Analyze Diet

Topic:Horseback Riding

Horseback riding involves the practice of riding, managing, and interacting with horses, encompassing a variety of disciplines and styles. It requires understanding equine behavior, anatomy, and the use of appropriate riding equipment. Common disciplines within horseback riding include dressage, show jumping, eventing, and western riding, each with its own set of techniques and traditions. The study of horseback riding extends to areas such as biomechanics, rider-horse communication, and the impact of riding on equine welfare. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the techniques, effects, and practices associated with horseback riding, providing insights into its influence on both rider and horse.
Youth Accidents With Horses.
The Physician and sportsmedicine    September 1, 1985   Volume 13, Issue 9 105-117 doi: 10.1080/00913847.1985.11708882
Bixby-Hammett DM.In brief: In a two-year study of the estimated 13,428,000 hours of horse activities by 18,408 US Pony Clubs (USPC) members aged 6 to 21 in scheduled supervised programs, there were 64 accidents resulting in 88 injuries in 16 areas of the body. The head/face was the area most often injured (27.27%), and bruise/abrasion was the most common type of injury (28.26%). Cross-country riding was the most dangerous event (42.31%). Unexpected actions of the horse caused many accidents-25% occurred when the horse bucked and threw the rider, 23.08% when the horse refused a jump, and 17.31% when the horse f...
Head protection for horse riders: a cause for concern.
Archives of emergency medicine    June 1, 1985   Volume 2, Issue 2 85-87 doi: 10.1136/emj.2.2.85
Muwanga LC, Dove AF.We report the frequency with which horse riders with a significant head injury present to a large accident and emergency department. We have also recorded details about the use of headwear and conclude that horse-riding is associated with a serious risk of head injury and 'protective' headwear may not always protect.
Horse-riding accidents.
The Medical journal of Australia    April 15, 1985   Volume 142, Issue 8 492 
Nixon J, Pearn J.No abstract available
Horse-riding accidents.
The Medical journal of Australia    February 18, 1985   Volume 142, Issue 4 281 
Hook RH.No abstract available
“The grave yawns for the horseman.” Equestrian deaths in South Australia 1973-1983.
The Medical journal of Australia    November 10, 1984   Volume 141, Issue 10 632-635 doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.1984.tb113173.x
Pounder DJ.The fatalities associated with the riding and handling of horses in South Australia over the 11-year period 1973-1983 are reviewed. There were 18 deaths, including two sudden natural deaths in the saddle and one drowning. The 15 cases of horse-related trauma represent a death rate of approximately one per million population per annum. Thirteen of the deaths were the result of a head injury after a fall. Nine persons were not wearing protective headgear. The two principal groups at risk were male professional riders with a mean age of 32 years and female amateurs with a mean age of 19 years.
Drug prescription and equine events.
The Veterinary record    November 3, 1984   Volume 115, Issue 18 452 doi: 10.1136/vr.115.18.452
Vogel C.No abstract available
Clinical and pathological studies of brain injuries in horse-riding accidents: a description of cases and review with a warning to the unhelmeted.
Clinical neuropathology    November 1, 1984   Volume 3, Issue 6 253-259 
Ilgren EB, Teddy PJ, Vafadis J, Briggs M, Gardiner NG.We present a clinical and pathological study of brain injuries in horse-riding accidents. Among six fatal cases, all experienced riders varying in age and sex, two were not wearing helmets and four had inadequate protective headgear. Among five non-fatal cases, four wore adequate helmets and only one of these suffered permanent neurological damage. The fifth was not wearing a helmet and although he eventually returned to work, a CT scan following the fall showed a deep-seated perithalamic hematoma. These findings are consistent with those of virtually all other studies in that they suggest tha...
Rodeo roping thumb injuries.
The Journal of hand surgery    March 1, 1984   Volume 9, Issue 2 178-180 doi: 10.1016/s0363-5023(84)80136-7
Morgan RF, Nichter LS, Friedman HI, McCue FC.Three men with thumb injuries sustained during rodeo roping competition have been treated recently. Two of the thumbs were amputated, and the third was partially avulsed. The mechanism of injury was identical in all three cases. The thumbs were entwined between the rope and saddle horn while reducing the slack in the rope and then subjected to shearing and crushing forces as tension was placed on the rope. These injuries emphasize the importance of keeping the thumb upward and clear of the rope to avoid entrapment between the rope and saddle horn.
Some meanings of being a horsewoman.
The Psychoanalytic study of the child    January 1, 1983   Volume 38 501-517 doi: 10.1080/00797308.1983.11823406
Schowalter JE.No abstract available
Equestrian Injuries.
The Physician and sportsmedicine    January 1, 1983   Volume 11, Issue 1 90-97 doi: 10.1080/00913847.1983.11708437
Bernhang AM, Winslett G.In brief: It has always been assumed that participants in equestrian sports are at high risk of serious injury and that minor injuries are common. This study of American Horse Shows Association and United States Pony Clubs horse shows tried to determine if shows are as safe as or safer than other sports, what the accident rate is for horse shows, if any factors influence the accident rate, and what types of accidents and injuries occur. There were 290 reported injuries and two deaths in the 984 responding shows. The accident rate per entry was 0.0003. There was no statistically significant rel...
A study of physical demands in riding.
European journal of applied physiology and occupational physiology    January 1, 1983   Volume 50, Issue 3 373-382 doi: 10.1007/BF00423243
Westerling D.Thirteen experienced riders and three elite riders underwent bicycle ergometer tests at submaximal and maximal workloads. Oxygen uptake, pulmonary ventilation and heart rate were also studied during riding at a walk, a trot and a canter. The mean maximal oxygen uptake of the experienced riders in the ergometer test (2.71 . min-1) was superior to the average maximal oxygen uptake of other groups of the same age and sex. The average oxygen uptake of the experienced riders in trot sitting was 1.701 . min-1, trot rising 1.681 . min-1 and in canter 1.801 . min-1. The experienced riders used at leas...
Sports activities and risk of testicular cancer.
British journal of cancer    November 1, 1982   Volume 46, Issue 5 749-756 doi: 10.1038/bjc.1982.267
Coldman AJ, Elwood JM, Gallagher RP.The relationship of testicular seminoma with several factors was explored using a case-control study. Previously recognized associations with cryptorchidism and infantile inguinal hernia were confirmed and relationships were also found with cycling and horse-riding. These findings represent the first relationships of testicular cancer with well-defined postnatal risk factors.
Horseriding for the disabled.
The Australian nurses' journal. Royal Australian Nursing Federation    July 1, 1982   Volume 12, Issue 1 54-55 
Pearce M.No abstract available
The Pennsylvania horseback riding program for cerebral palsy.
American journal of physical medicine    June 1, 1982   Volume 61, Issue 3 141-144 
Haskin M, Bream JA, Erdman WJ.No abstract available
Horseback riding for the handicapped.
The Journal of the Kentucky Medical Association    November 1, 1981   Volume 79, Issue 11 745-746 
Marcum D.No abstract available
Metabolic conjugation of some carboxylic acids in the horse.
Xenobiotica; the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems    October 1, 1981   Volume 11, Issue 10 655-663 doi: 10.3109/00498258109049085
Marsh MV, Caldwell J, Smith RL, Horner MW, Houghton E, Moss MS.1. 14C-Labelled benzoic acid, salicylic acid and 2-naphthylacetic acid were administered orally to horses, and urinary metabolites investigated by chromatographic and mass spectral techniques. 2. [14C]Benzoic acid (5 mg/kg) was eliminated rapidly in the urine, and quantitatively recovered in 24 h. The major urinary metabolite was hippuric acid (95% of dose) with much smaller amounts of benzoic acid, benzoyl glucuronide and 3-hydroxy-3-phenylpropionic acid. Administration of [ring-D5]benzoic acid together with [14C]benzoic acid to a pony permitted the mass spectral determination of metabolites ...
Relaxation while horse riding. Interview by Janet Barber.
Nursing focus    August 1, 1981   Volume 2, Issue 12 421-422 
Byatt J.No abstract available
[Horse-riding accidents in western Ostergötland – a prospective study 1978-1980].
Lakartidningen    June 10, 1981   Volume 78, Issue 24 2356-2357 
Bröte L, Skau A.No abstract available
[Therapeutic riding in the psychiatric treatment program of children].
Arztliche Jugendkunde    January 1, 1981   Volume 72, Issue 1 28-32 
Piskorz J, Petermann HD.No abstract available
[Spine injuries due to horse riding. Part 2 (author’s transl)].
Unfallheilkunde    July 1, 1980   Volume 83, Issue 7 373-376 
Steinbrück K.No abstract available
[Spine injuries due to horse riding. Part 1 (author’s transl)].
Unfallheilkunde    July 1, 1980   Volume 83, Issue 7 366-372 
Steinbrück K.No abstract available
[First stage of hippotherapy at Oletta for the students of the nursing school].
L'Infirmiere francaise    March 1, 1980   Issue 213 32 
Alessandri PL.No abstract available
Riding back to health.
The Volunteer leader    December 8, 1979   Volume 20, Issue 4 5 
No abstract available
Horseriding catching on as a therapy for the disabled.
Canadian Medical Association journal    September 8, 1979   Volume 121, Issue 5 631-650 
Woods D.No abstract available
Ride & tie. What it’s all about.
Modern veterinary practice    September 1, 1979   Volume 60, Issue 9 688-689 
Townsend C.No abstract available
[Hippotherapy].
Fortschritte der Medizin    August 2, 1979   Volume 97, Issue 29 1253-1255 
Huber EG.No abstract available
Everybody’s horses.
The Veterinary record    June 2, 1979   Volume 104, Issue 22 491 doi: 10.1136/vr.104.22.491-a
No abstract available
[Horse-riding in the psychological rehabilitation and recreation of ophthalmologically disabled persons (author’s transl)].
Klinika oczna    May 1, 1979   Volume 81, Issue 5-6 329 
Czabańska E.No abstract available
[Motor goals of therapeutic horseback riding for cerebral palsied children (author’s transl)].
Die Rehabilitation    May 1, 1979   Volume 18, Issue 2 56-61 
Feldkamp M.The article reviews in a critical survey the current opinions on the possibilities of improving the motor functions of cerebral palsied children with the help of riding therapy. Furthermore, the essential motor difficulties with spasm, athetosis and ataxia are described. It is demonstrated that only a small number of these typical difficulties can be tackled by means of riding therapy and that some key problems, particularly encountered by the spastics, cannot be solved. If, despite these facts, the favourable effects of riding on the cerebral palsied cannot be denied, then this must be attrib...
Equestrian sports.
JAMA    October 20, 1978   Volume 240, Issue 17 1892-1893 
Barclay WR.No abstract available