Withers vertical movement symmetry is useful for locating the primary lame limb in naturally occurring lameness

Emma Persson-Sjodin*, Elin Hernlund, Thilo Pfau, Pia Haubro Andersen, Karin Holm Forsström, Anna Byström, Filipe M Serra Bragança, Aagje Hardeman, Line Greve, Agneta Egenvall, Marie Rhodin

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: During orthopaedic assessment of lame horses, a head nod is commonly present in both primary forelimb and hindlimb lame horses. Additional motion metrics that could assist clinicians in correctly differentiating between these two scenarios would be of great clinical value.

OBJECTIVES: The primary objective of this study was to examine whether withers movement asymmetry can be used in a clinical setting to distinguish primary forelimb lameness from compensatory head movement asymmetry due to primary hindlimb lameness.

STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective, multicentre study.

METHODS: Movement asymmetry of head, withers and pelvis was measured using multi-camera optical motion capture, as part of routine lameness investigations at four European equine hospitals. Vertical movement asymmetry parameters from 317 horses trotting in a straight line were compared before and after successful diagnostic analgesia of a single limb. Descriptive statistics, t-tests and linear models were used to analyse the data.

RESULTS: In forelimb lame horses, 80%-81% showed head and withers asymmetry both indicating lameness in the same forelimb. In hindlimb lame horses, 69%-72% showed head asymmetry ipsilateral to the lame hindlimb and withers asymmetry diagonal to the lame hindlimb, thus, head and withers asymmetry indicated lameness in different forelimbs. A large (>15 mm) compensatory head nod was seen in 28%-31% of the hindlimb lame horses. In 89%-92% of these, head and withers asymmetry indicated lameness in different forelimbs. Withers asymmetry decreased linearly with reduced head or pelvic asymmetry for both forelimb and hindlimb lame horses.

MAIN LIMITATIONS: Compensatory strategies were evaluated on group level to identify common patterns, potentially ignoring uncommon individual strategies.

CONCLUSIONS: Withers vertical movement asymmetry metrics can be useful in helping to locate the primary lame limb during quantitative lameness assessment. Head and withers movement asymmetry parameters generally indicate the same forelimb in forelimb lame horses, but different forelimbs in hindlimb lame horses.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)76-88
Number of pages13
JournalEquine Veterinary Journal
Volume56
Issue number1
Early online date24 May 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The Swedish‐Norwegian Foundation for Equine Research (H‐14‐47‐013), the Swedish Research Council Formas (2014‐12003‐28225‐26) and the Marie‐Claire Cronstedt Foundation (SLU ua 2018.4.2—2084).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Equine Veterinary Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of EVJ Ltd.

Keywords

  • compensatory lameness
  • gait analysis
  • horse
  • kinematics
  • optical motion capture
  • withers asymmetry

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