The Effect of Victory and Defeat on the Correlations of Stress Parameters Between the Horse and Rider in Kök‐Börü Equestrian Teams
Ali Rişvanli, İsmail Şen, Kanat Canuzakov, Askarbek Tulobayev, Abuzer Taş, Ruslan Salykov, Nezahat Ceylan, Ünal Türkçapar, Ulanbek Alimov, Arina Kazakbayeva, Ayday Cunuşova, Nur Abdimnap Uulu, Burak Fatih Yuksel, Mert Turanli, Muhammed Uz, Metin Bayraktar, Nuriddin Ruzikulov

TL;DR
This study examines how winning or losing in the traditional equestrian game Kök-Börü affects stress and physiological correlations between horses and riders.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into how victory and defeat influence stress-related parameters in horse-rider teams during traditional equestrian sports.
Findings
Winning teams showed both positive and negative correlations in biochemical and haematological parameters.
Losing teams exhibited significant changes in hormonal parameters before and after the game.
Victory and defeat had no significant impact on correlations between haematological and biochemical parameters.
Abstract
The presented study outlines a research plan aimed at determining the effects of winning and losing situations on the relationship levels between the rider and horse's stress, metabolic, and physiological parameters in Kök‐Börü, a traditional equestrian team game. For this purpose, blood samples were collected from both the horses and riders of four different teams participating in two different Kök‐Börü games before and after the games. Cortisol, ACTH, beta‐endorphin, epinephrine, norepinephrine, T3 and T4 analyses were performed on the collected blood samples using species‐specific commercial ELISA kits. Additionally, biochemical and haematological parameters in the same blood samples were tested using an autoanalyser. Based on the obtained data, it was found that there were both positive and negative correlations between most biochemical and haematological parameters of the winning…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Equine Medical Research · Exercise and Physiological Responses · Animal Behavior and Welfare Studies
