Home › Forums › Big Races – Discussion › Nakayama Sprinters Stakes 2009
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October 4, 2009 at 14:01 #251669
That would have to be the mumps, Gerald.
October 4, 2009 at 14:10 #251673I’ve just seen the replay, a frustrating race.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRyzWr1WW0oThe inquiry was about the Scenic Blast’s stumble.
October 4, 2009 at 14:55 #251691That would have to be the mumps, Gerald.
Well bleeding learn to speak proper, like wot I does!
I usually have problems with Youtube, so here is the official site instead:-
http://japanracing.jp/sprinters/index.html
English language commentary won’t be available until Monday.
I wonder whether all the yearlings will be put in the same paddock as him, to get it out of the way.)October 4, 2009 at 20:22 #251786
Haven’t come across any worthwhile news on Scenic Blast.When the broadcaster said was being treated for a severe case of the bumps, maybe he was just referring to the resultant cuts, grazes and bruising from the race interference?
October 4, 2009 at 20:42 #251792Found it at last.
I’ll have to syringe my ears out.
thumps
(accelerated heartbeat), not an unusual complaint when a horse has endured severe stress.
October 4, 2009 at 20:55 #251795Sneaking up behind a 1,000 pound Thoroughbred with a case of the hiccups and yelling “Boo!,” is not advisable for several reasons. For one, you might just get a surprise of your own.
The medical term for the noise we commonly refer to as hiccups is synchronous diaphragmatic flutter or singultus. In horses, it has been called “thumps” since 1831 when a veterinarian first reported a thumping noise coming from the abdomen of a horse that just ran 13 miles.
“Thumps in and of itself is not a problem,” says Dr. Cristobal Navas de Solís, an equine internal medicine resident at the University of Illinois Veterinary Teaching Hospital. “But if a horse does have thumps, there is usually an underlying cause that needs to be treated.”
Many horses with the anomaly are endurance athletes that have an electrolyte imbalance and significant fluid loss after an exhaustive workout. For example, thumps is common in Arabian horses competing in long distance races that last 25, 50, or even 100 miles.
“Typically these patients are dehydrated and have low blood calcium levels, but once you treat the underlying problem the thumps usually disappear on their own.”
Thumps in horses, and hiccups in humans, are slightly different variations upon the same theme. For one, hiccups in humans are not commonly associated with electrolyte imbalances.
Secondly, the location from which we hear the characteristic noise coming also differs in horse and man. The “hic” we hear in humans is caused by the closure of the vocal chords after the diaphragm spasmodically contracts, quickly inflating the lungs. In horses, however, veterinarians and owners that have witnessed the ailment can attest that the abnormal noise comes from the animal’s side.
Low blood calcium levels are the classic abnormality associated with thumps. This may make the phrenic nerve, which runs along both sides of the heart and controls diaphragm movements, more easily excitable. But it is also a good idea to check all electrolyte levels, especially magnesium, potassium, sodium and chlorine.
In a typical scenario with a dehydrated horse and abnormal electrolyte levels, the phrenic nerve might begin to fire at the rate of which the atria of the heart contract. In short, the nerve is inappropriately obeying firing instructions from the heart, instead of the brain, to control diaphragm movements.
“Usually we see the horse’s abdomen contract 40-50 times per minute. Typically, each contraction occurs at the same time the heart beats, but in rare cases that does not always happen, nor do the thumps have to occur on both sides of the horse.”
Though hiccups in humans are quite harmless, thumps in horses are usually linked to an abnormality that warrants attention. If you hear the telltale sounds — and don’t suspect your horse has merely gotten into the Kentucky bourbon — contact your veterinarian as soon as possible.
Source: Dr. Cristobal Navas de Solis
University of Illinois College of Veterinary MedicineDoctor Gerald
edit: Seems that the aussie horse shat his pants – now we know why we don’t run 6f races at Sandown!
October 6, 2009 at 01:02 #252040Another one. This time in Australia. Maybe it happens all the time, but we never find out in Britain, because racing isn’t open.
Jolie’s Shinju was diagnosed as having the thumps, a hyper-stimulated diaphragm, as well as a heart arrhythmia, following her poor run in the JRA Cup at Moonee Valley a fortnight ago, but it is the latter that concerns Racing Victoria’s chief veterinarian Paul O’Callaghan.(Just heard on radio that horse had a racecourse gallop within the past couple of hours, and there is no issue.)
Previous paragraph turned out to be incorrect. After looking at ECG, etc, vet determined Jolie’s Shinju still had an irregular heartbeat, and she’s not allowed to race in Australia for the rest of the Spring Carnival.
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