Warren L. Beard
Ohio State University
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Veterinary Clinics of North America-equine Practice | 1996
Warren L. Beard
The respiratory system is a frequent cause of exercise intolerance in performance horses. Labored breathing, fatigue during performance, and prolonged recovery after exercise are common complaints. Inadequate fitness level and diseases of the cardiovascular system are differential diagnoses that share these complaints and should be ruled out. Generation of increased airway noise is a clinical sign that implicates the upper respiratory system. A careful history from the owner and endoscopy of the upper airway are the most useful diagnostic tools. Endoscopy during exercise on a treadmill is indicated when the airway lesion is not apparent with endoscopy at rest. Treatment of the respiratory obstruction may differ with the level of performance required.
Veterinary Clinics of North America-equine Practice | 1991
Warren L. Beard
Caslicks, episioplasty, urethroplasty, cervical, and rectovestibular laceration repair are, by preference, performed in the standing patient. Normal castration is performed routinely uneventfully in the standing patient. The duration of the procedures and the ease with which they are accomplished in a standing horse of normal temperament make general anesthesia unnecessary. More invasive procedures, such as removal of urinary bladder calculi in male horses or removal of a neoplastic ovary in a mare, can be accomplished in a standing patient but serious consideration should be given to the use of general anesthesia. For these procedures, the potential complications are increased while the ability to effectively deal with those complications is diminished in a standing patient. For instance, imagine a mare that lays down in the stocks during a standing flank removal of an ovary or a stallion that defecates during a Gokels approach to the bladder. Only extenuating circumstances justify these risks when general anesthesia is available.
Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association | 2013
Shannon J. Murray; Yvonne Elce; J. Brett Woodie; Rolf M. Embertson; James T. Robertson; Warren L. Beard
OBJECTIVE To determine survival rate and athletic ability after nonsurgical or surgical treatment of cleft palate in horses. DESIGN Retrospective case series. ANIMALS 55 horses with cleft palate. PROCEDURES 13 of the 55 horses died or were euthanized without treatment and were not included in all analyses. Medical records were reviewed for signalment, history, method of diagnosis, soft or hard palate involvement, type of surgical procedure performed, postoperative complications, and survival to hospital discharge. Information on athletic ability was acquired from race records and follow-up conversations with owners, trainers, or referring veterinarians. RESULTS The predominant reason for initial evaluation was milk or feed in the nostrils (60%). The diagnosis was confirmed by means of videoendoscopy of the upper portion of the airway in all cases. Most cases involved the soft palate only (92.7%). Twenty-six of the 55 (47.3%) horses underwent surgical repair, and 12 of these had dehiscence at the caudal edge of the soft palate. Among potential racehorses, 14 of 33 had surgery. Of these, 12 of 14 survived to discharge and 2 horses raced. Among potential racehorses, 10 of 33 were discharged without surgery and 2 of these raced. Among nonracehorses, 12 of 22 underwent surgery and 11 survived to discharge. All horses that were discharged and for which follow-up information was available survived to 2 years of age or older without ill thrift despite dehiscence at the caudal edge of the soft palate and continued mild nasal discharge. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Horses with cleft palate had a higher survival rate than previously reported.
Veterinary Surgery | 2000
R. Leveille; Joanne Hardy; James T. Robertson; A. M. Willis; Warren L. Beard; Steven E. Weisbrode; O. M. Lepage
Equine Veterinary Journal | 2010
Joanne Hardy; M. Minton; James T. Robertson; Warren L. Beard; L. A. Beard
Veterinary Surgery | 2004
Warren L. Beard
Veterinary Surgery | 1990
Thomas C. Bohanon; Warren L. Beard; James T. Robertson
Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association | 2000
William W. Muir; Phillip Lerche; James T. Robertson; John A. E. Hubbell; Warren L. Beard; Tirina Miller; Britton L. Badgley; Virgina Bothwell
Veterinary Surgery | 1989
Warren L. Beard; James T. Robertson; D. M. Getzy
Veterinary Surgery | 1996
James P. Chase; Warren L. Beard; Alicia L. Bertone; Karen Goltz