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Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk

The walk and trot are inherently symmetrical gaits, making them potentially suitable for the detection of left-right asymmetries. The aims of this study were to describe asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk in non-lame high-level dressage horses and to seek associations between th...

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Autores principales: Byström, Anna, Egenvall, Agneta, Roepstorff, Lars, Rhodin, Marie, Bragança, Filipe S., Hernlund, Elin, van Weeren, René, Weishaupt, Michael A., Clayton, Hilary M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6160136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30261019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204548
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author Byström, Anna
Egenvall, Agneta
Roepstorff, Lars
Rhodin, Marie
Bragança, Filipe S.
Hernlund, Elin
van Weeren, René
Weishaupt, Michael A.
Clayton, Hilary M.
author_facet Byström, Anna
Egenvall, Agneta
Roepstorff, Lars
Rhodin, Marie
Bragança, Filipe S.
Hernlund, Elin
van Weeren, René
Weishaupt, Michael A.
Clayton, Hilary M.
author_sort Byström, Anna
collection PubMed
description The walk and trot are inherently symmetrical gaits, making them potentially suitable for the detection of left-right asymmetries. The aims of this study were to describe asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk in non-lame high-level dressage horses and to seek associations between these asymmetric movements and other kinematic variables and vertical ground reaction forces (vGRFs). Seven dressage horses, judged clinically as being sound, walked unridden and unrestrained on a treadmill with an integrated force measuring system (480 Hz), from which spatiotemporal and vGRF variables were extracted. Markers were tracked by 12 infrared cameras (240 Hz). The vertical position of the sixth thoracic vertebra (T6), limb protraction and retraction distances throughout stance, and global limb lengths were determined. Contralateral trial-mean differences were calculated, including difference in T6 minimum vertical position between contralateral steps (T6minDiff). Mixed models were used to study associations between symmetry parameters. Trial-mean T6minDiff ranged between 0.3–23 mm. Of the seven horses, five consistently dropped the withers more in early left forelimb stance, one was fairly symmetrical, and one dropped the withers more in early right forelimb stance. Comparisons between contralateral limbs showed the following associations. The forelimb that was retracted when T6min was lowest showed greater retraction at toe-off (1 mm increase predicted 0.17 mm T6minDiff increase) and shorter stance duration (1 ms decrease predicted 0.3 mm T6minDiff increase). The hind limb that was in midstance when T6min was lowest showed a greater range of motion during the stance phase (1 mm increase in protraction or retraction predicted 0.2 mm T6minDiff increase). The haunches were displaced away from the side of the forelimb that was protracted when T6min was lowest (1 mm lateral shift predicted 0.07 mm T6minDiff increase). Forelimb and hind limb vGRF parameters were non-significant. Asymmetry of vertical withers movement in horses assessed as being sound at trot was related to a complex pattern of asymmetries in spatiotemporal variables throughout the stride cycle rather than to vertical load redistribution between the forelimbs. This suggests that the asymmetry may be due to inherent laterality rather than weight-bearing lameness.
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spelling pubmed-61601362018-10-19 Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk Byström, Anna Egenvall, Agneta Roepstorff, Lars Rhodin, Marie Bragança, Filipe S. Hernlund, Elin van Weeren, René Weishaupt, Michael A. Clayton, Hilary M. PLoS One Research Article The walk and trot are inherently symmetrical gaits, making them potentially suitable for the detection of left-right asymmetries. The aims of this study were to describe asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk in non-lame high-level dressage horses and to seek associations between these asymmetric movements and other kinematic variables and vertical ground reaction forces (vGRFs). Seven dressage horses, judged clinically as being sound, walked unridden and unrestrained on a treadmill with an integrated force measuring system (480 Hz), from which spatiotemporal and vGRF variables were extracted. Markers were tracked by 12 infrared cameras (240 Hz). The vertical position of the sixth thoracic vertebra (T6), limb protraction and retraction distances throughout stance, and global limb lengths were determined. Contralateral trial-mean differences were calculated, including difference in T6 minimum vertical position between contralateral steps (T6minDiff). Mixed models were used to study associations between symmetry parameters. Trial-mean T6minDiff ranged between 0.3–23 mm. Of the seven horses, five consistently dropped the withers more in early left forelimb stance, one was fairly symmetrical, and one dropped the withers more in early right forelimb stance. Comparisons between contralateral limbs showed the following associations. The forelimb that was retracted when T6min was lowest showed greater retraction at toe-off (1 mm increase predicted 0.17 mm T6minDiff increase) and shorter stance duration (1 ms decrease predicted 0.3 mm T6minDiff increase). The hind limb that was in midstance when T6min was lowest showed a greater range of motion during the stance phase (1 mm increase in protraction or retraction predicted 0.2 mm T6minDiff increase). The haunches were displaced away from the side of the forelimb that was protracted when T6min was lowest (1 mm lateral shift predicted 0.07 mm T6minDiff increase). Forelimb and hind limb vGRF parameters were non-significant. Asymmetry of vertical withers movement in horses assessed as being sound at trot was related to a complex pattern of asymmetries in spatiotemporal variables throughout the stride cycle rather than to vertical load redistribution between the forelimbs. This suggests that the asymmetry may be due to inherent laterality rather than weight-bearing lameness. Public Library of Science 2018-09-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6160136/ /pubmed/30261019 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204548 Text en © 2018 Byström et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Byström, Anna
Egenvall, Agneta
Roepstorff, Lars
Rhodin, Marie
Bragança, Filipe S.
Hernlund, Elin
van Weeren, René
Weishaupt, Michael A.
Clayton, Hilary M.
Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk
title Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk
title_full Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk
title_fullStr Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk
title_full_unstemmed Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk
title_short Biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk
title_sort biomechanical findings in horses showing asymmetrical vertical excursions of the withers at walk
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6160136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30261019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204548
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