Circulatory system of the horse

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The heart of the great Kareem Phar Lap

The circulatory system of the horse consists of the heart, the blood vessels, and the blood.

Anatomy

Heart

The equine heart is a muscular pump that circulates blood throughout the body. It is more glenoid in shape than the human heart and consists of four chambers: the left and right atria, and the left and right ventricles. The average adult horse has a 3.6-kilogram (7.9 lb) heart, although it can be more than twice this size. The heart grows until the horse is 4 years of age, although it can increase slightly in size as a response to conditioning.[1] Heart size does not necessarily correlate to the size of the horse.[2]

Circulatory capacity is partially determined by functional mass of the heart and spleen.[3] Once the oxygen has entered the bloodstream it must be transported to working muscle and waste products removed. The equine cardiovascular system is hugely compliant with a heart rate range from 20 to 240 beats per minute and a splenic red cell reserve able to double packed cell volume and oxygen delivery during maximal exercise. However, studies on Thoroughbreds have shown that the proportion of skeletal muscle exceeds 50% of body weight, and so the energetic capacity of the muscular system far exceeds the capacity of the cardiovascular system to deliver oxygen.[4]

Blood and blood vessels

Blood is made up of red blood cells (

clotting factors
, and contributes to the greatest volume of blood.

The heart and blood vessels contain approximately 34 L (9.0 US gal) of blood in a 450 kg (990 lb) horse, which equates to about 76 mL/kg (1.2 oz/lb).[5]

Spleen

The spleen removes damaged red blood cells from circulation. It also holds extra blood cells, releasing them during exertion to increase blood volume and the amount of oxygen transported to tissues.

Frog

The horse hoof contains a structural component known as the "frog", which covers the deeper structure of the hoof known as the digital cushion, a vessel-filled tissue. When the horse places weight on a leg, the ground pushes upward on the frog, compressing it and the underlying digital cushion. This results in squeezing blood out of the digital cushion, which then helps to pump it back up the leg, helping the heart to work against gravity.

Pulse

The average pulse is 28–45 beats per minute (bpm) in a mature horse, but it can reach more than 250 bpm during maximum exertion. Depending on cardiovascular fitness and the horse's response to exercise, this drops significantly within 15–30 seconds after the horse stops galloping. A two-year-old horse may have a slightly faster pulse, and a 2–4-week-old foal normally has a pulse between 70 and 90 bpm.

hypothermic, or have pressure on the brain, heart disease, or collapsed circulation.[5]

Determining heart rate

Heart rate may be determined with a stethoscope, placed just behind the left

elbow of the animal. The pulse may also be felt when taken on an artery close to the skin, most commonly the facial artery located on the lower jaw just behind the cheek. The radial pulse may be taken right behind the back of the knee. The digital pulse is taken on the inside of the pastern, right below the fetlock. It is usually very faint and difficult to find, although certain problems, such as laminitis
, will make it quite strong.

Blood pressure

Although blood pressure may vary greatly between animals, the average blood pressure for a standing horse is 120/70 

mmHg. An indirect measurement of blood pressure may be taken with a cuff placed around the middle coccygeal artery at the base of the tail, or above the digital artery. It is usually taken to monitor circulation during surgery.[5] Direct blood pressure measurements, via catheterization of an artery, provide a more accurate measurement, and are preferred for anesthetic monitoring.[6]

Gums

The gums of the horse can offer good clues to its circulatory health. Another way to see if the circulatory system is running correctly is by pressing a finger on the gum; the pink color should return in 2 seconds. The owner can assess the gums by lifting the upper lip with one hand, while holding the head still (via halter) with the other.

Gum color

Healthy, pale pink gums

Capillary refill time

The capillary refill time is determined by pressing a finger against the horse's gums for about 2 seconds, so that a white "thumbprint" is left. After releasing, it should take no longer than 2 seconds for the gum color to return to normal. If it takes longer for the gum color to return, the horse may be experiencing shock.

Cardiovascular capacity

Measurements of heart size do not appear to correlate directly with racing speed, stride length, or stride frequency. However, the ability of the body to pump blood can help identify athletic potential in an unproven horse. There is a hypothesis that measurements of a horse's heart at rest are directly related to the same horse's cardiac function during exercise. Therefore, attempts have been made to take resting measurements of horses using an electrocardiograph (ECG). This has led to the development of the "heart score", which measures the QRS interval. However, no work has correlated this to a horse's oxygen uptake (VO2Max) and the test has not been a good predictor of future athletic ability.[7]

On the other hand, the Pearson correlation coefficient has been found to provide a link between oxygen uptake and echocardiographic measures.[8] There is also evidence that maximal oxygen consumption and heart size are more important predictors of performance for horses that run longer distances because their energy consumption is mainly aerobic.[9]

"X factor"

Eclipse, the horse proposed as the source of the X factor

The X factor theory proposes that a mutation within a gene located on the

homozygous for the X factor. Large hearts have been found in four major Thoroughbred lines, all descendants of Eclipse: Princequillo, War Admiral, Blue Larkspur and Mahmoud.[10] Many outstanding race horses such as Eclipse and Secretariat were noted for being excellent broodmare producers but generally failed to produce male offspring with the ability of their sires, thus the theory that the gene was carried only on the x chromosome meant that stallions with large hearts could only pass on the trait via their daughters.[11]

The Heart Score, using electrocardiography, was developed over 40 years ago to describe the correlation between the QRS (intraventricular conduction time) complexes and the performances of several elite versus average racehorses with the belief that a large heart correlated to athletic ability.[12] This belief is widespread and therefore a high heart score can increase the animal's worth in some circles.[2] However, the X-Factor theory was never scientifically peer-reviewed and studies on the ECG protocol used, indicate that the Heart Score has little correlation to future racing ability.[7] In addition, the gene(s) associated with cardiovascular dimensions and athletic performance have not been identified, nor has its mode of inheritance been determined; the condition may be influenced by multiple genetic factors.[11]

Disorders of the circulatory system

References

  1. ^ Changes over time in echocardiographic measurements in young standardbred racehorses undergoing training and racing and association with racing performance. (Buhl, et al 2005. JAVMA)
  2. ^ a b Marianna Haun. The X Factor: A matter of heart Archived 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed July 2007.
  3. ^ Blood Volume, State of Training and Working Capacity of Race Horses (Persson, 1967)
  4. ^ Comparison of echocardiographic and autopsy measurements of cardiac dimensions in the horse. (O Callaghan, et al, Equine Vet J. 1985)
  5. ^ a b c d Giffin, James and Tom Gore, DVM. Horse Owner's Veterinary Handbook, Second Edition. Howell Book House. New York, NY. Copyright 1998
  6. ^ a b Echocardiography and electrocardiography as means to evaluate potential performance in racehorses, (Lightowler, et al J. Vet Sci 2004)
  7. ^ Heart size estimated by echocardiography correlates with maximal oxygen uptake (Young, et al 2002 Equine Vet J Suppl).
  8. ^ Left ventricular size and systolic function in thoroughbred racehorses and their relationship to race performance (Young, et al, 2005 J Appl Physiol)
  9. ^ Haun (2012-01-25). "The X Factor: The Heart of the Matter. Accessed October 2010". Horsesonly.com. Archived from the original on 2012-06-21. Retrieved 2012-06-20.
  10. ^ a b "Davidge, D. William (2005) "Is the X Factor the Answer?" Pedigree Post, accessed October 10 2010". Pedigreepost.net. Archived from the original on 2008-01-17. Retrieved 2012-06-20.
  11. ISSN 1751-0813.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )

External links