Search results

Filters

  • Journals
  • Authors
  • Keywords
  • Date
  • Type

Search results

Number of results: 7
items per page: 25 50 75
Sort by:
Download PDF Download RIS Download Bibtex

Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of training on body surface temperature over the joints in racehorses, measured by infrared thermography. The study involved monitoring of 14 Thoroughbred racehorses in 6 imaging sessions over a period of 3 months. Temperature measurements of the forelimb and hindlimb joints were made before and just after training. Joint temperature of limbs increased significantly after training. Environmental temperature had a statistically significant influence on surface temperature over the joints. The lowest surface temperatures were recorded over the metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joint and the highest temperatures in the shoulder, elbow, hip and stifle joint. The metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints warmed the least during training, but were influenced the most by differences in environmental temperature. The surface temperature difference before and after training is an important indicator of the thermoregulatory response to exercise in racing horses. Understanding surface temperature changes in response to regular training is necessary for future studies on diagnosing injuries of joints.
Go to article

Bibliography

Arfuso F, Giannetto C, Giudice E, Fazio F, Piccione G (2016) Dynamic modulation of platelet aggregation, albumin and nonesterified fatty acids during physical exercise in Thoroughbred horses. Res Vet Sci 104: 86-91.
Bowman KF, Purohit RC, Ganjam VK, Pechman RD Jr, Vaughan JT (1983) Thermographic evaluation of corticosteroid efficacy in amphotericin B – induced arthritis in ponies. Am J Vet Res 44: 51-56.
Ciutacu O, Tanase A, Miclaus I (2006) Digital infrared thermography in assessing soft tissue injuries on sport equines. Bull Univ Agric Sci Vet Med 63: 228-233.
Dyson S, Lakhani K, Wood J (2001) Factors influencing blood flow in the equine digit and their effect on uptake of 99 m technetium methylene diphosphonate into bone. Equine Vet J 33: 591-598.
Field A (2009) Discovering statistics using SPSS, 3rd ed., Sage Publications Ltd, London.
Gaschen L, Burba DJ (2012) Musculoskeletal injury in thoroughbred racehorses: correlation of findings using multiple imaging modalities. Vet Clin North Am Equine Pract 28: 539-561.
Hodgson DR, Davis RE, McConaghy FF (1994) Thermoregulation in the horse in response to exercise. Br Vet J 150: 219-235.
Howell K, Dudek K, Soroko M (2020) Thermal camera performance and image analysis repeatability in equine thermography. Infrared Phys Technol 110: 103447.
Jodkowska E (2005) Body surface temperature as a criterion of the horse predisposition to effort [in polish]. Zesz Nauk Uniw Przyr Wroc 511: 7-114.
Jodkowska E, Dudek K (2000) Studies on symmetry of body surface temperature of race horses [in polish]. Zesz Nauk Prz Hod 50: 307-319.
Jodkowska E, Dudek K, Bek-Kaczkowska I (2001) Effect of race training on body surface temperature of several horse breeds [in polish]. Rocz Nauk Zootech 14: 63-72.
Langman VA, Langman SL, Ellifrit N (2015) Seasonal acclimatization determined by non-invasive measurements of coat insulation. Zoo Biol 34: 368-373.
Lindinger MI, Waller A (2008) Muscle and blood acid-base physiology during exercise and in response to training. In: Hinchcliff KW, Geor RJ, Kaneps AJ (eds) Equine exercise physiology. Saunders Elsevier, Philadelphia, pp 350-381.
Luzi F, Mitchell M, Nanni Costa L, Redaelli V (2013) Thermography: current status and advances in livestock animals and in veterinary medicine, 1 st ed., Fondazione Iniziative Zooprofilattiche e zootecniche Publisher, Brescia.
McGreevy P, Warren-Smith A, Guisard Y (2012) The effect of double bridles and jaw clamping crank nosebands on temperature of eyes and facial skin of horses. J Vet Behav 7: 142-148.
Mogg KC, Pollitt CC (1992) Hoof and distal limb surface temperature in the normal pony under constant and changing ambient temperatures. Equine Vet J 24: 134-139.
Muir P, Peterson AL, Sample SJ, Scollay MC, Markel MD, Kalscheur VL (2008) Exercise-induced metacarpophalangeal joint adaptation in the Thoroughbred racehorse. J Anat 213: 706-717.
O’Sullivan CB, Lumsden JM (2003) Stress fractures of the tibia and humerus in Thoroughbred racehorses: 99 cases (1992-2000). J Am Vet Med Assoc 222: 491-498.
Palmer SE (1983) Effect of ambient temperature upon the surface temperature of the equine limb. Am J Vet Res 44: 1098-1101.
Piccione G, Caola G, Mortola JP (2005) Scaling the daily oscillations of breathing frequency and skin temperature in mammals. Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 140: 477-486.
Prochno HC, Barussi FM, Bastos FZ, Weber SH, Bechara GH, Rehan IF, Michelotto PV (2020) Infrared thermography applied to monitoring musculoskeletal adaptation to training in thoroughbred race horses. J Equine Vet Sci 87: 102935.
Purohit RC, McCoy MD (1980) Thermography in the diagnosis of inflammatory processes in the horse. Am J Vet Res 41: 1167-1174.
Purohit RC, Pascoe DD, Turner TA (2006) Use of infrared imaging in veterinary medicine. In: Bronzino JD (ed) The biomedical engineering handbook, third edition: Biomedical engineering fundamentals. Taylor and Francis Group, Boca Raton, pp 1-8.
Reed SR, Jackson BF, Mc Ilwraith CW, Wright IM, Pilsworth R, Knapp S, Wood JLN, Verheyen KL (2012) Descriptive epidemiology of joint injuries in Thoroughbred racehorses in training. Equine Vet J 44: 13-19.
Shephard RJ (1982) Physiology and biochemistry of exercise, 1st ed., Praeger Publishers Inc, New York. Simon EL, Gaughan EM, Epp T, Spire M (2006) Influence of exercise on thermographically determined surface temperatures of thoracic and pelvic limbs in horses. J Am Vet Med Assoc 229: 1940-1944.
Soroko M, Davies-Morel MCG, Howell K (2016) The thermography in equestrian sport. In: Quesada JIP (ed) Application of infrared thermography in sports science, Springer Publisher, Berlin, pp 265-296.
Soroko M, Dudek K, Howell K. Jodkowska E, Henklewski R (2014) Thermographic evaluation of racehorse performance. J Equine Vet Sci 34: 1076-1083.
Soroko M, Howell K (2018) Infrared thermography: Current applications in equine medicine. J Equine Vet Sci 60: 90-96.
Soroko M, Jodkowska E, Dudek K (2015) Thermography diagnosis in monitoring the annual training cycle of racehorses [in polish]. Med Weter 71: 52-58.
Soroko M, Howell K, Dudek K (2017b) The effect of ambient temperature on infrared thermographic images of joints in the distal forelimbs of healthy racehorses. J Therm Biol 66: 63-67.
Soroko M, Howell K, Dudek K, Henklewski R, Zielińska P (2017a) The influence of breed, age, gender, training level and ambient temperature on forelimb and back temperature in racehorses. Anim Sci J 88: 347-355.
Soroko M, Howell K, Dudek K, Wilk I, Zastrzeżyńska M, Janczarek I (2018) A pilot study into the utility of dynamic infrared thermography for measuring body surface temperature changes during treadmill exercise in horses. J Equine Vet Sci 62: 44-46.
Turner TA (1996) Thermography as an aid in the localization of upper hindlimb lameness. Pferdeheilkunde 12: 632-634.
Turner TA (2001) Diagnostic thermography. Vet Clin North Am Equine Pract 17: 95-114.
Turner TA, Pansch J, Wilson JH (2001) Thermographic assessment of racing thoroughbreds. Proc Am Assoc Eq Pract 47: 344-346.
Whitton RC, Trope GD, Ghasem-Zadeh A, Anderson GA, Parkin TD, Mackie EJ, Seeman E (2010) Third metacarpal condylar fatigue fractures in equine athletes occur within previously modelled subchondral bone. Bone 47: 826-831.
Yarnell K, Fleming J, Stratton TD, Brassington R (2014) Monitoring changes in skin temperature associated with exercise in horses on a water treadmill by use of infrared thermography. J Therm Biol 45: 110-116.
Go to article

Authors and Affiliations

M. Soroko
1
W. Górniak
2
M. Godlewska
1
K. Howell
3

  1. Institute of Animal Breeding, Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences, Chelmonskiego 38C, 51-630 Wroclaw, Poland
  2. Department of Automotive Engineering, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, Na Grobli 13, 50-421 Wroclaw, Poland
  3. Microvascular Diagnostics, Institute of Immunity and Transplantation, Royal Free Hospital, Pond Street, London NW3 2QG, UK
Download PDF Download RIS Download Bibtex

Abstract

The article is a reappraisal of the work of Tymoteusz Karpowicz, one of the landmarks of the Polish poetic Neo-avant-garde, in terms of the quixotic model (principle). This approach brings into focus the following building blocks of Karpowicz’s autocreative poetics: the private library project, the idea of the book of books, the concept of holistic interconnectedness and the poet’s programmatic detachment (isolationism). In his verse they form sylleptic configurations in which language-games collide with the existential concrete and, in effect, transform the poetry into a performance acted out by the author both in his text and his highly mythicized geographic space. The superposing of his autothematic statements on his autocreative performative actions shows their remark-able congruence, and hence t the incontestable applicability of the quixotic model to describe the nature of Karpowicz’s creative project. In sum, he was a poet bent on finding his own place between the totalizing power of language and the harsh realities beyond the pale of literature.
Go to article

Authors and Affiliations

Karolina Górniak-Prasnal
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Wydział Polonistyki UJ
Download PDF Download RIS Download Bibtex

Abstract

This article is an attempt to confront the autothematic refl ection in Leopold Staff’s (Ars poetica and The Artist’s Sadness) with two poems, inspired by a somewhat similar approach, by Tymoteusz Karpowicz and Krystyna Miłobędzka. What they seem to have in common are textual signs of welcome with ‘open arms’ and ‘the outstretched hand’. These emblematic gestures invite the reader/the Other to a diffi cult dialogue and at the same time indicate the nature of the authors’ poetic ambition. The analysis of the two pairs of poems is set in the context of the 20th-century evolution of the idea of poetic genius and the poet’s self-awareness. Crucial to this comparative study of the poetic practice of Leopold Staff, Tymoteusz Karpowicz and Krystyna Miłobędzka is an appraisal of the authenticity of their vision and the language they used to express their maximalist ambitions.

Go to article

Authors and Affiliations

Karolina Górniak-Prasnal
ORCID: ORCID
Download PDF Download RIS Download Bibtex

Abstract

There are hardly any data concerning the vertical micro−distribution of protozoa in water column in cryoconite holes on the glacier surface. Such comparisons can provide insights into the ecology of protozoa. The present research was made on Ecology Glacier (South Shetland Islands, Antarctic); vertical microzonation of c iliates in relation to physical and chemical parameters in cryoconite holes was studied. The density and biomass of protozoans significantly differed between the studied stations (cryoconite holes), with the lowest numbers in the surface water and the highest in the bottom water. The surface waters were dominated by mixotrophic and omnivorous taxa, whe reas the deepest sampling level has shown the increase of the proportion of bacterivore species . Ordination analysis indicated that TN and P−PO 4 can strongly regulate the abundance and species composition of protozoa. The redundancy analyses (RDA) showed that the ciliate communities can be separated into two groups. The first group included species associated with surface water: Halteria grandinella and Codonella sp. The second group included species that are associated with bottom water: Prorodon sp. , Holosticha pullaster , Stylonychia mytilus −complex and small scuticociliates.
Go to article

Authors and Affiliations

Tomasz Mieczan
Monika Tarkowska-Kukuryk
Dorota Górniak
Aleksander Świątecki
Marek Zdanowski
Małgorzata Adamczuk

This page uses 'cookies'. Learn more