Motion sensors detect
horse lameness earlier than veterinarians, MU study finds
Published: Tuesday, July 3, 2012 - 13:04 in Health &
Medicine
In a
new study published in the Equine Veterinary Journal, Keegan and co-author
Meghan McCracken, an equine surgery resident at MU, put special adjustable
shoes on horses that temporarily induced symptoms of lameness. The horses were
then monitored by the Lameness Locator as well as by a number of veterinarians using
any lameness testing methods they wished. If no lameness was detected by either
the veterinarians or the Lameness Locator, the special shoes were adjusted
slightly to increase the symptoms of lameness. This process was repeated until
both the Lameness Locator and the participating veterinarians properly
identified in which leg of the horse the lameness was occurring. Keegan and
McCracken found that the Lameness Locator was able to correctly identify
lameness earlier than veterinarians using subjective eye test methods more than
58 percent of the time and more than 67 percent of the time when the lameness
occurred in the hind legs of the horse. Keegan attributes this to the sensors'
high sensitivity levels.
"There are two reasons why the Lameness Locator is better
than the naked eye," Keegan said. "It samples motion at a higher
frequency beyond the capability of the human eye and it removes the bias that
frequently accompanies human subjective evaluation."
Because equine lameness may begin subtly and can range from a
simple mild problem affecting a single limb to a more complicated one affecting
multiple limbs, veterinarians and horse owners know that early detection is the
key to successful outcomes.
"If veterinarians can detect lameness earlier, before it
gets too bad, it makes treatment much easier," Keegan said. "Lameness
often goes undetected or undiagnosed entirely, which can cause owners to retire
horses earlier than needed, simply because they cannot figure out why the
horses are unhealthy. The Lameness Locator should be able to help with that as
well."