Analyze Diet

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.
Percutaneous tendon splitting–method and results.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1976   Volume 8, Issue 3 101-103 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1976.tb03307.x
Knudsen O.The paper briefly describes the percutaneous tendon splitting operation as performed in general practice and evaluates its effectiveness on the basis of races run during a 2 year follow-up period. The results are compared with similar figures for normal Standardbred trotters. A higher percentage of horses subjected to splitting of the suspensory ligament failed to remain sound long enough to run more than 10 races during the follow-up period. The percentage of horses returning to racing whose superficial flexor was operated upon was somewhat lower than the control group.
Letter: Brain damage in jockeys.
Lancet (London, England)    June 5, 1976   Volume 1, Issue 7971 1241 doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(76)92188-7
d'Abreu F.This research article discusses brain injuries in jockeys, particularly in horse racing. The author recounts the preventive measures taken by the Jockey Club and the Betting Levy Board to protect […]
Observations on the intraarticular use of corticosteroids in the racing thoroughbred.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1976   Volume 168, Issue 11 1039-1041 
McKay AG, Milne FJ.A project to determine if intraarticular corticosteroid therapy was deleterious to the racing Thoroughbred was carried out in the 1971, 1972, and 1973 racing seasons. Of 22 horses available for follow-up examination, 6 had radiographic evidence of deterioration; 1 of these was destroyed because of probable corticosteroid-induced arthropathy. The remaining 16 horses did not have any evidence of deterioration. One of the 16, a stakes winner, had been given 12 injections into the left front fetlock during the 3-year period. It was concluded that if proper and careful aftercare is adhered to, intr...
Veterinarians, horse trainers, and racing boards.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1976   Volume 168, Issue 11 1004-1008 
Hannah HW.No abstract available
Intra-articular treatment of arthritis in race-horses with sodium hyaluronate.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1976   Volume 17, Issue 4 379-394 doi: 10.1186/BF03547893
Asheim A, Lindblad G.Forty-five race-horses with arthritis of non-in-fectious type in 54 joints were treated with sodium hyaluronate intra-articularly. All joints had previously been treated without lasting success by conventional methods, such as firing, blistering or intraarticular injection of cortisone. In most cases only 1 injection of 2 ml (20 mg) sodium hyaluronate was needed. To avoid subjective evaluation, the effects of the treatment were based on the joint’s capacity of withstanding extreme stress, which means that the horse should be able to train and race again. The treatment was concentrated on the...
Electrocardiographic anomalies in the racehorse.
New Zealand veterinary journal    November 1, 1975   Volume 23, Issue 11 262-269 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1975.34256
Irvine CH.No abstract available
[Equine influenza in Czechoslovakia during the 1973 epizootic].
Veterinarni medicina    September 1, 1975   Volume 20, Issue 9 555-560 
Zakopal J, Pour L.During the epizootic spreading in Europe, equine influenza was brought in also into Czechoslovakia. The disease gradually spread from Slovakia (where horses were isolated after a trip abroad) to race horses throughout the country. The serological examination by the IH test showed that, again, the A equi 1/Praha 56 virus was the causative agent of the infection. The application of the Grippeguin vaccine from France was effective. No clinical manifestations of the disease were observed in two mares from one farm that had not been vaccinated although they had been in the focus of infection. Howev...
Letter: Illness after racing: acute gastric dilatation?
The Veterinary record    May 10, 1975   Volume 96, Issue 19 437-438 doi: 10.1136/vr.96.19.437
Owenn RR.No abstract available
Letter: Illness after racing.
The Veterinary record    February 1, 1975   Volume 96, Issue 5 116 doi: 10.1136/vr.96.5.116-b
Pocock PI.No abstract available
Letter: Illness after racing.
The Veterinary record    January 11, 1975   Volume 96, Issue 2 47 doi: 10.1136/vr.96.2.47-b
Mackinnon JD.No abstract available
The nutrition of racehorses: a review.
Australian veterinary journal    January 1, 1975   Volume 51, Issue 1 14-21 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1975.tb14491.x
Pearce GR.No abstract available
Letter: An undiagnosed colic in a racing stable.
New Zealand veterinary journal    August 1, 1974   Volume 22, Issue 8 147-148 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1974.34154
Blakely JA.No abstract available
Editorial: Pre-race drug testing.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1974   Volume 64, Issue 3 325-334 
Maylin GA.No abstract available
Dope testing in racing animals.
The Veterinary record    April 27, 1974   Volume 94, Issue 17 389-394 doi: 10.1136/vr.94.17.389
Moss MS.No abstract available
Epistaxis in the racehorse.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1974   Volume 6, Issue 2 45-58 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1974.tb03930.x
Cook WR.No abstract available
[Pharmacological studies on doping drugs for race horses. 3. Ephedrine (author’s transl)].
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    February 1, 1974   Volume 36, Issue 1 9-18 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.36.9
Fujii S, Inada S, Yoshida S, Kusanagi C, Mima K.No abstract available
The physiological and biochemical response of standardbred horses to exercise of varying speed and duration.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1974   Volume 15, Issue 3 310-324 doi: 10.1186/BF03547461
Lindholm A, Saltin B.LINDHOLM, ARNE and BENGT SALTIN: The physiological and biochemical response of standardbred horses to exercise of varying speed and duration. Acta vet. scand. 1974, 15, 310–324. — Welltrained standardbred horses were studied to examine the metabolic response to excercise of various speeds and duration. Comparisons between interval (400, 700, 1,000 and 2,000 m) and continuous trotting (1 hr., 2 hrs.) and racing were made. Muscle and rectal temperatures were recorded before and immediately after each work bout. Heart rate was linearly related to trotting speed, and maximal heart rate (240 be...
Relationship of racetrack surface to lameness in the thoroughbred racehorse.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1973   Volume 34, Issue 10 1285-1289 
Cheney JA, Shen CK, Wheat JD.No abstract available
Cannon-bone fracture in the thoroughbred racehorse.
Medical & biological engineering    September 1, 1973   Volume 11, Issue 5 613-620 doi: 10.1007/BF02477408
Cheney JA, Liou SY, Wheat JD.Abstract The high incidence of lameness in thoroughbred racehorses in California led to a study which indicated a relationship between track hardness and the percentage of occurrence of lameness. One type of lameness is due to a longitudinal fracture of the foreleg cannon bone (third metacarpal). A study was made to obtain the compressive strength of cannon bonein vitro due to single and cyclical loading, and material properties of bone material in the longitudinal and transverse directions in the bone. A theory for the interaction of bone-marrow fluid with the longitudinal compression predic...
[Influence of racing on several blood-parameters in trotters]. Krzywanek H, Schulze A, Wittke G.No abstract available
[Effectiveness of morantel tartrate against nematode infections in race horses].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    December 1, 1972   Volume 114, Issue 12 613-614 
Hiepe T.No abstract available
Drugs, performance and responses to exercise in the racehorse. 1. Physiological observations on the cardiac and respiratory responses.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1972   Volume 48, Issue 10 537-543 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1972.tb08004.x
Stewart GA.The research focuses on understanding the physiological responses, mainly cardiovascular and respiratory, of racehorses during exercise and how drugs can impact these responses. The study aims to set up a […]
Drugs, performance and responses to exercise in the racehorse. 2. Observations on amphetamine, promazine and thiamine.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1972   Volume 48, Issue 10 544-547 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1972.tb08006.x
Stewart GA.No abstract available
[Studies on the detection of doping drugs. I. A thin-layer chromatographic screening procedure for detecting drugs from urine sample of race horses].
Yakugaku zasshi : Journal of the Pharmaceutical Society of Japan    September 1, 1972   Volume 92, Issue 9 1074-1081 doi: 10.1248/yakushi1947.92.9_1074
Imai Y, Kawakubo T, Otake I, Namekata M.No abstract available
[Pharmacological studies on doping drug for race horses. II. Caffeine].
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    June 1, 1972   Volume 34, Issue 3 135-141 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.34.135
Fujii S, Inada S, Yoshida S, Kusanagi C, Mima K.No abstract available
Uses and misuses of anti-inflammatory drus in racehorses. II.
Equine veterinary journal    April 5, 1972   Volume 4, Issue 2 69-72 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1972.tb03882.x
Moss MS.No abstract available
[Respiratory tract lesion and shock in a horse following a racing accident].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    March 1, 1972   Volume 59, Issue 3 111-114 
Laber G, Pobisch R.No abstract available
The radiographic status of the left fore fetlock of winning thoroughbreds at Ontario racetracks in 1970.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    February 1, 1972   Volume 13, Issue 2 33-39 
Milne FJ.FOR MANY YEARS, concern has been expressed at the wastage of young Thoroughbreds at the racetrack. This concern even manifested itself in the publication of a book (1) which referred to the prevailing practice of prematurely start-ing the racing career of the Thoroughbred long before it had attained sufficient maturity to engage in stiff, damaging competition. This is not a fault of the Thoroughbred industry alone, because in certain parts of the U.S.A., Quarter Horses less than two years of age are already racing. We could swing to the opposite extreme, of course, to the pleasure horse world ...
Thermography of the superficial flexor tendon in race horses.
Acta radiologica. Supplementum    January 1, 1972   Volume 319 295-297 
Strömberg B.Thermography is the pictorial representation of infra-red (IR) emission from the surface of an object. IR emission from biological surfaces originates from two principal sources, circulation and metabolism, which are interdepen-dent. Changes in IR emission as recorded by thermography were correlated to changes in local blood circulation (BrAnemark & Nilsson 1969) and to changes in '33Xe disappearance rate (Stromberg & Norberg 1971). In 1969 Stromberg & Tufvesson, using microradiography, demonstrated that there were vascular changes in the superficial flexor tendon (SFT) even before clinical si...
[Forelimb biomechanics of the galloping-racehorse and its relation to the so-called tibial disease].
Monatshefte fur Veterinarmedizin    December 15, 1971   Volume 26, Issue 24 939-944 
Wilsdorf G.No abstract available