|

July 2010,
Hi Folks,
This year’s
summer heat and humidity is
stifling.
My horses are sweating just standing out in the pasture grazing. Because
of the heat we're seeing in this area, I wanted to reprint an article
taken from the
Eastern Draft Horse Association….. I’d also like to Thank Dr Ed Murray
for reviewing this article for me. Dr Ed Murray felt that the only
problem they didn't address were the issues from heat stroke that can
also arise 2-3 days later after folks think all is behind them.
Heat
Stress/ Heat Stroke
Summertime can be an extremely dangerous time for
horses, especially if their owners aren't aware of the dangers in
overheating...or "Heat Stress", when the condition progresses, it can
lead to a life-threatening condition called "Heat Stroke". The best
prevention for equine owners is to know how to identify heat stress in a
horse before it progresses to heat stroke. If a horse is being exercised
on hot days, extra care and attention must be given because there is a
significant increase in the amount of heat produced by working muscles.
Heat production can increase as much as 50% during intense exercise as
compared with heat production when the horse is at rest. A horse
increases its sweating rate to move more blood to the capillaries under
the skin and breaths much harder in an effort to release this build-up
of heat. The most commonly observed signs of "Heat Stress" are profuse
sweating, rapid breathing, and a rapid heart rate. Some horses have a
condition leaving them little or no ability to produce sweat; these
horses are called "Anhydrotic". Since heat
loss is mainly dependent on sweating and its evaporation,
anhydrotic horses are prime candidates for
heat stress. It's important to know if your horse falls at risk due to
this condition, and take proper precautions to protect it from
overheating. When you work or exercise your horse in hot weather, watch
carefully for the signs of "Heat Stroke" which can include; skin that is
dry and hot, a pulse and respiratory rates much higher than normal and
unusually high rectal temperatures. "Heat stroke is life threatening,"
If you suspect that your horse is suffering from heat stroke, call your
veterinarian immediately! While you are waiting for your vet, move the
horse to a shady area with fans or wind to provide cool ventilation.
Spray cool water on the horse’s legs and body to help lower the internal
temperature. In critical situations, ice packs or cold water soaked
towels should be placed on legs and other areas that exhibit large veins
surfaced on the horse. (If cold towels are used, make sure to change
them often because the horse’s extreme heat will quickly turn the cold
water hot) Normally, a horse's rectal temperature is around 101 degrees
Fahrenheit, if the rectal temperature is around 104 degrees for any
length of time, it is characteristic of a life-threatening situation.
When a horse is suffering from heat stress, stop working the horse and
begin cooling the animal's body with fans and shade to help stop the
onset of heat stroke. Also, pay careful attention to make sure that the
horse doesn't become dehydrated during long bouts of exercise, large
amounts of fluid can be lost through sweat. In most cases, horses should
be allowed to drink as often as they desire, even during exercise,
unless they are showing signs of heat stress. A "hot" horse has the
chance to colic if given lots of water while they are hot. Small amounts
of water should be offered to the horse in frequent intervals before,
during and after exercise. A simple test that can be used to determine
marginal water loss in a horse is the pinch test. When a section of skin
on the neck or shoulder is pinched, the skin recoil will be immediate in
normally hydrated horses. Dehydration will delay skin recoil. It is
important to make sure the horse is properly cooled-down following
exercise work-outs. The built up heat must be released from the horse's
body through respiration and sweat. Heat loss through sweat requires
moving air and evaporation. Walking a hot horse allows the air movement
to continue to help evaporate heat, if left standing still; the lack of
air movement could force the internal temperature to rise even higher.
Air flow is vital to remove heat off the horse's body. The length of
cool-down will depend on the amount of work, the environmental
conditions and the individual horse. Horse owners, who know the signs of
heat stress in horses can help prevent heat stroke in their animals, so
becoming aware, can reduce the chance of injury, or even worse, death.
If you use common sense and good judgment,
this all can be avoided, so watch for the signs!
Managing Heat Stress in Horses
Kevin
H. Kline, PhD, Professor of Animal
Sciences
As summer approaches, and the weather heats up, so does the competitive
season for horse shows, racing and other equine event. This is the time
of the year that severe heat-related stress occurs in equine athletes.
Symptoms such as reduced skin elasticity and capillary refill time,
anhidrosis (failure of the sweat glands),
colic due to decreased water content of digesta,
and hyperthermia may all be due to heat-induced disruption of the
horse's normal water and electrolyte balance. Many horse owners don't
realize that only about 25% of the energy used in the performance
horse's working muscles is converted to actual muscle movement. The
remaining 75% loss of efficiency is represented by waste heat that
becomes very difficult for the horse to dissipate in hot and humid
weather.
Unfortunately, the problems described above are often partly brought on
by poor management due to some common misconceptions among horse owners
and trainers. Several of the following misguided ideas have been found
in equine publications of years past:
-
"Never let a
hot horse drink more than one or two swallows of water at a time".
-
"Never give
ice-cold water to a hot horse - either inside or out".
-
"Never let a
hot horse cool out without a blanket or sheet".
-
"Never let a
hot horse cool out in a drafty area".
Each of the above disproven practices severely restricts the overheated
horse's ability to dissipate heat the way nature intended. The immediate
need for performance horses to rid themselves of highly detrimental
waste heat is accomplished through four main routes. These include
evaporation, convection, conduction, and radiation.
By far, the most important mechanism for heat dissipation in horses is
evaporation. Conversion of the water in sweat (or other sources of water
placed on the horse's hot skin) into gas consumes heat and cools the
horse's skin. During and after exercise, the horse's skin is laden with
dilated capillaries carrying overheated blood from the body core. The
blood in these capillaries is cooled to help maintain a reasonable body
temperature that will allow the horse's nervous and muscular systems to
function normally. Even a normally hydrated horse with no inhibition of
evaporative cooling that is exercising in a hot and humid environment
may achieve a rectal temperature in excess of 104 degrees Fahrenheit.
Disallowing the adequate water consumption that can be used for
sweating, or blocking the evaporation of water from the skin using a
blanket, are very bad ideas during hot and humid conditions. These
practices can result in a horse's body temperature spiking into a
dangerous range of up to 107 or 108 degrees Fahrenheit (heat stroke).
Although allowing a hot horse to consume unrestricted amounts of water
may lead to problems such as colic due to hyper distension of the
stomach, it should be realized that a typical horse's stomach can hold
between 2 and 4 gallons of fluid without being distended. So, even
though a horse's stomach is small compared to other animals of its size,
one or two sips of water at a time is overly restrictive when the hot
horse is rapidly losing water trying to keep itself cool.
Statement #2 above has been the source of some
controversy over the years because of the belief among certain horse
trainers that ice cold water placed on a hot horse's body will "shock"
the horse's thermoregulatory system into shutting down blood flow to the
skin. This belief has been found to be wrong. Extensive research
conducted during 1995 at the University of Illinois and University of
Guelph and at the 1996 Olympic Summer Games in Atlanta proved
conclusively that horses working under hot and humid conditions were
better able to maintain core body temperature within an acceptable range
or even reduce it during rest periods after intense phases when ice
water baths were used. Liberal application of icy cold water to
overheated horses helps to dissipate heat not only by providing more
water to evaporate from the skin, but also by direct conduction of the
horse's body heat into the water which runs off the horse, carrying away
excess heat in the process. According to University of Illinois
researcher Dr. Jonathan Foreman, "In our treadmill simulations of
C Halt (a rest period during a phase of
the equestrian competitions at the Olympic Games), cold water baths were
used with significant decreases in core temperatures and heart rates. No
adverse clinical effects were apparent during the remainder of Phase
C trotting or after exercise. Horses
actually trotted more freely after bathing stops."
Standardbred trainers are probably the
worst at helping their horses to thermo regulate between multiple heats
on hot and humid days. The Standardbred
training traditions of blanketing, limiting water intake and refusing to
apply cold water to horses may severely limit the horse's ability to
return its body temperature to near normal before the second heat is
contested.
Another practice that makes little sense
physiologically is preventing access to moving air during hot and humid
conditions. During the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games, 85 misting fans were
placed at shaded recovery areas throughout various phases of the
equestrian courses to allow these elite athletes to stabilize and lower
their body temperatures. Regular dry fans work to both increase
evaporation, and also dissipate heat by the cooling process known as
convection. Misting fans take advantage of the additional cooling
property of blowing water onto the horse that is in the process of
changing from liquid to gas. The shaded areas guard against additional
heat load through solar radiation. Although radiation of heat from the
horse's body into the atmosphere is a potential mode of heat
dissipation, it most often works in the opposite direction during sunny
days, with horses (especially dark ones) gaining radiant heat from the
environment.
In the battle against heat stress in performance
horses, trainers should take advantage of all available modes of heat
dissipation during hot and humid conditions. Making certain that horses
are adequately hydrated before exercising in hot and humid conditions
and providing as much water as possible between bouts of exercise is an
important strategy for maintaining the critical sweating mechanism.
Realistically, only a portion of the fluid losses incurred during long
term exercise in hot and humid conditions can be replaced immediately.
However, providing plenty of electrolyte-rich, high quality hay and
fortified grain along with free-choice trace mineralized salt and water
in the days after intense exercise should fully replace both the fluid
and electrolyte losses. Additionally, taking advantage of conductive
heat loss through cold water baths, convective heat loss through fans
and natural air movements and avoiding radiant heat gain through the use
of shade are effective methods to minimize the chances of excessive heat
stress in performance horses during hot and humid conditions
Other News
Please mark your calendars for the upcoming Region 9 Show in
Murfreesboro Tennessee, August 13 - 15, 2010. Check out our web-site for
more information. ALQHA will need volunteers to work throughout the day
on Saturday (14th). Please contact Beverly Davis (
bldavis6@charter.net ) to let her know if / when you can be
available to help out. This money ALQHA get from working this show helps
pay for (among other things) our Banquet, end of year awards, and this
newsletter.
Some interesting
information from AQHA:
Alabama’s Quarter
Horse 2009 population – 58,816 (down 874 from 2008) / Total Quarter
Horses in U.S. – 2,758,654 (down 62,518 from 2008)
Alabama Quarter Horse
Foals Registered in 2009 – 1,634 (down 413) / Total AQHA foals
registered 93,835 (down 22,144 from 2008)
AQHA members in
Alabama - 2,857 / 529 are Amateurs / 428 are Youth members BUT
there are 15,486 Quarter Horse owners in Alabama…..
Whether you’re in the
practice pen or the show ring, don’t let the upcoming summer heat and
humidity get the best of you or your horse. Take care, have safe
travels, and we here at ALQHA look forward to seeing you at all of the
ALQHA approved shows throughout the 2010 year.
Donna Casey
Alabama Quarter Horse President
|
JOIN ALQHA &
DISCOVER YOUR LIFESTYLE |
|
RENEW YOUR ALQHA
MEMBERSHIP |
|