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Topic:Biomechanics

Biomechanics in horses refers to the study of the mechanical principles that govern movement and physical function in equine species. This field encompasses the analysis of gait, locomotion, and the forces exerted by and upon the horse's musculoskeletal system. Biomechanical studies often involve the use of motion capture technology, force plates, and computer modeling to assess how horses move and how various factors, such as conformation, training, and health status, influence their performance and soundness. Research in equine biomechanics contributes to understanding injury prevention, rehabilitation, and performance optimization. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanics of movement, the impact of external and internal forces, and the applications of biomechanical analysis in equine care and management.
The influence of dirt track hardness on equine limb acceleration and impact attenuation.
BMC veterinary research    March 19, 2026   doi: 10.1186/s12917-026-05376-0
Bruce OL, Pfau T, Crack LE, Sawatsky A, Leguillette R, Edwards WB.No abstract available
The dynamic 3D horse: analyzing the relationship between whole body pathomechanics and joint degeneration in the fetlocks.
Frontiers in veterinary science    March 11, 2026   Volume 13 1773617 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2026.1773617
Miller GP, Cornille JL, Hanning R, Lee AKK, Uhl EW, Osborn ML.Lameness is often associated with degenerative joint disease (DJD). Current therapies focus on minimizing pain or treating specific lesions but generally do not address the pathomechanical forces that are the root cause of degeneration. Treatments based on specific, whole-body therapies are becoming common in humans with DJD, but are still not routinely applied in equine cases. Designing targeted therapies for horses requires recognizing habitual postures and movements that are pathological. An important but often missing component for understanding movement postures is accurate and manipulata...
The effect of botulinum toxin injection into the deep digital flexor muscle on foot biomechanics in healthy horses.
American journal of veterinary research    February 26, 2026   1-10 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.25.12.0452
Slavik K, Underwood C, Lowndes C, Skelton G, van Eps A.To examine the effects of botulinum toxin inoculation into the deep digital flexor (DDF) muscle on foot biomechanics. Unassigned: 6 healthy horses were injected with botulinum toxin in the DDF of 1 forelimb. The opposite forelimb was untreated. Ground reaction forces (GRF) were measured using a pressure sensor in regions of interest, including the dorsal hoof wall (toe). The location of the center of pressure (COP) was measured relative to the dorsal hoof wall during static standing and at peak stance during walking. Repeat measurements 3, 7, 14, 28, and 42 days after injection were compared t...
Equine lameness detection and monitoring during diagnostic anaesthesia with an instrumented hoof boot.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    February 25, 2026   Volume 317 106614 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2026.106614
Keller J, Hassenstein MJ, Jung K, Geburek F.Ground reaction forces are accepted as gold standard for objective assessment of weightbearing lameness but measurements at the hoof are limited to experimental devices. This study aimed to evaluate whether innovative instrumented hoof boots (IHBs) could detect and monitor lameness in horses during diagnostic anaesthesia. Twenty-six horses referred for lameness examination (15 front limbs, 17 hindlimbs) were equipped with IHBs and body mounted inertial sensors. Data were collected simultaneously before and after diagnostic anaesthesia until objectively considered positive. Recorded IHB data i...
The high fundamental frequency in horse whinnies is generated by an aerodynamic whistle.
Current biology : CB    February 25, 2026   Volume 36, Issue 4 902-911.e4 doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2026.01.004
Lefèvre RA, Barluet de Beauchesne L, Sabarros F, Briefer Freymond S, Ramseyer A, Keller M, Reby D, Fitch WT, Briefer ÉF.Understanding why the frequencies of some species' vocalizations are far above or below those predicted by body size is key for explaining the remarkable diversity of mammalian vocal behavior. Horses, among the largest terrestrial mammals, provide a clear example of such deviation: their whinnies contain a very high fundamental frequency (>1,000 Hz) in addition to a second, lower one (∼200 Hz). While the lower fundamental frequency of whinnies is readily attributed to vocal fold (laryngeal) vibrations, the biomechanical processes underlying the production of the higher one remain unknown. Us...
Hoof and movement asymmetry in Thoroughbred racehorses with predominantly single direction training.
American journal of veterinary research    February 23, 2026   1-7 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.25.12.0437
Chan ZYS, Ho W, Slobodova A, Parkes RSV, Forbes B, Pfau T.To investigate associations between contralateral (left-right) hoof width asymmetry and vertical movement asymmetry in racing Thoroughbreds. We hypothesized that forehoof differences would be associated with poll and withers movement asymmetry and hind hoof differences with pelvis movement asymmetry. Unassigned: This observational cross-sectional study included 169 Thoroughbred racehorses recently retired from clockwise racing and assessed the day of scheduled farriery work. Contralateral hoof width differences were quantified and movement asymmetry during trot measured using inertial sensors ...
Spatial Variation in Turf Surface Properties of Polo Pitches: A Case Study of Different Handicaps of Argentina.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    February 22, 2026   Volume 16, Issue 4 685 doi: 10.3390/ani16040685
Blanco MA, Peterson ML, Cipriotti PA, Apecechea F.Polo is a high-speed equestrian sport that imposes mechanical demands on horses and turf, yet limited research has examined the functional behavior of polo playing surfaces. This study characterizes the spatial variability of mechanical surface properties across turf polo pitches representing high-, medium-, and low-handicap categories. Three fields were assessed using lightweight field-based instruments, including the Impact Test Device (ITD), Rotational Peak Shear (RPS) tester, Going Stick© for penetration (GSP) and shear (GSS), and a TDR probe for volumetric moisture content (VMC%). A tota...
The majority of proximal sesamoid and condylar fractures occurred in horses identified as high risk by inertial measurement unit sensors.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 13, 2026   1-10 doi: 10.2460/javma.25.08.0556
Hall NP, Sweeney DM, Holmströem M, Kim W, Wang Y, Donahue KD, Palmer SE, Lambert DH, Bayly WM.To determine whether targeted lesion-specific algorithms developed from data collected with accelerometer-based inertial measurement units worn by racing Thoroughbreds could retrospectively identify horses at high risk of incurring forelimb condylar or proximal sesamoid fractures. Unassigned: Fracture-specific algorithms were generated from July 2021 to December 2024 with accelerometer data from 42,623 races by 15,755 horses, including 54 races by 23 horses that subsequently suffered condylar fractures and 90 races by 31 horses that later sustained proximal sesamoid fractures. Fracture-specifi...
Tissue-Engineered Osteochondral Allograft Versus Fresh Osteochondral Allograft: Comparable Cartilage and Subchondral Bone Repair in a 14-Month Equine Osteochondral Defect Model.
The American journal of sports medicine    February 10, 2026   Volume 54, Issue 3 622-634 doi: 10.1177/03635465251409083
Keller LE, Kelly TN, Chevalier JM, Jung HJ, Pearson GB, Begum L, Beane OS, Bhumiratana S, Fortier LA.Fresh osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantation effectively repairs cartilage and subchondral bone; however, the persisting shortage of available donor OCAs and their short shelf-life make scheduling surgeries and meeting patient demand challenging. Attempts have been made to develop tissue-engineered solutions to address the limitations of OCA; nonetheless, these have failed to progress beyond the preclinical stage. Objective: To assess the safety and efficacy of a tissue-engineered osteochondral allograft (TE-OCA) as compared with equine OCA in an equine osteochondral defect model. Metho...
Biomechanics of the Head and Neck.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    February 6, 2026   S0749-0739(25)00072-0 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2025.12.004
Clayton HM.The horse's head and neck account for about 10% of body weight, and this, combined with the fact that they are cantilevered in front of the trunk, produces considerable leverage around the joints at the base of the neck. During locomotion, the neck is moved primarily by gravitational and inertial forces controlled by eccentric-concentric cycles of contraction in the topline muscles assisted by energy-saving, stretch-recoil cycles in the nuchal ligament. The functional part of the nuchal ligament is the caudal funicular region and the lamellae to the second cervical vertebra that acts as the po...
Biomechanical assessment of dressage Spanish horses through accelerometry and the immediate effects of a single capacitive resistive electrical transfer session.
BMC veterinary research    January 31, 2026   Volume 22, Issue 1 148 doi: 10.1186/s12917-026-05319-9
Calle-González N, Rivero JL, Argüelles D, Requena F, Muñoz A.Capacitive resistive electrical transfer (CRET) is a non-invasive electromagnetic diathermic technique. The effect of its application 24 h prior to exercise, compared to a sham application performed with the device off, was evaluated in 8 Spanish Purebred dressage stallions. CRET was applied bilaterally on the neck, back, and croup. The horses wore an accelerometer fixed on the sternal area during a dressage test, and spatiotemporal stride parameters, total and dorsoventral (DVAA), longitudinal (LAA), and mediolateral accelerometric activities, as well as dorsoventral displacement, were recor...
A narrative review of factors influencing rider performance and horse welfare in equestrian activities.
Frontiers in sports and active living    January 22, 2026   Volume 7 1744918 doi: 10.3389/fspor.2025.1744918
Balog O, Havanecz K, Csányi T, Ökrös C, Tóth L, Berki T.Equestrian sport is a unique multi-species discipline in which the performance of a horse-rider dyad depends on the harmonious interaction of two athletes with distinct biomechanics and needs. Although the sport contributes substantially to the global economy and is the only Olympic event involving two species, research on rider-centered factors has been fragmented. Current narrative review centered peer-reviewed evidence addressing three questions: (RQ1) how rider biomechanics and posture influence horse performance and welfare; (RQ2) what causes and consequences rider asymmetry has; and (RQ3...
Three-dimensional anatomical description of the microarchitecture of the distal sesamoid bone in healthy and navicular syndrome-affected horses by computed microtomography.
Anatomical record (Hoboken, N.J. : 2007)    January 20, 2026   doi: 10.1002/ar.70143
Salinas P, Vergara MA, Tapia D.Navicular syndrome (NS) is a chronic, degenerative condition of the equine thoracic limb that compromises the distal sesamoid bone (DSB) and associated structures responsible for stabilization and load absorption during locomotion. Although historically attributed to vascular alterations, its etiology is now recognized as biomechanical, characterized by chronic overload of the deep digital flexor tendon. Conventional diagnostic techniques-radiography, scintigraphy, and ultrasonography-lack the sensitivity and precision required to detect early microarchitectural alterations. This study aimed t...
Left and right-side echocardiographic measurement of pulmonary artery stiffness in thoroughbred racehorses.
Journal of equine veterinary science    January 19, 2026   Volume 158 105784 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2026.105784
Bozzola C, Stucchi L, Sala G, Schinardi L, Stancari G, Zucca E.Pulmonary Artery Stiffness (PAS) is a non-invasive echocardiographic index of pulmonary artery elasticity. In horses, PAS has been measured only from the right parasternal short-axis view, while the influence of alternative imaging windows remains unknown. Objective: To assess the repeatability and reproducibility of Acceleration Time (AT), Maximal Frequency Shift (MFS), and PAS measurements from the left parasternal angled view of the right ventricular inflow/outflow, and to compare these parameters with those obtained from the right parasternal short-axis view in Thoroughbred racehorses. Met...
Multiplanar intersegmental angular velocity in the assessment of topline movement in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 19, 2026   1-10 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.25.09.0331
Ursini TL, Clayton HM, Levine D, Richards J.To measure intersegmental movement in the sagittal, dorsal, and transverse planes of the cranial thoracic to caudal thoracic, caudal thoracic to lumbar, and lumbar to sacral segments using range of motion and angular velocity as measures of quality of movement. Unassigned: 6-degrees-of-freedom spinal motion was measured at the walk and trot in 3 sound Thoroughbred and Thoroughbred cross horses, and the data were pooled, giving a total of 54 gait cycles at walk and 33 at trot. These were compared against 8 cycles at walk and 13 at trot from 1 Thoroughbred horse that was confirmed as having mode...
Validation of a handheld smartphone markerless gait-analysis tool using an estimated groundline in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 16, 2026   doi: 10.1002/evj.70149
Key K, Kirkegaard J, Berg K, Andresen KR, Skov Hansen S.A handheld smartphone-based computer vision algorithm (RealHorse® [RH]) offers accessible alternatives for equine gait analysis but requires validation against a gold-standard three-dimensional multicamera optical motion capture system (Qualisys® [QS]). Objective: To evaluate the accuracy and precision of RH in measuring vertical displacement signals (VDS) at the eye, withers, back and croup in horses trotting on a straight line and on a circle. Methods: Cross-sectional comparative validation study of a markerless computer vision algorithm. Methods: Fifty-nine horses were recorded while trot...
Functional and biochemical inflammatory responses to low-dose intra-articular recombinant equine IL-1β: a pilot study.
Frontiers in veterinary science    January 16, 2026   Volume 12 1746738 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2025.1746738
Korac L, St George L, MacNicol J, McCrae P, Jung L, Golestani N, Karrow N, Cánovas A, Pearson W.Low-dose intra-articular injection of recombinant equine interleukin-1β (reIL-1β) may offer a useful model for studying early onset or subclinical joint inflammation in horses. This pilot study aimed to determine the lowest intra-articular dose of reIL-1β required to produce biochemical evidence of synovitis, and to correlate synovitis biomarkers with functional, upper-body asymmetry parameters. Saline (control) and 50, and 75 ng reIL-1β were injected into the left or right intercarpal joint of three ( = 3) horses in a three-way crossover design. Synovial fluid was collected by aseptic art...
Comparative tensile properties of the equine vagina, penile sheath, and scrotum.
Journal of biomechanics    January 16, 2026   Volume 197 113169 doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2026.113169
Collins AE, Wayne JS, Ferrando CA, De Vita R.This experimental study characterizes the elastic behavior of male and female equine genital tissues using uniaxial tensile testing, with strain measurements obtained via digital image correlation. Dog-bone-shaped tissue specimens were excised from mares and geldings (n=23 from female specimens and n=42 from male specimens) with all specimens aligned along the circumferential direction (CD) of the vagina, penis, and scrotum. The results include load-displacement data, stress-strain data, and tangent moduli for the penile sheath, vaginal canal, and scrotum, with strain measured in both the CD a...
Natural progression of tarsal osteochondrosis in Standardbred pacers and trotters.
Veterinary surgery : VS    January 3, 2026   doi: 10.1111/vsu.70073
McCoy AM, Lopp-Schurter CT, Bishop RC, Narotsky A, Grogger K, Kemper AM.To determine the natural progression of tarsal osteochondrosis (OC) in a cohort of Standardbred foals and assess the impact of gait preference (trotting vs. pacing). Methods: Longitudinal observational cohort study. Methods: Client-owned Standardbred foals (n = 148). Methods: Tarsal radiographs were taken every 2 months from 2 to 12 months of age and foals were video monitored to document time spent pacing or trotting. Differences between groups were assessed using χ analysis. Survival analysis was used to determine if lesion healing differed between groups over time. Results: Of 148 ...
Weekly riding frequency has a greater impact than rider skill level on western riders’ identification of stirrup asymmetry.
Journal of equine veterinary science    January 2, 2026   Volume 157 105758 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2025.105758
Jolley EN, Higgins AH, Logan AA.Asymmetry of stirrups and rider experience level has shown to impact rider symmetry and position. Objective: This study aims to determine if novice and advanced riders can detect stirrup asymmetry in the same frequency, hypothesizing that advanced riders would detect asymmetry in a greater frequency. Methods: Ten stock-type horses and 10 (5 advanced, 5 novice) riders, paired together to test random stirrup treatments. Riders were assigned to a horse for 2 rides, one with asymmetric stirrups, the other with symmetric stirrups, but blinded to their treatments. At the end of both rides, they took...
Group and Individual Changes in Spinal Mobility During a 12-Week Rehabilitation Program Including Swimming in Horses with Axial Musculoskeletal Lesions.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 30, 2025   Volume 16, Issue 1 103 doi: 10.3390/ani16010103
Pécresse B, Moiroud C, Hanne-Poujade S, Hatrisse C, De Azevedo E, Coudry V, Jacquet S, Audigié F, Chateau H.Locomotor disorders involving the spine are a major cause of impaired performance and early retirement in sport horses. Swimming is increasingly incorporated into rehabilitation protocols, but its effects on spinal biomechanics remain poorly understood. This prospective study evaluated changes in thoracolumbar mobility in sixteen sport horses diagnosed with cervical or thoracolumbar axial musculoskeletal lesions over a 12-week rehabilitation program comprising 4 weeks of land-based training followed by 8 weeks during which swimming sessions were incorporated three times per week. Weekly measur...
Evaluating the Accuracy of a Vision-Based Algorithm for Groundline Estimation in Trotting Horses Using Multiple Camera Angles.
Veterinary medicine and science    December 30, 2025   Volume 12, Issue 1 e70739 doi: 10.1002/vms3.70739
Key K, Berg K, Kirkegaard J, Andresen KR, Hansen SS.Equine lameness diagnosis largely relies on subjective visual assessments, which can be biased. Although marker-based methods, force plates and inertial measurement units (IMUs) provide objective measurements, they require specialized setups. Vision-based algorithms offer a portable, markerless alternative, but their accuracy needs thorough testing. Objective: To evaluate a custom vision-based algorithm for estimating the groundline across multiple camera angles, including handheld use in horses trotting on a treadmill. Methods: Experimental comparative study. Methods: Eight Standardbred trott...
Upwards or onwards? Assessment of objective gait quality parameters in three European horse breeds at walk and trot.
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 30, 2025   Volume 157 105764 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2025.105764
Gmel AI, Haraldsdóttir EH, Rosa TV, Lamas LP, Neuditschko M, Weishaupt MA.Europe has many horse breeds differing in conformation, gaits and genetics due to diverging breeding goals. Research studies comparing objective gait parameters between different horse breeds are limited and date back a decade. Objective: In this study, objective gait parameters were measured in three European breeds, namely Lusitanos (LUS; n = 52), Franches-Montagnes (FM; n = 311) and Swiss Warmblood (WB; n = 40) using an inertial measurement system (sensors at poll, withers, pelvis and all four canon bones) at walk and trot. Results: At walk and trot, LUS moved significantly slower than WB a...
Standing CT-based finite element models efficiently identify regions of high mechanical strain in equine metacarpal subchondral bone.
Scientific reports    December 11, 2025   Volume 16, Issue 1 1166 doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-30921-6
Malekipour F, Whitton RC, Muir P, Lee PV.Stress fractures are common in racehorses, with the metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joint being the most frequently affected site as it is subjected to high-magnitude and high-rate cyclic loads during training and racing. These loads lead to repeated compressive stresses, resulting in subchondral bone (SCB) sclerosis, fatigue microcracks, and matrix damage that can progress to parasagittal fractures or palmar osteochondral disease (POD). The present study developed joint-specific 3D FE models and slice-based FE models using standing CT images for three trained racehorses, each presenting distinct SC...
Association Between Stride Parameters and Racetrack Curvature for Thoroughbred Chuckwagon Horses.
Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)    December 4, 2025   Volume 25, Issue 23 7376 doi: 10.3390/s25237376
van den Broek M, Chan ZYS, De Bruyne C, Garcia-Alamo K, Skotarek Loch S, Pfau T.Increased risk of musculoskeletal injury in galloping racehorses has been linked to decreased stride length and reduced speed over consecutive races prior to the injury. As racetrack curvature influences horses' maximal speed, we hypothesized it also affects stride parameters. During training sessions, twenty-eight wagon-pulling Thoroughbred Chuckwagon horses were equipped with Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) loggers, allowing for identification of speed, stride length (SL) and stride frequency (SF), and average speed, SL and SF were calculated for consecutive 100 m sections. Effects...
Preliminary Biometric Study on Symmetry of Hoof Solear Aspect in Forelimbs in Four Horse Breeds.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    November 21, 2025   Volume 15, Issue 23 3369 doi: 10.3390/ani15233369
Stachurska A, Wnuk E, Łuszczyński J, Donderowicz W.Correct conformation and symmetry of bilateral hooves are associated with a properly balanced hoof, which has a significant impact on the biomechanics of movement and reduces the risk of injury. The aim of the study was to compare solear aspect dimensions of bilateral hooves in forelimbs (hoof width, length, frog width, length, medial and lateral diagonals) with regard to sex, breed and age of horses. The dimensions were measured with a calliper in 100 horses of four breeds. The results showed that the breed factor significantly affected all dimensions. Age was significant for some variables, ...
Could “wild horses” drag you away? Quantifying muscular architecture in the forelimbs of extant, non-domestic equids (Perissodactyla: Equidae).
Anatomical record (Hoboken, N.J. : 2007)    November 20, 2025   doi: 10.1002/ar.70092
De Ridder T, Aerts P, MacLaren JA.Equid evolution is characterized by a high diversity of extinct species and morphologies, whereas extant equids share a superficially similar, monodactyl morphology. This inferred musculoskeletal similarity of modern equid limbs remains unexplored, and it is often assumed that domestic horse limbs are representative for wild equids (e.g., zebras, onagers, etc.). Our aim was to quantitatively describe the muscle architecture and arrangement of all forelimb muscles in extant wild Equus species to test this assumption, and investigate any differences between the species. We hypothesized that ther...
Statistical approaches for estimating forelimb ground reaction forces in foals during walking and trotting.
Journal of biomechanics    November 16, 2025   Volume 194 113078 doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2025.113078
Opolz MD, Sipes GC, Moshage SG, McCoy AM, Kersh ME.Equine models are useful in biomechanics research due to their similarity in musculoskeletal tissue to humans, their athletic nature, and rapid skeletal development which permits ontogenetic studies. However, a continuing challenge in musculoskeletal models for large animal biomechanics is measuring the ground reaction force (GRF) during locomotion and therefore few reports of biomechanical measures such as joint torques. Here we evaluate two statistical approaches for estimating forelimb ground reaction forces in foals (n = 3). Longitudinal motion capture, GRF, and subject mass data during ...
Impact of the technology to monitor horse behaviour and health: a scoping review.
Journal of equine veterinary science    November 14, 2025   Volume 155 105734 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2025.105734
Giannone C, Atallah E, Dalla Costa E, Benetti E, Santolini E, Tassinari P, Bovo M.Technology for monitoring behaviour and health of horses has evolved significantly, presenting new opportunities and challenges in equine management and healthcare. This scoping review consolidates recent findings on wearable sensors and non-contact technologies, discussing their benefits and limitations. Among these advancements, heart rate monitors stand out as a key point in equine monitoring. By tracking heart rate variability, devices help monitor cardiac autonomic regulation, optimise training regimens and allow early detection of cardiac issues, although accuracy can be compromised by i...
The effect of repeated shocks on the low back during horse riding.
Journal of biomechanics    November 13, 2025   Volume 194 113067 doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2025.113067
Smit NA, Bos JE, van Dieën JH, Kingma I.Repeated shocks, such as those occurring during horse riding, may result in a risk of overloading the low back. This study investigated accelerations and angular changes in the low back during horse riding, using Inertial measurement units (IMUs) on the pelvis, and L4, L1, and T11 spine levels during 30 min of walking and 10 min of cantering in twelve female participants. The root mean squared (RMS) linear acceleration of each IMU and the transmission (signal transfer) between each pair of IMUs were calculated from the measured accelerations. Additionally, angular motions between IMU's were ...
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