The association between exercise‐induced pulmonary haemorrhage and race‐day performance in Thoroughbred racehorses
Autor: | Guy D. Lester, E. J. Crispe, C.J. Secombe, D. I. Perera |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Lung Diseases
Male medicine.medical_specialty 040301 veterinary sciences Population Hemorrhage Running 0403 veterinary science Race (biology) Physical Conditioning Animal Animals Medicine Horses Prospective Studies education education.field_of_study Repeated sampling business.industry 0402 animal and dairy science Horse 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences General Medicine Exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage 040201 dairy & animal science Cross-Sectional Studies Mixed effects Physical therapy Female Horse Diseases business Sports |
Zdroj: | Equine Veterinary Journal. 49:584-589 |
ISSN: | 2042-3306 0425-1644 |
DOI: | 10.1111/evj.12671 |
Popis: | Background: Exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) is commonly implicated as a cause of poor athletic performance but there is limited and conflicting evidence for this association. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine if EIPH, based on endoscopic examination after racing, is associated with a variety of novel and established performance parameters. Study design: Prospective, observational cross-sectional study. Methods: Thoroughbred racehorses competing between 2012 and 2015 were examined on-course no earlier than 30 min after racing. Examinations were recorded and graded blindly by experienced veterinarians using a 0-4 scale. Linear mixed effect models were used for analysis of continuous response variables with horse name incorporated as a random effect to account for repeated sampling and horse variability. Generalised estimating equations were used for analysis of binary responses. Performance variables were examined in 2 models, comparing EIPH grade 0 to grades 1-4, and EIPH grade ≤2 compared with EIPH grades ≥3, controlling race factors that could influence performance. Results: There were 3794 observations collected from 1567 horses. EIPH was detected in 55.1% of observations. Horses with grade 4 EIPH were significantly more likely to have a lower finishing position and finish further behind the winner, less likely to place in the first 3 positions and collect race earnings, collected less earnings per race start and were slower over the last 600 m of the race than horses without EIPH (grade 0). Similar associations were seen in Model 2, with horses with EIPH grade ≥3 having inferior performance when compared to horses with EIPH ≤2. Main limitations: Enrolment was voluntary. Conclusion: Mild to moderate haemorrhage was not associated with inferior race day performance in this population of Thoroughbred racehorses. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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