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Journal ArticleDOI

Racehorse injuries, clinical problems and fatalities recorded on British racecourses from flat racing and National Hunt racing during 1996, 1997 and 1998

TLDR
The survey described in this paper has provided an up-to-date description of the fatal and non-fatal horseracing incidents under conditions on mainland Britain, enabling progress to be made towards improving the safety and welfare of racehorses.
Abstract
For improvements to the safety and welfare of racehorses to be possible, it is essential to have access to basic descriptive information about the veterinary incidents encountered during horseracing. A 3 year surveillance study (1996-1998) was conducted by The Jockey Club into racing injuries, other postrace clinical problems and fatalities from all 59 British racecourses (mainland Britain only) to identify risk factors. During the survey there were 222,993 racing starts: 106,897 starts in flat races on turf (47.9%), 26,519 starts in flat races on all-weather surfaces (11.9%), 30,932 starts in chases on turf (13.9%), 51,786 starts in hurdle races on turf (23.2%) and 6,859 starts in National Hunt flat races (3.1%). Information was recorded about age of horses, racing surfaces and clinical events observed or attended by a veterinary team of 2 clinicians and one veterinary surgeon employed by the racing authority. Of the 2358 clinical events reported (1.05% of all starts), 1937 involved the musculoskeletal system and 421 involved other body systems. Six hundred and fifty-seven incidents (0.29% of starts) resulted in death or euthanasia. Eighty-one percent of limb injury reports involved forelimbs and 46% involved flexor tendons/suspensory ligaments. Nonlimb problems included epistaxis (0.83/1000 starts), 'exhausted horse syndrome' (0.47/1000 starts) and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (0.20/1000 starts). Incidents including fatalities per 1000 starts were 24.7 from chases, 19.45 from hurdle races, 8.46 from National Hunt flat races and 3.97 from flat races. The overall tendon injury was higher in chases than in hurdle races, even though age-specific rates of tendon injury were higher in hurdle races than in chases. The risk of injuries per start increased significantly with age, while softer racing surfaces were associated with fewer fatalities and injuries than firmer surfaces. The survey described in this paper has provided an up-to-date description of the fatal and non-fatal horseracing incidents under conditions on mainland Britain, enabling progress to be made towards improving the safety and welfare of racehorses.

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Citations
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Effects of platelet‐rich plasma on the quality of repair of mechanically induced core lesions in equine superficial digital flexor tendons: A placebo‐controlled experimental study

TL;DR: It was concluded that PRP increases metabolic activity and seems to advance maturation of repair tissue over nontreated experimentally induced tendon lesions, which suggests thatPRP might be beneficial in the treatment of clinical tendon injuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is there a relationship between ground and climatic conditions and injuries in football

TL;DR: It is concluded that the most plausible explanation for all of these reported findings involves variations in playing surface characteristics, and shoe-surface traction for the average player is the specific relevant variable that is most likely to correlate with injury incidence in a given game of football.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mesenchymal stem cell therapy for equine tendinopathy

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the implantation of marrow-derived stromal stem cells (BM-MSCs) would synthesize a matrix more closely resembling tendon matrix than scar tissue, and hence increase the capacity to return to performance successfully, and improve clinical outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monitoring the fate of autologous and allogeneic mesenchymal progenitor cells injected into the superficial digital flexor tendon of horses: Preliminary study

TL;DR: Post mortem examinations performed after 10 or 34 days revealed GFP labelled cells located mainly within injected lesions, but with a small proportion integrated into the crimp pattern of adjacent healthy areas of tendon.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiological study of wastage among racehorses 1982 and 1983.

TL;DR: An epidemiological study of wastage among racehorses was conducted in 1982 and 1983 among six stables, five of which were in Newmarket, to suggest that the diagnosis, therapy and prophylaxis of lameness merit a high priority in research efforts to reduce wastage.
Journal ArticleDOI

An assessment of wastage in thoroughbred racing from conception to 4 years of age

TL;DR: The most substantial reason for not competing or competing less than the average number of times was horses showing little or no ability to race, and the reasons for an unsatisfactory number of racing appearances were examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Causes of death in racehorses over a 2 year period.

TL;DR: The proximal sesamoid bone(s), third metacarpal bone and humerus were the most common bones fractured in Thoroughbred horses and Quarter Horses and other major causes of death included respiratory, digestive and multi-organ system disorders.
Journal Article

Prevalence of, and factors associated with, musculoskeletal racing injuries of thoroughbreds.

TL;DR: All horses diagnosed by a commission veterinarian of the Kentucky Racing Commission as having sustained a musculoskeletal injury, defined as an obvious change in soundness immediately before, during, or after a race held between Jan 1, 1992 and May 31, 1993 were included in a study to determine the prevalence of and factors associated with racing injuries involving the musculOSkeletal system of horses competing at 4 Thoroughbred racetracks in Kentucky.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors associated with injuries in Thoroughbred horses

TL;DR: A case-control study was conducted on Thoroughbred horses to identify factors associated with the risk of breakdown on racetrack, while simultaneously controlling for the effect of other putative factors.
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