A
research project carried out at the Norwegian School of Veterinary
Science has revealed that 50.7% of Norwegian Standardbred yearlings
suffer from loose bone fragments and lesions in their joints.
Developmental
orthopaedic disease is well recognised in the horse, and can result
in lameness or poor performance. It can appear in various forms such
as: osteochondrosis (OC)/osteochondrosis dissecans (OCD),
palmar/plantar osteochondral fragments (POF or “Birkeland
fractures”), ununited palmar/plantar eminences (UPE) and
dorsoproximal first phalanx fragments.
The
aim of the study, led by Sigrid Lykkjen, was to assess the
prevalence, development and interrelation of the various forms of
developmental orthopaedic disease (DOD) affecting the tarsocrural,
metacarpophalangeal (MCP) and metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joints in
Standardbred trotters.
The
work formed the basis of her PhD thesis entitled “Genetic studies
of developmental orthopaedic joint diseases in the Standardbred
trotter”. The research was carried out as a collaborative project
between the Horse Clinic and Department of Disease Genetics at The
Norwegian School of Veterinary Science, the University of Ås and the
University of Minnesota.
Tarsocrural
and MCP/MTP joints of 464 Norwegian Standardbred yearlings, born in
2006 and 2007,were examined radiographically. Lykkjen assessed the
prevalence of osteochondral lesions and also looked at the
interrelation between affected sites.
She
found osteochondral lesions in 50.7% of the horses. OC/OCD of the
tarsocrural (hock) joint occurred in 19.3%. Of the lesions in the
hock joint, OCD of the distal intermediate ridge of the tibia (DIT)
was the most common. The prevalence of OC/OCD in MCP joints was 3.6%,
whereas the prevalence of POF and UPE in MCP/MTP joints was 23.1% and
3.9%, respectively.
It
was common for horses to have similar lesions on the opposite leg.
There was an association between OCD of the distal intermediate ridge
and OCD of the lateral trochlea ridge, and between POF and UPE.
The
high prevalence results for tarsocrural OC/OCD
emphasise the need for breeders to take account of these diseases in
planning their breeding programme.
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