Publications by authors named "Madison Ricard"

is a reported cause of infertility and endometritis in sheep, cattle, and pigs; however, the association between uterine disease and is poorly understood in horses. Recently, a high prevalence of in equine aborted chorioallantoises was reported in horses in western Canada. Based on this high prevalence, investigation into the effects of on infertility and endometritis in western Canadian mares is prudent.

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The clinical presentation, cytologic findings, radiographic findings, and postmortem assessment of a cat with primary pulmonary adenocarcinoma with multiple digital metastasis are described. An unusual shifting, waxing and waning pattern of lameness, suspected to be an early manifestation of digital metastasis before any gross lesions were visible, was documented. Initial cytologic finding of a lung nodule was equivocal for diagnosis of neoplasia despite being strongly suspicious.

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Objective: This study aims to identify the most common causes of equine perinatal loss up to 7 d of age in Canada.

Animal: Equine.

Procedure: Necropsy reports from 360 equine perinatal loss cases were acquired from provincial veterinary diagnostic labs across Canada.

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Chlamydiae are reported to cause abortion in several species, however the association between sp. and equine abortions is poorly understood. A zoonotic transfer event of from aborted equine tissues in Australia has emphasized the need to better understand the prevalence of this pathogen in equine populations.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to identify the most common causes of equine abortion in Canada, and to compare findings to similar reports from other countries.

Animal: Equine.

Procedure: Necropsy reports from 901 equine abortion cases were acquired from provincial veterinary diagnostic laboratories across Canada.

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Pharyngeal cleft cysts (also called branchial cleft cysts) are rare congenital defects of the pharynx region that appear as soft, fluctuant cystic structures on the ventral neck. These cysts are formed by anomalous regression of the pharyngeal clefts during embryonic development and are lined by pseudostratified columnar to squamous, partially ciliated epithelium on histopathology. Development of these cysts is sporadic, with no currently identified risk factors in veterinary species.

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