Results 271 to 280 of about 18,800 (310)
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Equine Cloning

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 2006
Equine cloning is now in use as a clinical technique. It is available commercially, and its efficiency seems to be increasing. The foals produced by cloning may differ in some phenotypic and behavioral traits from the original animal but should produce offspring that reflect those that the original donor animal would have produced.
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Equine Influenza

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1993
Influenza continues to be one of the most important diseases of horses despite the availability and widespread use of equine influenza vaccines for almost 30 years. In recent years, infection with the influenza A/equine/2 subtype has become endemic in the equine populations of North America, Europe, and Scandinavia.
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Equine Ehrlichiosis

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1993
Equine ehrlichiosis is a seasonal disease of horses first reported in 1969. Clinical signs in horses include high fever, depression, partial hypophagia, anorexia, limb edema, petechiation, icterus, ataxia, and reluctance to move. Hematologic changes include leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, icterus, anemia, and inclusion bodies, principally in neutrophils ...
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Equine recumbency

Veterinary Record, 1972
A, Littlejohn, R, Munro
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Equine pleuropneumonia

British Veterinary Journal, 1995
Pleuropneumonia is a clinically important equine disease, predisposed by a number of identifiable factors. Successful management is largely dependent on early identification and prompt initiation of appropriate treatment strategies. Rapid resolution of the disease process is associated with appropriate treatment commenced within 48 h of the causative ...
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Equine Hyperlipidemias

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 2011
Hyperlipidemia is the presence of elevated lipid concentrations in the blood and is associated with periods of negative energy balance and physiologic stress. In increased concentrations, circulating lipids typically occur in the triglyceride form, which may interfere with numerous normal physiologic functions, particularly by reducing insulin ...
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Equine influenza

Veterinary Record, 1977
D G, Powell, D, Felmingham
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Equine anaesthesiology

Equine Veterinary Journal, 1992
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