Endoscopy of the upper respiratory tract during treadmill exercise: a clinical study of 100 horses.
Aust Vet J. 1995 Mar; 72(3):101-7.AV

Abstract

Endoscopy of the upper respiratory tract was performed in 100 horses during high speed treadmill exercise. Reasons for endoscopy were a history of an abnormal noise during exercise in 75 horses, poor performance in 17 horses and to evaluate the results of upper respiratory tract surgery in 8 horses. Of the 75 horses with a history of an abnormal noise during exercise the cause was determined in 67 (89%). Endoscopic abnormalities were detected at rest in 40 of these 75 horses (53%). In these 40 horses, a similar diagnosis as to the cause of the abnormal noise was made at rest and during exercise on the treadmill in 19 cases, while in the remaining 21 the endoscopic findings during exercise varied from that seen at rest. This included 3 horses in which a diagnosis was made at rest but no abnormalities were detected during exercise. Some of the findings during treadmill endoscopy included laryngeal dysfunction, grades 3, 4 and 5 (22 cases), dorsal displacement of the soft palate (20), epiglottic entrapment (8), epiglottic flutter (4), aryepiglottic fold flutter (4), pharyngeal collapse (3), arytenoiditis (3), vocal cord flutter (3), false nostril noise (2), pharyngeal lymphoid hyperplasia (2), soft palate haemorrhage (1) and positional arytenoid collapse (1). More than one abnormality was observed during exercise in 7 horses. A complete and correct diagnosis based on the resting endoscopy findings alone was made in 19 (25%) of these 75 cases. In the 17 horses examined because of poor performance, no abnormalities were detected during treadmill endoscopy that were not evident at rest.(

ABSTRACT

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Kannegieter NJ
Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, University of Sydney, New South Wales.
Dore ML
No affiliation info available

MeSH

AnimalsEndoscopyExercise TestFemaleHorse DiseasesHorsesLaryngeal DiseasesMaleMotor ActivityPhysical Conditioning, AnimalRespiratory SoundsRespiratory SystemVideotape Recording

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

7611982