Analyze Diet

Topic:Gait Analysis

Gait analysis in horses involves the systematic study of the movement patterns of horses to assess their locomotion. This analysis is often conducted using advanced technologies such as motion capture systems, force plates, and high-speed cameras to collect quantitative data on various aspects of gait, including stride length, limb movement, and joint angles. Gait analysis is utilized in veterinary medicine, performance evaluation, and rehabilitation to identify abnormalities, improve performance, and monitor recovery from injury. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore methodologies, applications, and findings related to gait analysis in equine science.
Locomotion and gait analysis.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    December 1, 1985   Volume 1, Issue 3 549-572 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30750-2
Dalin G, Jeffcott LB.Gait analysis can play an important role in exercise physiology, racetrack ergonomics, lameness prophylaxis, and assessment of performance potential in racehorses. This article concentrates on the methods used for gait analysis and considers some basic data on the different gaits of the horse.
Scapular notch resection for suprascapular nerve decompression in 12 horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 10 1019-1020 
Schneider JE, Adams OR, Easley KJ, Schneider RK, Bramlage LR, Peter J, Boero MJ.Supraspinatus and infraspinatus muscle paralysis with atrophy was treated by partial osteotomy of the scapula, deep to the suprascapular nerve. The horses had various gait abnormalities, which were corrected by the surgery, but regeneration of the muscles varied from partial to complete, depending on the duration of the condition and the degree of atrophy before surgery.
Changes in digital venous pressures of horses moving at the walk and trot.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 7 1545-1549 
Ratzlaff MH, Shindell RM, DeBowes RM.Blood pressures from the catheterized lateral digital vein of the fore-limbs of 6 clinically normal horses were measured at rest, at the walk, and at the trot. Digital venous pressures were compared with the phases of the stride and weight-bearing forces, using electrogoniometry and a force platform. Rapid increases in digital venous pressures to maximal values were observed immediately before maximal forces during the support period of the stride. At the trot, increases in peak vertical forces were paralleled by increases in peak digital venous pressures. Seemingly, the hydrodynamics of the d...
Semitendinosus tenotomy for treatment of fibrotic myopathy in the horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 15, 1985   Volume 186, Issue 6 565-567 
Bramlage LR, Reed SM, Embertson RM.The medical records and follow-up data for 4 horses with fibrotic myopathy of the semitendinosus muscle treated by semitendinosus tenotomy were reviewed. The gait deficit for each of the 4 horses was typical of fibrotic myopathy. Two of the horses had the gait deficit since birth. The efficacy of semitendinosus tenotomy was compared with the traditional treatment of partial myotenectomy of the affected muscle. The functional results in the 4 horses appeared to be equal to partial myotenectomy in returning the horses to athletic function and, compared with what has been reported, was cosmetical...
Force development during sustained locomotion: a determinant of gait, speed and metabolic power.
The Journal of experimental biology    March 1, 1985   Volume 115 253-262 doi: 10.1242/jeb.115.1.253
Taylor CR.This paper develops three simple ideas about force development during sustained locomotion which provide some insights into the mechanisms that determine why animals change gait, how fast they can run, and how much metabolic energy they consume. The first idea is that the alternate stretch-shorten pattern of activity of the muscles involved in locomotion allows muscle-tendon units to function as springs, affecting the amount of force a given cross-sectional area of muscle develops, and the metabolic requirements of the muscles for force development. Animals select speeds and stride frequencies...
The role of compliance in mammalian running gaits.
The Journal of experimental biology    March 1, 1985   Volume 115 263-282 doi: 10.1242/jeb.115.1.263
McMahon TA.The running gaits used by both bipedal and quadrupedal animals are reviewed and contrasted. At high speeds, bipeds use both ordinary running, in which the legs move opposite one another, and hopping. Quadrupeds generally use the trot or its variations at moderate speeds, and first the canter and then the gallop as speed increases. Running in both bipeds and quadrupeds generally involves at least one aerial phase per stride cycle, but certain perturbations to running including running in circles, running under enhanced gravity, running on compliant surfaces and running with increased knee flexi...
Standardised terminology for the description and analysis of equine locomotion.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1984   Volume 16, Issue 6 522-528 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1984.tb02007.x
Leach DH, Ormrod K, Clayton HM.Terminology for the analysis of equine locomotion is reviewed and the most appropriate terms selected for use by research workers in this field. Each cycle of limb movement comprises a stance phase, when the hoof is in contact with the ground, alternating with a swing phase. The stance phase is subdivided at the mid-stance position into an initial decelerative phase followed by a propulsive phase. When the stance phases of different limbs occur concurrently, the term overlap refers to the duration of simultaneous ground contact. Single support is the term used to describe the phase when the li...
The effect of racetrack design on gait symmetry of the pacer.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    October 1, 1984   Volume 48, Issue 4 374-380 
Crawford WH, Leach DH.A survey of a western Canadian racetrack determined the superelevation and transition curves to be less than the cited design standards. High-speed cinematography was used to film seven Standardbred pacers as they proceeded around one curve of the track at racing speed and for each horse 19 temporal stride parameters were obtained from these films using a film analyzer system. Average velocities were calculated and the mean stride length was found to vary from 5.08 m to 5.77 m. In all frames analyzed the hind foot was observed to contact the track surface prior to the ipsilateral forefoot and ...
Purchase examinations for performance horses.
Modern veterinary practice    September 1, 1984   Volume 65, Issue 9 692-695 
Anderson GF, Landsheft B.Performance horses should be thoroughly examined before sale to detect any defects that could render them unsuitable for the purchaser's intended use. With the horse in its stall, the eyes, nasolacrimal puncta, external ear canals and mouth are examined, the rectal temperature measured and the heart, lungs, trachea and sinuses auscultated. Moving the horse out of the stall, the head, parotid glands, mandibular lymph nodes, larynx, neck muscles, jugular veins and cervical vertebrae are inspected. The scapula, point of the shoulder, withers, tuber sacrale and point of the hip are palpated, after...
Stride characteristics of horses competing in Grand Prix jumping.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 5 888-892 
Leach DH, Ormrod K, Clayton HM.An investigation was made of the stride characteristics of horses jumping 2 obstacles during a Grand Prix competition. One obstacle was a picket fence and rail 1.3 m high (fence 2), and the other was a coop and rail 1.52 m high (fence 11). Thirteen distance and 22 timing measurements of 17 horses were extracted from high-speed films, using computer-aided analysis. These data were used to compare takeoff and landing of the lead and nonlead legs, the thoracic limbs and pelvic limbs, and fence 2 and fence 11. Paired t-tests were used to compare means and a stepwise regression analysis was done fo...
Evolution of equine locomotion research.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 2 87-92 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01724.x
Leach DH, Dagg AI.No abstract available
A review of research on equine locomotion and biomechanics.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 2 93-102 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01726.x
Leach DH, Dagg AI.A review of the literature about equine locomotion and biomechanics is presented to summarise available knowledge and provide perspective to current and proposed research programmes. It is evident that much past research has failed to provide sufficient information on basic principles of these two disciplines and that information is now required before progress can be made on more applied research topics. However, useful contributions have been made in gait typology, analysis of racetrack surface and design and limb kinetics, kinematics and coordination.
Treadmill for equine locomotion analysis.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 2 111-115 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01730.x
Fredricson I, Drevemo S, Dalin G, Hjertén G, Björne K, Rynde R, Franzen G.A treadmill for equine locomotion analysis is described and its potential considered for locomotive research and clinical investigation. The treadmill comprised an endless belt driven by a hydraulic motor at various speeds up to 14 m/sec and the direction of belt movement was reversible. The carrying side of the belt ran over a steel-concrete table which acted as a flat support. The belt itself consisted of a steel base on to which was glued a rubber belt and the surface was covered with a layer of coir matting which permitted some forward sliding of the landing hooves simulating the condition...
Bone stress in the horse forelimb during locomotion at different gaits: a comparison of two experimental methods.
Journal of biomechanics    January 1, 1983   Volume 16, Issue 8 565-576 doi: 10.1016/0021-9290(83)90107-0
Biewener AA, Thomason J, Goodship A, Lanyon LE.Longitudinal stresses acting in the cranial and caudal cortices of the radius and the dorsal and palmar cortices of the metacarpus in the horse were determined using two independent methods simultaneously. One approach involved the use of rosette strain gauges to record in vivo bone strain; the other involved filming the position of the horse's forelimb as it passed over a force plate. Agreement between the two analyses was better for the radius than for the metacarpus. Both methods showed the radius to be loaded primarily in sagittal bending, acting to place the caudal cortex in compression a...
Limb mechanics as a function of speed and gait: a study of functional strains in the radius and tibia of horse and dog.
The Journal of experimental biology    December 1, 1982   Volume 101 187-211 doi: 10.1242/jeb.101.1.187
Rubin CT, Lanyon LE.Rosette strain gauges were attached to the midshaft of the radius and tibia of two horses and two dogs, which ran on a treadmill through their entire range of speed and gait. The relative magnitudes of the principal strains on the opposite cortices of each bone remained constant through the stance phase of the stride, and their orientation varied by a maximum of only 14 degrees through the entire speed range. The maximum strain rate increased linearly with speed, but the peak strain magnitude was also dependent upon the gait used, increasing incrementally by up to 59% at the transition from wa...
Effect of induced back pain on gait and performance of trotting horses.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1982   Volume 14, Issue 2 129-133 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1982.tb02366.x
Jeffcott LB, Dalin G, Drevemo S, Fredricson I, Björne K, Bergquist A.Back pain was induced in Standardbred horses by multiple intramuscular injections of a concentrated lactic acid solution into the left longissimus dorsi muscle. The investigation was divided into 2 parts. In Stage 1, 2 trotters were exercised on a treadmill and filmed by high speed cinematography before and after the induction of back pain. No signs of hindlimb lameness were evident and no quantitative changes in the components of the gait resulted, but a noticeable reduction was seen in performance capacity. Stage 2 involved a more intensive clinical and cinematic analysis of 3 horses. In the...
Modifications of a force plate system for equine gait analysis.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 3 538-540 
Steiss JE, Yuill GT, White NA, Bowen JM.A force plate system for measurement of the vertical component of the force applied by a horse's limb on ground contact was modified. The modifications included use of steel supporting posts for improved durability and an additional strain gauge on each arm of the Wheatstone bridge for increased sensitivity and temperature compensation. Data from clinically normal horses are provided to indicate the performance obtained with these modifications of the force plate system.
[Ergonomic optimization in geometric layout of trotting racetracks].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1982   Volume 10, Issue 1 67-79 
Fredricson I, Hjertén G, Dalin G, Darenius A, Drevemo S, Björne K.No abstract available
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.
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...
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...
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...
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
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...
Changes of plasma uric acid levels in horses after galloping.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1978   Volume 25, Issue 1 127-128 
Keenan DM.Two horses were alternately galloped and cantered at 48 h intervals in a cross over trial. Galloping produced a rise in plasma lactic and uric acids. The lactic acid decreased in concentration whereas the uric acid increased in the hour after exercise. Plasma phosphate levels were depressed 1 h after galloping. There was no significant variation in these parameters after cantering. Possible reasons for these changes are discussed.
Respiratory sounds recorded by radio-stethoscope from normal horses at exercise.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 3 176-179 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02252.x
Attenburrow DP.A graphic representation is presented of respiratory sounds recorded by a radio-stethoscope from normal horses exercised at the walk, trot, canter and gallop. Methods whereby inspiratory and expiratory sounds were distinguished are discussed. The form of amplitude envelopes of the sounds recorded at different gaits are compared. Certain measurements of relative amplitudes and the form of amplitude envelopes of the recorded respiratory sounds can be recognised as typical of normal horses when exercised at the canter and gallop. The influence of some physiological events (e.g. deglutition on the...
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
A laboratory system for production of flexion rates and forces in the forelimb of the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 3 365-369 
Kingsbury HB, Quddus MA, Rooney JR, Geary JE.The distal portion of the forelimb of the horse is provided with a stay apparatus composed of tendons, ligaments, and fascia. This stay apparatus provides the major resistance to joint flexion during the support phase of the stride. The laboratory test system described was shown to be able to reproduce in vitro limb motions and hoof forces measured with a running horse. These results indicated the stay apparatus operates in a largely passive mode, active muscle contraction apparently serving to provide rigidity only early in the support phase of the stride. The testing system described was des...
Biokinetical analysis of the movements of the pelvic limb of the horse and the role of the muscles in the walk and the trot.
Anatomy and embryology    February 20, 1978   Volume 152, Issue 3 261-272 doi: 10.1007/BF00350524
Wentink GH.The movements of the right hind limb of horses with normal locomotion were studied using cinephotography and electromyography. A model of the cycle of a stride in the walk and the trot was constructed and the kinetic parameters of the segments of the limb were calculated. A good correlation was obtained between the kinetics and the periods of the cycle of a stride during which individual muscles display activity. The results of this study demonstrate that: at placing and lifting, i.e., when a change occurs in the direction of the movement of the limb; b) At the walk, the greatest forces operan...