Basics
Clinical Signs
Diagnostics
Treatment
Misc
100

PPID stands for? 

Pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction

100

Most common clinical sign

Failure to shed fully

100

What hampers veterinarians in diagnosing patients

Poor sensitivity 

100

Does treatment cure the disease

NO just manages 

100

Another clinical signs of PPID 

Infertility 

Lethargy 

Excess sweating 

chronic infections

200

Another name for PPID 

Cushing's Syndrome 

200

Name another clinical sign that deals with haricot

curly hair coat 

200

How to test for PPID

plasma ACTH levels 

200

Most widely used drug to treat PPID

Pergolide (Prascend) 

200

Name another testing method 

Dexamethasone suppression test 


300

True or false

PPID is uncommon in horses?

False: is the most common endocrine disorder

300

What clinical sign effects the foot (hoof)

repeated laminitis episodes/hoof abscesses

300

What do you expect to be high if positive 

ACTH

300

Another drug that may help PPID (less effective) 

Cyproheptadine (serotonin antagonist) 

300

What is the reference range

>29 pg/ml

400

PIPA stands for

Pars intermedia pituitary adenoma

400

Technical word for curly, long hair coat that fails to shed

hypertrichosis

400

Laboratory tests that may be abnormal 

Low lymphocytes 

Increased neutrophils 

intermittent high blood sugar 

400

Name 2 side effects of Parcend 

Not eating 

Weight loss 

lethargy 

400

Diet for PPID horse 

low soluble carbohydrate feed and forage

low carb hay pellets 

No CLASSIC SWEET FEED

500

Cause of PPID 

In a normal equine pituitary gland, a specific cell type (melanotrope) receives neuronal input from the hypothalamus.  These neurons release dopamine.  Dopamine then inhibits the intermediate lobe of the pituitary gland from making and releasing many different hormones. In the diseased gland, these hypothalamic neurons degenerate and much of that dopamine input is lost.  The melanotropes become dys-inhibited.  As a result, the pituitary gland’s intermediate lobe undergoes hypertrophy and hyperplasia.  The cells are hyperactive or present in high numbers and lead to production of abnormally high levels of many pituitary hormones. 


Specifically, ACTH overstimulates a horse’s cortisol synthesis by the adrenal glands.  The hyper-cortisolemic state leads to the long list of outward problems in the affected animal

500

Name a something your horse may do more of

increased H2 or urination 

500

What do you do if negative but have clinical signs that highly suggest PPID

TRH (Thyrotropin releasing hormone)

TRH stim 

if negative, then repeat test in 6-12 months 

500

What age of horses are affected 

Older >17 

Young as 7 

500

What is major focus of equine endocrine disease researchers

Making a PPID diagnosis at a much earlier stage of the disease process

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