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Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The role of thermography as a detection method of the hoof print in non-lame Warmblood horses as well as its use in temperature determination in six areas from its surface was investigated in this pilot study. The study included sixty non-lame horses, and all four limbs of each horse...

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Autores principales: Zaha, Cristian, Schuszler, Larisa, Dascalu, Roxana, Nistor, Paula, Florea, Tiana, Rujescu, Ciprian, Sicoe, Bogdan, Igna, Cornel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37505874
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci10070470
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author Zaha, Cristian
Schuszler, Larisa
Dascalu, Roxana
Nistor, Paula
Florea, Tiana
Rujescu, Ciprian
Sicoe, Bogdan
Igna, Cornel
author_facet Zaha, Cristian
Schuszler, Larisa
Dascalu, Roxana
Nistor, Paula
Florea, Tiana
Rujescu, Ciprian
Sicoe, Bogdan
Igna, Cornel
author_sort Zaha, Cristian
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The role of thermography as a detection method of the hoof print in non-lame Warmblood horses as well as its use in temperature determination in six areas from its surface was investigated in this pilot study. The study included sixty non-lame horses, and all four limbs of each horse were taken into consideration (n = 240). A comparison between the hoof print temperature values was performed between the horses used for leisure and those used for cross-country. The studied horses were selected based on the following criteria: no alterations in posture and no muscle group asymmetry during visual examination, no lateral or medial deviation of the carpus or hock, no reaction to the flexion tests, negative reactions to the hoof tester, no lameness during walking, trotting or lunging, no anti-inflammatory medication in the last three weeks and rectal temperature between 37 °C and 38 °C. The thermal patterns of the hoof print show no difference among the four limbs and the mean temperature of the selected areas presents no significant statistical differences. Also, there was no statistical differences between the mean temperature of the selected areas from the forelimbs and hindlimbs from the horses used for leisure and those used for cross-country. Thermography can detect the hoof print on a flat surface and the mean temperature for each studied area can be proposed as a reference temperature value. There were no differences in the mean hoofprint temperature between leisure and cross-country Warmblood Horses. Further investigations are required to clarify whether there are any differences in the thermal pattern of hoof prints from other breeds or from horses with musculoskeletal conditions. ABSTRACT: Background: The field of veterinary medicine lacks information on equine thermal hoof printing, and few data on the same subject are available in dogs. In human medicine, thermography is used to detect heat emitted by the foot when it comes in contact with a flat surface to detect the abnormalities of the foot balance. The hypothesis states that the thermal pattern of the hoof print in Warmblood horses is detectable and it does not vary among the four limbs in leisure and cross-country Warmblood horses in terms of mean temperature of the hoof print surface. A pilot study was conducted to investigate the accuracy of thermography in temperature detection of the hoof print and to investigate the occurrence of possible differences in the mean value of six selected areas and whether there are any differences in the mean temperature of the hoof print between leisure and cross-country Warmblood horses. Methods: The study included sixty non-lame Warmblood horses with all limbs taken into consideration (n = 240). The selection criteria for the horses were: no alterations in posture and no muscle group asymmetry during visual examination, no lateral or medial deviation of the carpus or hock, no reaction to the flexion tests, negative reactions to the hoof tester, no lameness during walking, trotting or lunging, no anti-inflammatory medication in the last three weeks prior to examination and rectal temperature between 37 °C and 38 °C. The hoof print of each hoof was measured with the horse in the standing position, all four limbs on the ground, using a FLIR E50 thermal camera. Six areas of temperature from the hoof print were taken into consideration, and for each of them, the mean value was identified using FLIR Tools software for photo interpretation. The One-Way ANOVA test was used to test the differences between the mean temperatures obtained for each selected area from all limbs and to compare the hoof print temperature values between the leisure horses and cross-country horses. Data were statistically processed using SAS Studio. Results: Thermography can detect the temperature emitted by the hoof but the thermal patterns of the hoof print show no difference for all four studied limbs. No significant statistical differences were noticed between the mean temperatures identified for each studied area. Also, there were no statistical differences between the mean temperature of the selected areas from the forelimbs and hindlimbs from the horses used for leisure and those used for cross-country. Based on this aspect, the mean temperature of one selected area can be determined in any of the four limbs, without visible variations. Conclusions: Thermography can detect the hoof print on a flat surface and the mean temperature for each studied area can be proposed as a reference temperature value. There were no differences in the mean temperature of the hoofprint between leisure and cross-country Warmblood Horses. Further investigations are required to clarify whether there are any differences in the thermal pattern of hoof prints from other breeds or from horses with musculoskeletal conditions.
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spelling pubmed-103854322023-07-30 Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study Zaha, Cristian Schuszler, Larisa Dascalu, Roxana Nistor, Paula Florea, Tiana Rujescu, Ciprian Sicoe, Bogdan Igna, Cornel Vet Sci Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The role of thermography as a detection method of the hoof print in non-lame Warmblood horses as well as its use in temperature determination in six areas from its surface was investigated in this pilot study. The study included sixty non-lame horses, and all four limbs of each horse were taken into consideration (n = 240). A comparison between the hoof print temperature values was performed between the horses used for leisure and those used for cross-country. The studied horses were selected based on the following criteria: no alterations in posture and no muscle group asymmetry during visual examination, no lateral or medial deviation of the carpus or hock, no reaction to the flexion tests, negative reactions to the hoof tester, no lameness during walking, trotting or lunging, no anti-inflammatory medication in the last three weeks and rectal temperature between 37 °C and 38 °C. The thermal patterns of the hoof print show no difference among the four limbs and the mean temperature of the selected areas presents no significant statistical differences. Also, there was no statistical differences between the mean temperature of the selected areas from the forelimbs and hindlimbs from the horses used for leisure and those used for cross-country. Thermography can detect the hoof print on a flat surface and the mean temperature for each studied area can be proposed as a reference temperature value. There were no differences in the mean hoofprint temperature between leisure and cross-country Warmblood Horses. Further investigations are required to clarify whether there are any differences in the thermal pattern of hoof prints from other breeds or from horses with musculoskeletal conditions. ABSTRACT: Background: The field of veterinary medicine lacks information on equine thermal hoof printing, and few data on the same subject are available in dogs. In human medicine, thermography is used to detect heat emitted by the foot when it comes in contact with a flat surface to detect the abnormalities of the foot balance. The hypothesis states that the thermal pattern of the hoof print in Warmblood horses is detectable and it does not vary among the four limbs in leisure and cross-country Warmblood horses in terms of mean temperature of the hoof print surface. A pilot study was conducted to investigate the accuracy of thermography in temperature detection of the hoof print and to investigate the occurrence of possible differences in the mean value of six selected areas and whether there are any differences in the mean temperature of the hoof print between leisure and cross-country Warmblood horses. Methods: The study included sixty non-lame Warmblood horses with all limbs taken into consideration (n = 240). The selection criteria for the horses were: no alterations in posture and no muscle group asymmetry during visual examination, no lateral or medial deviation of the carpus or hock, no reaction to the flexion tests, negative reactions to the hoof tester, no lameness during walking, trotting or lunging, no anti-inflammatory medication in the last three weeks prior to examination and rectal temperature between 37 °C and 38 °C. The hoof print of each hoof was measured with the horse in the standing position, all four limbs on the ground, using a FLIR E50 thermal camera. Six areas of temperature from the hoof print were taken into consideration, and for each of them, the mean value was identified using FLIR Tools software for photo interpretation. The One-Way ANOVA test was used to test the differences between the mean temperatures obtained for each selected area from all limbs and to compare the hoof print temperature values between the leisure horses and cross-country horses. Data were statistically processed using SAS Studio. Results: Thermography can detect the temperature emitted by the hoof but the thermal patterns of the hoof print show no difference for all four studied limbs. No significant statistical differences were noticed between the mean temperatures identified for each studied area. Also, there were no statistical differences between the mean temperature of the selected areas from the forelimbs and hindlimbs from the horses used for leisure and those used for cross-country. Based on this aspect, the mean temperature of one selected area can be determined in any of the four limbs, without visible variations. Conclusions: Thermography can detect the hoof print on a flat surface and the mean temperature for each studied area can be proposed as a reference temperature value. There were no differences in the mean temperature of the hoofprint between leisure and cross-country Warmblood Horses. Further investigations are required to clarify whether there are any differences in the thermal pattern of hoof prints from other breeds or from horses with musculoskeletal conditions. MDPI 2023-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10385432/ /pubmed/37505874 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci10070470 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Zaha, Cristian
Schuszler, Larisa
Dascalu, Roxana
Nistor, Paula
Florea, Tiana
Rujescu, Ciprian
Sicoe, Bogdan
Igna, Cornel
Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study
title Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study
title_full Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study
title_fullStr Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study
title_short Thermographic Image of the Hoof Print in Leisure and Cross-Country Warmblood Horses: A Pilot Study
title_sort thermographic image of the hoof print in leisure and cross-country warmblood horses: a pilot study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37505874
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci10070470
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