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Topic:Exercise

Exercise in horses encompasses the physical activities that horses engage in, either through natural behaviors or structured training programs. These activities impact a horse's musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and respiratory systems, influencing overall health and performance. Exercise can vary in intensity, duration, and frequency, and its effects are studied to understand conditioning, endurance, and recovery processes in equines. Research in this field often focuses on the physiological adaptations to different types of exercise, the prevention of exercise-related injuries, and the optimization of training regimens for various equestrian disciplines. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the physiological, biomechanical, and health-related aspects of exercise in horses.
Skeletal muscle characteristics and metabolic response to exercise in young standardbreds.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 2 167-170 
Ronéus N, Essén-Gustavsson B.To determine whether performance capacity in a group of young trained Standardbreds is related to skeletal muscle characteristics and metabolic response to exercise. Methods: 13 clinically normal 2-year-old Standardbreds. Methods: Venous blood and middle gluteal muscle biopsy samples were obtained from each horse within 1 to 2 minutes after trotting at high speed for 1,600 m. Results: There was a positive correlation between plasma lactate and muscle glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) concentrations and trotting speed. There was a negative correlation between muscle adenosine triphosphate concentrati...
Residual strength of equine bone is not reduced by intense fatigue loading: implications for stress fracture.
Journal of biomechanics    February 1, 1997   Volume 30, Issue 2 109-114 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9290(96)00113-3
Martin RB, Gibson VA, Stover SM, Gibeling JC, Griffin LV.Fatigue or stress fractures are an important clinical problem in humans as well as racehorses. An important question in this context is, when a bone experiences fatigue damage during extreme use, how much is it weakened compared to its original state? Since there are very limited data on this question and stress fractures are common in racehorses, we sought to determine the effect of fatigue loading on the monotonic strength of equine cortical bone. Beams were machined from the dorsal, medial and lateral cortices of the third metacarpal bones of six thoroughbred racehorses. Beams from left and...
Treatment of horses in training.
The Veterinary record    January 18, 1997   Volume 140, Issue 3 76 
Green P, Webbon PM.No abstract available
Exercise-induced changes in the lung of Shetland ponies: ultrastructure and morphometry.
Journal of submicroscopic cytology and pathology    January 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 1 65-72 
Erickson HH, McAvoy JL, Westfall JA.The ultrastructural changes in pulmonary alveoli produced by running two ponies on a high speed treadmill at 7.6 m/sec, 3-degree incline, for 2 min support the hypothesis of pulmonary capillary stress failure as an explanation for exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH). Light microscopy combined with scanning and transmission electron microscopy confirmed the presence of red blood cells and proteinaceous material in the alveolar lumina and interstitial swelling in approximately one third of the pulmonary alveoli examined. Morphometric analysis revealed that the blood-gas barrier was 30-7...
Effect of allopurinol on the formation of reactive oxygen species during intense exercise in the horse.
Research in veterinary science    January 1, 1997   Volume 62, Issue 1 11-16 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(97)90172-7
Mills PC, Smith NC, Harris RC, Harris P.Allopurinol was administered to six horses in a cross-over study to determine the relative contribution of xanthine oxidase (XO) activity to the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the horse during intense exercise. Exercise increased the mean (SEM) plasma lipid hydroperioxide concentration to a maximum of 492.7 (33.4) microM within one minute of exercise completion and maximum levels of both oxidised glutathione (GSSG) in haemolysates of red blood cells and the glutathione redox ratio (GRR) occurred 20 minutes after exercise (87.2 [12.2] microM and 8.9 [0.9] per cent, respectively)....
Age-related differences in collagen crimp patterns in the superficial digital flexor tendon core region of untrained horses.
Australian veterinary journal    January 1, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 1 39-44 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1997.tb13829.x
Patterson-Kane JC, Firth EC, Goodship AE, Parry DA.To measure collagen fibril crimp angles and lengths as well as collagen fibril mass-average diameters in central and peripheral regions of the superficial digital flexor tendon of wild horses, to ascertain any age-related changes in either region in the absence of imposed galloping exercise. Methods: Measurements from a random cull of wild horses. Methods: Superficial digital flexor tendon samples were taken from 23 wild horses ranging in age from two to ten years. Methods: Horses were divided into 'young' (< 5 years, n = 10), 'middle-aged' (5 to < 10 years, n = 9) and 'ol...
Heart rate variability during exercise in the horse.
Biomedical sciences instrumentation    January 1, 1997   Volume 34 246-251 
Thayer JF, Hahn AW, Pearson MA, Sollers JJ, Johnson PJ, Loch WE.High heart rate variability (HRV) has been associated with more efficient autonomic control, allowing more responsivity and sensitivity to changing environmental demands. Previous results from spectral analysis of interbeat intervals of equine heart rate (HR) indicated increased HRV, reflecting more effective vagal control of the heart. This study focuses on characterizing equine HR and HRV during increasing then decreasing physical demand. A non-invasive ambulatory monitoring system continuously records HR and HRV as horses exercise on a high speed equine treadmill at increasing then decreasi...
Cardiorespiratory responses to exercise in horses with different grades of idiopathic laryngeal hemiplegia.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1997   Volume 29, Issue 1 6-10 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1997.tb01629.x
Christley RM, Hodgson DR, Evans DL, Rose RJ.The relationship between different grades of laryngeal function, as assessed by endoscopy at rest, and the measurements of indices of gas exchange and exercise capacity was assessed during a standardised treadmill exercise test in 149 horses. Horses with abnormalities other than idiopathic laryngeal hemiplegia (ILH) were excluded from the study and laryngeal function was graded according to an established system. There were no significant differences in age, weight, maximum oxygen uptake, maximum carbon dioxide production, maximum respiratory exchange ratio, maximum oxygen pulse and run time b...
[Adaptation to hypoxia as a factor enhancing work capacity].
Vestnik Rossiiskoi akademii meditsinskikh nauk    January 1, 1997   Issue 5 46-50 
Kozlov SA.The results of applying N. N. Sirotinin's concept of the use of hypoxic adaptation to enhance working capacity are given. There is evidence for the efficiency of adaptation of trotters to two hypoxias: to hypoxic hypoxia (in the midmountains) and to exercise hypoxia (during interval training under the conditions of Moscow) for increasing their performance. These studies demonstrated that in the midmountains, the trotters had more infrequent respiration, increased respiratory and minute respiratory volumes which were more obvious by the end of a monthly mountain stay. The monthly training of tr...
Effect of 19-norandrostenololylaurate on serum testosterone concentration, libido, and closure of distal radial growth plate in colts.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1997   Volume 38, Issue 1 59-67 doi: 10.1186/BF03548508
Koskinen E, Katila T.The long-term effect of anabolic steroid was investigated in 3 experiments. In experiment I, 500 mg of 19-norandrostenololylaurate was given to 5 colts and a dose of 100 mg to another 5 colts every 3rd week. Six colts served as untreated controls. The animals were 12-16 months old at the start, and 24 months at the end of treatment. In experiment II, a dose of 1 mg/kg was given every 3rd week to 4 colts and 0.3 mg/kg every week to another 4 colts. Six colts served as controls. The colts were treated from 7 months to 12 months of age. In experiment III, 1 mg/kg of steroid was given every 3rd we...
[Orthopedic hippotherapy–new methods in treatment of segmental instabilities of the lumbar spine].
Wiener medizinische Wochenschrift (1946)    January 1, 1997   Volume 147, Issue 22 504-508 
Rothhaupt D, Ziegler H, Laser T.The orthopedic hippotherapy represents a new form of therapeutic exercise in the conservative treatment of segmental instabilities in the lumbar spine region. This kind of therapy works on the principle of conveying to the patient the three-dimensional swinging motion of the horse's back. The patient reacts to these movement impulses by moving up and down (vertical movement of the spine), back and forth (sagittal movement) and to the right and the left (horizontal movement). The small movements of the spine thus produced bring about a mobilization of the segments involved in movement and there...
Energy sources and requirements of the exercising horse.
Annual review of nutrition    January 1, 1997   Volume 17 185-210 doi: 10.1146/annurev.nutr.17.1.185
Harris P.This review outlines the energy sources available to the horse, from its diet and from its body stores, at rest and while exercising. It looks at the current ways of describing the energy potential of diets fed to horses and discusses the relative advantages and disadvantages of the digestible energy and net energy systems. The more empirical net energy system for calculating the energy available for maintenance and work is compared with a more physiological partitioning system. Finally, the energy requirements for maintenance and exercise are discussed, together with how they may be practical...
Plasma von Willebrand factor in thoroughbreds in response to high-intensity treadmill exercise.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 1 71-76 
Smith JM, Meyers KM, Barbee DD, Schott H, Bayly WM.To determine whether plasma von Willebrand factor (vWf) concentration changes in horses during and after treadmill exercise. Methods: 5 mature, fit Thoroughbreds. Methods: A blood sampling catheter was placed in the right jugular vein. A warm-up period was followed by a 3-minute rest period. Horses were galloped at racing pace until fatigued (about 2 minutes). Blood samples were collected prior to warm-up, during the postwarm-up rest period, 1 minute into the run, at cessation of the run, and 5 to 120 minutes after cessation of the run. vWf activity was measured by ELISA and corrected for plas...
Evaluation of young or unproven horses for potential exercise intolerance.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 607-612 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30275-4
Hendrickson DA.The determination of poor performance in the young or unproven horse can be a difficult experience for the practitioner. This article describes an incremental exercise test that may be helpful in determining the cause of poor performance in horses when a complete physical examination and a lameness examination fail to elucidate the causes of poor performance. Included are values from normal yearling and 2-year-old horses that have undergone the incremental exercise test.
Exercise intolerance and poor performance in western performance and sprint horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 581-606 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30274-2
Kobluk CN, Gross GM.This article deals with the presenting histories, clinical examinations, and therapies of the causes of poor performance and exercise intolerance in the western performance horse and the sprint racehorse. The veterinarian's ability to diagnose and treat various pathophysiologic conditions that affect these horses is crucial to the major goals of a return to optimal performance and a long athletic career. Although these horses are a significant portion of most veterinary practices, there exists a minimal amount of information on their clinical evaluation and treatment. This article intends to f...
Myoglobin content and oxygen diffusion: model analysis of horse and steer muscle.
The American journal of physiology    December 1, 1996   Volume 271, Issue 6 Pt 1 C2027-C2036 doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.1996.271.6.C2027
Conley KE, Jones C.We test the hypothesis that myoglobin is important for O2 supply near the oxidative capacity of muscle. This hypothesis is evaluated with a simple model that incorporates the properties of heart and skeletal muscle tissue taken from steers and horses exercising at their maximum O2 consumption rate. These tissue samples allowed us to set the bounds on oxidative demand and O2 flux from red blood cells to the core of the muscle fiber, to estimate the blood and tissue capacities for O2 diffusion, and to define the capillary blood PO2 driving this O2 flux. A model combining blood convection with ti...
Upper respiratory causes of exercise intolerance.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 435-455 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30266-3
Beard W.The respiratory system is a frequent cause of exercise intolerance in performance horses. Labored breathing, fatigue during performance, and prolonged recovery after exercise are common complaints. Inadequate fitness level and diseases of the cardiovascular system are differential diagnoses that share these complaints and should be ruled out. Generation of increased airway noise is a clinical sign that implicates the upper respiratory system. A careful history from the owner and endoscopy of the upper airway are the most useful diagnostic tools. Endoscopy during exercise on a treadmill is indi...
Lower respiratory tract disease.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 457-472 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30267-5
Moore BR.Lower respiratory tract disease is an important source of poor performance and exercise intolerance in racehorses and middle-aged sport horses. Horses that perform high-intensity exercise are predisposed to development of infectious and noninfectious respiratory disease. Diagnostic aids for investigation of lower respiratory tract disease include thorough thoracic auscultation with rebreathing, endoscopic examination, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), and thoracic radiographic examination. The therapeutic approach for horses with lower respiratory tract diseases often can be directed by cytologic ...
Cardio-respiratory and plasma lactate responses to exercise with low draught resistances in standardbred trotters.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    December 1, 1996   Volume 43, Issue 10 635-641 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1996.tb00497.x
Gottlieb-Vedi M, Essén-Gustavsson B, Lindholm A.Five Standardbred trotters performed treadmill exercise with incrementally increasing trotting velocities for 2 min intervals in three different tests until fatigue. Each test was performed with draught loads of either 10, 20 or 30 kilopond (kp). Each trotting interval was followed by 2 min periods at a walk without draught load. Recordings were made of heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR), plasma lactate (PLA) and stride frequency (SF) at the end of each trotting interval. The HR increased to average values of 191 +/- 10,203 +/- 10 and 214 +/- 7 bpm and PLA increased to 3.8 +/- 0.7, 7.3 +/-...
Metabolic causes of equine exercise intolerance.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 537-554 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30271-7
Foreman JH.Metabolic causes of exercise intolerance can be subtle and difficult to document in horses. Because of increased metabolic rate in exercising muscle, most metabolic causes of exercise intolerance are clinically manifested by muscle abnormalities such as ER. Newer causes of ER are being documented by current research and are summarized in the article on muscular causes of equine exercise intolerance. Endocrine causes of exercise intolerance have been poorly documented, but recent work has shown the detrimental effects of hypothyroidism on exercise tolerance in horses. Many metabolic manifestati...
Skeletal origins of exercise intolerance in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 517-535 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30270-5
Gaughan EM.Skeletal origins of exercise intolerance and performance failure can reside in multiple tissues. Diagnosis of injury that results in an ability to continue to exercise, yet inefficiently do so, requires familiarity with evaluation of subtle lameness and often with the specific demands of the different equine sports. Imaging is usually vital to diagnosis development and understanding of lesion influences on locomotion. Therapy is lesion dependent. Return to competitive exercise and performance is dictated by an understanding of skeletal tissue response to injury, rational progressive treatment,...
Exercise intolerance in endurance horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 565-580 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30273-0
Flaminio MJ, Gaughan EM, Gillespie JR.Endurance competition requires synchronism and development of metabolic and musculoskeletal systems. An understanding of the existence of performance-limiting factors may permit the detection of exercise intolerance that could lead to performance failure, fatigue, and exhaustion. New concepts for assessment of fitness have increased the understanding of individual capacities and deficiencies and the interaction of the different systems involved in exercise.
Cardiovascular causes of exercise intolerance.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 473-494 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30268-7
Mitten LA.Exercise intolerance, due to cardiovascular disease in horses, may be caused by cardiac arrhythmias, valvular regurgitation, congenital abnormalities, myocardial dysfunction, pericardial disease, and vascular thrombosis. The most common cardiovascular cause of exercise intolerance in horses is atrial fibrillation. Cardiovascular abnormalities such as cardiac arrhythmias or murmurs, however, are common in athletic horses and are not always associated with exercise intolerance. Use of an electrocardiography (during rest and exercise) and echocardiography may be necessary to better determine the ...
Muscular causes of exercise intolerance in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1996   Volume 12, Issue 3 495-515 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30269-9
Valberg SJ.The muscular system of the horse is remarkable in its athletic scope and capacity to adapt to the demands placed on it. Muscular fatigue often causes exercise intolerance in horses as a primary muscular dysfunction or secondary to abnormalities in other integrated systems such as the cardiovascular, respiratory, or skeletal system. This article reviews basic muscular physiology leading to a discussion of the physiologic causes of muscular fatigue. In addition, a review of pathologic muscle disorders such as muscle strains and exertional myopathies that lead to poor performance is provided.
Efficacy of prosthetic laryngoplasty with and without bilateral ventriculocordectomy as treatments for laryngeal hemiplegia in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 11 1668-1673 
Tetens J, Derksen FJ, Stick JA, Lloyd JW, Robinson NE.To evaluate the efficacy of prosthetic laryngoplasty with and without bilateral ventriculocordectomy for treatment of experimentally induced left laryngeal hemiplegia (LLH). Methods: 15 adult Standardbreds. Methods: Horses were allotted to 3 equal groups. Sham operation (group 1), prosthetic laryngoplasty (group 2), or prosthetic laryngoplasty with bilateral ventriculocordectomy (group 3) was performed after induction of LLH. Upper airway function testing was performed prior to left recurrent laryngeal neurectomy (LRLN), 14 days after LRLN, and 60 and 180 days after surgical treatment. Measure...
Changes in maximum oxygen uptake during prolonged training, overtraining, and detraining in horses.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    November 1, 1996   Volume 81, Issue 5 2244-2249 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1996.81.5.2244
Tyler CM, Golland LC, Evans DL, Hodgson DR, Rose RJ.Thirteen standardbred horses were trained as follows: phase 1 (endurance training, 7 wk), phase 2 (high-intensity training, 9 wk), phase 3 (overload training, 18 wk), and phase 4 (detraining, 12 wk). In phase 3, the horses were divided into two groups: overload training (OLT) and control (C). The OLT group exercised at greater intensities, frequencies, and durations than group C. Overtraining occurred after 31 wk of training and was defined as a significant decrease in treadmill run time in response to a standardized exercise test. In the OLT group, there was a significant decrease in body wei...
High-speed exercise history and catastrophic racing fracture in thoroughbreds.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 11 1549-1555 
Estberg L, Stover SM, Gardner IA, Drake CM, Johnson B, Ardans A.To investigate the relation between several racing speed history characteristics and risk of fatal skeletal injury (FSI) in racing Thoroughbreds. Methods: 64 Thoroughbreds euthanatized during a 9-month period in 1991 at a California racemeet because of a catastrophic fracture incurred while racing (cases), identified retrospectively. For each race in which an FSI occurred, 1 control horse was randomly selected from the noncatastrophically injured participants. Methods: Racing and officially timed workout histories were obtained for each horse. Several history characteristics were calculated to...
Correlation between myofibrillar ATPase activity and myosin heavy chain composition in equine skeletal muscle and the influence of training.
The Anatomical record    October 1, 1996   Volume 246, Issue 2 195-207 doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0185(199610)246:2<195::AID-AR6>3.0.CO;2-0
Rivero JL, Talmadge RJ, Edgerton VR.The histochemical myofibrillar ATPase (mATPase) method is used routinely for identification of equine skeletal muscle fiber types, but important problems have been observed with the subdivision of fast fiber population when using this method. To verify the use of this qualitative method, a number of equine muscle biopsies were analyzed with a combination of histochemical, immunohistochemical, electrophoretic, and morphometric techniques. The influence of training on these interrelations was also evaluated. Methods: Five young (2-3 years old) thoroughbred horses were intensively trained for 8 m...
The effect of exercise on diaphragmatic activation in horses.
Respiration physiology    October 1, 1996   Volume 106, Issue 1 35-46 doi: 10.1016/0034-5687(96)00058-8
Ainsworth DM, Eicker SW, Nalevanko ME, Ducharme NG, Hackett RP, Snedden K.Horses chronically-instrumented with costal diaphragmatic electromyographic electrodes were studied during exercise while unencumbered by a breathing mask. Exercise-associated changes in esophageal (Pes), gastric (Pga) and transdiaphragmatic (Pdi) pressures were measured and related to diaphragmatic electromyographic activity (CS EMG) and to left forelimb impact. In all breaths examined, CS EMG always coincided with decrements in Pes. For all exercise trials, linear increases in CS EMG, Pga and Pdi and linear decreases in Pes, as a function of exercise intensity, always occurred. During all ga...
Mechanism of exercise-induced augmentation of lymphokine activated killer (LAK) cell activity in the horse.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    October 1, 1996   Volume 53, Issue 3-4 221-233 doi: 10.1016/S0165-2427(96)05610-3
Horohov DW, Keadle TL, Pourciau SS, Littlefield-Chabaud MA, Kamerling SG, Keowen ML, French DD, Melrose PA.Intense exercise affects various parameters of the immune system. The overall effect of exercise on immune function is dependent upon the physical condition of the subject, the intensity and duration of the exercise period, and the immune parameter assessed. Unconditioned horses subjected to a single bout of intensive exercise exhibit multiple alterations in immune function, including an augmentation of lymphokine activated killer (LAK) cell function. This increase in LAK cell activity is not due to an increase in circulating LAK precursors. While peripheral blood mononuclear cells from exerci...
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