Breakdown Breakthrough
New research has identified a promising diagnostic technique that should decrease the incidence of breakdowns of elite equine athletes at the track and help save the lives of young foals with infections at the breeding farm.
- Topics: Article, Other Veterinary Technologies
New research has identified a promising diagnostic technique that should decrease the incidence of breakdowns of elite equine athletes at the track and help save the lives of young foals with infections at the breeding farm. “The potential for this technology is immense” said Equine Research Centre (ERC) president Dr. Andrew Clarke. It offers the ability to diagnose and assess subtle soft tissue injuries that are the precursors of more serious problems and to localize infections from the lungs of foals to the feet of mature horses.
Collaborative studies between the Equine Research Centre (Guelph) Inc., Animal Imaging Systems (Toronto) and Resolution Pharmaceuticals have shown promising results in the detection of inflammation and infection in horses. Clinical trials on a novel imaging compound, Tekappran, are being conducted in the nuclear scintigraphy facility at the Equine Research Centre.
Scintigraphy, or nuclear imaging, is renowned for its sensitivity and its ability to isolate sub-clinical bone problems in horses before changes appear on x-rays.
“Tendon and muscle injuries are common in high performance horses and yet there has not been an imaging compound commercially available that can rapidly detect soft tissue injuries in the same way as a bone scan” said Lawry Riddolls, the nuclear medicine technologist at the ERC TheHorse.com is home to thousands of free articles about horse health care. In order to access some of our exclusive free content, you must be signed into TheHorse.com. Already have an account?Create a free account with TheHorse.com to view this content.
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