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Journal ArticleDOI

Head and pelvic movement symmetry in horses during circular motion and in rising trot

TLDR
Horses had greatest asymmetry during rising trot on the circle, with MS values of comparable magnitude to mild lameness, with changes in MS was significant between exercise conditions.
Abstract
Lameness examinations in horses often include lungeing and ridden exercise. To incorporate these exercises into the evidence-based decision making process aided by quantitative sensor based gait analysis, guideline values for movement asymmetry are needed. In this study, movement symmetry (MS) was quantified in horses during unridden and ridden trot on the straight and on the circle. Systematic changes in MS were expected as a result of the ‘asymmetrical loading’ caused by circular movement, the rising trot and the combination of the two. Out of 23 horses (age 4–20 years, height 13.3–17.2 hands), 13 presented within normal limits for head movement and 22 for pelvic movement. Inertial measurement units assessed MS of vertical head and sacral movement during trot in-hand, on the lunge and in rising trot (straight, left/right circle). Changes in MS between straight line trot and ridden exercise on the circle were more pronounced for the head than for the sacrum. The highest amount of asymmetry was observed during rising trot on the circle (symmetry index of the head: 1.23 for the left rein, 0.83 for the right rein; symmetry index of the sacrum 0.84 for the left rein, 1.15 for the right rein). Change in MS was significant between exercise conditions except for the difference between head displacement maxima. Horses had greatest asymmetry during rising trot on the circle, with MS values of comparable magnitude to mild lameness.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Head and pelvic movement asymmetries at trot in riding horses in training and perceived as free from lameness by the owner.

TL;DR: A large proportion of horses in training which were perceived as free from lameness by their owner showed movement asymmetries above previously reported asymmetry thresholds during straight line trot, wondering how objective asymmetry scores can be translated into pain, orthopedic abnormality, or any type of unsoundness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Head and pelvic movement asymmetry during lungeing in horses with symmetrical movement on the straight.

TL;DR: Lungeing induces systematic asymmetries in vertical head and pelvic motion patterns in horses that may not be the same in both directions.

The difference in kinematics of horses walking, trotting and cantering on a flat and banked 10m circle

TL;DR: At faster gaits it appears that horses negotiate a banked curve with limb posture closer to body posture and probably with demands on the musculoskeletal system more similar to straight canter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lungeing on hard and soft surfaces: Movement symmetry of trotting horses considered sound by their owners

TL;DR: While more symmetrical horses showed a consistent amount of movement symmetry across surfaces/reins, horses objectively quantified as lame on the straight showed decreased movement symmetry during lungeing, in particular with the lame limb on the inside of a hard circle.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of rider:horse bodyweight ratio and rider-horse-saddle fit on equine gait and behaviour: a pilot study.

TL;DR: The conclusions and clinical relevance of the study were that large riders can induce temporary lameness and behaviours consistent with musculoskeletal pain that may relate to rider bodyweight and/or weight distribution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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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Head and trunk movement adaptations in horses with experimentally induced fore- or hindlimb lameness.

TL;DR: The maximal vertical acceleration of the head and displacement amplitude of the tuber sacrale proved to be the best indicators to quantify a fore- and hindlimb lameness, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

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 ArticleDOI

A method for deriving displacement data during cyclical movement using an inertial sensor

TL;DR: A novel approach is reported and evaluated that enables the user to determine linear displacements of a proprietary orientation sensor during cyclical movement, using a modified version of a commercial inertial orientation sensor that combines accelerometers, gyroscopes and magnetometers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motor and sensory laterality in thoroughbred horses

TL;DR: The absence of a correlation between laterality of nostril use and motor bias indicates that lateralisation of the equine brain occurs on at least two levels of neural organisation—sensory and motor—a finding that is consistent with other examples of lateralisation in species that have been examined in more detail.
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