A repeatable procedure for fertilization of bovine ova in vitro is described. Oocytes were recovered from ovarian follicles or from oviducts near the time of ovulation following treatment of donors with pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG) and prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha). For in vitro capacitation semen was incubated, then high ionic strength treated and subsequently incubated in defined medium prior to insemination of oocytes. In one experiment frozen bull semen was successfully used. In experiments with 4 bulls (B, C, D, F), 34 (43.6%) of 78 ova and 13 (19.7%) of 66 follicular oocytes were fertilized in vitro. In the last series (spermatozoa from Bull F) the fertilization of 22 (62.9%) of 35 tubal ova was achieved. In vitro development proceeded to the 8-cell stage. No fertilization in vitro followed use of one male (Bull E), even though his spermatozoa could penetrate zona-free hamster ova in vitro, and higher than usual bacterial contamination of his semen was implicated as the probable cause. Findings suggested vigorous progressive sperm motility and acrosome integrity to be important features of good sperm samples. In one experiment a 4-cell stage embryo was transferred with the result that the recipient gave birth to a normal bull calf on June 9, 1981. The first calf resulting from in vitro fertilization has been found to be completely normal.
Summary Over a period of 5 years on a central Kentucky Thoroughbred stud farm 132 foals were evaluated for the presence of cervical vertebral malformation (CVM). Lateral cervical vertebral radiographs were obtained on 70 standing foals. These radiographs were evaluated semi‐quantitatively and scored numerically for the presence of stenosis of the vertebral canal, enlarged physeal growth plates, caudal extension of the dorsal border of the orifice of the vertebral canal, angular fixation, delayed ossification of bone and degenerative joint disease. From these scores a total CVM score was given for each set of radiographs. All foals were repeatedly examined for clinical signs of neurological disease. Foals with no clinical signs of CVM had maximal total CVM scores (mean ± sd) of 5.7 ± 2.8 and foals affected with CVM had maximal total CVM scores of 17.0 ± 2.8. Determination of the total CVM score was non‐invasive, inexpensive and a very accurate procedure for predicting and diagnosing the presence of CVM in Thoroughbred foals up to 1 year of age.
Balloon-tipped catheters were used to occlude the external carotid artery and its branches in nine horses with hemorrhage caused by guttural pouch mycosis. The internal carotid artery on the affected side was occluded simultaneously in four horses and had been occluded previously in two others. In three horses, a single balloon-tipped catheter was inserted in the external carotid artery beneath the floor of the guttural pouch and its tip was advanced blindly into distal branches. In one horse, the superficial temporal artery was occluded briefly during surgery by a balloon-tipped catheter so a catheter inserted into the external carotid artery could be diverted into the maxillary artery. In the other five horses, the external carotid artery was occluded proximally and the maxillary artery was occluded immediately caudal to the alar canal by a balloon-tipped catheter inserted into the major palatine artery. Serious postoperative hemorrhage did not occur in eight horses, but one horse that had a single balloon-tipped catheter inserted into the external carotid artery had profuse hemorrhage 11 days after surgery and was euthanatized. One horse was euthanatized because of persistent dysphagia. The only complication related to use of balloon catheters was a mild incisional infection in one horse. It was concluded that the external carotid and maxillary arteries must be occluded on both sides of the eroded segment to prevent hemorrhage from normograde and retrograde flow.
Thirteen foals that ranged in age from 4 days to 4 months were presented for treatment of gastroduodenal obstruction. The site of obstruction was determined from examination of standing right lateral contrast radiographs of the caudal part of the thorax and abdomen. Depending on the site, the obstruction was bypassed by esophagogastrostomy, gastroduodenostomy, partial gastrectomy with gastroduodenostomy, duodenojejunostomy, or gastrojejunostomy followed by jejunojejunostomy. Six of the 13 foals (46%) survived. All foals with pyloric stenosis survived. Seven of eight foals with duodenal stenosis died. Deaths were due to complications unrelated to the primary gastroduodenal obstruction.
Frequencies of equine leukocyte antigen distribution were determined by complement-mediated cytotoxicity testing among populations of Thoroughbred and Standardbred horses, including animals affected with equine sarcoid and laminitis. A highly significant association is described between the presence or history of sarcoid lesions in Thoroughbreds and the expression of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-encoded antigens, W3 and B1. No association was found between antigenic expression frequencies and laminitis in either breed. These findings suggest that a strong relationship exists between the equine MHC and a predisposition to sarcoid.
Skin expansion was used in three horses, one heifer, and one dog to aid in the repair of cosmetic defects. Skin expansion was produced by inserting an expandable silicone device subcutaneously and gradually inflating the device with saline. Skin expansion allowed skin to be mobilized and sutured over cosmetic defects without excessive tension. A successful outcome was achieved in four of the five cases reported here. In one animal, two attempts to create a pocket for a silicone prosthesis failed because the expanders ruptured. Complications included implant failure, wound dehiscence, and exposure of an expander. Skin expansion can be used to enable closure of skin defects in areas where skin tension usually precludes repair by local transposition.
Fourteen horses with cecal impaction were treated by cecocolic anastomosis. In nine horses, the anastomosis followed enterotomy and evacuation of the cecal contents, and in two horses it followed saline infusion and massage of the cecum. In three horses, the anastomosis was the only surgical procedure performed. Cecocolic anastomosis was performed between the lateral and dorsal cecal teniae, and the lateral and medial free teniae of the right ventral colon. The anastomosis was hand sutured in five horses. In all other horses, the GIA surgical stapling instrument was used in combination with hand sutured seromuscular layer closures and became the preferred surgical technique. The anastomosis allowed an alternative route for the transit of ingesta from the cecum to the right ventral colon.Twelve of the 14 horses survived 2 months or longer after surgery (short-term survival rate, 86%) and 10 horses survived 12 months or longer after surgery (long-term survival rate, 71%). Early postoperative complications included mild abdominal pain (6 horses), wound infections (3 horses), fatal peritonitis (2 horses), and large colon distention necessitating reoperation (2 horses). LTHOUGH CECAL IMPACTION (CI) has been re-A ported in only 5% of horses with obstructive disease of the large intestine, awareness of CI and cecal perforation has increased because of an apparent increase in the prevalence of cecal disease at referral centers. 1, Disagreement exists over the most appropriate treatment of CI. Medical management of horses with CI has been advocated by some clinician^.^-^ Most acknowledge the limitations of medical therapy for CI, although one author reported good results.6Because of the chance of cecal perforation, others recommend surgical management in horses that do not respond to medical therapy.2,4,5*6-11 S urgical techniques include manual massage, sometimes accompanied with infusion of water or saline into the cecum to moisten the ingesta, evacuation of the cecal contents by enterotomy (typhlotomy), and partial or complete typhlectomy. Good results have been reported with enterotomy alone, and poor results have been reported with infusion and massage6 ; good success regardless of the treatment regimen was reported by another author who recommended infusion and massage. 6 Our results with enterotomy and evacuation of the cecal contents or saline infusion and massage of the ingesta were poor. Continued cecal filling and subsequent perfortition occurred postoperatively, and only one of five horses survived.2 Neither enterotomy nor manual massage altered the ability of the cecum to empty postoperatively. We attributed this to an ongoing primary cecal motility dysfunction.We reasoned that a cecocolic anastomosis (CCA) would allow a new route for the transit of ingesta from the cecum to the right ventral colon, which might avert the fatal postoperative complication of cecal perforation. The purpose of this report is to describe the use of CCA in the surgical management of 14 horses with CI.
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