By Shoshana Brackett
MISSISSIPPI STATE
-- Ashley Hill does not fit the profile of a traditional scientific
researcher. She’s a second year veterinary student
who spent her summer researching a disabling skin disorder in horses. Hill was one of
16 students participating in a student summer research program at
Mississippi State University’s College of Veterinary
Medicine. Dr. Jerald Ainsworth,
associate dean of research and graduate studies at the CVM, said the
12-week summer program provides students with valuable insight into
the work of scientists. “For the first week, students participate in training on ethics, research
career opportunities, and do poster and oral presentations,” Ainsworth
said. The students are
totally immersed in a research project, either on a new project or
part of their advisor’s project. Under the direction
of her advisor, Hill gathered data to aid research on hyperelastosis
cutis, a skin disorder in horses. Hill said the disease
is inherited and is prevalent in certain lines of American Quarter
Horses, particularly cutting horses. “A harmless event can cause great damage. Putting a saddle on
a sick horse can cause open wounds and sloughing of skin,” Hill
said. The disease is
usually discovered in 2-year-old foals, mainly because that is the
age when horses are introduced to tack, Hill said. This connective
tissue disorder is similar to a human disease called Ehlers-Danlos
Syndrome, Type VI, or EDSVI. “It’s so similar it’s astounding,” she said. “I’ve
been looking at skin samples and examining their collagen crosslinks to determine
if you see the same things as in humans.” This summer, Hill
traveled twice to Salt Lake City, to work a total of four weeks in
cooperation with Associated Regional and University Pathologists Inc.
at the University of Utah. ARUP does diagnostic testing for humans. Dr. Cyprianna Swiderski,
Hill’s advisor and a CVM assistant professor
in clinical sciences, has been studying this disease with Utah researchers
for two years. Hill took small skin samples from healthy and sick horses
at the CVM and tested them in labs in Utah. “I was looking at skin samples of horses that we knew to have the disease
and that did not have the disease,” Hill said. “In the four weeks
time, I was able to get and process an amazing amount of data.” Hill’s findings have been extremely helpful in narrowing the list
of possible genetic defects responsible for the skin disease. Further,
her work provides a strong link between the horse and human disorders.
The data gathered will help in the development of better diagnostic
testing for horses. “This is such a new disease that anything we can get out there
is a great help,” she said. Hill said that
the goal is to gain understanding of the disease and be able to educate
the horse industry further. The Morris Animal
Foundation and MSU’s Office of the Vice President
for Research funded Hill’s project. -30- Released: Sept.
28, 2006
Animal
Health
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Student
studies skin disorder in horses
Contact: Dr. Cyprianna Swiderski, (662) 325-3432
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:57
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm06/060928.html
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