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Topic:Technology

The integration of technology in equine management encompasses a range of tools and systems designed to enhance the care, training, and monitoring of horses. This includes wearable devices that track vital signs and activity levels, providing data for health assessments and performance optimization. Advanced imaging techniques, such as thermography and ultrasonography, aid in the diagnosis and treatment of equine injuries and conditions. Additionally, developments in genetic testing contribute to understanding hereditary traits and potential health risks. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the application, effectiveness, and impact of technology in various aspects of equine care and management.
Valorization of horse manure through catalytic supercritical water gasification.
Waste management (New York, N.Y.)    April 5, 2016   Volume 52 147-158 doi: 10.1016/j.wasman.2016.03.049
Nanda S, Dalai AK, Gökalp I, Kozinski JA.The organic wastes such as lignocellulosic biomass, municipal solid waste, sewage sludge and livestock manure have attracted attention as alternative sources of energy. Cattle manure, a waste generated in surplus amounts from the feedlot, has always been a chief environmental concern. This study is focused on identifying the candidacy of horse manure as a next generation feedstock for biofuel production through supercritical water gasification. The horse manure was gasified in supercritical water to examine the effects of temperature (400-600°C), biomass-to-water ratio (1:5 and 1:10) and reac...
Innovations in Equine Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    March 26, 2016   Volume 32, Issue 1 xiii-xiv doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2016.02.001
King MR, Davidson EJ.No abstract available
Automated parasite faecal egg counting using fluorescence labelling, smartphone image capture and computational image analysis.
International journal for parasitology    March 26, 2016   Volume 46, Issue 8 485-493 doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2016.02.004
Slusarewicz P, Pagano S, Mills C, Popa G, Chow KM, Mendenhall M, Rodgers DW, Nielsen MK.Intestinal parasites are a concern in veterinary medicine worldwide and for human health in the developing world. Infections are identified by microscopic visualisation of parasite eggs in faeces, which is time-consuming, requires technical expertise and is impractical for use on-site. For these reasons, recommendations for parasite surveillance are not widely adopted and parasite control is based on administration of rote prophylactic treatments with anthelmintic drugs. This approach is known to promote anthelmintic resistance, so there is a pronounced need for a convenient egg counting assay...
Evaluation of a wireless activity monitoring system to quantify locomotor activity in horses in experimental settings.
Equine veterinary journal    March 22, 2016   Volume 49, Issue 2 225-231 doi: 10.1111/evj.12568
Fries M, Montavon S, Spadavecchia C, Levionnois OL.Methods of evaluating locomotor activity can be useful in efforts to quantify behavioural activity in horses objectively. Objective: To evaluate whether an accelerometric device would be adequate to quantify locomotor activity and step frequency in horses, and to distinguish between different levels of activity and different gaits. Methods: Observational study in an experimental setting. Methods: Dual-mode (activity and step count) piezo-electric accelerometric devices were placed at each of 4 locations (head, withers, forelimb and hindlimb) in each of 6 horses performing different controlled ...
Tenogenic induction of equine mesenchymal stem cells by means of growth factors and low-level laser technology.
Veterinary research communications    January 13, 2016   Volume 40, Issue 1 39-48 doi: 10.1007/s11259-016-9652-y
Gomiero C, Bertolutti G, Martinello T, Van Bruaene N, Broeckx SY, Patruno M, Spaas JH.Tendons regenerate poorly due to a dense extracellular matrix and low cellularity. Cellular therapies aim to improve tendon repair using mesenchymal stem cells and tenocytes; however, a current limitation is the low proliferative potential of tenocytes in cases of severe trauma. The purpose of this study was to develop a method useful in veterinary medicine to improve the differentiation of Peripheral Blood equine mesenchymal stem cells (PB-MSCs) into tenocytes. PB-MSCs were used to study the effects of the addition of some growth factors (GFs) as TGFβ3 (transforming growth factor), EGF2 (Epi...
Removing movement artifacts from equine ECG recordings acquired with textile electrodes. Lanata A, Guidi A, Baragli P, Paradiso R, Valenza G, Scilingo EP.This study reports on the implementation of a novel system to detect and reduce movement artifact (MA) contribution in electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings acquired from horses in free movement conditions. The system comprises both integrated textile electrodes for ECG acquisition and one triaxial accelerometer for movement monitoring. Here, ECG and physical activity are continuously acquired from seven horses through the wearable system and a model that integrates cardiovascular and movement information to estimate the MA contribution is implemented. Moreover, in this study we propose a new alg...
Veterinary applications of infrared thermography.
American journal of veterinary research    December 29, 2015   Volume 77, Issue 1 98-107 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.77.1.98
Rekant SI, Lyons MA, Pacheco JM, Arzt J, Rodriguez LL.Abnormal body temperature is a major indicator of disease; infrared thermography (IRT) can assess changes in body surface temperature quickly and remotely. This technology can be applied to a myriad of diseases of various etiologies across a wide range of host species in veterinary medicine. It is used to monitor the physiologic status of individual animals, such as measuring feed efficiency or diagnosing pregnancy. Infrared thermography has applications in the assessment of animal welfare, and has been used to detect soring in horses and monitor stress responses. This review addresses the var...
Comparison of a standalone consumer grade smartphone with a specialist inertial measurement unit for quantification of movement symmetry in the trotting horse.
Equine veterinary journal    December 25, 2015   Volume 49, Issue 1 124-129 doi: 10.1111/evj.12529
Pfau T, Weller R.Equine inertial measurement unit (IMU) gait analysis has gained in popularity for use in horses. Similar transducers are now found in consumer grade smartphones. However, to date there are no scientific data evaluating their use for assessment of movement (a)symmetry in the horse. Objective: To establish limits of agreement (LoA, mean difference ±2 s.d.) between a validated specialist IMU system and IMU data collected with a consumer grade smartphone for quantification of movement symmetry and range of motion (ROM) of pelvic movement in the trotting horse. Methods: Method comparison study bas...
Substance use disorder treatment retention and completion: a prospective study of horse-assisted therapy (HAT) for young adults.
Addiction science & clinical practice    October 14, 2015   Volume 10 21 doi: 10.1186/s13722-015-0043-4
Kern-Godal A, Arnevik EA, Walderhaug E, Ravndal E.Keeping substance use disorder patients actively engaged in treatment is a challenge. Horse-assisted therapy (HAT) is increasingly used as a complementary therapy, with claimed motivational and other benefits to physical and psychological health. This naturalistic study aimed to assess HAT's impact on the duration and completion of treatment for young substance users at Oslo University Hospital. Methods: Discharge and other data were derived from the Youth Addiction Treatment Evaluation Project (YATEP) database for patients (n = 108) admitted during an 18-month period. An intention-to-treat ...
Preliminary comparative study of two accelerometers performances for evaluation of dorsoventral movement in trotting horse.
Computer methods in biomechanics and biomedical engineering    September 11, 2015   Volume 18 Suppl 1 1892-1893 doi: 10.1080/10255842.2015.1076654
Brouillet N, Jarlot B, Pillard P, Bertucci W, Viguier E.No abstract available
Validity and practical utility of accelerometry for the measurement of in-hand physical activity in horses.
BMC veterinary research    September 11, 2015   Volume 11 233 doi: 10.1186/s12917-015-0550-2
Morrison R, Sutton DG, Ramsoy C, Hunter-Blair N, Carnwath J, Horsfield E, Yam PS.Accelerometers are valid, practical and reliable tools for the measurement of habitual physical activity (PA). Quantification of PA in horses is desirable for use in research and clinical settings. The objective of this study was to evaluate a triaxial accelerometer for objective measurement of PA in the horse by assessment of their practical utility and validity. Horses were recruited to establish both the optimal site of accelerometer attachment and questionnaire designed to explore owner acceptance. Validity and cut-off values were obtained by assessing PA at various gaits. Validation study...
Augmenting reality in anatomy.
The Veterinary record    November 8, 2014   Volume 175, Issue 18 444 doi: 10.1136/vr.g6637
No abstract available
Recognition of lameness: man versus machine.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 20, 2014   Volume 201, Issue 3 245-248 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2014.05.018
Dyson S.No abstract available
Technological advances in equestrian sports: are they beneficial for both performance and welfare?
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    December 14, 2013   Volume 199, Issue 3 313-314 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2013.12.009
van Weeren PR, Back W.No abstract available
How ultrasound technologies have expanded and revolutionized research in reproduction in large animals.
Theriogenology    November 28, 2013   Volume 81, Issue 1 112-125 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2013.09.007
Ginther OJ.Gray-scale ultrasonic imaging (UI) was introduced in 1980 and initially was used to examine clinically the reproductive tract of mares. By 1983 in mares and 1984 in heifers/cows, UI had become a tool for basic research. In each species, transrectal gray-scale UI has been used extensively to characterize follicle dynamics and investigate the gonadotropic control and hormonal role of the follicles. However, the use of transrectal UI has also disclosed and characterized many other aspects of reproduction in each species, including (1) endometrial echotexture as a biological indicator of circulati...
Micro-chipping horses: animal identification and beyond.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    November 15, 2013   Volume 199, Issue 1 4 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2013.10.037
Wall P.No abstract available
Validation of a novel technique for creating simulated radiographs using computed tomography datasets. Mendoza P, d'Anjou MA, Carmel EN, Fournier E, Mai W, Alexander K, Winter MD, Zwingenberger AL, Thrall DE, Theoret C.Understanding radiographic anatomy and the effects of varying patient and radiographic tube positioning on image quality can be a challenge for students. The purposes of this study were to develop and validate a novel technique for creating simulated radiographs using computed tomography (CT) datasets. A DICOM viewer (ORS Visual) plug-in was developed with the ability to move and deform cuboidal volumetric CT datasets, and to produce images simulating the effects of tube-patient-detector distance and angulation. Computed tomographic datasets were acquired from two dogs, one cat, and one horse....
Reduced-size microchips for identification of horses: response to implantation and readability during a six-month period.
The Veterinary record    October 24, 2013   Volume 173, Issue 18 451 doi: 10.1136/vr.101824
Wulf M, Aurich C, von Lewinski M, Möstl E, Aurich JE.In this study, readability of reduced-size microchips in horses and the response to implantation were analysed. It was hypothesised that small microchips can be implanted stress-free but are less readable than larger microchips. Adult mares (n=40) were implanted with a reduced-size microchip (10.9×1.6 mm) at the left side of the neck (size of conventional microchips 11.4×2.2 mm). Microchips were identified with three different scanners (A, B, C) immediately, and at 6, 12 and 28 weeks after implantation. Twelve out of the 40 mares were submitted to microchip implantation and control treatment...
Incorporating oral photography and endoscopy into the equine dental examination.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    June 27, 2013   Volume 29, Issue 2 345-vi doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2013.04.007
Galloway SS, Easley J.This article discusses the significant features and use of digital cameras, intraoral cameras, and oral endoscopes in equine dental practice. Although system features believed to be important have been listed, specific system recommendations have been omitted, since each veterinarian must individually determine the best system to meet practice clinical needs and budget. Veterinarians are encouraged to thoroughly research not only the camera/endoscope purchase but also the capabilities of the entire system, the compatibility of the system with different computer software programs, the reputatio...
Advances in equine dental radiology.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    June 5, 2013   Volume 29, Issue 2 367-vi doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2013.04.001
Baratt R.Although diagnostic images can be obtained with traditional rare-earth film-screen combinations, digital radiography (DR) has enhanced the ability of the general practitioner to obtain diagnostic radiographs of the equine head. With the widespread availability of DR in equine practices, the practitioner can more readily learn the correct positioning for the various projections of the equine head that are used to evaluate the dentition and sinuses. Digital systems provide rapid processing of the image, enabling the practitioner to correct positioning errors and retake the image without signific...
What can finite element analysis tell us?
Equine veterinary journal    April 10, 2013   Volume 45, Issue 3 265-266 doi: 10.1111/evj.12070
Gföhler M, Peham C.No abstract available
Horse-like walking, trotting, and galloping derived from kinematic Motion Primitives (kMPs) and their application to walk/trot transitions in a compliant quadruped robot.
Biological cybernetics    March 6, 2013   Volume 107, Issue 3 309-320 doi: 10.1007/s00422-013-0551-9
Moro FL, Spröwitz A, Tuleu A, Vespignani M, Tsagarakis NG, Ijspeert AJ, Caldwell DG.This manuscript proposes a method to directly transfer the features of horse walking, trotting, and galloping to a quadruped robot, with the aim of creating a much more natural (horse-like) locomotion profile. A principal component analysis on horse joint trajectories shows that walk, trot, and gallop can be described by a set of four kinematic Motion Primitives (kMPs). These kMPs are used to generate valid, stable gaits that are tested on a compliant quadruped robot. Tests on the effects of gait frequency scaling as follows: results indicate a speed optimal walking frequency around 3.4 Hz, an...
Use of a wireless, inertial sensor-based system to objectively evaluate flexion tests in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    March 2, 2013   Issue 43 8-11 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2012.00611.x
Marshall JF, Lund DG, Voute LC.A wireless, inertial sensor-based system has previously been validated for evaluation of equine lameness. However, threshold values have not been determined for the assessment of responses to flexion tests. The aim of this investigation was to evaluate a sensor-based system for objective assessment of the response to flexion. Methods: Healthy adult horses (n = 17) in work were recruited prospectively. Horses were instrumented with sensors on the head (accelerometer), pelvis (accelerometer) and right forelimb (gyroscope), before trotting in a straight line (minimum 25 strides) for 2 consecutive...
Robot-assisted surgery: searching for the pony.
Journal of endourology    December 13, 2012   Volume 26, Issue 12 1540-1541 doi: 10.1089/end.2012.1554
Menon M.No abstract available
The basics of musculoskeletal magnetic resonance imaging: terminology, imaging sequences, image planes, and descriptions of basic pathologic change.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    November 28, 2012   Volume 28, Issue 3 599-616 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2012.09.001
Winter MD.The usefulness of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in the diagnosis of equine lameness is unquestionable. As with most imaging modalities, advances in technology happen quickly, and the information that can be obtained can seem limitless. An understanding of MR sequences, expected signal intensity of normal tissues, and the role of multiplanar imaging is the foundation for interpreting MR images. The rapid development of new techniques and sequences and the potential for biochemical changes to be indirectly assessed using MR spectroscopy offer possibilities for the continued development of this...
Digital radiography for the equine practitioner: basic principles and recent advances.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    October 18, 2012   Volume 28, Issue 3 483-495 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2012.08.003
Nelson NC, Zekas LJ, Reese DJ.As availability increases and cost decreases, digital radiograph systems become more common in equine practice. Technological advances provide an array of choices for the equine practitioner considering purchase. Two classes of systems are available: computed radiography and flat-panel systems (direct radiography). Image processing encompasses all manipulations performed on an image at acquisition and can have a profound effect on the final digital radiograph. Consideration should be given to the type of display monitor because many options are now available. The type of display monitor and th...
Advances in equine ultrasonography.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    October 12, 2012   Volume 28, Issue 3 497-506 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2012.08.001
Neelis DA, Roberts GD.The many advancements in ultrasound technology, including spatial compounding, harmonic imaging, multidimensional and extended field-of-view images, and improvements in transducer capabilities, are used to enhance the ultrasonographic examination of the equine patient. The improvements in software and hardware capabilities help overcome artifacts, improve image quality, and allow better documentation of the examination for follow-up studies. In addition, the ability of smaller, more portable machines to produce better images is ideal for the ambulatory practice setting.
Use of motion trackers for equine locomotion analysis to implement a horse simulator.
Computer methods in biomechanics and biomedical engineering    October 4, 2012   Volume 15 Suppl 1 127-128 doi: 10.1080/10255842.2012.713609
Mager-Maury S, Biau S, Deslandes S.No abstract available
Comparison of an inertial sensor system of lameness quantification with subjective lameness evaluation.
Equine veterinary journal    May 6, 2012   Volume 44, Issue 6 652-656 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2012.00571.x
McCracken MJ, Kramer J, Keegan KG, Lopes M, Wilson DA, Reed SK, LaCarrubba A, Rasch M.Subjective evaluation of mild lameness has been shown to have poor interobserver reliability. Traditional methods of objective lameness evaluation require specialised conditions and equipment. Wireless inertial sensor systems have been developed to allow for simple, rapid, objective lameness detection in horses trotted over ground. Objective: The purpose of this study was to compare the sensitivities of an inertial sensor system and subjective evaluation performed by experienced equine practitioners at detecting lameness in horses. We hypothesised that the inertial sensor system would identify...
Technology and the ambulatory equine practitioner: implementing and affording the 21st century.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    May 2, 2012   Volume 28, Issue 1 25-38 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2012.02.004
Baus MR, Magnus RP.Purchasing new or used capital assets involves both emotional and financial components in the decision making process. In addition, there are intangible factors such as client perceptions and expectations that fit into the equation. Identify the facts from a business perspective and then define whether this investment (expense) is good for the practice and fits with the short- and long-term growth strategies. Ask the tough questions, analyze the numbers, understand the clients’ needs, and tie this together with the practice brand and strategic objectives. The informed and prepared buyer is u...
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