• Equine veterinary journal · Jan 2008

    Lower respiratory tract disease in Thoroughbred racehorses: analysis of endoscopic data from a UK training yard.

    • P H L Ramzan, T D H Parkin, and M C Shepherd.
    • Rossdale and Partners, Beaufort Cottage Stables, High Street, Newmarket, Suffolk, UK.
    • Equine Vet. J. 2008 Jan 1;40(1):7-13.

    Reason For Performing StudyThere has been much research directed at potential causative agents and the epidemiology of lower respiratory tract disease (LRTD), but few reports of the clinical progression and outcome.ObjectivesTo define clinical features of LRTD in racehorses, including association with age and average duration of disease, through the analysis of endoscopic data.MethodsA retrospective analysis of records from a single training yard of endoscopic examinations undertaken over a 2-year period was performed. Horses were subjected to regular endoscopic examination for a variety of reasons, and all horses placed on antibiotic therapy for lower respiratory tract disease were rescoped following treatment. Data analysed included a 0-8 tracheal mucus score based on visible endoscopic mucus and gross tracheal lavage turbidity, as well as age and treatment duration and type.ResultsA total of 522 endoscopic examinations undertaken on 123 horses and tracking 169 episodes of lower respiratory tract disease were recorded. Mean duration of disease episode was 15.5 days (median = 11 days, range = 4-61 days). Horses age 2 years were significantly more likely than those age > or=3 years to have at least one episode of respiratory disease (P<0.001). There was a direct association between initial tracheal mucus score and rescope score after treatment.ConclusionsLower respiratory tract disease was more common in 2-year-olds than in older horses. Affected horses had endoscopic evidence of increased tracheal mucus accumulation for an average of 15.5 days per episode, a considerably shorter period than that suggested by previous studies.Potential RelevanceEndoscopic examinations permit longitudinal tracking of lower respiratory tract disease in Thoroughbred racehorses. A prolonged duration of disease, sometimes extending for months, can be expected in a small proportion of cases, some of which appear to be refractory to treatment. There is a clear need for evidence-based analysis of treatment regimes to assist clinicians in decision making when managing disease in both individual and group situations.

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