The effect of exercise on the distribution and manifestation of osteochondrotic lesions in the Warmblood foal.
Abstract: Osteochondrosis (OC) in the horse has been defined as a disturbance in the process of endochondral ossification which is of multifactorial origin, becoming evident in a large number of joints. Exercise is one of the environmental factors that may influence the clinical manifestation of the disorder, but has never been thoroughly investigated. In this study we investigated the influence of exercise during the first 5 months on the development and distribution of OC lesions in foals of age 5 and 11 months. Forty-three foals, all from sires having OC in either the femoropatellar or tibiotarsal joint, were reared to weaning at 5 months under similar conditions except for the type and amount of exercise. Fifteen foals remained at pasture, 14 were kept in box stalls and 14 foals were kept in the same box stalls but daily given an increasing number of gallop sprints. After weaning, 8 foals from each group were subjected to euthanasia. The remaining 19 animals were given identical light exercise regimen for an additional 6 months to euthanasia at 11 months. After euthanasia all major diarthrodial joints were inspected for macroscopic lesions. Histological sections were made from the lesions and from all distal tibial sagittal ridges. Lesions were scored according to severity on a scale of 0 to 4, and a total OC score per joint was calculated. In the 5 month group, lesions were found in all foals (mean number of lesions 5.5, range 1-14). Frequency was highest in the tibiotarsal (1.9 lesions/foal), the femoropatellar/femorotibial (1.0), the cervical intervertebral (1.0), and the metatarsophalangeal joints (0.6). At 11 months the prevalence of lesions had significantly decreased (mean number of lesions 3.1, range 0-7). This decrease was most evident in the femoropatellar/femorotibial joint, but was negligible in the tibiotarsal joint. Exercise did not significantly influence numbers of lesions, but at 5 months there was a tendency towards more severe lesions in the box-rested foals. In the femoropatellar/femorotibial joint, lesions were found mainly in the femoral condyles of the box-rested foals and at the lateral trochlear ridge of the femur in the trained foals. It is concluded that OC may become manifest in many joints. Many lesions regress and do not become clinically evident, making the number of horses with lesions at mature age into an underestimation of the total amount of animals that have suffered from the condition. The period during which a lesion develops and possibly regresses is limited and variable per site. Exercise at the level given in this study may have some influence on the appearance and the distribution of the lesions, but did not appear to have an aetiological role.
Publication Date: 2000-09-22 PubMed ID: 10999656DOI: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05309.xGoogle Scholar: Lookup
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Summary
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The research investigated the relationship between exercise in the first 5 months of life and the development and distribution of osteochondrotic lesions in Warmblood foals. Their findings suggest that while the level of exercise given in the study may have influenced the appearance and location of osteochondrosis lesions, it didn’t play an aetiological role in the disorder.
Study Methodology
- This study involved 43 foals, all of which were offspring of sires with osteochondrosis in either the femoropatellar or tibiotarsal joint.
- Said foals were raised under similar conditions until weaning at 5 months. Their lifestyles differed only in the type and quantity of exercise they were given.
- Foals were divided into three groups: those constantly kept in pasture, those kept in stalls, and those kept in stalls but given daily increasing numbers of gallop sprints.
- Post-weaning, 8 foals from each group were euthanized. The remaining 19 animals were put on an identical light exercise regimen for additional 6 months before being euthanized at 11 months.
- Post-euthanasia, all major diarthrodial joints of the foals were inspected for macroscopic lesions. Histological sections were taken from any lesions found and from all distal tibial sagittal ridges.
- Osteochondrotic lesions were rated on a severity scale of 0 to 4 and total joint scores were calculated.
Findings
- Lesions were found in all the foals at the 5-month mark. Frequency was highest in femoropatellar/femorotibial and tibiotarsal joints, followed by cervical intervertebral and metatarsophalangeal joints.
- Lesion prevalence significantly decreased by the time the foals were 11 months old. The most notable decrease was in the femoropatellar/femorotibial joint, with little change in the tibiotarsal joint.
- The type of exercise did not significantly affect the number of lesions, though it did seem to result in more severe lesions in the stall-rested foals at 5 months compared to those that were exercised.
- Lesions in the femoropatellar/femorotibial joint were mainly found in the femoral condyles of stall-rested foals and the lateral trochlear ridge of the femur in the exercised foals.
Conclusion
- The research concluded that osteochondrosis can manifest in numerous joints. Many of the lesions regress and are not clinically apparent, rendering the headcount of mature horses with lesions an underrepresentation of the total population that has suffered from the condition.
- The duration of lesion development and possible regression is restricted and differs by location.
- The level of exercise given in this study may have some impact on the appearance and distribution of the lesions yet didn’t appear to play an etiological role in osteochondrosis.
Cite This Article
APA
van Weeren PR, Barneveld A.
(2000).
The effect of exercise on the distribution and manifestation of osteochondrotic lesions in the Warmblood foal.
Equine Vet J Suppl(31), 16-25.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05309.x Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Equine Sciences, Utrecht University, The Netherlands.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Animals, Newborn
- Breeding
- Female
- Horse Diseases / etiology
- Horse Diseases / genetics
- Horse Diseases / pathology
- Horses
- Joint Diseases / etiology
- Joint Diseases / pathology
- Joint Diseases / veterinary
- Male
- Metatarsophalangeal Joint / pathology
- Osteochondritis / etiology
- Osteochondritis / pathology
- Osteochondritis / veterinary
- Physical Conditioning, Animal
- Severity of Illness Index
- Stifle / pathology
Citations
This article has been cited 15 times.- Grissom SK, Semevolos SA, Duesterdieck-Zellmer K. Role of cartilage and bone matrix regulation in early equine osteochondrosis. Bone Rep 2023 Jun;18:101653.
- Hoey S, O'Sullivan J, Byrne J, Devine S, Toomey W, McAllister H, Skelly C. Ultrasound screening protocol for osteochondrosis at selected predilection sites in thoroughbred yearlings. Ir Vet J 2022 Apr 27;75(1):8.
- Bergmann W, de Mik-van Mourik M, Veraa S, van den Broek J, Wijnberg ID, Back W, Gröne A. Cervical articular process joint osteochondrosis in Warmblood foals. Equine Vet J 2020 Sep;52(5):664-669.
- Hendrickson EHS, Lykkjen S, Dolvik NI, Olstad K. Prevalence of osteochondral lesions in the fetlock and hock joints of Standardbred horses that survived bacterial infection before 6 months of age. BMC Vet Res 2018 Dec 10;14(1):390.
- Semevolos SA, Duesterdieck-Zellmer KF, Larson M, Kinsley MA. Expression of pro-apoptotic markers is increased along the osteochondral junction in naturally occurring osteochondrosis. Bone Rep 2018 Dec;9:19-26.
- Haysom SS, Vickers MH, Yu LH, Reynolds CM, Firth EC, McGlashan SR. Post-weaning high-fat diet results in growth cartilage lesions in young male rats. PLoS One 2017;12(11):e0188411.
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- Sontam DM, Firth EC, Tsai P, Vickers MH, O'Sullivan JM. Different exercise modalities have distinct effects on the integrin-linked kinase (ILK) and Ca2+ signaling pathways in the male rat bone. Physiol Rep 2015 Oct;3(10).
- Power J, Hernandez P, Wardale J, Henson FM. Alterations in sclerostin protein in lesions of equine osteochondrosis. Vet Rec Open 2014;1(1):e000005.
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- Nagy A, Dyson S. Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Computed Tomographic and Radiographic Findings in the Metacarpophalangeal Joints of 31 Warmblood Showjumpers in Full Work and Competing Regularly. Animals (Basel) 2024 May 9;14(10).
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