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Topic:Heart Rate

Heart rate in horses is a physiological parameter that reflects the number of heartbeats per minute. It is an important indicator of cardiovascular function and can be influenced by factors such as exercise, stress, excitement, and health status. Monitoring heart rate provides valuable insights into the horse's physical condition and can aid in assessing fitness levels or detecting potential health issues. In equine practice, heart rate is often measured using stethoscopes, heart rate monitors, or electrocardiograms. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the determinants, measurement techniques, and implications of heart rate variations in equine health and performance.
Effect of body posture on cardiopulmonary function in horses during five hours of constant-dose halothane anesthesia.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 1 11-16 
Steffey EP, Kelly AB, Hodgson DS, Grandy JL, Woliner MJ, Willits N.Cardiovascular and respiratory functions were serially characterized in 7 healthy, spontaneously breathing, adult horses (from which food had been withheld) during 5 hours of constant 1.06% alveolar halothane (end-expired halothane concentration of 1.06%; equivalent to 1.2 times the minimal alveolar anesthetic concentration for horses). To enable comparison of temporal results in relation to 2 body postures, horses were studied in lateral recumbency (LR) and dorsal recumbency (DR) on separate occasions. Temporal changes in results of measures of circulation previously reported from this labora...
Haemodynamic changes during sedation in ponies.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1990   Volume 14, Issue 4 309-327 doi: 10.1007/BF00350713
Gasthuys F, De Moor A, Parmentier D.The cardiovascular changes induced by several sedatives were investigated in five ponies with a subcutaneously transposed carotid artery by means of cardiac output determinations (thermodilution technique), systemic and pulmonary artery pressure measurements (direct intravascular method) and arterial blood analysis (blood gases and packed cell volume). The cardiovascular depression (decrease in systemic blood pressure and cardiac output) was long lasting (greater than 90 min) after administration of propionylpromazine (0.08 mg/kg intravenous (i.v.)) together with promethazine (0.08 mg/kg i.v.)...
Influence of preinduction methoxamine, lactated Ringer solution, or hypertonic saline solution infusion or postinduction dobutamine infusion on anesthetic-induced hypotension in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 1 17-21 
Dyson DH, Pascoe PJ.A controlled study of the cardiovascular responses in horses anesthetized with acepromazine (0.05 mg/kg of body weight, IV), guaifenesin (100 mg/kg, IV), thiamylal (5.0 mg/kg, IV), and halothane in O2 (1.2 to 1.4% end-expired concentration) was performed to determine whether hypotension could be prevented by use of various treatments. Six horses were given 5 treatments in a randomized sequence: no treatment (control), methoxamine (0.04 mg/kg, IV), lactated Ringer solution (20.0 ml/kg, IV), 7.5% hypertonic saline solution (4.0 ml/kg, IV), or constant infusion of dobutamine (5.0 mg/kg/min, IV) d...
Historical highlights in cardiac pacing. Geddes LA.The benchmarks in cardiac pacing are identified, beginning with F. Steiner (1871), who rhythmically stimulated the chloroform-arrested hearts of 3 horses, 1 donkey, 10 dogs, 14 cats, and 8 rabbits. The chloroform-arrested heart in human subjects was paced by T. Greene in the following year (1872) in the UK. In 1882, H. Ziemssen in Germany applied cardiac pacing to a 42-year old woman who had a large defect in the anterior left chest wall subsequent to resection of an enchondroma. Intentional cardiac pacing did not occur until 1932, when A.A. Hyman in the US demonstrated that cardiac pacing cou...
[Clinical changes after intravenous administration of endotoxin in the horse].
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    December 1, 1989   Volume 60, Issue 4 198-200 
Stadler P, van Amstel SR.The results of a study conducted to determine the clinical changes in 4 experimentally-induced cases of endotoxaemia in the horse are reported on. Endotoxaemia was induced by injecting commercially available E. coli 055:B5 lipopolysaccharide intravenously at a dose of 1 microgram kg-1. The parameters that were monitored include general behaviour, rectal temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate and quality, pulse quality, mucous membrane colour, capillary refill time, appearance of the faeces and the presence of laminitis. Increases in rectal temperature, respiratory and heart rate, capillary ...
Cardiovascular effects of detomidine, a new alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonist, in the conscious pony.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1989   Volume 12, Issue 4 378-388 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1989.tb00688.x
Sarazan RD, Starke WA, Krause GF, Garner HE.The cardiovascular effects of detomidine and xylazine were compared in six chronically instrumented, conscious ponies. Ponies were instrumented with a micromanometer in the left ventricular chamber, a Doppler flow probe on a coronary artery and sonomicrometer crystals in the left ventricular free wall. Heart rate, ventricular systolic pressure, stroke work, dP/dtmax, minute work and coronary blood flow were measured for 4 h following intravenous injection of detomidine at several doses or xylazine at 1.1 mg/kg. Both drugs caused a profound hypertensive response at 15 s post-injection. The magn...
Effects of halothane and isoflurane on baroreflex sensitivity in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 12 2127-2134 
Hellyer PW, Bednarski RM, Hubbell JA, Muir WW.Baroreflex sensitivity (BS) was used to quantitatively assess the effects of halothane and isoflurane on the heart rate/arterial pressure relationship during steady-state (10 minutes) and dynamic pressure changes in adult horses. Arterial pressure was decreased in response to nitroglycerin or sodium nitroprusside and increased in response to phenylephrine HCl. Mean (+/- SEM) BS in awake horses was 28.9 +/- 2.6 and 13.2 +/- 2.0 ms/mm of Hg during steady-state decreases and increases in systolic arterial pressure (SAP), respectively. Halothane and isoflurane either significantly (P less than 0.0...
Cardiopulmonary effects of ephedrine in halothane-anesthetized horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1989   Volume 12, Issue 4 389-396 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1989.tb00689.x
Grandy JL, Hodgson DS, Dunlop CI, Chapman PL, Heath RB.The cardiopulmonary effects of intravenous (i.v.) administration of the sympathomimetic drug ephedrine during two different levels of halothane anesthesia [end-tidal concentration of 1.37% (light anesthesia) and 2.1% (deep anesthesia)] were studied in eight horses. Anesthesia was induced and maintained using only halothane in O2. Ventilation was controlled to maintain a Paco2 of 38-42 mmHg. Following instrumentation and stabilization of the horse at the halothane concentration being studied, baseline measurements of cardiac output (Q), arterial blood pressure (AP), pulmonary artery pressure, h...
ECG of the month. Paroxysmal ventricular tachycardia in a horse with diarrhea.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 1, 1989   Volume 195, Issue 9 1222-1223 
Hondalus MK, Pipers FS.No abstract available
Effects of fenoldopam on cecal blood flow and mechanical activity in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 11 1926-1930 
Clark ES, Moore JN.Lateral cecal arterial blood flow, carotid arterial pressure, heart rate, and mechanical activity in the duodenum, right ventral colon, cecal body, and cecal apex were measured in 6 conscious healthy horses for 60 minutes during and for 120 minutes after IV infusion of 0.9% NaCl solution (control) or fenoldopam. There were no significant changes in these measurements during or after infusion of 0.9% NaCl (saline) solution. Fenoldopam, a selective dopamine-1 receptor agonist, was administered in saline solution at dosages of 0.01, 0.05, and 0.1 micrograms/kg/min. Intravenous infusion of fenoldo...
Survival after small intestine resection and anastomosis in horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    November 1, 1989   Volume 18, Issue 6 415-423 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1990.tb01116.x
MacDonald MH, Pascoe JR, Stover SM, Meagher DM.The authors examined factors influencing survival in 140 horses that recovered from anesthesia after small intestinal resection between 1968 and 1986, using Kaplan-Meier estimated survival curves and the Cox proportional hazards regression model. Seventy-two horses (51%) died during the initial postoperative period, 19 horses (14%) died after discharge from the hospital, 33 horses (24%) were alive, and 16 horses (11%) were classified as censored. Mean age at surgery was 8 years. Horses 15 years of age or older, Arabians and Stallions, were overrepresented in the hospital population. The most c...
Effects of N,N-dimethylglycine on cardiorespiratory function and lactate production in thoroughbred horses performing incremental treadmill exercise.
The Veterinary record    September 2, 1989   Volume 125, Issue 10 268-271 doi: 10.1136/vr.125.10.268
Rose RJ, Schlierf HA, Knight PK, Plummer C, Davis M, Ray SP.In a crossover study, either a placebo paste or N,N-dimethylglycine was administered orally at a dose rate of 1.2 mg/kg twice daily for five days to six thoroughbred horses, with bodyweights ranging from 424 to 492 kg. Using previously determined regression equations for oxygen uptake (VO2) against speed for each horse, a standardised exercise test was given with speeds equivalent to fixed percentages of the maximum oxygen uptake (VO2max). The test consisted of two minutes at speeds equivalent to approximately 40 per cent and 50 per cent VO2max, and one minute at speeds that produced approxima...
The effect of the organophosphate trichlorfon on the neuromuscular blocking activity of atracurium in halothane-anesthetized horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    September 1, 1989   Volume 12, Issue 3 277-282 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1989.tb00671.x
Hildebrand SV, Hill T, Holland M.To determine whether cholinesterase inhibition by an organophosphate would influence atracurium's neuromuscular blockade, six horses were anesthetized and paralyzed with atracurium (total of five injections per horse) on experimental Day 1, then were given trichlorfon (64 mg/kg per os) 6 days later. On Day 7, horses were anesthetized and paralyzed in the same manner as on experimental Day 1. Blood was taken to measure serum cholinesterase activity prior to anesthesia on Days 1 and 7. No significant difference was noted in atracurium's neuromuscular blocking activity between the 2 experimental ...
Cardiovascular effects recorded in horses during anaesthesia after treatment with trichlorfon.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1989   Volume 47, Issue 2 164-169 
Adams JG, Trim CM.Five horses were anaesthetised twice with thiopentone sodium, guaifenesin and halothane. The second anaesthesia was 16 days after the first and two days following oral administration of trichlorfon. Heart rate, carotid arterial, pulmonary arterial and right atrial pressures, cardiac output and blood temperature were measured every 15 minutes for 120 minutes. Heart rate, carotid arterial pressure and cardiac output were similar on both occasions. Pulmonary arterial and right atrial pressures were highest during anaesthesia after treatment with trichlorfon when compared with values obtained befo...
Effects of allopurinol in experimental endotoxin shock in horses.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1989   Volume 47, Issue 2 178-184 
Lochner F, Sangiah S, Burrows G, Shawley R, McNew R, Walker J.The effect of allopurinol pretreatment 12 hours before an intraperitoneal challenge with a sublethal dose of Escherichia coli endotoxin (50 micrograms kg-1) was evaluated in 18 horses. The horses were divided among three equal groups: 1-endotoxin alone; 2-5 mg allopurinol kg-1 bodyweight plus endotoxin; and 3-50 mg allopurinol kg-1 bodyweight plus endotoxin. A variety of evaluation parameters were used. No differences among the groups were noted in rectal temperature, heart rate, respiration rate, haematological values, blood PaO2, blood PaCO2, blood pH or blood bicarbonate. Significant (P les...
Oxygen transport during exercise in large mammals. I. Adaptive variation in oxygen demand.
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)    August 1, 1989   Volume 67, Issue 2 862-870 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1989.67.2.862
Jones JH, Longworth KE, Lindholm A, Conley KE, Karas RH, Kayar SR, Taylor CR.This study investigated mechanisms used by horses and steers to increase O2 uptake and delivery (VO2) from resting to maximal rates and identified the mechanisms that enable horses to achieve higher maximal rates of O2 consumption (VO2max) than steers. VO2 and circulatory variables were measured while Standardbred trotting horses and steers (450-kg body mass) stood quietly and ran on a treadmill at speeds up to those eliciting VO2max. As VO2 increased in both species, heart rate and circulating hemoglobin (Hb) concentration increased, thereby increasing O2 delivery by the circulation, while ca...
Blood and muscle metabolic responses to draught work of varying intensity and duration in horses.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1989   Volume 47, Issue 1 102-109 
Gottlieb M, Essén-Gustavsson B, Skoglund-Wallberg H.Three standardbred trotters performed treadmill exercise at a velocity of 2 m s-1 with a draught load of both 34 kiloponds (kp) (test 1) and 80 kp (test 2), and also at 7 m s-1 with 34 kp (test 3). The heart rate increased to average values of 111 (+/- 5), 157 (+/- 10) and 197 (+/- 7) beats min-1 in tests 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Plasma free fatty acids increased only during tests 1 and 2. Blood lactate and muscle glucose-6-phosphate and lactate concentrations were low after tests 1 and 2, but high after test 3, where also muscle glycogen utilisation was greatest. Muscle creatine phosphate a...
Effects of dopamine administration on cecal mechanical activity and cecal blood flow in conscious healthy horses.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 7 1084-1088 
Clark ES, Moore JN.Lateral cecal arterial blood flow, carotid arterial pressure, heart rate, and mechanical activity of the circular and longitudinal muscle layers of the cecal body were measured in 7 conscious healthy horses during IV infusion of physiologic saline solution for 60 minutes (control), during a 60-minute IV infusion of dopamine (at dosages of 1, 2.5, and 5 micrograms/kg/min), and for 60 minutes after IV infusion of dopamine. The mean values for lateral cecal arterial blood flow during IV infusion of dopamine at a dosage of either 1 or 2.5 micrograms/kg/min were not significantly different from the...
The effects of slow infusion of a low dosage of endotoxin in healthy horses.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    June 1, 1989   Issue 7 33-37 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb05652.x
Clark ES, Moore JN.The effects of slow intravenous (i.v.) infusion of a very low dosage of endotoxin (a cumulative dosage of 0.03 microgram/kg bodyweight [bwt] infused over 60 mins) were evaluated in six conscious healthy horses. Duodenal, right ventral colon, and caecal contractions were detected with strain gauge force transducers. Lateral caecal arterial blood flow was measured using transit time ultrasonic blood flow probes. Duodenal contractile activity was not significantly altered by infusion of endotoxin. In contrast, the contractile activity of the right ventral colon 90 and 270 mins after infusion of e...
Pharmacokinetics and cardio-respiratory effects of oral theophylline in exercised horses.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1989   Volume 12, Issue 2 189-199 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1989.tb00660.x
Ingvast-Larsson C, Kallings P, Persson S, Appelgren LE, Wiese B.The pharmacokinetics of theophylline at rest and the effects on cardio-respiratory and blood lactate responses to exercise were investigated after repeated oral administrations in six healthy Standardbred horses. A dose of 5 mg/kg body weight was administered every 12 h. The binding of theophylline to plasma protein was also determined. There was good agreement between predicted and observed plasma concentrations of theophylline at steady state. The mean half-life of elimination was shown to be 17.0 +/- 2.5 h, the mean half life of absorption was 1.6 +/- 1.8 h, the apparent volume of distribut...
Renal effects of dopamine infusion in conscious horses.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    June 1, 1989   Issue 7 124-128 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb05671.x
Trim CM, Moore JN, Clark ES.An ultrasonic flow probe was implanted around a branch of the left renal artery in five horses. The effects of dopamine were studied in the unsedated horses 10 days after surgery. Three experiments, separated by at least two days, were performed in random order on each horse. In two experiments, dopamine was infused intravenously for 60 mins at either 2.5 and 5.0 micrograms/kg bodyweight (bwt)/min. Saline was infused for 60 mins before and after each infusion, and for 180 mins in the third experiment as a control. Renal blood flow increased during administration of dopamine at both dose rates ...
Xylazine and tiletamine-zolazepam anesthesia in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 5 737-742 
Hubbell JA, Bednarski RM, Muir WW.The cardiopulmonary and anesthetic effects of xylazine in combination with a 1:1 mixture of tiletamine and zolazepam were determined in 6 horses. Each horse was given xylazine IV or IM, as well as tiletamine-zolazepam IV on 4 randomized occasions. Anesthetics were administered at the rate of 1.1 mg of xylazine/kg of body weight, IV, 1.1 mg of tiletamine-zolazepam/kg, IV (treatment 1); 1.1 mg of xylazine/kg, IV, 1.65 mg of tiletamine-zolazepam/kg, IV (treatment 2); 1.1 mg of xylazine/kg, IV, 2.2 mg of tiletamine-zolazepam/kg, IV (treatment 3); and 2.2 mg of xylazine/kg, IM, 1.65 mg of tiletamin...
Evolution of the ECG from Spanish bred foals during the post natal stage.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1989   Volume 46, Issue 3 358-362 
Tovar P, Escabias MI, Santisteban R.A study of electrocardiograms recorded from foals during the first two weeks of life has been made in order to detect any changes of the cardiac activation and recuperation processes during this period. A stepwise discriminant analysis revealed significant differences between the first and second week of age, fundamentally on the basis of the T and P wave amplitudes which gave the lowest values at 14 days, and on the PQ segment duration that showed the highest values at the same age.
Blood chemistry and skeletal muscle metabolic responses during and after different speeds and durations of trotting.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 2 91-95 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02102.x
Valberg S, Gustavsson BE, Lindholm A, Persson SG.Eight standardbred horses trotted on a treadmill for 55 mins at a sub-maximal speed of 5m/sec and subsequently performed an exercise test consisting of 2 min intervals at increasing speed. Heart (HR) and respiratory (Rf) rates and venous blood samples were obtained before, during and for 5 mins after exercise. Gluteus medius muscle biopsies and rectal temperatures were taken before and after exercise. The mean HR was 132/min and the mean Rf was 156/min during the 5m/sec trotting. With 5m/sec exercise, plasma free fatty acids (FFA), glucose, creatinine and cortisol concentrations increased mark...
Tourniquet-induced hypertension in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1989   Volume 194, Issue 3 386-388 
Abrahamsen E, Hellyer PW, Bednarski RM, Hubbell JA, Muir WW.Arterial hypertension developed in a horse anesthetized for arthroscopy and lavage of an inflamed right carpal joint. Anesthesia was induced with xylazine HCl, butorphanol, guaifenesin, and thiamylal Na and was maintained with halothane in oxygen. Arterial hypertension and tachycardia developed within 15 minutes after a pneumatic tourniquet was placed 8 to 10 cm proximal to the right carpus and inflated to 800 mm of Hg. The surgical procedure was expedited, halothane was discontinued and anesthesia was maintained with guaifenesin to facilitate bandaging. Heart rate decreased from 72 to 42 beat...
Relation of intrinsic heart rate and autonomic nervous tone to resting heart rate in the young and the adult of various domestic animals.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    February 1, 1989   Volume 51, Issue 1 29-34 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.51.29
Matsui K, Sugano S.Intrinsic heart rate (IHR) and autonomic nervous tone (ANT) were measured using the young and the adult of horses, cows, pigs, goats and chickens in order to elucidate species differences in a decrease of resting heart rate (RHR) with growth or age. The IHR and ANT were estimated from the changes in heart rate after the administration of atropine and/or propranolol. The IHR in all species decreased progressively with an increase in body weight from young to adult, and moreover the ANT altered toward the direction of parasympathetic predominance by a decrease in sympathetic tone and/or an incre...
Left ventricular function and haemodynamics in ponies during exercise and recovery.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 39-44 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02087.x
Rugh KS, Garner HE, Miramonti JR, Hatfield DG.Myocardial and haemodynamic responses to strenuous treadmill exercise were monitored with chronically implanted instrumentation in seven physically untrained ponies. In two other ponies, haemodynamics were monitored using a conventional catheter technique. During exercise (mean +/- sem heart rate = 203 +/- 3 beats/min), left ventricular peak systolic ahd end-diastolic blood pressure significantly increased from 125 +/- 2 to 208 +/- 6 mmHg and from 29 +/- 1 to 58 +/- 3 mmHg, respectively (P less than 0.05). Peak positive first derivative of left ventricular pressure (dP/dt) was also increased s...
Pulsed-wave Doppler evaluation of intracardiac blood flow in 30 clinically normal Standardbred horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 1 75-83 
Reef VB, Lalezari K, De Boo J, van der Belt AJ, Spencer PA, Dik KJ.Pulsed-wave Doppler echocardiography was performed on 30 clinically normal 1- to 6-year-old racing Standardbreds. There were 13 females, 13 geldings, and 4 stallions. Cardiac disease was not detected with M-mode, 2-dimensional real-time or pulsed-wave Doppler echocardiography. Normal flow velocities for right and left atrial outflow, right and left ventricular outflow, the aorta, and pulmonary artery were determined. Peak flow velocities for right and left atrial outflow occurred during the rapid filling phase and were higher toward the mitral valve (mean, 0.70 +/- 0.24 m/s) than toward the tr...
Biphasic disruption of fasting equine gut motility by dopamine–a preliminary study.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 4 354-361 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1988.tb00195.x
King JN, Gerring EL.Dopamine was infused intravenously (1, 5 and 10 micrograms/kg/min) for 60 min in three fasted ponies. A dose-dependent increase in heart rate occurred that was rapid in onset and termination at the start and end of the infusions, respectively. Dose-dependent changes in gastric and small intestinal motility were observed. An initial marked inhibition of gastric contraction amplitude was followed by a secondary prolonged period of activity. At the same time the small intestine showed a prolonged period of irregular activity (phase II) and a marked increase in the interval between successive phas...
The accuracy of three different heart rate meters used for studies in the exercising horse.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    November 1, 1988   Volume 35, Issue 9 665-672 
Sloet van Oldruitenborgh-Oosterbaan MM, van den Hoven R, Breukink HJ.No abstract available
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