Studies at UF Veterinary College Aim to Advance Horse Health

If you have visited the Ocala area recently, you would have to agree that Florida's horse business is growing by leaps and bounds. The World Equestrian Center, a 378-acre state-of-the-art equine competition venue in its second year of operation, is partially responsible for the influx of horses to the area. Next month, the University of Florida–the state's only vet school–is scheduled to open a world-class hospital located at WEC, offering advanced diagnostics and treatment for equine competitors and companion animals. The hospital will be open to all horses, not just those competing at the center.

Just 25 miles north of the WEC, UF's College of Veterinary Medicine, located in Gainesville, Florida, ranks number nine among veterinary medical colleges according to the U.S. News & World Report. Researchers at the Large Animal Hospital tackle everything from equine allergies to the complex questions of performance-enhancing drugs for equine athletes, and operate programs in the field to teach backyard livestock owners the importance of regular vaccines and dewormers. The Large Animal Hospital provides diagnostics and care to horses, cattle, goats, alpacas, llamas, and other large farm or food animals and serves the region with state-of-the-art emergency rescue vehicles and training in animal rescue during disasters for first-responders.

Defined in part by the world-class horse farms, nurseries, and all-encompassing horse business in Florida, the scope of equine-related topics facing researchers and veterinarians at UF is wide and the stakes are high. Florida is home to year-round Thoroughbred racing and one of America's richest Thoroughbred races, the $3-million GI Pegasus World Cup at Gulfstream Park, as well as two of the world's busiest and most established horse show venues in Wellington and Ocala. According to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the horse industry in Florida generates an annual $6.8 billion economic impact on the GDP in the state.

A recent visit to the veterinary college uncovered three studies that are of particular relevance to the Thoroughbreds: a study by Dr. Rosanna Marsella to find an alternative to steroid treatment for allergies in horses, a study by Dr. Taralyn McCarrel in conjunction with the Florida Racing Lab on Liposomal BupiVacaine and its therapeutic benefits in racehorses, and a study by Dr. Sally DeNotta to find a non-opioid sedative for use in safely extracting a sample of Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) outside the confines of an equine hospital.

When horses suffer from skin allergies or lung ailments caused by allergic reactions, the most prescribed treatment involves steroids often for an extended period of time. Dr. Rosanna Marsella said she was making progress in her attempt to find a biologic treatment for horses plagued by allergies. The use of novel biologic agents to treat allergies in horses would avoid the side effects, limitations, and detriments of long-term steroid use.

“Currently, allergies in the skin and lungs in horses are primarily treated with steroids,” said Marsella. “Steroids have a lot of potential for adverse effects. Horses, more than other species, are sensitive to these adverse effects and the results can be devastating. We know that biologics work in human medicine. We have one that works on the small animal side and my goal now is to develop one for horses.”

“A biologic is an antibody that targets specifically and directly the molecule causing the allergic response. It can be injected with minimal to no side effects because it is not a drug. The antibody removes that molecule from the system.”

“As a veterinarian, I see a lot of horses that are on steroids for a long period of time and it is unhealthy. Also, equine athletes cannot compete on steroids. There is therefore a tremendous need to develop a treatment that is effective, safe and sustainable that is not steroids.”

Regarding the progression of research in horses, Marsella, a horse owner herself, sees the science as less advanced for horses as it is for humans or small animals. The approach, as she sees it, has been largely a reactive one. Finding a biologic to treat allergies is a first step in the right direction towards sustainable treatments for horses. The next step for this study is the production of mono antibodies. The clinical trial phase will follow.

Dr. Taralyn McCarrel has been at UF since 2015. McCarrel is an orthopedic surgeon, teaches orthopedics, and does research on orthopedic needs and regenerative therapies. McCarrel also heads a program in collaboration with the Florida Racing Lab, responsible for the drug testing for racing in the state, to study pharmacokinetics or the way that drugs are distributed through the body and cleared from the body, as well as the therapeutic effects of some drugs on horses.

“Generally, we help the racing lab to establish their methodologies of how they do the testing and produce research that supports the levels they determine are acceptable,” said McCarrel.

“Dr. Cindy Cole [of Florida Racing Lab] and I will discuss drugs that we think are important to study either because they are new drugs or drugs that have a newly discovered effect–either as a therapeutic drug or in giving a competitive advantage.”

UF maintains a group of Thoroughbred racehorses that are kept in racing condition with a high-speed treadmill to provide subjects that are as close as possible to the population being tested at the tracks.

Drs. McCarrel and Cole collaborated on looking at a new formulation of a local anesthetic called Bupivacaine. Bupivacaine is often used for pain in post-operative settings and acts as a nerve-blocking anesthetic that lasts several hours. The new formulation called liposomal bupivacaine is long-acting and can provide relief for up to three days.

“Liposomal bupivacaine is meant to be a long-acting local anesthetic and we looked at it from two perspectives. One was to make sure that we could detect the drug to ensure that it could not be used to make a horse that is lame be comfortable in a race,” said McCarrel. “Another important piece was that the drug could be very useful. So, could we determine how long it lasts, and is there a way that the effects of the drug would be beneficial to the horse?”

McCarrel also completed a study on the effects of cannabidiol (CBD) treatments in horses (written results are expected soon) and they have a currently ongoing study on bisphosphonates which clear from circulation quickly, and then go to the bone where as of now, they cannot be detected without invasive techniques. The study aims to find out if bisphosphonates are released back into circulation in a detectable way as the bone remodels.

Dr. Sally DeNotta is a clinician in the large animal hospital and her specialty is in infectious disease and neurologic disease. Her research focuses on topics that affect equine practitioners who are out seeing horses in the field.

“We just completed a research study here at UF looking at alternative options to opioid medications in equine practice,” said DeNotta. “Opioids are very potent and effective analgesics in reducing pain throughout the body, including the brain and spinal cord. They are often used in combination with other medications to increase the level of sedation during potentially painful procedures.”

“Morphine is a potent opioid, and has traditionally been the analgesic of choice for collecting cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), an important diagnostic sample for horses with neurologic disease. Because morphine carries a high risk for illicit use, it is highly regulated by the DEA and is rarely carried on veterinarians' vehicles, thereby limiting their ability to perform this procedure outside of a veterinary hospital.”

“We sought to find out if there are opioid-free sedation protocols that practitioners can use to collect CSF from standing horses. This would allow them to perform this valuable diagnostic procedure while avoiding the regulatory liability and risk that comes with using controlled medications,” said DeNotta.

“The results of this study revealed non-opioid sedation protocols that worked just as well as morphine,” said DeNotta. “We found that a combination of detomidine and xylazine, two non-controlled sedatives used commonly in equine practice, allowed for equal procedural success and efficiency when compared to the morphine protocol. This research provides safe and effective sedation alternatives for practicing veterinarians, while also supporting recent initiatives to broadly reduce the use of opioids in both human and veterinary medicine.”

The three studies are a small sample of the wide array of topics being tackled at UF College of Veterinary Medicine. In the Thoroughbred business, where so many horses are retired from racing at a young age, it is critical to have dedicated researchers who help to create treatments that will prolong a horse's health, wellness, and soundness to extend their active life before it is time for a real retirement.

For more information about the UF College of Veterinary Medicine go to https://largeanimal.vethospitals.ufl.edu/ and to help support their work, contact Jacquie Basha at 954-881-0003.

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UMN Researchers Studying Sudden Cardiac Death In Racehorses To Aide In Medina Spirit Investigation

University of Minnesota researchers will assist in investigating the death of famed Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit, who collapsed and died on the racetrack Monday in Arcadia, California, of a suspected cardiac event.

The horse's necropsy—the animal equivalent of an autopsy—will be conducted at the University of California, Davis. But samples of hair, blood, and heart tissue are en route to the College of Veterinary Medicine's (CVM) Equine Genetics and Genomics Laboratory, where scientists studying cardiac arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death in racehorses will apply their expertise to the overall picture of the 3-year-old colt's death.

Unlike the breakneck pace for which he was famous in life, the study of Medina Spirit's death will be slow and methodical. California racing authorities have said there is no timetable for necropsy results but that it could take months. The CVM researchers will release the results of their analysis to the California Horse Racing Board separately, and likely much later. Ultimately, to buttress the necropsy, the researchers hope to determine whether Medina Spirit had specific genetic factors putting him at risk for sudden cardiac death.

The CVM scientists, led by Assistant Professor Sian Durward-Akhurst and Professor Molly McCue, will also incorporate the Medina Spirit samples into an ongoing research project seeking to understand genetic and other risk factors for sudden cardiac death in racehorses. The researchers' goal is to identify horses at risk for sudden cardiac death—and to put tools into the hands of racetrack veterinarians that will allow them to identify those horses in time to scratch them from a race—in order to prevent future such tragedies. Those tools include an at-rest electrocardiogram (ECG) combined with artificial intelligence to identify horses likely to develop irregular heartbeats during a race—even if their resting ECG looks normal.

“Medina Spirit's death is devastating, and sadly, such deaths occur all too frequently,” Dr. McCue said. “Our hope is to find ways to pinpoint horses at risk so we can intervene before they lose their lives. In addition to helping equine athletes, this research may also provide answers for sudden cardiac death in young human athletes.”

McCue's lab has been studying horse genetic disease for nearly two decades. Durward-Akhurst and McCue have been working on sudden cardiac death in racehorses since 2015, when Durward-Akhurst was a PhD student, including creating with their collaborators the largest publicly available comprehensive catalog of equine genetic variation.

The post UMN Researchers Studying Sudden Cardiac Death In Racehorses To Aide In Medina Spirit Investigation appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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