Analyze Diet
Equine veterinary journal2011; 44(4); 420-424; doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2011.00474.x

A comparative study of proximal hindlimb flexion in horses: 5 versus 60 seconds.

Abstract: The flexion test is routinely used in lameness and prepurchase examinations. There is no accepted standard for duration of flexion or evidence that interpretation of results would differ with different durations of flexion. Objective: There will be no difference in interpretation of proximal hindlimb flexion for 5 or 60 s. Methods: Video recordings of lameness examinations of 34 client-owned horses were performed that included: baseline lameness, proximal hindlimb flexion for 60 s, and flexion of the same limb for 5 s. Videos were edited to blind reviewers to the hypothesis being tested. The baseline lameness video from each horse was paired with each flexion to make 2 pairs of videos for each case. Twenty video pairs were repeated to assess intraobserver repeatability. Fifteen experienced equine clinicians were asked to review the baseline lameness video followed by the flexion test and grade the response to flexion as either positive or negative. Potential associations between the duration of flexion and the likelihood of a positive flexion test were evaluated using generalised linear mixed models. A kappa value was calculated to assess the degree of intraobserver agreement on the repeated videos. Significance level was set at P<0.05. Results: Proximal hindlimb flexion of 60 s was more likely to be called positive than flexion of 5 s (P<0.0001), with the likelihood of the same interpretation 74% of the time. The first flexion performed was more likely to be called positive than subsequent flexions (P = 0.029). Intra-assessor agreement averaged 75% with κ= 0.49. Conclusions: Proximal hindlimb flexion of a limb for 5 s does not yield the same result as flexing a limb for 60 s. Conclusions: Shorter durations of flexion may be useful for clinicians that have good agreement with flexions of 5 and 60 s.
Publication Date: 2011-09-16 PubMed ID: 21923880DOI: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2011.00474.xGoogle Scholar: Lookup
The Equine Research Bank provides access to a large database of publicly available scientific literature. Inclusion in the Research Bank does not imply endorsement of study methods or findings by Mad Barn.
  • Comparative Study
  • Journal Article

Summary

This research summary has been generated with artificial intelligence and may contain errors and omissions. Refer to the original study to confirm details provided. Submit correction.

The research explores differences in the interpretation of a horse’s hindlimb reflex depending on the duration of flexions, either 5 or 60 seconds. The study found out that horses’ hindlimbs flexed for 60 seconds were more likely to yield positive results than when flexed for 5 seconds.

Objective and Methodology

  • The main goal of the study is to determine if the duration of proximal hindlimb flexion, a common test in lameness examinations in horses, affects the conclusion drawn from the examination.
  • The experiment involved 34 client-owned horses undergoing lameness examinations recorded on video. A procedure involving 60 seconds flexion was followed by a similar procedure involving 5 seconds flexion. The video was edited to blind the reviewers.
  • Two video pairs were produced for each case, with 20 video pairs repeated to assess consistency.
  • Fifteen experienced equine clinicians reviewed the video pairs, grading them as positive or negative response to flexion.

Results and Conclusions

  • Examinations with flexions of 60 seconds were more likely to produce a positive response compared to flexions of 5 seconds.
  • When the interpretation of flexion was the same, it was so 74% of the time.
  • The first flexion was more likely to be called positive than subsequent flexions.
  • There was a 75% intra-assessor agreement with κ= 0.49, an indicator of moderate agreement.
  • The conclusion was that shorter durations of flexion may not produce the same results as longer durations of flexion.
  • However, the study suggests that shorter durations might be beneficial for clinicians who have good agreement with flexions of both 5 and 60 seconds.

Cite This Article

APA
Armentrout AR, Beard WL, White BJ, Lillich JD. (2011). A comparative study of proximal hindlimb flexion in horses: 5 versus 60 seconds. Equine Vet J, 44(4), 420-424. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2042-3306.2011.00474.x

Publication

ISSN: 2042-3306
NlmUniqueID: 0173320
Country: United States
Language: English
Volume: 44
Issue: 4
Pages: 420-424

Researcher Affiliations

Armentrout, A R
  • Department of Clinical Sciences, Kansas State University Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, Kansas, USA. aarmentr@vet.k-state.edu
Beard, W L
    White, B J
      Lillich, J D

        MeSH Terms

        • Animals
        • Female
        • Hindlimb / pathology
        • Horse Diseases / diagnosis
        • Horses
        • Lameness, Animal / diagnosis
        • Male
        • Observer Variation
        • Physical Examination / methods
        • Physical Examination / veterinary
        • Range of Motion, Articular

        Citations

        This article has been cited 2 times.
        1. Grosjean D, De Bakker E, Mugnier A, Forterre F, Saunders J, Van Ryssen B, Samoy YCA. Effect of dog-related parameters on the flexion test outcome: A large cohort retrospective study on physiological and orthopedic pathological-related factors. Front Vet Sci 2022;9:1064795.
          doi: 10.3389/fvets.2022.1064795pubmed: 36590796google scholar: lookup
        2. Bowen AG, Tabor G, Labens R, Randle H. Visually Assessing Equine Quality of Movement: A Survey to Identify Key Movements and Patient-Specific Measures. Animals (Basel) 2023 Sep 5;13(18).
          doi: 10.3390/ani13182822pubmed: 37760222google scholar: lookup