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Joanne Kramer

Researcher at University of Missouri

Publications -  37
Citations -  1624

Joanne Kramer is an academic researcher from University of Missouri. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lameness & Forelimb. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 36 publications receiving 1408 citations.

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Repeatability of subjective evaluation of lameness in horses

TL;DR: In this paper, a study was conducted to estimate agreement between equine practitioners performing lameness evaluations in horses in the live, over ground setting, where 131 mature horses were evaluated for lameness by 2-5 clinicians with a weighted-average of 18.7 years of experience.
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Assessment of repeatability of a wireless, inertial sensor-based lameness evaluation system for horses

TL;DR: The inertial sensor system used to measure asymmetry of head and pelvic movement as an aid in the detection and evaluation of lameness in horses trotting in a straight line was sufficiently repeatable to investigate for clinical use.
Journal Article

Evaluation of mild lameness in horses trotting on a treadmill by clinicians and interns or residents and correlation of their assessments with kinematic gait analysis

TL;DR: Mild lameness may be difficult to evaluate during treadmill locomotion because clinicians were more repeatable in their subjective evaluation of lameness than interns or residents, and they were not more reliable at detecting the true state of Lameness.
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Comparison of an inertial sensor system of lameness quantification with subjective lameness evaluation

TL;DR: The inertial sensor system was able to identify lameness at a lower level of sole pressure than the consensus of 3 equine veterinarians and may be an effective aid to lameness localisation in clinical cases.
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Evaluation of a sensor-based system of motion analysis for detection and quantification of forelimb and hind limb lameness in horses.

TL;DR: The A-G system detected and quantified forelimb and hind limb lameness in horses trotting on the treadmill and this system might be used to objectively evaluate Lameness in the field.