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Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training

BACKGROUND: Horses show compensatory head movement in hindlimb lameness and compensatory pelvis movement in forelimb lameness but little is known about the relationship of withers movement symmetry with head and pelvic asymmetry in horses with naturally occurring gait asymmetries. OBJECTIVES: To doc...

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Autores principales: Pfau, T., Noordwijk, K., Sepulveda Caviedes, M. F., Persson‐Sjodin, E., Barstow, A., Forbes, B., Rhodin, M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5724686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28548349
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evj.12705
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author Pfau, T.
Noordwijk, K.
Sepulveda Caviedes, M. F.
Persson‐Sjodin, E.
Barstow, A.
Forbes, B.
Rhodin, M.
author_facet Pfau, T.
Noordwijk, K.
Sepulveda Caviedes, M. F.
Persson‐Sjodin, E.
Barstow, A.
Forbes, B.
Rhodin, M.
author_sort Pfau, T.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Horses show compensatory head movement in hindlimb lameness and compensatory pelvis movement in forelimb lameness but little is known about the relationship of withers movement symmetry with head and pelvic asymmetry in horses with naturally occurring gait asymmetries. OBJECTIVES: To document head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and timing differences in horses with naturally occurring gait asymmetries. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of gait data. METHODS: Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and timing of displacement minima and maxima were quantified from inertial sensors in 163 Thoroughbreds during trot‐ups on hard ground. Horses were divided into 4 subgroups using the direction of head and withers movement asymmetry. Scatter plots of head vs. pelvic movement asymmetry illustrated how the head–withers relationship distinguishes between contralateral and ipsilateral head–pelvic movement asymmetry. Independent t test or Mann–Whitney U test (P<0.05) compared pelvic movement asymmetry and timing differences between groups. RESULTS: The relationship between head and withers asymmetry (i.e. same sided or opposite sided asymmetry) predicts the relationship between head and pelvic asymmetry in 69–77% of horses. Pelvic movement symmetry was significantly different between horses with same sign vs. opposite sign of head–withers asymmetry (P<0.0001). Timing of the maximum head height reached after contralateral (‘sound’) stance was delayed compared to withers (P = 0.02) and pelvis (P = 0.04) in horses with contralateral head–withers asymmetry. MAIN LIMITATIONS: The clinical lameness status of the horses was not investigated. CONCLUSION: In the Thoroughbreds with natural gait asymmetries investigated here, the direction of head vs. withers movement asymmetry identifies the majority of horses with ipsilateral and contralateral head and pelvic movement asymmetries. Withers movement should be further investigated for differentiating between forelimb and hindlimb lame horses. Horses with opposite sided head and withers asymmetry significantly delay the upward movement of the head after ‘sound’ forelimb stance.
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spelling pubmed-57246862017-12-12 Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training Pfau, T. Noordwijk, K. Sepulveda Caviedes, M. F. Persson‐Sjodin, E. Barstow, A. Forbes, B. Rhodin, M. Equine Vet J Experimental and Basic Research Studies BACKGROUND: Horses show compensatory head movement in hindlimb lameness and compensatory pelvis movement in forelimb lameness but little is known about the relationship of withers movement symmetry with head and pelvic asymmetry in horses with naturally occurring gait asymmetries. OBJECTIVES: To document head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and timing differences in horses with naturally occurring gait asymmetries. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of gait data. METHODS: Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and timing of displacement minima and maxima were quantified from inertial sensors in 163 Thoroughbreds during trot‐ups on hard ground. Horses were divided into 4 subgroups using the direction of head and withers movement asymmetry. Scatter plots of head vs. pelvic movement asymmetry illustrated how the head–withers relationship distinguishes between contralateral and ipsilateral head–pelvic movement asymmetry. Independent t test or Mann–Whitney U test (P<0.05) compared pelvic movement asymmetry and timing differences between groups. RESULTS: The relationship between head and withers asymmetry (i.e. same sided or opposite sided asymmetry) predicts the relationship between head and pelvic asymmetry in 69–77% of horses. Pelvic movement symmetry was significantly different between horses with same sign vs. opposite sign of head–withers asymmetry (P<0.0001). Timing of the maximum head height reached after contralateral (‘sound’) stance was delayed compared to withers (P = 0.02) and pelvis (P = 0.04) in horses with contralateral head–withers asymmetry. MAIN LIMITATIONS: The clinical lameness status of the horses was not investigated. CONCLUSION: In the Thoroughbreds with natural gait asymmetries investigated here, the direction of head vs. withers movement asymmetry identifies the majority of horses with ipsilateral and contralateral head and pelvic movement asymmetries. Withers movement should be further investigated for differentiating between forelimb and hindlimb lame horses. Horses with opposite sided head and withers asymmetry significantly delay the upward movement of the head after ‘sound’ forelimb stance. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-07-03 2018-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5724686/ /pubmed/28548349 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evj.12705 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Equine Veterinary Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of EVJ Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Experimental and Basic Research Studies
Pfau, T.
Noordwijk, K.
Sepulveda Caviedes, M. F.
Persson‐Sjodin, E.
Barstow, A.
Forbes, B.
Rhodin, M.
Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training
title Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training
title_full Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training
title_fullStr Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training
title_full_unstemmed Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training
title_short Head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing Thoroughbreds in training
title_sort head, withers and pelvic movement asymmetry and their relative timing in trot in racing thoroughbreds in training
topic Experimental and Basic Research Studies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5724686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28548349
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evj.12705
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