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Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Racehorses routinely trot over tarmac, artificial and turf surfaces to access gallop tracks and during warm-up exercises. While undertaking these activities, jockeys may assume either a rising or two-point seat position. Understanding how hoof movements vary depending on jockey seati...

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Autores principales: Horan, Kate, Price, Haydn, Day, Peter, Mackechnie-Guire, Russell, Pfau, Thilo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10451298/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37627354
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13162563
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author Horan, Kate
Price, Haydn
Day, Peter
Mackechnie-Guire, Russell
Pfau, Thilo
author_facet Horan, Kate
Price, Haydn
Day, Peter
Mackechnie-Guire, Russell
Pfau, Thilo
author_sort Horan, Kate
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Racehorses routinely trot over tarmac, artificial and turf surfaces to access gallop tracks and during warm-up exercises. While undertaking these activities, jockeys may assume either a rising or two-point seat position. Understanding how hoof movements vary depending on jockey seating style may have a bearing on safety and stability, and this may vary across surfaces with contrasting fundamental properties, such as hardness and regularity. This study fitted inertial measurement units (IMUs) to the forelimb hooves of six retired Thoroughbred racehorses as they trotted in a randomized order over tarmac, artificial and turf surfaces, with their jockey in rising and two-point seat positions. The IMUs enabled hoof landing, mid-stance, breakover, and swing durations to be calculated, in addition to stride length, for each trial condition. Landing duration was significantly shorter on the tarmac than on the turf and artificial surfaces. Mid-stance duration was significantly longer on the tarmac than on the artificial surface and increased for the two-point seat position. Neither surface nor jockey position affected breakover, but the presence of a jockey increased breakover compared to in-hand exercise. Swing duration was significantly longer on turf compared to the artificial surface. Stride length was significantly shorter on tarmac than on turf, and stride length had a strong positive correlation with speed. ABSTRACT: Injuries to racehorses and their jockeys are not limited to the racetrack and high-speed work. To optimise racehorse-jockey dyads’ health, well-being, and safety, it is important to understand their kinematics under the various exercise conditions they are exposed to. This includes trot work on roads, turf and artificial surfaces when accessing gallop tracks and warming up. This study quantified the forelimb hoof kinematics of racehorses trotting over tarmac, turf and artificial surfaces as their jockey adopted rising and two-point seat positions. A convenience sample of six horses was recruited from the British Racing School, Newmarket, and the horses were all ridden by the same jockey. Inertial measurement units (HoofBeat) were secured to the forelimb hooves of the horses and enabled landing, mid-stance, breakover, swing and stride durations, plus stride length, to be quantified via an in-built algorithm. Data were collected at a frequency of 1140 Hz. Linear Mixed Models were used to test for significant differences in the timing of these stride phases and stride length amongst the different surface and jockey positions. Speed was included as a covariate. Significance was set at p < 0.05. Hoof landing and mid-stance durations were negatively correlated, with approximately a 0.5 ms decrease in mid-stance duration for every 1 ms increase in landing duration (r(2) = 0.5, p < 0.001). Hoof landing duration was significantly affected by surface (p < 0.001) and an interaction between jockey position and surface (p = 0.035). Landing duration was approximately 4.4 times shorter on tarmac compared to grass and artificial surfaces. Mid-stance duration was significantly affected by jockey position (p < 0.001) and surface (p = 0.001), speed (p < 0.001) and jockey position*speed (p < 0.001). Mean values for mid-stance increased by 13 ms with the jockey in the two-point seat position, and mid-stance was 19 ms longer on the tarmac than on the artificial surface. There was no significant difference in the breakover duration amongst surfaces or jockey positions (p ≥ 0.076) for the ridden dataset. However, the mean breakover duration on tarmac in the presence of a rider decreased by 21 ms compared to the in-hand dataset. Swing was significantly affected by surface (p = 0.039) and speed (p = 0.001), with a mean swing phase 20 ms longer on turf than on the artificial surface. Total stride duration was affected by surface only (p = 0.011). Tarmac was associated with a mean stride time that was significantly reduced, by 49 ms, compared to the turf, and this effect may be related to the shorter landing times on turf. Mean stride length was 14 cm shorter on tarmac than on grass, and stride length showed a strong positive correlation with speed, with a 71 cm increase in stride length for every 1 m s(−1) increase in speed (r(2) = 0.8, p < 0.001). In summary, this study demonstrated that the durations of the different stride cycle phases and stride length can be sensitive to surface type and jockey riding position. Further work is required to establish links between altered stride time variables and the risk of musculoskeletal injury.
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spelling pubmed-104512982023-08-26 Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces Horan, Kate Price, Haydn Day, Peter Mackechnie-Guire, Russell Pfau, Thilo Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Racehorses routinely trot over tarmac, artificial and turf surfaces to access gallop tracks and during warm-up exercises. While undertaking these activities, jockeys may assume either a rising or two-point seat position. Understanding how hoof movements vary depending on jockey seating style may have a bearing on safety and stability, and this may vary across surfaces with contrasting fundamental properties, such as hardness and regularity. This study fitted inertial measurement units (IMUs) to the forelimb hooves of six retired Thoroughbred racehorses as they trotted in a randomized order over tarmac, artificial and turf surfaces, with their jockey in rising and two-point seat positions. The IMUs enabled hoof landing, mid-stance, breakover, and swing durations to be calculated, in addition to stride length, for each trial condition. Landing duration was significantly shorter on the tarmac than on the turf and artificial surfaces. Mid-stance duration was significantly longer on the tarmac than on the artificial surface and increased for the two-point seat position. Neither surface nor jockey position affected breakover, but the presence of a jockey increased breakover compared to in-hand exercise. Swing duration was significantly longer on turf compared to the artificial surface. Stride length was significantly shorter on tarmac than on turf, and stride length had a strong positive correlation with speed. ABSTRACT: Injuries to racehorses and their jockeys are not limited to the racetrack and high-speed work. To optimise racehorse-jockey dyads’ health, well-being, and safety, it is important to understand their kinematics under the various exercise conditions they are exposed to. This includes trot work on roads, turf and artificial surfaces when accessing gallop tracks and warming up. This study quantified the forelimb hoof kinematics of racehorses trotting over tarmac, turf and artificial surfaces as their jockey adopted rising and two-point seat positions. A convenience sample of six horses was recruited from the British Racing School, Newmarket, and the horses were all ridden by the same jockey. Inertial measurement units (HoofBeat) were secured to the forelimb hooves of the horses and enabled landing, mid-stance, breakover, swing and stride durations, plus stride length, to be quantified via an in-built algorithm. Data were collected at a frequency of 1140 Hz. Linear Mixed Models were used to test for significant differences in the timing of these stride phases and stride length amongst the different surface and jockey positions. Speed was included as a covariate. Significance was set at p < 0.05. Hoof landing and mid-stance durations were negatively correlated, with approximately a 0.5 ms decrease in mid-stance duration for every 1 ms increase in landing duration (r(2) = 0.5, p < 0.001). Hoof landing duration was significantly affected by surface (p < 0.001) and an interaction between jockey position and surface (p = 0.035). Landing duration was approximately 4.4 times shorter on tarmac compared to grass and artificial surfaces. Mid-stance duration was significantly affected by jockey position (p < 0.001) and surface (p = 0.001), speed (p < 0.001) and jockey position*speed (p < 0.001). Mean values for mid-stance increased by 13 ms with the jockey in the two-point seat position, and mid-stance was 19 ms longer on the tarmac than on the artificial surface. There was no significant difference in the breakover duration amongst surfaces or jockey positions (p ≥ 0.076) for the ridden dataset. However, the mean breakover duration on tarmac in the presence of a rider decreased by 21 ms compared to the in-hand dataset. Swing was significantly affected by surface (p = 0.039) and speed (p = 0.001), with a mean swing phase 20 ms longer on turf than on the artificial surface. Total stride duration was affected by surface only (p = 0.011). Tarmac was associated with a mean stride time that was significantly reduced, by 49 ms, compared to the turf, and this effect may be related to the shorter landing times on turf. Mean stride length was 14 cm shorter on tarmac than on grass, and stride length showed a strong positive correlation with speed, with a 71 cm increase in stride length for every 1 m s(−1) increase in speed (r(2) = 0.8, p < 0.001). In summary, this study demonstrated that the durations of the different stride cycle phases and stride length can be sensitive to surface type and jockey riding position. Further work is required to establish links between altered stride time variables and the risk of musculoskeletal injury. MDPI 2023-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10451298/ /pubmed/37627354 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13162563 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
Horan, Kate
Price, Haydn
Day, Peter
Mackechnie-Guire, Russell
Pfau, Thilo
Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces
title Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces
title_full Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces
title_fullStr Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces
title_full_unstemmed Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces
title_short Timing Differences in Stride Cycle Phases in Retired Racehorses Ridden in Rising and Two-Point Seat Positions at Trot on Turf, Artificial and Tarmac Surfaces
title_sort timing differences in stride cycle phases in retired racehorses ridden in rising and two-point seat positions at trot on turf, artificial and tarmac surfaces
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10451298/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37627354
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13162563
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