The diagnosis of keratoma in 7 horses and their treatment and outcome were evaluated. Horses were 2 to 20 years old, of various breeds, and were intact or castrated males. All were lame, and 6 horses had had previous injuries of the affected hoof that had not responded to prior treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransnasal, axial division of the aryepiglottic fold was performed to correct entrapment of the epiglottis in 20 sedated, standing horses, using a hooked bistoury and topical anesthesia. Presenting complaints included decreased exercise tolerance or loss of racing performance, abnormal respiratory noise, and coughing. The surgical procedure was technically easy to perform with a minimum of instrumentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe stiffness, load to failure, and bending moments of adult intact equine humeri and humeri repaired with 3 fixation techniques were determined in vitro. Bones were tested in axial compression (30 pairs), mediolateral 3-point bending (15 pairs), and caudocranial 3-point bending (15 pairs). An oblique osteotomy of 1 humerus of each pair was performed to simulate the long spiral oblique fractures that occur clinically in horses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 4 adult horses, simple, nondisplaced, incomplete fracture of the proximal extremity of the third metacarpal bone (MC3) was identified radiographically only on the dorsopalmar projection. Lameness was slight to moderate. Although nerve blocks of the foot and fetlock did not alter the lameness, high palmar regional nerve block improved the gait in 1 of the 2 horses on which it was performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Vet Med Assoc
February 1988
The medical records of 10 horses with invasive neoplasms of the penis, prepuce, and/or superficial inguinal lymph nodes in which treatment involved en bloc resection and penile retroversion were reviewed. All were geldings and ranged in age from 12 to 25 years (mean, 19 years). Evaluation of biopsy specimens obtained before surgery confirmed lymphosarcoma in 1 horse and squamous cell carcinoma in 9 horses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 21-year-old mare was evaluated for intermittent episodes of apparent abdominal pain of 6 month's duration. Abdominal palpation per rectum revealed distended small intestine in the caudal portion of the abdomen. Ventral midline celiotomy revealed a mass in the midjejunal region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFractures of Metacarpal and Metatarsal II and IV (the splint bones) were treated in 283 horses over an 11 year period. In 21 cases the proximal portion of the fractured bone was stabilized with metallic implants. One or more cortical bone screws were used in 11 horses, and bone plates were applied in 11 horses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany cases of enteroliths were reported in the nineteenth century but the number greatly decreased in the early twentieth century. However, in recent years the number of cases in certain parts of the United States such as California has greatly increased. The reasons for the increase are obscure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Vet Med Assoc
December 1986
Nine Thoroughbred racehorses were admitted with cellulitis (of one or more limbs) associated with coagulase-positive staphylococci. The right hindlimb was affected in 4 horses, the right forelimb in 2, the left hindlimb in 1, and both hindlimbs in 2. Typical abnormalities included high values for rectal temperature (9 horses) and heart rate (5 horses), hyperfibrinogenemia (7 horses), leukocytosis (7 horses), and neutrophilia (6 horses).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA controlled trial of treatment of chronic osteomyelitis caused by Staphylococcus aureus compared nafcillin alone with nafcillin plus rifampin for a six-week period. Treatment was well tolerated, the only adverse effect being mild neutropenia in four of 18 patients; no toxicity was observed from rifampin. Eight of ten patients in the combined treatment group had a favorable clinical response (with follow-up of two to four years) as compared to four of eight in the nafcillin group (P = .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Microbiol
March 1986
Cross-reactivity in Histoplasma serologic tests was evaluated by using sera from patients with histoplasmosis and other infections. Serum samples from 127 of 134 (95%) patients with histoplasmosis were judged positive by complement fixation tests, and 121 (90%) showed H bands, M bands, or both by immunodiffusion. Of these 134 patients, cross-reactions were seen to Blastomyces dermatitidis in 53 patients (40%), to Coccidioides immitis in 20 patients (16%), and to Aspergillus fumigatus in 3 patients (2%) by complement fixation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have evaluated the Histoplasma antibody response in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in nine patients with central nervous system histoplasmosis and 98 controls. While the CSF Histoplasma antibody response identified eight of the nine patients, CSF cultures were positive in only two. Of controls with histoplasmosis but without meningitis (13 patients), or without histoplasmosis (85 patients), elevated CSF antibodies were detected by complement fixation in seven, by IgG radioimmunoassay in 17, and by IgM radioimmunoassay in five.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have compared several humoral and cellular immune responses in ocular and in acute histoplasmosis syndromes. T-lymphocyte subset analysis revealed elevated ratios of T-helper/T-suppressor lymphocytes in ten of 22 patients with ocular histoplasmosis, whereas ratios were depressed in 18 of 22 with acute histoplasmosis syndromes. Lymphocyte transformation responses to mitogens and to histoplasma antigens were similar in both acute and ocular histoplasmosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTechnetium-99 (99Tc) pyrophosphate bone scanning often identifies patients with osteomyelitis before roentgenographic findings appear. However, recent studies have shown that 99Tc bone scanning often gives false-negative results, especially in neonates. The accuracy of computed tomographic scanning and indium-111 leukocyte scanning for diagnosis of early osteomyelitis has not been established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have evaluated the clinical usefulness of a commercially available teichoic acid antibody assay (ENDO-STAPH). Teichoic acid antibody titers up to a 1:2 serum dilution were observed in 20% of normal subjects, thus, titers of 1:4 or more were considered positive. Of patients with Staphylococcus aureus infections, 16 of 23 with endocarditis, 12 of 20 with complicated bacteremia, three of 17 with uncomplicated bacteremia, and ten of 20 with nonbacteremic infections had positive titers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Vet Med Assoc
October 1983
The histologic and histochemical features of palatine muscles from 53 horses were studied; 25 of the horses were racehorses that had upper airway obstruction associated with dorsal displacement of the soft palate and 28 of the horses did not have any respiratory disorders and served as controls. Pathologic features observed included myonecrosis, phagocytosis, mononuclear cell infiltration of perimysial connective tissue, alkaline phosphatase-positive myofibers, and myofibers with cytoarchitectural changes that included irregular staining of the intermyofibrillar sarcoplasm and sarcoplasmic masses. These histopathologic features were judged to be indicative of myositis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA lateral radiograph of the pharyngeal region provides a technique for identifying pharyngeal disorders, including entrapment of the epiglottic cartilage and dorsal displacement of the soft palate. Epiglottic cartilage length, predicted from radiographs by measurement from the body of the thyroid cartilage to the tip of the epiglottis (thyroepiglottic length), was well correlated to actual length at postmortem examination (r2 = 0.98).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedicine (Baltimore)
September 1983
Clinical and laboratory features have been reviewed in 66 episodes of disseminated histoplasmosis that occurred during two large urban outbreaks in Indianapolis. Immunosuppression, age greater than 54 years, and presence of other serious underlying illnesses predisposed to the disseminated form of the disease; only 21% of patients lacked one of these risk factors. Central nervous system findings, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, and lymphopenia suggested disseminated disease but were present in only about one-third of patients.
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