND
- Subjects
- Animals, Case-Control Studies, Horse Diseases pathology, Horses, Retrospective Studies, Spinal Cord Compression diagnosis, Spinal Cord Compression pathology, Cervical Vertebrae abnormalities, Congenital Abnormalities veterinary, Horse Diseases diagnosis, Spinal Cord Compression veterinary
- Abstract
Objective: To compare signalment of horses with cervical vertebral malformation-malarticulation (CVM) with that of control horses and to describe results of clinical examination, diagnostic imaging and necropsy findings, and reported outcome in horses with CVM., Design: Retrospective case-control study., Animals: 270 horses with CVM and 608 control horses admitted to 6 veterinary hospitals from 1992 through 2007., Procedures: Medical records of participating hospitals were reviewed to identify horses with CVM (ie, case horses) and contemporaneous control (non-CVM-affected) horses that were admitted for treatment. Signalment was compared between case horses and control horses. Results of clinical examination, laboratory and diagnostic imaging findings, necropsy results, and outcome were assessed for horses with CVM., Results: Case horses were younger (median age, 2 years) than were control horses (median age, 7 years). Thoroughbreds, warmbloods, and Tennessee Walking Horses were overrepresented in the CVM group. Gait asymmetry and cervical hyperesthesia were frequently detected in horses with CVM. Vertebral canal stenosis and articular process osteophytosis were commonly observed at necropsy; agreement between the results of radiographic or myelographic analysis and detection of lesions at necropsy was 65% to 71% and 67% to 78%, respectively. Of 263 horses with CVM for which outcome was recorded, 1 died and 172 (65.4%) were euthanatized., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Odds of a diagnosis of CVM were greater in young horses and horses of specific breeds. Detection of gait asymmetry and cervical hyperesthesia were frequently reported in association with CVM. Accurate diagnosis of lesions associated with CVM by use of radiography and myelography can be challenging.
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- 2010
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24. Effects of single-dose intravenous phenylbutazone on experimentally induced, reversible lameness in the horse.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Barange A, Lawrence LM, and Hungerford LL
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal administration & dosage, Female, Forelimb injuries, Heart Rate, Hydrocortisone blood, Injections, Intravenous veterinary, Injury Severity Score, Lameness, Animal, Pain prevention & control, Pain Measurement veterinary, Phenylbutazone administration & dosage, Treatment Outcome, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal therapeutic use, Horses injuries, Pain veterinary, Phenylbutazone therapeutic use
- Abstract
The objective was to test the hypothesis that phenylbutazone (PBZ) alleviates lameness in an adjustable heart bar shoe model of equine foot pain. Eight Quarter Horse mares underwent 4-weekly treatments randomly: 0.9% saline placebo (SAL: 1 mL/45 kg body weight i.v.) with no lameness; SAL with lameness; PBZ (4.4 mg/kg body weight i.v.) with no lameness; and PBZ with lameness. Blinded heart rate (HR) and lameness score (LS) were assessed every 20 min for 2 h and then hourly through 9 h. At 1 h SAL or PBZ was administered. Jugular venous samples were obtained at hours 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8 and were evaluated for packed cell volume (PCV), cortisol, and drug concentrations. Repeated measures anova and t-tests were used to identify PBZ effects at a significance level of P<0.05. PBZ-treated LS was lower 2-8 h post-treatment, and HR was lower from 2 through 6 h post-treatment (P<0.05). Phenylbutazone did not change PCV and had minimal effect on cortisol. Mean plasma PBZ and oxyphenbutazone concentrations 7 h after treatment were 7.2-7.5 and 1.6-1.9 microg/mL, respectively. It was concluded that PBZ was efficacious in alleviating lameness in this model. Cortisol and PCV were not discriminating enough to distinguish between PBZ-treated and SAL-treated trials.
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- 2008
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25. Effects of a pre-moistened multilayered breathable fabric in promoting heat loss during recovery after exercise under hot conditions.
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Foreman JH, Benson GJ, and Foreman MH
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- Analysis of Variance, Animals, Body Temperature physiology, Cross-Over Studies, Exercise Test veterinary, Female, Male, Pulmonary Artery, Body Temperature Regulation physiology, Horses physiology, Hot Temperature adverse effects, Physical Conditioning, Animal physiology
- Abstract
Reasons for Performing Study: Horses generate considerable internal heat burdens when exercising. Although common practice for a trainer or groom to place a wet blanket or towel on the dorsum of a hot horse post exercise, there are no data supporting the efficacy of this cooling method., Objective: To test the hypothesis that a pre-moistened blanket designed with a multilayered breathable fabric would enhance heat loss in horses post exercise., Methods: Eight treadmill-trained horses performed a standardised exercise test (SET) weekly for 3 weeks, with 3 different recovery treatments administered randomly. Pulmonary artery temperature (PAT) was measured via Swan-Ganz catheter. The SET consisted of 10 min at 3.7 m/sec, 3 min at 11.0 m/sec, 25 min at 3.7 m/sec and 20 min of recovery walking at 2.0 m/sec (58 min exercise and recovery under laboratory conditions of 35.0-40.6 degrees C and 27-49% RH). From 3-7 min during recovery, the treadmill was stopped and horses randomly received either: (a) no bath (negative control); (b) a bath consisting of 32 l of 1-4 degrees C water split into 3-4 cycles of bilateral water application (positive control) followed by water removal ('scraping'); or (c) application of a multilayered fabric blanket soaked in 16-19 degrees C water, wrung out, and placed over the dorsum and sides of the horse. PAT was compared using RM ANOVA with the Student Neuman-Keul's test used post hoc to discriminate between treatments at specific points in time., Results: Mean PAT rose with each phase of exercise (P<0.001) and peaked at a mean of 40.2 +/- 0.2 degrees C. During recovery, the cold bath decreased HR and PAT for 9 min after walking resumed (P<0.001-P<0.05). The blanket did not decrease HR or PAT compared to negative control (P>0.05), and both were hotter than the cold bath treatment through 16 min of recovery (P<0.05)., Conclusions: A specially-designed cooling blanket failed to reduce PAT when compared to negative control. Cold water bathing decreased HR and PAT but was not effective throughout all of recovery., Potential Relevance: A specially-designed, pre-moistened multilayered breathable fabric failed to promote evaporative cooling compared to negative control. Cold water baths may need to be repeated throughout recovery to optimise their effect.
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- 2006
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26. Severe acute rhabdomyolysis associated with Streptococcus equi infection in four horses.
- Author
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Sponseller BT, Valberg SJ, Tennent-Brown BS, Foreman JH, Kumar P, and Timoney JF
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Animals, Fatal Outcome, Female, Horse Diseases microbiology, Horse Diseases pathology, Horses, Immunohistochemistry veterinary, Lameness, Animal, Male, Muscle, Skeletal microbiology, Rhabdomyolysis diagnosis, Rhabdomyolysis microbiology, Rhabdomyolysis pathology, Streptococcal Infections complications, Streptococcal Infections diagnosis, Streptococcal Infections pathology, Horse Diseases diagnosis, Muscle, Skeletal pathology, Rhabdomyolysis veterinary, Streptococcal Infections veterinary, Streptococcus equi isolation & purification
- Abstract
Four Quarter Horses (9 months to 7 years of age) with submandibular lymphadenopathy and firm muscles (palpation of which elicited signs of pain) were evaluated; in general, the horses had a stiff gait, and 3 horses became recumbent. Streptococcus equi was cultured from aspirates of lymph nodes or samples of purulent material collected from the auditory tube diverticula. Once the horses were recumbent, their condition deteriorated rapidly despite aggressive antimicrobial and antiinflammatory treatment, necessitating euthanasia within 24 to 48 hours. One horse did not become recumbent and recovered completely. Among the 4 horses, common clinicopathologic findings included neutrophilia, hyperfibrinogenemia, and high serum activities of creatine kinase and aspartate aminotransferase. Necropsies of the 3 euthanatized horses revealed large, pale areas most prominent in the semimembranosus, semitendinosus, sublumbar, and gluteal muscles that were characterized histologically by severe acute myonecrosis and macrophage infiltration of necrotic myofibers. Streptococcus equi was identified in sections of affected muscle by use of immunofluorescent stains for Lancefield group C carbohydrate and S. equi M protein. In the 4 horses of this report, acute severe rhabdomyolysis without clinical evidence of muscle atrophy or infarction was associated with S. equi infection; rhabdomyolysis was attributed to either an inflammatory cascade resembling streptococcal toxic shock or potentially direct toxic effects of S. equi within muscle tissue.
- Published
- 2005
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27. Effects of a menthol-based analgesic balm on pressor responses evoked from muscle afferents in cats.
- Author
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Ragan BG, Nelson AJ, Foreman JH, Bell GW, and Iwamoto GA
- Subjects
- Administration, Topical, Analgesics administration & dosage, Analysis of Variance, Animals, Blood Pressure drug effects, Cats, Electric Stimulation, Heart Rate drug effects, Menthol administration & dosage, Muscle Contraction physiology, Time Factors, Analgesics pharmacology, Menthol pharmacology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Neurons, Afferent drug effects, Pressoreceptors drug effects
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate changes in heart rate (HR) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) as indicators of changes in pressor response for muscle afferents after topical application of menthol (MEN)-based analgesic balm., Animals: 11 decerebrate cats., Procedure: Pressor responses were reflexively evoked by static contraction of hind limb muscles, which are caused by group III and IV afferents. Responses were monitored without interference from anesthesia or effects of higher brain function by the use of decerebrate cats. After obtaining baseline data, MEN analgesic balm (1.9%) was applied to the skin over contracting muscles of 1 hind limb in 6 cats; petrolatum was applied to 5 control cats. Muscle contractions were evoked every 10 minutes, alternating between hind limbs, for 120 minutes. Peak MAP and HR were analyzed., Results: Peak MAP responses evoked by static muscle contraction for the ipsilateral hind limb were significantly attenuated 20 minutes after application, but approached baseline values 40 minutes after application. The pressor response was significantly decreased 20 minutes after application during the last 12 seconds of the stimulus, which was attributed to group IV afferents. There were no significant differences in HR responses., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Application of MEN analgesic balm to the skin over contracting muscles significantly decreased the pressor response to static muscle contractions. This suggests that topical application of MEN has effects on responses evoked from receptors located in muscles. The MEN analgesic balm appeared to attenuate the pressor response 20 minutes after application, but it was a short-term effect.
- Published
- 2004
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28. Neurologic abnormalities and cerebrospinal fluid changes in horses administered fumonisin B1 intravenously.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Constable PD, Waggoner AL, Levy M, Eppley RM, Smith GW, Tumbleson ME, and Haschek WM
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain drug effects, Brain pathology, Encephalomalacia chemically induced, Encephalomalacia physiopathology, Enzyme Inhibitors administration & dosage, Female, Fumonisins administration & dosage, Horse Diseases blood, Horse Diseases cerebrospinal fluid, Horses, Infusions, Intravenous veterinary, Male, Mycotoxins administration & dosage, Encephalomalacia veterinary, Enzyme Inhibitors toxicity, Fumonisins toxicity, Horse Diseases physiopathology, Mycotoxins toxicity
- Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to characterize a dose-dependent toxic effect of fumonisin B1 (FB1) and to document initial neurologic signs, clinical progression, and terminal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) changes in horses administered FB1 IV. Seventeen healthy horses were administered 0.00 (n = 4), 0.01 (n = 3), 0.05 (n = 3), 0.10 (n = 3), or 0.20 mg (n = 4) of purified FB1 IV q24h. When neurologic abnormalities observed by a masked observer became severe, atlanto-occipital CSF taps were performed and CSF pressure, cell count, cytology, protein, albumin and glucose concentrations, and creatine kinase activity were measured. Changes in CSF and number of days to 1st observation of neurologic abnormalities were compared between doses by ANOVA, with the level of significance set at P < .05. Control horses and low-dose horses (0.01 mg/kg) remained neurologically normal. In higher dose FB1-treated horses (n = 10), initial clinical signs (days 4-10) included hindlimb ataxia, delayed forelimb placing, and decreased tongue tone and movement. Hindlimb and trunkal ataxia, depression, hyperesthesia, and intermittent dementia gradually became apparent. When data from all horses with neurologic abnormalities were pooled (0.05-0.20 mg/kg FB1), mild clinical signs (mean day 6.3) occurred significantly earlier than did more severe (mean day 8.9) clinical signs (P = .009). Neurologic horses had high CSF protein, albumin, and IgG concentrations and increased albumin quotients (P < .05). It was concluded that FB1-induced neurologic and CSF changes in a dose-dependent manner, with a no-observable-limit of 0.01 mg FB1/kg IV q24h for 28 days. The neurologic and CSF changes were consistent with vasogenic cerebral edema.
- Published
- 2004
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29. Effects of topical perineural capsaicin in a reversible model of equine foot lameness.
- Author
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Seino KK, Foreman JH, Greene SA, Goetz TE, and Benson GJ
- Subjects
- Administration, Cutaneous, Analgesics administration & dosage, Animals, Capsaicin administration & dosage, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Horse Diseases pathology, Horses, Lameness, Animal pathology, Male, Ointments, Pain drug therapy, Pain pathology, Pain veterinary, Pain Measurement veterinary, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Analgesics therapeutic use, Capsaicin therapeutic use, Horse Diseases drug therapy, Lameness, Animal drug therapy
- Abstract
Capsaicin is a local substance P depleter with dramatic analgesic effects. We tested the hypothesis that the topical application of capsaicin ointment over the palmar digital nerves would attenuate the clinical effects of a reversible model of equine foot lameness. Seven healthy adult horses shod unilaterally with adjustable heart bar shoes were studied in a crossover design for 2 weeks. Grade 5.0/5.0 lameness (nonweight bearing) was induced by tightening the adjustable heart bar shoe. One hour later, capsaicin ointment was applied over the medial and lateral palmar digital nerves 3 cm proximal to the coronary band, or horses were left untreated. One week later, treatment assignments were reversed, and the experiment was repeated. The heart rate was markedly lower in treated than in untreated trials at 20 and 40 minutes after capsaicin and between 1.6 and 3.6 hours after capsaicin (P < .05). The lameness score was markedly decreased in capsaicin-treated horses at 40 minutes and from 1.3 to 4 hours after treatment (P < .05). We conclude that the topical application of capsaicin ointment over the palmar digital nerves provided measurable pain relief for up to 4 hours after treatment (P < .05). The clinical application of this analgesic technique in horses with spontaneous clinical or induced laminitis or other sources of foot pain remains to be shown.
- Published
- 2003
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30. Forelimb skeletal scintigraphy responses in previously untrained Thoroughbreds undergoing initial treadmill training.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Kneller SK, Twardock AR, Chambers MD, and Inoue OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Bone and Bones diagnostic imaging, Carpus, Animal diagnostic imaging, Exercise Test veterinary, Female, Horse Diseases diagnosis, Horse Diseases diagnostic imaging, Horses anatomy & histology, Joints diagnostic imaging, Lameness, Animal diagnosis, Lameness, Animal diagnostic imaging, Male, Muscle, Skeletal diagnostic imaging, Prospective Studies, Radionuclide Imaging, Forelimb diagnostic imaging, Horse Diseases etiology, Horses physiology, Lameness, Animal etiology, Physical Conditioning, Animal physiology
- Abstract
Scintigraphy has been used in numerous clinical settings to examine horses to determine the origin of lameness problems, but it has not been used previously to monitor prospectively the skeletal responses of a group of similarly-trained racehorses. Our hypothesis was that in naïve Thoroughbred (TB) racehorses, initial treadmill training induces increased radiopharmaceutical uptake in high-motion joints and in the dorsal third metacarpal bone (MC3). Eight previously-untrained TB racehorses underwent sequential skeletal scintigraphic examinations as they exercised daily for 9 weeks on an inclined treadmill. At the end of Weeks 0 (pre-training), 3 (trotting at 4.2 m/s and initial galloping), 6 (galloping at 7.5 m/s), and 9 (sprinting 600 m at 12.5 m/s), horses received 140 mCi 99m Technetium-methylene diphosphonate i.v. followed by a standard skeletal scintigraphic forelimb examination 2 h later. Views were graded for increased radiopharmaceutical uptake by 3 co-investigators who were blinded to horse identification, breed, sex, date, and clinical findings. Results were compared before and after training for each skeletal location using the Mann-Whitney Rank Sum Test with the level of significance set at P<0.05. Initial treadmill training resulted in increased radiopharmaceutical uptake in the carpus (P = 0.031), metacarpophalangeal joint (P = 0.021), proximal phalanx (P = 0.035), and distal phalanx (P = 0.003). Training did not affect dorsal MC3 radiopharmaceutical uptake (P>0.05).
- Published
- 2002
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31. Cardiovascular changes associated with intravenous administration of fumonisin B1 in horses.
- Author
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Smith GW, Constable PD, Foreman JH, Eppley RM, Waggoner AL, Tumbleson ME, and Haschek WM
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Gas Analysis veterinary, Blood Pressure drug effects, Cardiac Output drug effects, Cardiovascular Diseases blood, Cardiovascular Diseases chemically induced, Cardiovascular Diseases physiopathology, Encephalomalacia chemically induced, Encephalomalacia physiopathology, Heart Rate drug effects, Horse Diseases blood, Horse Diseases chemically induced, Horses, Injections, Intravenous veterinary, Myocardium metabolism, Random Allocation, Sphingolipids blood, Troponin I blood, Carboxylic Acids toxicity, Cardiovascular Diseases veterinary, Enzyme Inhibitors toxicity, Fumonisins, Horse Diseases physiopathology, Mycotoxins toxicity
- Abstract
Objective: To determine whether cardiovascular dysfunction is evident in horses with leukoencephalomalacia experimentally induced by administration of fumonisin B1., Animals: 11 healthy horses of various breeds (body weight, 252 to 367 kg)., Procedure: Horses were randomly assigned to 3 groups and administered fumonisin B1 daily. Horses received IV injections of 0 (control horses; n = 4), 0.01 (3), or 0.20 mg (4) of fumonisin B1/kg for 7 to 28 days. Horses were examined daily for evidence of neurologic disease. When neurologic signs consistent with leukoencephalomalacia were evident, horses were anesthetized, and catheters were inserted for evaluation of the cardiovascular system. After recovery from anesthesia, hemodynamic measurements were obtained., Results: Fumonisin-treated horses with clinical signs of neurologic disease had evidence of cardiovascular dysfunction manifested as decreases in heart rate, cardiac output, right ventricular contractility (assessed by measuring the maximal rate of change of right ventricular pressure), coccygeal artery pulse pressure, and pH and base excess in venous blood as well as increases in systemic vascular resistance, compared with values for control horses. Fumonisin-treated horses with and without clinical signs of neurologic disease also had higher serum and right ventricular sphinganine and sphingosine concentrations than control horses., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: An association was detected among fumonisin-induced neurologic disease, increased serum and myocardial sphinganine and sphingosine concentrations, and decreased cardiovascular function in horses. Fumonisin-induced decreases in cardiovascular function may contribute to the pathophysiologic development of leukoencephalomalacia in horses.
- Published
- 2002
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32. Technical note: using calcium carbonate as an osmolar control treatment for acid-base studies in horses.
- Author
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Frey LP, Kline KH, Foreman JH, and Lyman JT
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Gas Analysis, Female, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Male, Osmolar Concentration, Potassium blood, Sodium blood, Sodium Bicarbonate pharmacology, Acid-Base Equilibrium physiology, Calcium Carbonate pharmacology, Horses physiology
- Abstract
The efficacy of using calcium carbonate as an osmolar control treatment for acid-base studies in horses receiving alkalizing compounds was evaluated. Six mares were nasogastrically intubated with isomolar quantities of sodium or calcium as sodium bicarbonate or calcium carbonate or with water during three treatment periods. Doses of the carbonic acid salts were 500 mg/kg sodium bicarbonate mixed with 4 L of distilled water (positive control) and 595 mg/kg calcium carbonate mixed with 2 L of distilled water to yield isoosmolar treatments. Four liters of distilled water served as the negative control. Jugular venous blood samples were drawn before intubation and at hourly intervals for 6 h after intubation. The serum electrolytes Na+ and K+, blood pH, and HCO3- were determined. The sodium bicarbonate treatment increased blood pH and HCO3- (P < 0.01) above both the water and CaCO3 treatments. No differences (P > 0.05) were found between the water and CaCO3 treatments. These data indicate that calcium carbonate may serve as a suitable osmolar control treatment for studying the effects of treatments that affect acid-base status of horses.
- Published
- 2001
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33. Short- and long-term survival and prevalence of postoperative ileus after small intestinal surgery in the horse.
- Author
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Freeman DE, Hammock P, Baker GJ, Goetz T, Foreman JH, Schaeffer DJ, Richter RA, Inoue O, and Magid JH
- Subjects
- Anastomosis, Surgical veterinary, Animals, Colic mortality, Colic surgery, Horses, Ileal Diseases mortality, Ileal Diseases surgery, Illinois epidemiology, Intestinal Obstruction mortality, Postoperative Complications mortality, Prevalence, Severity of Illness Index, Survival Analysis, Colic veterinary, Horse Diseases mortality, Horse Diseases surgery, Ileal Diseases veterinary, Intestinal Obstruction veterinary, Postoperative Complications veterinary
- Abstract
The records of 74 horses that recovered from anaesthesia after surgery for a small intestinal lesion from 1994 to 1999 were reviewed. Sixty-three horses (85%) had a strangulating lesion and 43 of these (68%) had a resection and anastomosis. Four of 11 horses (36%) without a strangulating lesion had a resection and anastomosis. Sixty-three horses (85%) survived to discharge, with a survival rate of 53/63 in horses with a strangulating lesion (84%) and 10/11 (91%) in others. For all lesions, short-term survival for all end-to-end anastomoses (91%; 21/23) and for no resection (92%; 23/25) were superior (P < 0.05) to survival for jejunocaecal anastomosis (76%; 19/25). Fourteen horses (19%) had a repeat abdominal surgery during hospitalisation; 9 of these (64%) survived short-term. Postoperative ileus developed in 7/70 horses (10%) after surgery for a problem other than proximal enteritis, and all had a strangulating lesion. Postoperative ileus (POI) was more likely after a jejunocaecostomy than after other procedures, and did not develop after a jejunojejunostomy. Survival > 7 months was 52/69 (75%) and for > 12 months was 39/57 (68%). The estimated prevalence of adhesions was 13%. Short-term survival was poorest in horses that had a jejunocaecostomy, but long-term survival was less affected by the anastomosis used. The sharpest decline in survival was during the first postoperative week and postoperative mortality then declined over time after surgery. A postoperative protocol that allowed early postoperative feeding was well tolerated. The results confirm that the overall prognosis after small intestinal surgery in horses is improved over earlier findings.
- Published
- 2000
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34. Equine respiratory pharmacology.
- Author
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Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Anthelmintics therapeutic use, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal therapeutic use, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Bronchodilator Agents therapeutic use, Glucocorticoids therapeutic use, Horses, Respiratory Tract Infections drug therapy, Horse Diseases drug therapy, Respiratory Tract Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Differentiation of diseases of the equine respiratory tract is based on history, clinical signs, auscultation, endoscopy, imaging, and sampling of airway exudate. Upper respiratory therapies include surgical correction of airway obstructions; flushing of localized abscesses (strangles), guttural pouch disease, or sinusitis; and oral or parenteral antibiotic and anti-inflammatory therapy if deemed necessary. Pneumonia usually is treated with antimicrobials, anti-inflammatories, and bronchodilators. Pleural drainage is indicated if significant pleural effusion is present. The most commonly used therapies for early inflammatory and chronic allergic obstructive conditions include bronchodilators and anti-inflammatories. Acute respiratory distress, particularly acute pulmonary edema, is treated with diuretics (usually furosemide), intranasal oxygen, bronchodilators, corticosteroids, and alleviation of the underlying cause. Furosemide also had been used in North America as a race-day preventative for exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH), but recent data have shown that furosemide may be a performance-enhancing agent itself.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Hemodynamic effects of ionized calcium in horses anesthetized with halothane or isoflurane.
- Author
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Grubb TL, Benson GJ, Foreman JH, Constable PD, Thurmon JC, Olson WO, Tranquilli WJ, and Davis LE
- Subjects
- Anesthesia, Inhalation veterinary, Animals, Blood Pressure drug effects, Cardiac Output drug effects, Female, Hemodynamics physiology, Male, Orchiectomy, Pulmonary Artery drug effects, Stroke Volume drug effects, Time Factors, Calcium blood, Halothane pharmacology, Hemodynamics drug effects, Horses physiology, Isoflurane pharmacology
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the effects of halothane and isoflurane on cardiovascular function and serum total and ionized calcium concentrations in horses, and to determine whether administration of calcium gluconate would attenuate these effects., Animals: 6 clinically normal adult Thoroughbreds., Procedure: Catheters were inserted for measurement of arterial blood pressures, pulmonary arterial blood pressures, right ventricular pressure (for determination of myocardial contractility), right atrial pressure, and cardiac output and for collection of arterial blood samples. Anesthesia was then induced with xylazine hydrochloride and ketamine hydrochloride and maintained with halothane or isoflurane. An i.v. infusion of calcium gluconate was begun 75 minutes after anesthetic induction; dosage of calcium gluconate was 0.1 mg/kg of body weight/min for the first 15 minutes, 0.2 mg/kg/min for the next 15 minutes, and 0.4 mg/kg/min for an additional 15 minutes. Data were collected before, during, and after administration of calcium gluconate., Results: Halothane and isoflurane decreased myocardial contractility, cardiac index, and mean arterial pressure, but halothane caused greater depression than isoflurane. Calcium gluconate attenuated the anesthetic-induced depression in cardiac index, stroke index, and maximal rate of increase in right ventricular pressure when horses were anesthetized with isoflurane. When horses were anesthetized with halothane, a higher dosage of calcium gluconate was required to attenuate the depression in stroke index and maximal rate of increase in right ventricular pressure; cardiac index was not changed with calcium administration., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: I.v. administration of calcium gluconate may support myocardial function in horses anesthetized with isoflurane.
- Published
- 1999
36. Environmental stress and 3-day eventing: effects of altitude.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Waldsmith JK, and Lalum RB
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Gas Analysis, Body Temperature, Heart Rate, Horses, Respiration, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Horse Diseases physiopathology, Physical Conditioning, Animal, Stress, Physiological veterinary
- Abstract
Three-day event horses are subject to various external environmental stresses including changes in ambient temperature, humidity, altitude, and test severity. Considerable research on the adverse effects of increased heat and humidity preceded the 1996 Olympic Summer Games in Atlanta, Georgia USA, but no research has been done previously on the effects of altitude on 3-day eventing. Physical and venous blood gas data were collected on horses (n = 24) competing in the High Prairie Preliminary (CCN*) and Intermediate (CCN**) 3-day events and Preliminary Horse Trials in Parker, Colorado (1900 m above sea level). Despite the increased altitude, only post exercise rectal temperature and pH were higher (P < 0.05) whereas heart rate (HR), [K+], and ionized calcium (ICa++) were lower (P < 0.05) in 3-day event horses compared to horse trial horses. All other variables (respiratory rate [RR], PCV, [Hb], PCO2, [tCO2], [HCO3-], BE, and [Na+]) were not different between groups (P > 0.05). When these preliminary horse trial horses in Colorado were compared to those previously studied at preliminary horse trials at sea level in Arizona, post exercise HR and RR were higher (P < 0.05) and pH, PCO2, [tCO2], [HCO3-], BE and [iCa++] were lower (P < 0.05) at altitude. These data show that increased altitude (1900 m above sea level) was more stressful for 3-day event horses, but did not result in the severe physiological changes and inability to complete prescribed exercise tests seen in previous studies with increased heat and humidity. It is clear from these and previous data that increased heat and humidity are the more important environmental stressors in 3-day eventing.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Techniques for evaluation of right ventricular relaxation rate in horses and effects of inhalant anesthetics with and without intravenous administration of calcium gluconate.
- Author
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Grubb TL, Constable PD, Benson GJ, Foreman JH, Olson WO, Thurmon JC, Tranquilli WJ, and Davis LE
- Subjects
- Animals, Calcium Gluconate therapeutic use, Female, Halothane therapeutic use, Horse Diseases diagnosis, Horses, Injections, Intravenous veterinary, Isoflurane therapeutic use, Male, Regression Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Xylazine therapeutic use, Anesthetics, Inhalation therapeutic use, Heart Function Tests veterinary, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Horse Diseases physiopathology, Models, Biological
- Abstract
Objectives: To determine the most repeatable method for evaluating right ventricular relaxation rate in horses and to determine and compare effects of isoflurane or halothane with and without the added influence of intravenously administered calcium gluconate on right ventricular relaxation rates in horses., Animals: 6 Thoroughbred horses from 2 to 4 years old., Procedure: 6 models (2 for monoexponential decay with zero asymptote, 3 for monoexponential decay with variable asymptote, and 1 for biexponential decay) for determining right ventricular relaxation rate were assessed in conscious and anesthetized horses. The 2 methods yielding the most repeatable results then were used to determine right ventricular relaxation rates in horses anesthetized with isoflurane or halothane before, during, and after i.v. administration of calcium gluconate. Right ventricular pressure was measured, using a catheter-tip high-fidelity pressure transducer, and results were digitized at 500 Hz from minimum rate of change in ventricular pressure., Results: 2 models that used monoexponential decay with zero asymptote repeatedly produced an estimate for relaxation rate and were used to analyze effects of anesthesia and calcium gluconate administration on relaxation rate. Isoflurane and halothane each prolonged right ventricular relaxation rate, with greater prolongation evident in halothane-anesthetized horses. Calcium gluconate attenuated the anesthesia-induced prolongation in right ventricular relaxation rate, with greater response obtained in isoflurane-anesthetized horses., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Right ventricular relaxation rate in horses is assessed best by use of a monoexponential decay model with zero asymptote and nonlinear regression. Intravenous administration of calcium gluconate to isoflurane-anesthetized horses best preserves myocardial relaxant function.
- Published
- 1999
38. Necrotizing mycotic vasculitis with cerebral infarction caused by Aspergillus niger in a horse with acute typholocolitis.
- Author
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Tunev SS, Ehrhart EJ, Jensen HE, Foreman JH, Richter RA, and Messick JB
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Animals, Aspergillosis complications, Aspergillosis pathology, Cecal Diseases microbiology, Cerebral Infarction microbiology, Cerebral Infarction pathology, Colitis microbiology, Female, Horses, Necrosis, Vasculitis microbiology, Vasculitis pathology, Aspergillosis veterinary, Aspergillus niger isolation & purification, Cecal Diseases veterinary, Cerebral Infarction veterinary, Colitis veterinary, Horse Diseases pathology, Vasculitis veterinary
- Abstract
An 18-year-old Morgan mare was presented to the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, University of Illinois, with a 10-day history of watery diarrhea, depression, and dysphagia. On admission, the animal was severely dehydrated, depressed, and unable to swallow and had no clinical signs of diarrhea. The respiratory and heart rate and body temperature were within normal limits. Following fluid therapy, the mare developed severe watery diarrhea and continued to be depressed, incoordinated, and dysphagic. The animal died on the fourth day after admission and was sent to the Laboratories of Veterinary Diagnostic Medicine for necropsy. Gross postmortem findings were consistent with an acute cerebral infarction in the right cerebral hemisphere, an acute necrotizing typhlocolitis, multifocal petechial and ecchymotic hemorrhages, enlarged and congested pars intermedia of the pituitary gland, and marked bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia with multifocal areas of necrosis and hemorrhage. Histologic evaluation of the affected brain demonstrated an area of coagulative necrosis of the gray matter, with hemorrhage, vasculitis, and thrombosis. There were many fungal hyphae 3.5-6.0 microm, pale basophilic, septate, and occasionally branching at 45 degrees present in the arterial walls and throughout the necrotic tissue. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed Aspergillus niger as the etiologic agent responsible for the mycotic vasculitis and infarction in the brain. Bacteria culture and immunohistochemical staining of the colon and cecum failed to demonstrate specific pathogens.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Parietal hernia of the small intestine into the epiploic foramen of a horse.
- Author
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Hammock PD, Freeman DE, Magid JH, and Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Colic etiology, Colic veterinary, Diagnosis, Differential, Hernia diagnosis, Hernia veterinary, Herniorrhaphy, Horse Diseases etiology, Horse Diseases surgery, Horses, Ileal Diseases diagnosis, Ileal Diseases surgery, Intestinal Obstruction etiology, Intestinal Obstruction surgery, Male, Horse Diseases diagnosis, Ileal Diseases veterinary, Intestinal Obstruction veterinary
- Abstract
A 12-year old 573-kg (1,261-lb) Quarter Horse gelding was referred with colic of 12 hours' duration and with poor response to medical treatment. On the basis of physical and laboratory findings, a pelvic flexure impaction was suspected. The horse was treated medically. Because signs of mild abdominal pain persisted and the heart rate had increased, an exploratory celiotomy was performed 30 hours after signs of colic were first noticed. At surgery, the ileum was found partially entrapped within the epiploic foramen, in a left-to-right direction, to form a parietal hernia. The entrapped intestinal segment was reduced but not resected, and the horse recovered fully. In retrospect, the delay before surgery in this horse was tolerated because this was a parietal hernia and, therefore, did not cause complete ileal obstruction. This horse had an unusual form of small-intestinal strangulation in the epiploic foramen that might not cause sufficient obstruction initially to allow early detection.
- Published
- 1999
40. Hemodynamic effects of thyroidectomy in sedentary horses.
- Author
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Vischer CM, Foreman JH, Constable PD, Benson GJ, Kline KH, Freeman DE, Campbell KL, and Grubb TL
- Subjects
- Adrenergic alpha-Agonists pharmacology, Adrenergic beta-Agonists pharmacology, Animals, Blood Volume, Body Weight, Electrocardiography veterinary, Female, Horses, Hypothyroidism physiopathology, Isoproterenol pharmacology, Phenylephrine pharmacology, Radioimmunoassay veterinary, Rest, Thyroid Function Tests veterinary, Thyroid Hormones metabolism, Thyroidectomy adverse effects, Thyroxine analysis, Triiodothyronine analysis, Hemodynamics physiology, Horse Diseases physiopathology, Hypothyroidism veterinary, Thyroidectomy veterinary
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate hemodynamic effects of thyroidectomy in horses at rest., Animals: 6 healthy aged Quarter Horse mares., Procedure: Horses were monitored for 5 months before and 4 weeks after thyroidectomy and for an additional 4 weeks after administration of thyroid hormone supplement (2.5 microg of thyroxine/kg of body weight, PO, q 12 h, and 0.6 microg of triiodothyronine/kg, PO, q 12 h). Responses to thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) were measured before and 4 weeks after thyroidectomy. Other variables monitored daily were resting rectal temperature (T), heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR), and body weight (BW). Monthly cardiac output (Q), blood volume (BV), plasma volume (PV), standard electrocardiographic measures, systolic and right ventricular blood pressure, and HR responses were determined after IV administration of isoproterenol and phenylephrine. Variables were analyzed by use of repeated-measures ANOVA., Results: Complete thyroidectomy was confirmed by minimal response to TSH 4 weeks after surgery. Resting HR, RR, T, Q, and beta-adrenergic responsiveness to isoproterenol decreased significantly after thyroidectomy. Resting T, Q, and beta-adrenergic responsiveness increased after administration of supplement and was not significantly different from euthyroid values. Blood volume and PV increased significantly after thyroidectomy but did not return to euthyroid values despite administration of supplement. Response to phenylephrine was minimally different between treatments., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Thyroidectomy in horses caused decreased resting HR, RR, T, Q, and isoproterenol responsiveness and increased BV, PV, PQ interval, and QT interval corrected for HR. Some of these surgically induced changes appeared to be partially reversed by administration of thyroid hormone supplement.
- Published
- 1999
41. Use of peripheral temperature and core-peripheral temperature difference to predict cardiac output in dehydrated calves housed in a thermoneutral environment.
- Author
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Constable PD, Walker PG, Morin DE, Foreman JH, and Thurmon JC
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Blood Pressure, Cattle, Dehydration chemically induced, Dehydration physiopathology, Diarrhea chemically induced, Diarrhea physiopathology, Diuretics, Electrolytes blood, Furosemide, Heart Rate, Housing, Animal, Hydrochlorothiazide, Male, Spironolactone, Temperature, Body Temperature, Cardiac Output, Cattle Diseases physiopathology, Dehydration veterinary, Diarrhea veterinary, Hemodynamics
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the relation between cardiac output (CO) and peripheral (fetlock) temperature (PT) and core-peripheral (rectal-fetlock) temperature difference (CPTD) in dehydrated calves housed in a thermoneutral environment., Animals: 28 male dairy calves 3 to 10 days old., Procedure: Severe dehydration and watery diarrhea were induced by administering diuretics (furosemide, hydrohlorothiazide, spironolactone) and sucrose solution. Cardiac output was measured by means of thermodilution, core temperature was determined by placing a digital thermometer in the rectum, and PT was measured by taping a thermistor to the left hind fetlock and insulating the thermistor from ambient air., Results: In thermoneutral ambient temperatures (10 to 24 C), PT and CPTD were constant and independent of CO at normal or high CO values but were linearly dependent on CO below a critical value (78% of normal CO output). Regression equations were developed that predicted CO from measured PT or CPTD. At ambient temperatures below the lower critical temperature for neonatal calves (8 to 10 C), normal values for PT and CPTD in healthy calves were significantly different from those at thermoneutral ambient temperatures., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Peripheral temperature and CPTD are practical, noninvasive, and inexpensive but only moderately useful methods for predicting CO in hemodynamically stable calves housed in a thermoneutral environment. Thus, these parameters are of some value in daily monitoring of the response to treatment and in determining need for i.v. fluid administration in dehydrated calves housed at a dry still-air temperature of 10 to 24 C but are of minimal to no value in calves housed at < 10 C.
- Published
- 1998
42. Comparison of hypertonic saline-dextran solution and lactated Ringer's solution for resuscitating severely dehydrated calves with diarrhea.
- Author
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Walker PG, Constable PD, Morin DE, Foreman JH, Drackley JK, and Thurmon JC
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Cardiac Output, Cattle, Cattle Diseases physiopathology, Dehydration etiology, Dehydration physiopathology, Dehydration therapy, Dextrans administration & dosage, Diarrhea complications, Diarrhea physiopathology, Electrolytes administration & dosage, Infusions, Intravenous veterinary, Isotonic Solutions administration & dosage, Male, Plasma Volume, Prospective Studies, Random Allocation, Rehydration Solutions administration & dosage, Ringer's Lactate, Saline Solution, Hypertonic administration & dosage, Stroke Volume, Urination, Cattle Diseases therapy, Dehydration veterinary, Diarrhea veterinary, Fluid Therapy veterinary
- Abstract
Objective: To determine effectiveness of rapid i.v. administration of hypertonic saline-dextran (HSD) solution combined with oral administration of isotonic electrolyte solution for resuscitating severely dehydrated calves and to compare the resuscitative response with that of a conventional treatment of lactated Ringer's solution (LRS) i.v. and orally administered isotonic electrolyte solution., Design: Prospective study., Animals: 15 male dairy calves 3 to 10 days old., Procedure: Baseline data were obtained. Osmotic diarrhea and severe dehydration were induced for 48 hours. Calves were then allocated to 3 treatment groups. The control group (group C) did not receive fluids, a second group (group H) received hypertonic saline (7.2% NaCl) solution with 6% dextran 70 and isotonic electrolyte solution, and a third group (group L) received LRS and isotonic electrolyte solution. Physical examinations were performed every 8 hours., Results: Calves developed diarrhea, lethargy, severe dehydration (mean, 14% of body weight), azotemia, hyperkalemia, and mild acidemia. Group-C calves remained lethargic and severely dehydrated during the 24-hour treatment phase. Calves treated with HSD and LRS were effectively resuscitated; however, response for most variables was more rapid and sustained for the HSD-treated group. Cardiac output was greater in LRS- than HSD-treated calves 1, 2, and 8 hours after initiation of treatment because of continued i.v. administration of fluids., Clinical Implications: A combination of HSD and isotonic electrolyte solution was a rapid and effective method for resuscitation of severely dehydrated calves. It was similar in effectiveness to conventional treatment in which LRS and isotonic electrolyte solution were used for resuscitating calves with severe dehydration.
- Published
- 1998
43. A reliable, practical, and economical protocol for inducing diarrhea and severe dehydration in the neonatal calf.
- Author
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Walker PG, Constable PD, Morin DE, Drackley JK, Foreman JH, and Thurmon JC
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Blood Glucose analysis, Blood Proteins analysis, Body Temperature, Body Weight, Cattle, Colostrum, Dehydration blood, Dehydration chemically induced, Diarrhea blood, Diarrhea chemically induced, Electrolytes blood, Feces, Furosemide administration & dosage, Hydrochlorothiazide administration & dosage, Male, Spironolactone administration & dosage, Sucrose administration & dosage, Dehydration physiopathology, Diarrhea physiopathology, Hemodynamics
- Abstract
Fifteen healthy, colostrum-fed, male dairy calves, aged 2 to 7 d were used in a study to develop a diarrhea protocol for neonatal calves that is reliable, practical, and economical. After instrumentation and recording baseline data, diarrhea and dehydration were induced by administering milk replacer [16.5 mL/kg of body weight (BW), PO], sucrose (2 g/kg in a 20% aqueous solution, p.o.), spironolactone and hydrochlorothiazide (1 mg/kg, PO) every 8 h, and furosemide (2 mg/kg, i.m., q6h). Calves were administered sucrose and diuretic agents for 48 h to induce diarrhea and severe dehydration. Clinical changes after 48 h were severe watery diarrhea, severe depression, and marked dehydration (mean, 14% BW loss). Cardiac output, stroke volume, mean central venous pressure, plasma volume, thiocyanate space, blood pH and bicarbonate concentration, base excess, serum chloride concentration, and fetlock temperature were decreased. Plasma lactate concentration, hematocrit, and serum potassium, creatinine, phosphorus, total protein and albumin concentrations were increased. This non-infectious calf diarrhea protocol has a 100% response rate, while providing a consistent and predictable hypovolemic state with diarrhea that reflects most of the clinicopathologic changes observed in osmotic/maldigestive diarrhea caused by infection with rotavirus, coronavirus or cryptosporidia. Limitations of the protocol, when compared to infectious diarrhea models, include failure to induce a severe metabolic acidosis, absence of hyponatremia, renal instead of enteric loss of chloride, renal as well as enteric loss of free water, absence of profound clinical depression and suspected differences in the morphologic and functional effect on intestinal epithelium. Despite these differences, the sucrose/diuretic protocol should be useful in the initial screening of new treatment modalities for calf diarrhea. To confirm their efficacy, the most effective treatment methods should then be examined in calves with naturally-acquired diarrhea.
- Published
- 1998
44. Clinical and laboratory assessment of hydration status of neonatal calves with diarrhea.
- Author
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Constable PD, Walker PG, Morin DE, and Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Cattle, Cattle Diseases chemically induced, Dehydration chemically induced, Dehydration complications, Dehydration diagnosis, Diarrhea chemically induced, Diarrhea complications, Diuretics adverse effects, Elasticity, Enophthalmos diagnosis, Enophthalmos veterinary, Linear Models, Male, Mucous Membrane pathology, Prospective Studies, Skin physiopathology, Sucrose adverse effects, Cattle Diseases diagnosis, Dehydration veterinary, Diarrhea veterinary
- Abstract
Objective: To develop accurate, objective guidelines for assessing hydration status of neonatal calves with diarrhea., Design: Prospective study., Animals: 15 male dairy calves 3 to 10 days old., Procedure: Dehydration and diarrhea were induced by administration of diuretic agents (i.e., furosemide, spironolactone, hydrochlorothiazide) and sucrose solution. Linear regression was used to examine the relationship between potentially useful factors for evaluating hydration status (extent of enophthalmos; skin-tent duration on neck, thorax, and upper and lower eyelids; heart rate; mean central venous pressure; peripheral [extremity] and core [rectal] temperatures; core-peripheral [rectal-extremity] temperature difference; PCV; and hemoglobin and plasma protein concentrations) and degree of dehydration, as determined by change in body weight., Results: Best predictors of degree of dehydration were extent of enophthalmos, skin elasticity on neck and thorax, and plasma protein concentration., Clinical Implications: These experimentally determined guidelines provide practitioners with a simple, inexpensive, and practical method for evaluating hydration status of neonatal calves with diarrhea.
- Published
- 1998
45. The exhausted horse syndrome.
- Author
-
Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Animals, Biopsy veterinary, Fatigue diagnosis, Fatigue etiology, Fatigue therapy, Horse Diseases diagnosis, Horse Diseases therapy, Horses, Prognosis, Acclimatization physiology, Fatigue veterinary, Horse Diseases etiology, Muscle, Skeletal pathology, Physical Conditioning, Animal adverse effects
- Abstract
Exhaustion occurs in most equestrian sports, but it is more frequent in events that require sustained endurance work such as endurance racing, three-day eventing, trial riding, and hunting. Exhaustion is also more likely when an unfit, unacclimatized, or unsound horse is exercised. Mechanisms that contribute to exhaustion include heat retention, fluid and electrolyte loss, acid-base imbalance, and intramuscular glycogen depletion. Clinical signs include elevated temperature, pulse, and respiratory rate; depression; anorexia; unwillingness to continue to exercise; dehydration; weakness; stiffness; hypovolemic shock; exertional myopathy; synchronous diaphragmatic flutter; atrial fibrillation; diarrhea; colic; and laminitis. Treatment includes stopping exercise; rapid cooling; rapid large volume intravenous or oral fluid administration; and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug administration.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Metabolic causes of equine exercise intolerance.
- Author
-
Foreman JH
- Subjects
- Acid-Base Equilibrium, Animals, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Energy Metabolism physiology, Exercise Tolerance physiology, Horses metabolism, Horses physiology, Physical Conditioning, Animal physiology
- Abstract
Metabolic causes of exercise intolerance can be subtle and difficult to document in horses. Because of increased metabolic rate in exercising muscle, most metabolic causes of exercise intolerance are clinically manifested by muscle abnormalities such as ER. Newer causes of ER are being documented by current research and are summarized in the article on muscular causes of equine exercise intolerance. Endocrine causes of exercise intolerance have been poorly documented, but recent work has shown the detrimental effects of hypothyroidism on exercise tolerance in horses. Many metabolic manifestations of exercise intolerance are cumulative in heat exhaustion; prevention by veterinary monitoring is the best treatment, followed by cold water bathing and oral or intravenous fluid and electrolyte replacement. Several ergogenic aids have been proposed and marketed for use in horses, but each has its own problems and few have been shown clearly to have positive effects on performance.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Hemodynamic effects of calcium gluconate administered to conscious horses.
- Author
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Grubb TL, Foreman JH, Benson GJ, Thurmon JC, Tranquilli WJ, Constable PD, Olson WO, and Davis LE
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Pressure drug effects, Blood Pressure physiology, Calcium blood, Calcium Gluconate administration & dosage, Cardiac Output drug effects, Cardiac Output physiology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Heart Rate drug effects, Heart Rate physiology, Hemodynamics physiology, Horses blood, Infusions, Intravenous, Male, Myocardial Contraction drug effects, Myocardial Contraction physiology, Respiration drug effects, Respiration physiology, Stroke Volume drug effects, Stroke Volume physiology, Time Factors, Calcium Gluconate pharmacology, Consciousness physiology, Hemodynamics drug effects, Horses physiology
- Abstract
Calcium gluconate was administered to conscious horses at 3 different rates (0.1, 0.2, and 0.4 mg/kg/min for 15 minutes each). Serum calcium concentrations and parameters of cardiovascular function were evaluated. All 3 calcium administration rates caused marked increases in both ionized and total calcium concentrations, cardiac index, stroke index, and cardiac contractility (dP/dtmax). Mean arterial pressure and right atrial pressure were unchanged; heart rate decreased markedly during calcium administration. Ionized calcium concentration remained between 54% and 57% of total calcium concentration throughout the study. We conclude that calcium gluconate can safely be administered to conscious horses at 0.1 to 0.4 mg/kg/min and that administration will result in improved cardiac function.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Acid-base and electrolyte effects of shortening steeplechase in a three-day-event.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Grubb TL, Benson GJ, Frey LP, Foglia RA, and Griffin RL
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Gas Analysis veterinary, Blood Glucose metabolism, Blood Proteins metabolism, Exercise Test veterinary, Hematocrit veterinary, Hemoglobins metabolism, Horses blood, Hot Temperature, Humidity, Lactates blood, Time Factors, Acid-Base Equilibrium, Electrolytes blood, Horses physiology, Physical Conditioning, Animal physiology
- Abstract
This study was designed to characterise the acid-base and electrolyte effects of shortening the distance required during steeplechase (Phase B) in the face of hot and humid weather conditions during a treadmill-simulated Speed and Endurance test. Eight conditioned Thoroughbred horses underwent 3 randomised permutations of a standardised exercise test on a high speed treadmill. Each test consisted of trotting at 3.7 m/s for 10 min (Phase A); galloping at 11 m/s (Phase B) for 4 (cool laboratory conditions), 3 (hot and humid), or 2 (hot and humid) min; trotting at 3.7 m/s for 30 min (Phase C); and walking at 1.8 m/s for 10 min (Phase X). The treadmill slope was 4% for trotting and galloping and 0% for walking. Cool versus hot and humid conditions were 20 degrees C and 50-60% relative humidity vs. 26-28 degrees C and 80-85% relative humidity, respectively. Pulmonary artery blood samples were obtained at rest prior to exercise (Rest); at the end of Phases A (A10) and B (B2-4); at 10 (C10), 20 (C20) and 30 (C30) min through Phase C; and at 5 min into Phase X (X5). Additional samples for lactate (LA) and glucose (GLC) analysis were obtained 5 min into Phase C (C5) and at the end of Phase X (X10). Samples were analysed for packed cell volume (PCV), haemoglobin (HB), total plasma protein (TP), sodium (Na), potassium (K), chloride (Cl), anion gap (AG), plasma glucose (GLC) and lactate (LA), pH, PCO2, bicarbonate (HCO3) and base excess (BE). Shortening steeplechase distance by 50% under hot and humid conditions (2 min B) resulted in a consistent return to control measurements (4 min B) only for plasma LA. Changes in PCV, HB, TP, K and Cl were related more to the longer galloping distance in the 4 min B trials than to hot vs. cold laboratory conditions. Alternatively, changes in LA, GLC, pH, PCO2 and AG were more related to hot and humid laboratory conditions than they were to galloping distance. These latter variables, when combined with physical measures such as core temperature, bodyweight loss, point of fatigue on Phase C and recovery heart rates may serve as the best monitors of positive responses in future studies of proposed modifications to Phase C, rather than those variables which were more distance than weather-related.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Physiological effects of shortening steeplechase in a 3-day-event.
- Author
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Foreman JH, Grubb TL, Benson GJ, Frey LP, Foglia RA, and Griffin RL
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Temperature, Exercise Test veterinary, Gait physiology, Heart Rate, Hot Temperature, Humidity, Time Factors, Weight Loss, Horses physiology, Physical Conditioning, Animal physiology
- Abstract
Various methods for modifying the Speed and Endurance portion (Day 2) of the 3-day-event have been proposed to aid horses in dealing with the hot and humid conditions expected during the next Olympic 3-day-events in Atlanta, Georgia USA in 1996. This study was designed to characterise the effects of shortening the distance required during the steeplechase (Phase B) in the face of Atlanta-like hot and humid weather conditions. Eight conditioned Thoroughbred horses (mean +/- s.e.m. age 3.75 years, range 3-5 years) underwent 3 randomised permutations of a standardised exercise test on a high speed treadmill. Each test consisted of trotting at 3.7 m/s for 10 min (Phase A); galloping at 11 m/s (Phase B) for 4 (cool, control laboratory conditions), 3 (hot and humid), or 2 (hot and humid) min; trotting at 3.7 m/s for 30 min (Phase C); and walking at 1.8 m/s for 10 min (Phase X). Subjects had Swan-Ganz catheters inserted into the pulmonary artery (PA) for measuring core temperature (PAT) in mixed venous blood every 2 min. Heart rate (HR) was measured by an on-board HR computer every 2 min. Rectal temperature (RT) was measured at the beginning (RTzero) and end (RT10) of Phase X using a mercury rectal thermometer as under typical field conditions. Pre- and post exercise bodyweights (bwt) were determined on a digital electronic scale. The point on Phase C at which each horse visibly fatigued and drifted toward the back of the treadmill was defined as the point of fatigue. Differences between treatments were tested for significance (P < 0.05) by repeated measures, Student-Neuman-Keul's and Student's tests where appropriate. Heart rate increased (mean 115.7-136.1) with the onset of trotting exercise in Phase A (P < 0.05), increased further with Phase B galloping (mean +/- s.e.m. 187.8-193.7, P < 0.05) and decreased with a return to trotting during Phase C (mean 108-130.5, P < 0.05) for all 3 treatments. Through the end of Phase C, there were no differences in HR between treatments (P > 0.05). From 3-10 min in Phase X (recovery), HR after 2 min B (mean 81.3-91) were lower than after 3 min B (mean +/- s.e.m. 98.4-100.5, P < 0.05) and were no different than 4 min B HR (mean 85.9-94.8, P > 0.05). Pulmonary artery blood temperature increased (mean 38.1-38.7) with trotting in Phase A (P < 0.05), increased further with Phase B galloping (mean 39.4-40.2, P < 0.05) for all 3 treatments and then decreased (mean +/- s.e.m. 39.3-39.9, P < 0.05) during Phase C under cool conditions (4 min B) but plateaued or continued to rise slightly under hot and humid conditions (mean 39.7-40.2). Throughout Phases C and X, PAT was lower for 4 min B than for either hot and humid treatment (P < 0.05). Bodyweight decreased after exercise for all treatments (P < 0.05) with the largest bwt loss (mean 10.9 kg) after 3 min B (P < 0.05) followed by 2 min B (8.3 kg) and then by 4 min cool B (6.5 kg). Point of fatigue was different between the 3 treatments (P < 0.05), with 4 min B the longest (mean +/- s.e. 24.8 min), followed by 2 min B (21.8 min), and then 3 min B (16.3 min). Rectal temperature was not different between the 3 treatments (P > 0.05), but there was a trend for both RTzero and RT10 to be highest after the 3 min B, lower after the 2 min B, and lowest after the 4 min cool B. It was concluded that there was a progressive gain in restoring cool weather performance and recovery by a progressive shortening of Phase B under hot and humid conditions, based on net weight loss, point of fatigue and recovery HR. Shortening Phase B by as much as 50% under hot and humid conditions still did not allow a complete return to cool weather performance and recovery. Further modifications to Phase C will be required in order to aid horses in net heat loss during Phases B and C.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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50. Evaluation of fetal infection and abortion in pregnant ponies experimentally infected with Ehrlichia risticii.
- Author
-
Long MT, Goetz TE, Kakoma I, Whiteley HE, Lock TE, Holland CJ, Foreman JH, and Baker GJ
- Subjects
- Abortion, Veterinary pathology, Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial analysis, Cell Line, Cells, Cultured, Ehrlichia immunology, Ehrlichiosis microbiology, Ehrlichiosis pathology, Female, Fetal Diseases microbiology, Fetal Diseases pathology, Fetus microbiology, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect veterinary, Horse Diseases pathology, Horses, Intestines embryology, Intestines microbiology, Intestines pathology, Liver embryology, Liver microbiology, Liver pathology, Placenta microbiology, Placenta pathology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious etiology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious pathology, Pregnancy Outcome veterinary, Abortion, Veterinary etiology, Ehrlichia isolation & purification, Ehrlichiosis veterinary, Fetal Diseases veterinary, Horse Diseases microbiology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious veterinary
- Abstract
Fetal infectivity of Ehrlichia risticii was investigated in 19 ponies that were E risticii negative on the basis of results of an indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) test. Thirteen pregnant ponies were infected by IV administration of E risticii between 90 and 180 days of gestation. Six pregnant ponies served as noninfected controls. Each infected pony had clinical signs of equine monocytic ehrlichiosis, was confirmed to be ehrlichemic, and developed an IFA titer to E risticii. Two infected ponies became recumbent, were unresponsive to supportive care, and were euthanatized. After recovery from clinical illness, the remaining ponies were observed throughout gestation for reproductive abnormalities. On abortion, each fetus was necropsied and tissue specimens from the liver, bone marrow, spleen, colon, and mesenteric lymph nodes were inoculated into canine monocyte cell cultures. Six infected ponies aborted at a mean 217 days of gestation, which was between postinoculation days 65 and 111. Five fetuses were recovered for evaluation, and E risticii was isolated from 4 of them. All 5 fetuses recovered had similar histologic finding, including enterocolitis, periportal hepatitis, and lymphoid hyperplasia with necrosis of the mesenteric lymph nodes and spleen. All 5 fetuses tested negative for IgG to E risticii, although 3 had low IgM titer to E risticii. The remaining 5 infected ponies had normal parturition. Presuckle IFA titer to E risticii was measured in 4 of the term foals, and results for 3 were positive. Two foals from infected ponies were monitored for 6 months and daily gain in body weight was comparable to that of a control foal. None of the control ponies became ill or seroconverted during the clinical illness phase, and none aborted throughout gestation Two control ponies seroconverted to E risticii 6 weeks before parturition. Results of this study indicate that E ristcii is a primary abortifacient under experimental conditions.
- Published
- 1995
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