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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 effect of joint position on juxta-articular bone marrow pressure. Relation to intra-articular pressure and joint effusion–an experimental study on horses.
Acta orthopaedica Scandinavica    December 1, 1980   Volume 51, Issue 6 893-897 doi: 10.3109/17453678008990890
Arnoldi CC, Reimann I, Mortensen S, Christensen SB, Kristoffersen J, Sønnichsen HV, Smith M.Six metacarpo-phalangeal joints of adult horses were studied. Pressure measurements were made in the joint and the metacarpal bone with simultaneous measurement of the systemic arterial blood pressure. Investigations performed to study the effect of joint position on juxta-articular bone marrow pressure showed that an increase in joint flexion was always followed by a rise in intraosseous pressure with a significant increase at flexion above 60 degrees. Increase in intra-articular pressure which was achieved by injection of saline was always followed by a slower rise in intraosseous pressure. ...
Porcine xenografts for treatment of skin defects in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1980   Volume 177, Issue 7 625-628 
Diehl M, Ersek RA.No abstract available
Assessment of wall shear stress in arteries, applied to the coronary circulation.
Cardiovascular research    October 1, 1980   Volume 14, Issue 10 568-576 doi: 10.1093/cvr/14.10.568
Benson TJ, Nerem RM, Pedley TJ.Time dependent wall shear rates cannot be directly or accurately measured in arteries using presently available techniques. Here a simple method is presented for calculating them from a single measured velocity waveform (either centreline or cross-sectionally averaged velocity). The method involves only Fourier analysis and the application of given formulae, and it is expected to be approximately valid in any segment of artery which has no branches or sharp curves for a distance of several diameters. It is shown, however, that a frequency response of 30 Hz is required in the velocity measuring...
Natural rigaidity of the horse’s backbone.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 3 101-108 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb03393.x
Jeffcott LB, Dalin G.The functional anatomy of the thoracolumbar (TL) spine is considered in relation to the horse's ability to perform at speed and to jump. The morphological features quite clearly show the relative inflexibility of the equine back and this was confirmed by some experimental studies. Fresh post mortem specimens from 5 Thoroughbreds were used to estimate the limits of dorsoventral movement of the TL spine from mid-thoracic to the cranial lumbar (T10-L2). The individual spinous processes could be moved a mean 1.1-6.0 mm on maximum ventroflexion and 0.8-3.8 mm on dorsiflexion. The overall flexibilit...
Equine locomotion: 2. The analysis of coordination between limbs of trotting standardbreds.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 66-70 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02311.x
Drevemo S, Fredricson I, Dalin G, Björne K.A high-speed cinematographic analysis of interlimb time and linear gait characteristics was carried out at racing speed (12.0 m/sec; 1:23.6 min/km) in 30 clinically sound Standard-bred trotters. In respect of the whole group of horses the racing trot was found to be a very regular and symmetric gait. The variation coefficient between different horses ranged from 8 to 21 per cent depending on the particular characteristic being investigated. The variations recorded in individual animals were about 60 per cent less than those found for the whole group. The most stable characteristics were the du...
Equine locomotion: 3. The reproducibility of gait in standardbred trotters.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 71-73 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02312.x
Drevemo S, Dalin G, Fredricson I, Björne K.The reproducibility of certain gait characteristics was investigated in Standardbred trotters at a speed of 12.0 m/sec. Twenty-two horses were recorded twice on the same day and 4 of them on a third occasion 3 years later. The short-term reproducibility was shown to be very good. In the long-term study it was found that the stride length and duration of swing and stride had increased. This was interpreted as an effect of training.
The application of high-speed cinematography for the quantitative analysis of equine locomotion.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 54-59 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02309.x
Fredricson I, Drevemo S, Dalin G, Hjertën G, Björne K.Locomotive disorders constitute a serious problem in horse racing which will only be rectified by a better understanding of the causative factors associated with disturbances of gait. This study describes a system for the quantitative analysis of the locomotion of horses at speed. The method is based on high-speed cinematography with a semi-automatic system of analysis of the films. The recordings are made with a 16 mm high-speed camera run at 500 frames per second (fps) and the films are analysed by special film-reading equipment and a mini-computer. The time and linear gait variables are pre...
Equine locomotion; 1. The analysis of linear and temporal stride characteristics of trotting standardbreds.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 60-65 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02310.x
Drevemo S, Dalin G, Fredricson I, Hjertén G.The movements of the individual limbs of 30 clinically sound Standardbred trotters were studied using high-speed cinematography. At a speed of 12 metres per second (m/sec; 1:23.6 min/km) the mean stride length was 545 cm and the mean duration of the stride was 455 milliseconds (msecs). The stance phase in the forelimbs was 100 msecs and 177 msecs in the hindlimbs. This difference was due to a longer restraint period in the hindlimbs and resulted in slightly shorter swing phases for the hindlimbs. The variations in any particular horse for stride length and for the duration of stride, stance, s...
Design of an equine mobile surgery table.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    March 1, 1980   Volume 75, Issue 3 475-479 
Lokai MD, Ford J.No abstract available
[Nutritive arteries of the proximal sesamoid bones (Ossa sesamoidea proximalia) of horses].
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    January 1, 1980   Volume 9, Issue 3 220-223 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1980.tb00860.x
Freddi M, Soana S.No abstract available
Reappraisal of energetics of locomotion shows identical cost in bipeds and quadrupeds including ostrich and horse.
Nature    December 13, 1979   Volume 282, Issue 5740 713-716 doi: 10.1038/282713a0
Fedak MA, Seeherman HJ.No abstract available
Horse metacarpal bone: age, ash content, cortical area and failure stress interrelationships.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1979   Volume 49, Issue 4 979-982 doi: 10.2527/jas1979.494979x
El Shorafa WM, Feaster JP, Ott EA.No abstract available
Evaluation of equine radial and median nerve conduction velocities.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 10 1406-1410 
Henry RW, Diesem CD, Wiechers DO.Eleven ponies and 13 horses were used to develop a technique for determining conduction velocity for the radial and median nerves and establishing normal limits for these values. One pony was euthanatized to determine the course of the radial and the median nerves. From this dissection, both proximal and distal stimulation sites for the radial and the median nerves were selected, as well as areas for recording muscle evoked responses from the abductor digiti I longus (extensor carpi obliquus) and the radial head of the deep digital flexor muscles. The other ten ponies and the horses were used ...
[A review of the functional anatomy and biomechanical adaption of autopodium extensors and flexors in horses (author’s transl)].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    September 5, 1979   Volume 86, Issue 9 349-355 
Marolt J, Bego U, Zobundzija M, Durst-Zivković B, Brkić A.No abstract available
Improved measurements of shear modulus and pleural membrane tension of the lung.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    July 1, 1979   Volume 47, Issue 1 175-181 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1979.47.1.175
Hajji MA, Wilson TA, Lai-Fook SJ.The continuum solution for the deformation of an elastic half space covered by a membrane is used to interpret measurements of the indentation of lung lobes under a column of fluid. The shear modulus mu of the underlying parenchyma is found to be approximately 0.7 times transpulmonary pressure, independent of species size. The tension in the pleural membrane T increases rapidly with increasing membrane area. For dog lungs, the value of T is 10(3) to 10(4) dyn/cm. For the larger species tested, pigs and horses, T is larger. The continuum solution shows that a concentrated force applied to the p...
Variability in erythrocyte deformability among various mammals.
The American journal of physiology    May 1, 1979   Volume 236, Issue 5 H725-H730 doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1979.236.5.H725
Smith JE, Mohandas N, Shohet SB.Deformability is an important aspect of erythrocyte physiology and has been extensively studied using human red cells. We have studied erythrocytes from 25 different animals using a viscometric technique. Erythrocyte diameters ranged from 3.3 microns in the goat to 11.4 microns for the elephant seal. Erythrocytes from most species deformed readily when a fluid shear stress was applied. A deformability index of the stressed cell defined as (length - width)/(length + width) correlated with cell size. The erythrocytes of four animals (pygmy goat, goat, Batanga horse, and miniature horse) deformed...
Bilateral ossification of the tendon of the biceps brachii muscle in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1979   Volume 174, Issue 3 282-285 
Meagher DM, Pool RR, Brown MP.No abstract available
Dynamics of the hind limb at walk in horse and dog.
Anatomy and embryology    January 30, 1979   Volume 155, Issue 2 179-190 doi: 10.1007/BF00305750
Wentink GH.The dynamics of the hind limbs of the horse and dog at walk are compared. The kinematics were studied by electromyography of animals walking on a moving belt, and by cinephotography in horses walking on the ground and in dogs walking on a moving belt and on the ground. This study reveals that: 1) the retraction of the hoof or foot relative to the hip at the end of the support phase is less in the horse than in the dog; 2) the change in the sense of the movements of the hind limb segments at the end of the support phase and at the beginning of the swing phase occurs earlier in the horse (55â...
On the fracture toughness of equine metacarpi.
Journal of biomechanics    January 1, 1979   Volume 12, Issue 6 415-421 doi: 10.1016/0021-9290(79)90026-5
Alto A, Pope MH.No abstract available
Tendon and ligament from the horse: an ultrastructural study of collagen fibrils and elastic fibres as a function of age.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences    December 18, 1978   Volume 203, Issue 1152 293-303 doi: 10.1098/rspb.1978.0106
Parry DA, Craig AS, Barnes GR.A study has been made of the ultrastructural organization of the collagen fibrils and elastic fibres in tendons and ligaments from horses of ages ranging from 2 months premature to 19 years. Diameter distributions of the collagen fibrils in the common digital extensor tendon, the superficial flexor tendon and the suspensory ligament are unimodal in the foetal tissue and at birth, and at these stages of development the three collagenous tissues are virtually indistinguishable. However, at maturity, the ligament and flexor tendon have bimodal distributions similar to that found for rat-tail tend...
Locomotion in the horse: a procedure for computing the internal forces in the digit.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 11 1721-1727 
Bartel DL, Schryver HF, Lowe JE, Parker RA.No abstract available
[The thickness of compact bone tissue excised from the central part of os metacarpale and metatarsale tertium in foals].
Veterinarni medicina    November 1, 1978   Volume 23, Issue 11 697-704 
Dusek J.No abstract available
Locomotion in the horse: kinematics and external and internal forces in the normal equine digit in the walk and trot.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 11 1728-1733 
Schryver HF, Bartel DL, Langrana N, Lowe JE.No abstract available
A study of the normal range of strain, strain rate, and stiffness of tendon.
Journal of biomedical materials research    November 1, 1978   Volume 12, Issue 6 877-894 doi: 10.1002/jbm.820120610
Herrick WC, Kingsbury HB, Lou DY.This paper describes the result of an investigation of strains and strain rates which normally occur in the tendons of the equine foreleg and presents stress-strain curves and moduli for the tendons at these rates. It has previously been demonstrated that resistance to flexion of the joints of the distal part of the equine foreleg is provided by a passive system of tendons and ligaments. It is therefore possible, using a large displacement, high-rate testing machine, to duplicate in the laboratory the strain rates and forces which are normally produced in the tendons of the foreleg of the runn...
Histological studies of the effects of ultrasonic therapy on surgically split flexor tendons.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 4 267-268 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02279.x
Morcos MB, Aswad A.No abstract available
An experimental study on the role of the reciprocal tendinous apparatus of the horse at walk.
Anatomy and embryology    August 18, 1978   Volume 154, Issue 2 143-151 doi: 10.1007/BF00304659
Wentink GH.The locomotor pattern of the hind limb of seven horses has been studied in intact animals and after transection of the following structures: the peroneus tertius tendon, the cranial tibial muscle, both cranial tibial muscle and peroneus tertius tendon, and the superficial digital flexor tendon. The investigation was carried out by high speed cinematography and electromyography. It is concluded that (1) the muscles and tendons over the cranial aspect of the tibia play an important role during the support phase; (2) the movements of the hind limb may be performed without the action of the crania...
The measurement of extracellular fluid volume (radiosulphate space) in horses.
The British veterinary journal    May 1, 1978   Volume 134, Issue 3 283-285 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)33496-6
Thornton JR.No abstract available
Use of carbon fibre for tendon repair.
The Veterinary record    April 8, 1978   Volume 102, Issue 14 322 doi: 10.1136/vr.102.14.322
Goodship AE, Brown PN, Silver IA, Jenkins D, Kirby M.No abstract available
The use of carbon fibre (Grafil) for tendon repair in animals.
The Veterinary record    April 1, 1978   Volume 102, Issue 13 287-288 doi: 10.1136/vr.102.13.287
Vaughan LC, Edwards GB.No abstract available
The use of force platform gait analysis in the assessment of treatment for tendon injury in the racehorse [proceedings].
The Journal of physiology    April 1, 1978   Volume 277 38P 
Brown PN, Goodship AE, Lanyon LE, Pye C.No abstract available
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