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Topic:Trotting Horses

Trotting Horses refers to a specific gait in equines characterized by a two-beat diagonal stride, where the legs move in pairs diagonally across the horse's body. This gait is commonly observed in various horse breeds and is a fundamental aspect of disciplines such as harness racing and dressage. Trotting is often evaluated for its rhythm, balance, and speed, particularly in competitive settings. This topic encompasses a range of research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the biomechanics, training techniques, and performance metrics associated with trotting in horses. Additionally, the page includes research on the physiological and anatomical adaptations that enable this specific gait, as well as its implications for equine health and athletic performance.
Equine locomotion: 2. The analysis of coordination between limbs of trotting standardbreds.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 66-70 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02311.x
Drevemo S, Fredricson I, Dalin G, Björne K.A high-speed cinematographic analysis of interlimb time and linear gait characteristics was carried out at racing speed (12.0 m/sec; 1:23.6 min/km) in 30 clinically sound Standard-bred trotters. In respect of the whole group of horses the racing trot was found to be a very regular and symmetric gait. The variation coefficient between different horses ranged from 8 to 21 per cent depending on the particular characteristic being investigated. The variations recorded in individual animals were about 60 per cent less than those found for the whole group. The most stable characteristics were the du...
Equine locomotion: 3. The reproducibility of gait in standardbred trotters.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 71-73 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02312.x
Drevemo S, Dalin G, Fredricson I, Björne K.The reproducibility of certain gait characteristics was investigated in Standardbred trotters at a speed of 12.0 m/sec. Twenty-two horses were recorded twice on the same day and 4 of them on a third occasion 3 years later. The short-term reproducibility was shown to be very good. In the long-term study it was found that the stride length and duration of swing and stride had increased. This was interpreted as an effect of training.
Relationship between QRS-duration (heart score) and racing performance in trotters.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 81-84 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02315.x
Nielsen K, Vibe-Petersen G.Heart scores increased with age and training. Yearlings had average heart scores of approximately 90 milliseconds (msecs). This increased to approximately 110 msecs in 5-year-old horses, after which there was only slight further increase. In horses 4 years or older, regression analysis revealed a highly significant correlation between heart score and kilometre time. In younger horses the level of significance was less. There was a positive correlation between heart scores and earnings in races. Thus, horses with heart scores above 115 msecs had won considerably more than horses with lower hear...
Equine locomotion; 1. The analysis of linear and temporal stride characteristics of trotting standardbreds.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1980   Volume 12, Issue 2 60-65 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1980.tb02310.x
Drevemo S, Dalin G, Fredricson I, Hjertén G.The movements of the individual limbs of 30 clinically sound Standardbred trotters were studied using high-speed cinematography. At a speed of 12 metres per second (m/sec; 1:23.6 min/km) the mean stride length was 545 cm and the mean duration of the stride was 455 milliseconds (msecs). The stance phase in the forelimbs was 100 msecs and 177 msecs in the hindlimbs. This difference was due to a longer restraint period in the hindlimbs and resulted in slightly shorter swing phases for the hindlimbs. The variations in any particular horse for stride length and for the duration of stride, stance, s...
Quantitative comparisons of acidic prealbumin (PR) phenotypes in horses.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1980   Volume 21, Issue 3 380-388 doi: 10.1186/BF03546870
Ek N, Braend M.Comparisons of Pr protein amounts in horse sera have been performed using .’s (1965) immunodiffusion technique. Relative values against a chosen standard of 100 % were determined for a total of 435 horses. There was considerable variation between horses, the highest Pr value being 125 and the lowest 50 % of the standard. In animals of the same Pr phenotype the mean Pr values were significantly higher (P < 0.001) in foals than in mares. In Norwegian Trotter horses the Pr value of Pr NN animals was significantly higher than that of Pr SS phenotypes, whereas the mean Pr values of Pr SS was sig...
Irregular transmissions in the acidic prealbumin (Pr) system of the horse.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1980   Volume 11, Issue 2 109-112 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1980.tb01500.x
Braend M.During the routine parentage control of Norwegian Trotter horses with 10 000 parent offspring combinations two irregular transmissions of Pr alleles were found. The allele products were provisionally named D1 and D2. They appeared in two stallions which were typed as D1I and D2N respectively. The first stallion transmitted PrD1 to seven out of 10 offspring and the second stallion PrD2 to two of four offspring. Photographs of seven new Pr phenotypes are presented.
[Statistical studies on endoparasite infestation of riding horses and trotters].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    January 15, 1979   Volume 92, Issue 2 21-26 
Keller H, Fries I.No abstract available
Hemoglobin polymorphism in Equus przewalskii and E. caballus analyzed by isoelectric focusing.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1979   Volume 62, Issue 4 305-308 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(79)90093-2
Ryder OA, Sparkes RS, Sparkes MC, Clegg JB.1. Through the use of isoelectric focusing and peptide analysis, the hemoglobins of Przewalski's horse. Equus przewalskii and the domestic horse, E. caballus have been compared. 2. Przewalski's horses have two separate alpha-globin chain polymorphisms similar to domestic horses. Each hemoglobin phenotype could be accurately determined by isoelectric focusing. 3. Confirmation of the electrofocusing hemoglobin determinations was made by comparison to amino acid composition analyses of purified tryptic peptides and by analysis of the rare hemoglobins phenotypes observed in a family of Norwegian t...
Locomotion in the horse: kinematics and external and internal forces in the normal equine digit in the walk and trot.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 11 1728-1733 
Schryver HF, Bartel DL, Langrana N, Lowe JE.No abstract available
Equestrian sports.
JAMA    October 20, 1978   Volume 240, Issue 17 1892-1893 
Barclay WR.No abstract available
[Results of bacteriological cervical swab examinations taken from warm-blooded and trotting mares between 1974 and 1977].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    April 1, 1978   Volume 91, Issue 7 123-128 
Sonnenschein B, Weiss R.No abstract available
Biokinetical analysis of the movements of the pelvic limb of the horse and the role of the muscles in the walk and the trot.
Anatomy and embryology    February 20, 1978   Volume 152, Issue 3 261-272 doi: 10.1007/BF00350524
Wentink GH.The movements of the right hind limb of horses with normal locomotion were studied using cinephotography and electromyography. A model of the cycle of a stride in the walk and the trot was constructed and the kinetic parameters of the segments of the limb were calculated. A good correlation was obtained between the kinetics and the periods of the cycle of a stride during which individual muscles display activity. The results of this study demonstrate that: at placing and lifting, i.e., when a change occurs in the direction of the movement of the limb; b) At the walk, the greatest forces operan...
A relationship between gait and breakdown in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 2 249-253 
Pratt GW, O'Connor JT.A biomechanical model of running has been presented. A basic premise has been that the swing time is nearly independent of speed. In fact, both the racehorse and the trotter have nearly equal swing times. Consequently, as speed increases and the stance phase becomes shorter, the horse must compensate by increasing his extension or the length of the airborne phase (or both). The safe speed which allows the horse adequate preparation time for contact of a leg with the ground is calculated, using a stride-by-stride analysis of the motion of the horse. This is seen to be a very sensitive function ...
Who’s for riding?
The Medical journal of Australia    June 25, 1977   Volume 1, Issue 26 943-944 doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.1977.tb131271.x
Menelaus M.No abstract available
[Effect of training on exertion-dependent blood parameters in trotters].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 1, 1977   Volume 90, Issue 5 89-92 
Krzywanek VH, Wittke G, Schulze A.No abstract available
Use of bumetanide, a potent diuretic, to obtain urinary samples for dope testing in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1976   Volume 37, Issue 11 1257-1260 
Frey HH, Fitzek A, Wintzer HJ, Baumgärtel E.Use of the potent, high-ceiling diuretic bumetanide made it possible to obtain urinary samples for dope testing of trotters within the 1st hour after the race. The drug was injected intravenously at a dose level of 10 mug/kg during the cold season of the year, but on warm days, a dose of 20 mug/kg was more reliable. These doses did not produce any side-effects and did not interfere with the detection of doping drugs, since bumetanide is not metabolized to a detectable degree and the unchanged drug appears only in extracts from acidic urine. By enhancing the clearance of drugs used for doping, ...
[Radiographic evaluation of skeletal development in trotting horses in relation to their athletic activity (author’s transl)].
Folia veterinaria Latina    July 1, 1975   Volume 5, Issue 3 399-411 
Pezzoli G, Del Bue M.No abstract available
Scaling stride frequency and gait to animal size: mice to horses.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    December 20, 1974   Volume 186, Issue 4169 1112-1113 doi: 10.1126/science.186.4169.1112
Heglund NC, Taylor CR, McMahon TA.The stride frequency at which animals of different size change from one gait to another (walk, trot, gallop) changes in a regular manner with body mass. The speed at the transition from trot to gallop can be used as an equivalent speed for comparing animals of different size. This transition point occurs at lower speeds and higher stride frequencies in smaller animals. Plotting stride frequency at the trot-gallop transition point as a function of body mass in logarithmic coordinates yields a straight line.
[Electrolyte concentration and osmolality of blood plasma in trotting horses following exertion due to rate].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 15, 1974   Volume 87, Issue 22 425-428 
Wittke G, Franke D, Krzywanek H.No abstract available
An interventricular septal defect and a tricuspid valve insufficiency in a trotter mare.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1974   Volume 6, Issue 4 174-176 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1974.tb03955.x
Muylle E, De Roose P, Oyaert W, van den Hende C.No abstract available
[Clinical observations on virus-induced respiratory tract diseases in young trotting horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    July 1, 1974   Volume 87, Issue 13 251-253 
Keller H.No abstract available
Glycogen depletion pattern in muscle fibres of trotting horses.
Acta physiologica Scandinavica    February 1, 1974   Volume 90, Issue 2 475-484 doi: 10.1111/j.1748-1716.1974.tb05610.x
Lindholm A, Bjerneld H, Saltin B.No abstract available
[The effect of intermittent training loads on blood characteristics in trotters (author’s transl)].
European journal of applied physiology and occupational physiology    January 1, 1974   Volume 32, Issue 4 329-340 doi: 10.1007/BF00421478
Krzywanek H, Schulze A, Wittke G.No abstract available
[Local myopathy in trotting horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    June 15, 1973   Volume 86, Issue 12 221-225 
Wintzer HJ, von Glasenapp H.No abstract available
[Evaluation of actual efficiency in trotting horses].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    May 1, 1973   Volume 20, Issue 4 265-276 
Krzywanek H.No abstract available
[Motion analysis in trotting horses using ungulography].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    April 1, 1973   Volume 20, Issue 3 209-221 
Bayer A.No abstract available
[Influence of racing on several blood-parameters in trotters]. Krzywanek H, Schulze A, Wittke G.No abstract available
Ergonomic aspects of locomotor asymmetry in standardbred horses trotting through turns. An investigation with special reference to the fetlock joint, using high-speed cinematography and thermography.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica. Supplementum    January 1, 1973   Volume 44 111-139 
Dalin G, Drevemo S, Fredricson I, Jonsson K, Nilsson G.No abstract available
[Behavior of various blood parameters in trotters following defined exertion].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    September 1, 1972   Volume 85, Issue 17 325-329 
Krzywanek H, Schulze A, Wittke G.No abstract available
The surgical treatment of bone spavin. Wamberg’s spavin operation and tenectomy of the medial branch of the tendon of the anterior tibial muscle–a comparison of the results of surgical treatment in trotting horses.
Nordisk veterinaermedicin    July 1, 1972   Volume 24, Issue 7 388-392 
Grande EM.No abstract available