Results 131 to 140 of about 530 (176)
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First Aid for the Laminitic Foot: Therapeutic and Mechanical Support
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 2010The goals of mechanical treatment during the acute phase of laminitis are to preserve the lamellar interface by reducing the forces that are compromising its integrity and to make the horse more comfortable. Early decision making is important in managing acute laminitis.
Patrick T, Reilly +2 more
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Rehabilitating the Chronically Laminitic Foot
Journal of Equine Veterinary Science, 2010Abstract Trimming and shoeing the equine patients suffering with chronic laminitis entails a well organized approach, improves quality of life and generally results in a better outcome. The chronic laminitic hoof presents clinically in a variety of ways and thus treatment needs to be tailored to the individual horse.
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Plasma concentrations of inflammatory markers in previously laminitic ponies
Equine Veterinary Journal, 2013Summary Reasons for performing study The mechanisms underlying individual animal predisposition to pasture‐associated laminitis remain unclear; however, chronic inflammation is implicated. Objectives To identify ...
H, Wray +4 more
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Forage and pasture management for laminitic horses
Clinical Techniques in Equine Practice, 2004In the past, many cases of laminitis have been of mysterious origin. Recent investigations in veterinary medicine, coupled with the availability of new techniques for analyzing hydrolyzable carbohydrates in forage may provide evidence to solve some of these mysteries.
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Laminitic Pain: Parallels with Pain States in Humans and Other Species
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 2010Laminitis poses a threat to all horses, and is widely considered as being one of the most important diseases of horses and a global equine welfare problem. The effects of laminitis lead to debilitation, development of pronounced digital pain, and great suffering in the afflicted animal.
Collins, SN +3 more
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Insulin tolerance in laminitic ponies.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee, 1984Sensitivity to insulin was assessed in ponies episodically affected with chronic laminitis by measurement of blood glucose and arterial blood pressure during insulin tolerance tests. In terms of blood glucose values, laminitic ponies were significantly less sensitive to insulin than controls.
J R, Coffman, C M, Colles
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Laminites: A Structure of Flysch-Type Sediments
SEPM Journal of Sedimentary Research, 1963ABSTRACT The concept of turbidity currents has been widely recognized and has been used to explain the formation of intricately bedded sequences in orogenic deposits such as the flysch. Turbidities are the result of this mechanism, forming thick and regular beds, with graded bedding and sole marks.
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Gypsum-carbonate laminites in a recent sabkha, Kuwait
Carbonates and Evaporites, 1988Primary laminar gypsum, either alone or in couplets with carbonate and/or organic matter has been found in the supratidal zone of a carbonate sabkha in southern Kuwait. The laminites are confined to an area of abandoned, partly filled Holocene tidal channels in the supratidal zone, and not subject to regular tidal flooding at the present time.
H. A. Gunatilaka, D. J. Shearman
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Plasma Histamine Levels in Laminitic Horses and in Horses Treated with a Corticosteroid
Journal of Veterinary Medicine Series A, 1991SummaryIn seven sound horses histamine plasma levels were evaluated by means of a radioenzymatic method using the enzyme histamine‐N‐methyltransferase (mean = 4.46 nmol/l, SD = 1.55 nmol/l). Histamine levels of laminitic horses were significantly higher (n = 11; mean = 12.46 nmol/1, SD = 3.24 nmol/1).
R, Rautschka, C, Stanek, P F, Knezevic
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Novel lipoprotein density profiling in laminitic, obese, and healthy horses
Domestic Animal Endocrinology, 2019Lipoproteins are water-miscible macromolecules enabling the transport of lipids in blood. In humans, altered proportions of lipoproteins are used to detect and classify metabolic diseases. Obesity and obesity-related comorbidities are common in horses. The pathophysiology of obesity is poorly understood and likely multifactorial.
M C, Coleman +5 more
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