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Topic:Horse Racing

Horse racing is a competitive equestrian sport involving horses ridden by jockeys over set distances, often on flat tracks or over obstacles. It is characterized by a variety of race types, including thoroughbred, harness, and steeplechase, each with distinct rules and traditions. The sport emphasizes speed, stamina, and strategy, with races typically categorized by distance, surface type, and horse age or breed. Horse racing plays a significant role in the equine industry, influencing breeding, training, and veterinary care practices. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the physiological demands, training methodologies, and health considerations associated with horse racing.
Multiplexed LC-MS/MS analysis of horse plasma proteins to study doping in sport.
Proteomics    June 16, 2009   Volume 9, Issue 11 3058-3065 doi: 10.1002/pmic.200800737
Barton C, Beck P, Kay R, Teale P, Roberts J.The development of protein biomarkers for the indirect detection of doping in horse is a potential solution to doping threats such as gene and protein doping. A method for biomarker candidate discovery in horse plasma is presented using targeted analysis of proteotypic peptides from horse proteins. These peptides were first identified in a novel list of the abundant proteins in horse plasma. To monitor these peptides, an LC-MS/MS method using multiple reaction monitoring was developed to study the quantity of 49 proteins in horse plasma in a single run. The method was optimised and validated, ...
Fall and injury incidence rates of jockeys while racing in Ireland, France and Britain.
Injury    June 13, 2009   Volume 41, Issue 5 533-539 doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2009.05.009
Rueda MA, Halley WL, Gilchrist MD.This article presents and analyses injury incidence rates for amateur and professional racing jockeys in Ireland, France and Britain by means of a retrospective study and review of published data. Amateur jump racing was seen to have the highest fall risk in these three countries (between 115 and 140 falls/1000 rides). Jump racing also had the highest rates of injury/ride amongst both amateur and professional jockeys. Flat racing, however, had the highest rates of injuries/fall (34-44%). Of all the injuries in both jump and flat racing populations of amateur and professional jockeys, 15% were ...
Your racing horses will help you to quit: a lesson for COPD and alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency research.
The European respiratory journal    June 2, 2009   Volume 33, Issue 6 1244-1246 doi: 10.1183/09031936.00026409
Soriano JB, Miravitlles M.No abstract available
Body mass index and serum gamma-glutamyltransferase level as risk factors for injuries related to professional horse racing: a prospective study.
Journal of occupational health    June 1, 2009   Volume 51, Issue 4 323-331 doi: 10.1539/joh.l8158
Tobari H, Yamagishi K, Noda H, Tanigawa T, Iso H.Prevention of horse-related injuries is considered difficult because horse behavior is unpredictable. Therefore, risk factors for injuries related to professional horse racing need to be investigated. We conducted a study to determine whether body mass index (BMI) and gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) levels are associated with professional horse racing-related injuries. Methods: A baseline healthy survey of 546 male grooms and exercise riders aged 40-70 yr working at Miho Training Center, the largest racing-horse training facility in Japan, was performed in May 2003. A total of 93 occupational ...
The whipping of racehorses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    May 14, 2009   Volume 50, Issue 4 337 
Waxer H.No abstract available
An ethicist’s commentary on whipping racehorses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    May 5, 2009   Volume 50, Issue 2 132 
Rollin BE.No abstract available
Microsatellite loci in urine supernatant and stored samples from racehorses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 2, 2009   Volume 70, Issue 5 648-657 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.5.648
Chen JW, Uboh CE, Soma LR, Li X, Guan F, You Y.To evaluate whether urine supernatant contains amplifiable DNA and to determine factors that influence genotyping of samples from racehorses after storage and transportation. Methods: 580 urine, 279 whole blood, and 40 plasma samples obtained from 261 Thoroughbreds and Standardbreds. Methods: Genomic DNA was isolated from stored blood and urine samples collected from racehorses after competition. Quantified DNA was evaluated to determine whether 5 equine microsatellite loci (VHL20, HTG4, AHT4, HMS6, and HMS7) could be amplified by use of PCR techniques. Fragment size of each amplified locus wa...
Exercise during training is associated with racing performance in Thoroughbreds.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    April 17, 2009   Volume 181, Issue 1 43-47 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2009.03.008
Verheyen KL, Price JS, Wood JL.This study aimed to determine the effects of exercise on racecourse performance in horses racing on the flat. Daily exercise and race records were obtained over a 2-year period for a cohort of racehorses in training for which injury data were also available. Multivariable regression techniques were used to investigate associations between canter, training gallop and race distances accumulated in the 30 days prior to each race and the odds of winning the race, earning prize money and the amount of prize money won. Higher cumulative high-speed (gallop+race) distances were associated with increas...
Effect of poll flexion and dynamic laryngeal collapse on tracheal pressure in Norwegian Coldblooded Trotter racehorses.
Equine veterinary journal    March 24, 2009   Volume 41, Issue 1 59-64 doi: 10.2746/042516408x330392
Strand E, Fjordbakk CT, Holcombe SJ, Risberg A, Chalmers HJ.Dynamic laryngeal collapse (DLC) associated with poll flexion is a newly diagnosed upper respiratory tract obstructive disorder that causes poor racing performance. Objective: To determine if Norwegian Coldblooded Trotters (NCTs) affected with DLC associated with poll flexion differ from normal, elite NCTs based on simple airway mechanics measurements. Methods: Five normal elite NCTs and 6 NCTs diagnosed previously with DLC underwent treadmill videoendoscopy while tracheal pressures were measured continuously. Alternating head positions were used such that horses were exercised with free head ...
Racing performance after combined prosthetic laryngoplasty and ipsilateral ventriculocordectomy or partial arytenoidectomy: 135 Thoroughbred racehorses competing at less than 2400 m (1997-2007).
Equine veterinary journal    March 24, 2009   Volume 41, Issue 1 70-75 doi: 10.2746/042516408x343163
Witte TH, Mohammed HO, Radcliffe CH, Hackett RP, Ducharme NG.The success of combined prosthetic laryngoplasty with ipsilateral ventriculocordectomy (LPVC) has not been compared to that of partial arytenoidectomy (PA) in a clinical population. Objective: In Thoroughbred (TB) racehorses: (1) earnings after LPVC are unaffected by the severity of recurrent laryngeal neuropathy (RLN) (laryngeal grade III vs. grade IV); (2) LPVC and PA yield similar results in the treatment of grade III RLN; (3) performance outcome following PA is independent of diagnosis (RLN vs. unilateral arytenoid chondritis [UAC]); and (4) neither LPVC nor PA returns horses to the level ...
Efficacy of thermal cautery for intermittent dorsal displacement of the soft palate as compared to conservatively treated horses: results from 78 treadmill diagnosed horses.
Equine veterinary journal    March 24, 2009   Volume 41, Issue 1 65-69 doi: 10.2746/042516408x330383
Barakzai SZ, Boden LA, Hillyer MH, Marlin DJ, Dixon PM.Previously, objective comparisons of surgical procedures to relieve dorsal displacement of the soft palate (DDSP) have been limited by the presumptive basis of the diagnostic measures applied. Objective: To assess and compare the efficacy of thermal cautery surgery to conservatively treated controls in racehorses definitively diagnosed with idiopathic intermittent DDSP. Objective: Both conservative and surgical treatments have a beneficial result on racing performance in racehorses affected with DDSP. Methods: Race records were obtained for Thoroughbred racehorses definitively diagnosed with D...
The formation of aminorex in racehorses following levamisole administration. A quantitative and chiral analysis following synthetic aminorex or levamisole administration vs. aminorex-positive samples from the field: a preliminary report.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    March 18, 2009   Volume 32, Issue 2 160-166 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.2008.01015.x
Barker SA.Beginning in 2004, the horseracing industry experienced an epidemic of drug positives for the amphetamine-like drug aminorex. Investigation of the therapeutic treatment of the horses called positive for this drug suggested that its source was from the administration of the anthelmintic levamisole. This study examines the urine concentrations of aminorex as a function of time following administration of synthetic, racemic aminorex. Confirmation of the presence of aminorex in urine samples from the horses known to be treated with levamisole is also presented as are data concerning the concentrat...
The incidence of race-day jockey falls in Australia, 2002-2006.
The Medical journal of Australia    February 25, 2009   Volume 190, Issue 2 83-86 doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2009.tb02284.x
Hitchens PL, Blizzard CL, Jones G, Day LM, Fell J.To describe rates of occurrence of falls, injuries and fatalities to horse-racing jockeys in Australia. Methods: Retrospective analysis of data on race-day falls from stewards' reports provided by the Principal Racing Authority of each state and territory of Australia, August 2002 - July 2006. Methods: Fall, injury and fatality incidence rates; comparison with overseas rates. Results: There were 3360 jockey falls from 748 367 rides. Falls occurred at a rate of 0.42 per 100 rides in flat races and 5.26 per 100 rides in jumps races. In flat racing, 54.6% (1694/3101) of falls occurred before the ...
Days lost from training by two- and three-year-old Thoroughbred horses: a survey of seven UK training yards.
Equine veterinary journal    January 24, 2009   Volume 40, Issue 7 650-657 doi: 10.2746/042516408x363242
Dyson PK, Jackson BF, Pfeiffer DU, Price JS.The first major epidemiological study of injury incidence in the UK flat racing Thoroughbred (TB), published in 1985, found lameness to be the single largest reason for days when horses failed to train. It was considered advisable to ascertain if progress has been made in reducing the problem of musculoskeletal injuries in the intervening period. Objective: To quantify injury incidence and days lost from training by 2- and 3-year-old TBs in UK training yards during 2002 and 2003. Methods: One-hundred-and-eighty-two yearling TBs were recruited at the end of 2001 and daily training and injury re...
Accuracy of the TurfTrax Racing Data System for determination of equine speed and position.
Equine veterinary journal    January 24, 2009   Volume 40, Issue 7 680-683 doi: 10.2746/042516408x330338
Spence AJ, Tan H, Wilson A.The speed and position data collected by TurfTrax Racing Data Limited during UK Thoroughbred racing have potential to benefit equine science and welfare. The size (the 2006 data set alone consists of 30,932 individual horse starts across 2667 races) and nature (speed and 2D position for each horse at 4 updates per second) of the data make it a unique resource for questions in equine safety, welfare, performance, and animal locomotion. Objective: To determine the accuracy of the TurfTrax tracking system in estimating the speed and position of horses during racing. Methods: Measurements from the...
Surgical and conservative management of bilateral dynamic laryngeal collapse associated with poll flexion in harness race horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    January 13, 2009   Volume 37, Issue 6 501-507 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2008.00396.x
Fjordbakk CT, Strand E, Hanche-Olsen S.To test the hypothesis that in bilateral dynamic laryngeal collapse associated with poll flexion, vocal fold collapse (VFC) is the initial abnormal event that induces further laryngeal collapse, and that racing performance would therefore be substantially improved after bilateral ventriculocordectomy in affected individuals. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: Twenty-six horses. Methods: Medical records (1998-2006) of harness racehorses admitted for high-speed treadmill videoendoscopy (HSTV) that had bilateral dynamic laryngeal collapse associated with poll flexion were reviewed. Race recor...
Effect of Low-Dose Human Interferon-alpha on Shipping Fever of Thoroughbred Racehorses.
Journal of equine science    January 9, 2009   Volume 19, Issue 4 91-95 doi: 10.1294/jes.19.91
Akai M, Hobo S, Wada S.To assess the effect of human interferon-alpha (IFNα) on shipping fever of Thoroughbred racehorses subjected to long-distance transportation, an IFNα preparation was orally administered to 48 horses three times (once daily, 3 successive days) before transportation (IFNα group). In the control group (25 horses), maltose was administered in the same way. These treatments induced no abnormal findings in Thoroughbred racehorses before transportation. Immediately after transportation, significant increases in rectal temperature were observed in both treatment groups, whereas the rectal temperatu...
Incidence rate of musculoskeletal injuries and determinants of time to recovery in young Australian Thoroughbred racehorses.
Australian veterinary journal    December 17, 2008   Volume 86, Issue 12 473-480 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2008.00359.x
Cogger N, Evans DL, Hodgson DR, Reid SW, Perkins N.To describe the incidence rate of musculoskeletal (MS) injuries and investigate the factors that influence recovery from MS injury in young Thoroughbred horses in Australia. Methods: Training and injury data were collected at fortnightly intervals from 14 trainers in New South Wales. Incidence rates were calculated for initial injuries stratified by age-class and sex. Survival analysis methods were used to investigate the time to recovery after the first MS injury (measured as a start in a race or barrier trial). Results: For the 248 racehorses enrolled, there were 428 injuries recorded; 2-yea...
Mitochondrial DNA: an important female contribution to thoroughbred racehorse performance: amendments to nomenclature.
Mitochondrion    December 3, 2008   Volume 9, Issue 1 58-60 doi: 10.1016/j.mito.2008.11.002
Harrison SP, Turrion-Gomez JL.No abstract available
Limits to running speed in dogs, horses and humans.
The Journal of experimental biology    December 2, 2008   Volume 211, Issue Pt 24 3836-3849 doi: 10.1242/jeb.024968
Denny MW.Are there absolute limits to the speed at which animals can run? If so, how close are present-day individuals to these limits? I approach these questions by using three statistical models and data from competitive races to estimate maximum running speeds for greyhounds, thoroughbred horses and elite human athletes. In each case, an absolute speed limit is definable, and the current record approaches that predicted maximum. While all such extrapolations must be used cautiously, these data suggest that there are limits to the ability of either natural or artificial selection to produce ever fast...
Effect of track maintenance on mechanical properties of a dirt racetrack: a preliminary study.
Equine veterinary journal    November 26, 2008   Volume 40, Issue 6 602-605 doi: 10.2746/042516408x330347
Peterson ML, McIlwraith CW.When Thoroughbred racehorses experience catastrophic injuries, the track surface is often discussed as a factor. The present study investigated the mechanical properties of the surface and found that significant changes in a track occur during routine maintenance. Questions regarding the relative importance of track variability and hardness require further investigation.
Resting concentrations of cardiac troponin I in fit horses and effect of racing.
Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology    November 18, 2008   Volume 10, Issue 2 105-109 doi: 10.1016/j.jvc.2008.10.001
Nostell K, Häggström J.To determine normal resting values for cardiac troponin I (cTnI) in healthy Standardbred, Thoroughbred and Warmblood horses and investigate if racing has an influence on cTnI concentrations. Background: Measuring cTnI concentrations in plasma is the gold standard for detecting myocardial injury in humans. Cardiac troponin I is highly conserved between species and has gained interest as a marker for cardiac injury in horses. Increased levels of cTnI have been reported in association with endurance and short-term strenuous exercise on a treadmill in horses. However, the effect of true racing con...
Drug contamination of the equine racetrack environment: a preliminary examination.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    November 13, 2008   Volume 31, Issue 5 466-471 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.2008.00978.x
Barker SA.Advances in analytical technology now make it feasible to detect and confirm exceptionally low concentrations (pg to fg/mL) of drugs and their metabolites in equine biological fluids. These new capabilities complicate the regulatory interpretation of drug positives and bring into question the fair application of medication rules. Such approaches and policies are further complicated by the possibility that drug positives may arise from contamination of the equine environment on the backstretch of the race track. This manuscript provides data demonstrating that the general environment of the bac...
Factors associated with survival of neonatal foals with bacteremia and racing performance of surviving Thoroughbreds: 423 cases (1982-2007).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 5, 2008   Volume 233, Issue 9 1446-1452 doi: 10.2460/javma.233.9.1446
Sanchez LC, Giguère S, Lester GD.To identify factors associated with short-term survival in bacteremic neonatal foals, evaluate the racing performance of Thoroughbred survivors, and evaluate changes in causative organisms and their antimicrobial susceptibility. Methods: Retrospective case series. Methods: 423 bacteremic foals. Methods: Medical records of foals that were hospitalized in 1982 through 2007 were reviewed, and those with bacteremia were included in the study. Data retrieved included signalment, physical examination and clinicopathologic findings at admission, localized infections, concurrent illnesses, duration of...
Profiling training preparation in young Australian Thoroughbred racehorses.
Australian veterinary journal    October 31, 2008   Volume 86, Issue 11 419-424 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2008.00358.x
Cogger N, Perkins N, Hodgson DR, Reid SW, Evans DL.To describe the impact of age, sex, and musculoskeletal (MS) injury on three preparation-level measures of performance: (i) the duration of preparation, (ii) time from the beginning of the preparation until the first start in a race or barrier trial, and (iii) time from the first start until the end of the preparation. Methods: Daily training and injury data for 2- and 3-year old Thoroughbred racehorses were collected fortnightly from 14 trainers in NSW, Australia. Training data were aggregated into units referred to as 'preparations'. Univariate and multivariate analytical methods were used t...
More on horse racing practices.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 9, 2008   Volume 233, Issue 7 1054-1055 
McIlwraith CW.No abstract available
Identification of recombinant equine growth hormone in horse plasma by LC-MS/MS: a confirmatory analysis in doping control.
Analytical chemistry    September 25, 2008   Volume 80, Issue 21 8340-8347 doi: 10.1021/ac801234f
Bailly-Chouriberry L, Pinel G, Garcia P, Popot MA, Le Bizec B, Bonnaire Y.Equine growth hormone (eGH) has been available since 1998 as an approved drug (EquiGen-5, Bresagen) containing recombinant eGH (reGH). It is suspected of being illegally administered to racehorses in order to improve physical performance and to speed-up wound healing. Thus it may be considered a doping agent which would require a sensitive and reliable method of identification and confirmation in order to regulate its use in racehorses. reGH differs from the native eGH by an additional methionine at the N-terminal (met-eGH) and has never been unambiguously detected in any type of biological ma...
Osteochondral injury increases type II collagen degradation products (C2C) in synovial fluid of Thoroughbred racehorses.
Osteoarthritis and cartilage    September 16, 2008   Volume 17, Issue 3 371-374 doi: 10.1016/j.joca.2008.07.014
Trumble TN, Scarbrough AB, Brown MP.To investigate the effects of exercise and osteochondral (OC) injury on type II collagen degradation products (collagenase cleavage neoepitope commercially known as C2C) in synovial fluid (SF) from Thoroughbred (TB) racehorses and to compare these results with radiographic and arthroscopic scores of severity of joint injury. Methods: Metacarpophalangeal/metatarsophalangeal (MCP/MTP) and carpal SF was obtained from (1) 20 normal rested horses, (2) the same horses after 5 to 6 months of race training, and (3) 27 horses with OC injury from racing. For group 3, radiographic and arthroscopic scores...
Simultaneous doping analysis of main urinary metabolites of anabolic steroids in horse by ion-trap gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Analytical sciences : the international journal of the Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry    September 11, 2008   Volume 24, Issue 9 1199-1204 doi: 10.2116/analsci.24.1199
Yamada M, Aramaki S, Kurosawa M, Kijima-Suda I, Saito K, Nakazawa H.The use of anabolic steroids in racehorses is strictly regulated. We have developed a method for the simultaneous analysis of 11 anabolic steroids: fluoxymesterone, 17alpha-methyltestosterone, mestanolone, methandienone, methandriol, oxymetholone, boldenone, furazabol, methenolone, nandrolone, and stanozolol, for possible application to a doping test in racehorses. We selected 15 kinds of target substances for a doping test from the main metabolites of these anabolic steroids, and established a method for simultaneous analysis. Urine was hydrolyzed and subjected to solid-phase extraction. Then...
Validation of thromboelastometry in horses.
Veterinary clinical pathology    September 3, 2008   Volume 37, Issue 3 277-285 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-165X.2008.00052.x
Paltrinieri S, Meazza C, Giordano A, Tunesi C.Thromboelastometry is used for identifying or monitoring coagulation abnormalities. It has been validated in several species but not in horses and the characteristics of the equine thromboelastogram have not yet been detailed. Objective: The purpose of this study was to validate a thromboelastometer to be used with equine blood and to define the normal equine thromboelastogram. Methods: A Rotem-gamma thromboelastometer (Pentapharm GmbH, Munich, Germany) was used on 38 citrated blood samples to investigate native coagulation, the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways, the function of fibrinogen (lar...
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