Relationship between prevalence and severity of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage and environmental factors
Erin Pinnell, Sierra Shoemaker, Yuan Wang, Yanan Tang, Debra Sellon, Renaud Leguillette, Jenifer Gold, Macarena Sanz, Warwick M Bayly

TL;DR
This study finds that environmental factors like temperature and air quality may influence the occurrence and severity of lung bleeding in racehorses.
Contribution
The study identifies specific environmental risk factors associated with exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage in Thoroughbred racehorses.
Findings
Ambient temperature was negatively associated with both EIPH prevalence and severity.
Furosemide administration, turf and all-weather track surfaces, and lifetime race number were linked to EIPH occurrence.
Poor air quality increased EIPH severity in 2-year-old racehorses.
Abstract
Environmental risk factors could contribute to the development of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH) in racing Thoroughbreds. To identify environmental risk factors that might contribute to differences in EIPH prevalence and severity across 12 Thoroughbred racetracks in the United States. Eight hundred fifteen 2-year-old and 122 >2-year-old Thoroughbred racehorses. Prospective blinded observational study. Videoendoscopy was performed 30-60 min post-race. Three observers independently assigned an EIPH grade to each videorecording, and prevalence and severity of EIPH were determined. Multivariable logistic regression assessed relationships between EIPH prevalence and severity, respectively, and independent variables including furosemide administration, race distance and surface, and lifetime race number (LRN). P ≤ .05 was considered significant. One thousand one hundred…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Equine Medical Research · Exercise and Physiological Responses · Tendon Structure and Treatment
