Not One Size Fits All: Paper Outlines Findings From Newmarket Fetlock Injury Symposium

While the racing industry has made important strides forward in detecting horses at risk of suffering catastrophic injuries before they occur, that system is far from perfect. But better use and understanding of the various diagnostic tools at our disposal could help to plug those existing gaps–that’s the main takeaway from a recent article published in the Equine Veterinary Journal.

The seven-page paper provides a summary of the findings that came from a symposium held this past March at Newmarket, during which various veterinarians and experts shared their research into fracture risk assessment of the fetlock–the most common catastrophic injury site in racehorses.

For so long, the industry has been looking for “that one” diagnostic imaging technology “that solves all our problems,” Ryan Carpenter, a Santa Anita-based private veterinarian who gave a presentation at the symposium, told TDN. “The reality is, we’re not there yet,” he added.

“More importantly, we have to acknowledge that there are strengths and weaknesses to the whole modalities. It’s not a one size fits all,” Carpenter said. “But I think when you use them in conjunction with one another, and you recognize their strengths and weaknesses, I think you can make some serious headway.”

Many of the pre-existing injuries that end up proving catastrophic are extremely subtle and therefore difficult to detect. Indeed, this study found that 90% of horses fatally injured in Hong Kong displayed no noticeable clinical signs of injury during a pre-race veterinary inspection.

Experts have identified a range of race, horse and management-related factors that can be used to identify horses at serious risk of suffering catastrophic injuries on the track.

But as the paper points out, the statistical models these factors can be plugged into still aren’t especially effective at predicting catastrophic injuries, partly because of the low prevalence of these sorts of injuries anyway, and the dearth of relevant data.

Indeed, one study which encompasses some 2,000,000 starts and 4,000,000 workouts had a 65% success rate at predicting which one of only two horses was about to sustain a fracture–odds only marginally higher than that of a coin toss.

Which is where imaging can come in.

The paper finds a direct relationship between “serial testing”–what is a more systematic way of monitoring problem areas–and a higher probability of targeting pathology at the site of a potentially catastrophic injury.

Let’s zero in on radiography, what the paper says remains the most “important imaging modality in fetlock bone risk assessment,” but is nevertheless a “relatively untapped resource that through education of primary care vets could immediately have a profound impact on injury mitigation.”

What does the paper mean by “untapped”? This study on the effect of intraarticular joint injections on the risk of subsequent fracture found that prior imaging on the injected site had been done in less than 8% of cases.

Under the serial testing model, however, a clinical examination that identifies a problem area in the fetlock joint would lead to a second diagnostic test, like a radiograph, to get a better understanding of the issues at play.

If the veterinarian suspects further issues brewing in the fetlock than is visible on the radiograph, they have the option of ordering additional tests using a more sensitive imaging modality, like a positron emission tomography (PET) or an magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan.

And why isn’t that done more often as it is? “I think a lot of people are,” said Carpenter. “But I think some people aren’t.”

These are “multifactorial issues,” he added, stressing the need for trainers and their staff to flag sore horses in the first place, at the same time pinpointing the pressure put on trainers from owners and the racing office. “There’s a lot of these other factors that come into play that may or may not lead to good decisions.”

Nevertheless, as the paper points out, “there is no diagnostic test with 100% accuracy,” nor any one clear consensus of how the images are interpreted. To help in that regard, the paper has broken down into a table the pluses and minuses of each available imaging technology.

“Our goal was to basically condense a lot of information into a very useable reference,” said Carpenter.

Each technology–radiography, nuclear scintigraphy, computed tomography (CT), MRI and PET–is rated within the confines of these four categories: strengths, clinical information obtained, practical and technical limitations, and current knowledge gaps.

For nuclear scintigraphy, for example, large areas can be imaged but with low specificity. CT can be done quickly with high spatial resolution images, but there’s currently a knowledge gap in differentiating between active abnormalities in the bone and “static” long-term changes.

But knowledge is only useful when placed into the right hands, and the racing industry, the paper says, would be wise to take some lessons from human medicine, particularly when it comes to regulatory transparency and the sharing of relevant information. From a bird’s-eye viewpoint, the globalization of horse racing could be a more streamlined affair.

“Whilst veterinary assessment and regulatory pathways are in place in many racing jurisdictions globally, transparency about the process and standardization across countries is lacking,” the paper says.

But individual practitioners too must be more willing to share veterinary information that could have a bearing on that horse’s fate on the track, the paper similarly stresses. “Equally, owners, trainers and other stakeholders must understand their obligation to comply with the risk assessment process if they wish to enter a horse in a race.”

The paper also pinpoints several “actionable items” resulting from the symposium. These include:

  • A best practice guide on fetlock radiography.
  • The creation of trainer manuals to help them both identify the warning signs of serious fatigue injury and understand how these injuries progress.
  • The creation of an international, anonymized data repository, into which goes information like racehorse clinical and imaging data, and exercise and racing history.

This repository would then be used as a research tool.

“I don’t think anybody expected this symposium to solve all our problems, but what it did was lay a very nice foundation for the work that will come from this,” said Carpenter. “I think you’re going to look back in three to five years at a lot of good things that came out of this starting point and have a significant impact on this industry.”

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Grinning Tiger Back At Favored Los Al For Saturday’s Newly-Named Soi Phet Stakes

Fresh off a gate-to-wire 92-1 shocker in the Crystal Water Stakes on the Santa Anita turf, Grinning Tiger will try to remain perfect at Los Alamitos in the $100,000 Soi Phet Saturday.

A one-mile event for 3-year-olds & up bred or sired in California, the Soi Phet – which was formerly named the Bertrando (2014-2019) – is the eighth of nine races. Post time is 1 p.m. Approximate post time for the Soi Phet is 4:30 p.m.

The stakes honors a gelded son of Tizbud, who won five stakes at Los Alamitos – including the race now named for him in 2014 and 2018 – for the Benowitz Family Trust, Mathilde Powell and Paul Viskovich and trainer Leonard Powell. Soi Phet, who was claimed for $16,000 in the spring of 2013 at Hollywood Park, retired at age 11 in 2019 with more than $1 million in earnings.

Owned by Tyree Wolesensky and trained by Anthony Saavedra, Grinning Tiger ended a five-race losing streak with his Crystal Water stunner, defeating seven rivals by nearly two lengths at the same distance he will be running Saturday.

Both of his wins at Los Alamitos were 7-1 upsets in sprints. He defeated state bred optional claimers going 5 ½ furlongs during the 2019 Summer Thoroughbred Festival and led throughout to win an optional claimer during the Los Angeles County Fair meet nearly two months later.

A son of Smiling Tiger and the Pioneering mare Karlee's Kitten, Grinning Tiger has won eight of 27 and banked $209,801.

Galilean is also 2-for-2 at Los Alamitos with his victories coming in 2018 when trained by Hall of Famer Jerry Hollendorfer.

The Uncle Mo colt out of the El Prado mare Fresia won at first asking as a 2-year-old Sept. 22, then stretched out to the Soi Phet distance to win the King Glorious by nine lengths during the Winter meet that year.

Owned by a partnership that includes West Point Thoroughbreds, Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith and now trained by John Sadler, Galilean is seeking his first win since taking the California Cup Derby Feb. 18, 2019. He's 3-for-8 with a bankroll of $382,948.

Trained by Phil D'Amato for Summit Racing LLC, William Branch, Jeff Owen, Jeremy Peskoff and Jackie Rojas, King Abner will be trying to improve upon a fifth place finish as the 4-5 favorite in this race last year.

The 6-year-old gray gelding by Hansen out of the Salt Lake mare Margarita Salt has won six of 25 and earned $399,309. He owns a win at Los Alamitos, scoring an optional claiming victory during the 2018 Winter meet.

Take the One O One will bid for a second consecutive win for owner Samantha Siegel's Jay Em Ess Stable and trainer Brian Koriner. The 5-year-old Acclamation horse went gate-to-wire at the Soi Phet distance May 22 in Arcadia.

Out of the Jump Start mare North Freeway, Take the One O One is 5-for-13 with earnings of $382,306.

Claimed for $20,000 by trainer Andrew Lerner for Alydom Racing LLC out of a turf win May 25, Three Ay Em, who hass won four of 13 and earned $125,799, will be looking for his second tally at Los Alamitos.

The 4-year-old son of New Year's Day and the Theatrical mare Potenza broke his maiden via disqualification in his fourth career start Sept. 8, 2018 when trained by Jeff Bonde.

Lerner will be trying for a second consecutive win in the Soi Phet. He clicked with the mare Queen Bee to You a year ago.

Brandothebartender will be looking for his first win on a surface other than turf.

Trained by Craig Dollase for Flawless Racing, Brian Flanagan and Michael Jarvis, the 7-year-old Tribal Rule gelding out of the Stravinsky mare Frysland is 0-for-4 on dirt. He's 6-for-34 overall with a bankroll of $460,984.

Lymebyrd will be making his first start in Southern California since 2018 for owners Don and Guy Brown and trainer Angelo Tekos.

The 7-year-old Limehouse gelding out of the Old Trieste mare, who has won six of 33 and earned $212,534, has a Los Alamitos victory on his resume. He broke his maiden by 7 ½ lengths against $20,000 claimers July 15, 2017 when trained by Dean Pederson.

Loud Mouth will stretch out to eight furlongs after finishing fourth of five in the Thors Echo Stakes June 13.

Trained by Steve Knapp for Thomsen Racing LLC, the 4-year-old Boisterous colt out of the Drama Cat mare Tale of the Cat has won four of 16 and banked $133,348.

From inside out, the field for the Soi Phet Stakes: Brandothebartender, Umberto Rispoli rides, 119 pounds; King Abner, Abel Cedillo, 119; Take the One O One, Jose Valdivia, Jr., 119; Three Ay Em, Aaron Gryder, 119; Loud Mouth, Drayden Van Dyke, 119; Grinning Tiger, Heriberto Figueroa, 124; Lymebyrd, Tiago Pereira, 119 and Galilean, Juan Hernandez, 119.

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Health Department Reports 17 Coronavirus Positives During Santa Anita Spring Meet

There were 17 positive tests for the coronavirus during the recently concluded Spring Meet at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif., reports ktla.com, which got the count from the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

After closing to the public on March 13, live racing at Santa Anita was shut down on March 27. The health department allowed the track to resume racing on May 15, and safety precautions included having jockeys live in trailers in the parking lot during the race week.

Santa Anita's Spring Meet ended on Sunday.

Read more at ktla.com.

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Lasix Ban in California: How It’s Unfolding

Sunday May 17 at Santa Anita rather disappeared into the ether of a weekend dominated by the resumption of live racing after a COVID-fueled two-month hiatus.

But Sunday May 17 was notable in itself given how it christened the first 2-year-old race in California under the state’s new Lasix-free rules.

The chronology of events leading to that watershed is now something approaching lore. During Santa Anita’s much-publicized troubles early last year, the track instituted a ban on Lasix, an action the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) synthesized into a state-wide Lasix prohibition for 2-year-olds on race-day–though not training–beginning with this year’s crop.

These events in turn catalyzed a broader movement across the country, spearheaded by the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition, a group of industry organizations and individual tracks, to phase out Lasix.

As for California’s first 2-year-old contest, it was won stylishly by Love Wins, a daughter of Haynesfield trained by Luis Mendez. Since then at Santa Anita, there have been another nine juvenile contests run without the anti-bleeding medication.

And so, how have trainers adapted their programs to compensate? What kind of impact has it had on rates of Exercise Induced Pulmonary hemorrhaging (EIPH)? A quick synopsis would go something like this: nothing much to see here—thus far, at least.

“No news is good news”

“I would say that we haven’t altered our plan with the babies,” said trainer Doug O’Neill. “The majority of babies, it’s not really a concern that they’ll have exercise induced pulmonary hemorrhaging.”

Likewise trainer Michael McCarthy. “I have not changed what I’m doing with them in any way whatsoever,” he said.

Without Lasix, trainers have other tools in their toolbox to achieve similar ends on race-day, including “drawing” horses up, the removal of water and feed before a race, sometimes many hours before, to dehydrate.

None of the trainers questioned, however, said their practice of removing hay and water before a race has changed appreciably without use of the race-day medication.

When we spoke, McCarthy had started a lone 2-year-old runner to finish second. He removed the water and feed roughly three hours before the race, just as he does with horses who receive Lasix. “Did not bleed,” he said, of that starter. “Did not have any issues.”

When it comes time to run his first juveniles of the season, trainer Simon Callaghan said he’ll probably remove hay and water “a little bit” earlier than usual. But ultimately, he added, “I think it’s going to be a learning experience, learning as we go along.”

Not that Lasix should currently cause trainers many sleepless nights. As CHRB equine medical director, Rick Arthur, puts it, “two-year-olds should be horses that really should not be problematic bleeders.” Indeed, chronic EIPH has been found to worsen with repeated exercise and age.

To this point, no 2-year-old starters in California have been formally reported to the CHRB for suffering any degree of bleeding. “No news is good news,” Arthur said.

Ryan Carpenter, a Santa Anita-based private veterinarian, sings a similar tune. “It’s happening, we’ve accepted it, we’ve embraced it. It’s just part of our daily life,” he said, of the ban. “It surprisingly hasn’t been discussed, and that’s because I don’t think it’s an issue—at the moment.”

Still, there’s one important caveat to note as we gauge the efficacy of the Lasix experiment so far in the Golden State—the giant wrench that the coronavirus has thrown into the industry’s engines, meaning many trainers are slightly behind the curve with their juvenile squadrons this year.

“There’s numerous factors as to why,” admitted Callaghan, pointing to COVID-triggered disruptions to live racing and the sales programs. Some 2-year-olds have remained on the farm longer than usual, too.

As such, the bulk of his 2-year-olds aren’t doing the degree of work ordinarily required of them at this time, he said. “And typically, when we’re going easy works with them, we don’t give them Lasix anyhow.”

“It’s horrendous”

Behind schedule the 2-year-olds may be in California, but over the next few weeks and months, more and more of them will head to the track, the screws of morning training tightening incrementally.

On top of that are other confounders, not least a racing calendar that’ll soon weigh heavy with valuable 2-year-old contests. As more 2-year-olds are put through their paces, he wider the net for weaknesses to arise, the respiratory system at the head of the list.

“There’s a lot more humidity in the air,” said O’Neill, pointing to Del Mar, and an idea–oft-repeated among California trainers–that the climate at the seaside venue during the hot summer months lends to higher rates of EIPH. “It does make you wonder if it makes horses have a tendency to bleed down there,” O’Neill added.

It should be noted that the scientific literature doesn’t appear to support this notion—for example, several experts point to studies from the early 1980s, led by researcher John Pascoe, that found similar rates of EIPH across different locations and climates.

But one inarguable is the intensity of the training environment on Del Mar’s narrow track of a morning, even with fewer horses permitted at any one time than there once was—a concern at any busy training facility.

“Hypertension [can] cause bleeding,” said Ellis, highlighting how exercise significantly increases the stress put on racehorse respiratory systems. “That’s why Lasix works.”

Which leads to another related question: what to do to ease racehorse stress levels? Ellis said that the rigors of morning training were a manageable concern when Lasix was permitted on race-day—without it, however, he’s aware that reducing stress through things like altered training patterns and feed programs (supplements especially) will become increasingly important, he said.

Still, when it comes to the races, “there’s not a lot we can do in races but cross our fingers,” Ellis added. “I think it’s going to be a problem somewhere along the line.”

Having trained in England where race-day Lasix has long-been prohibited, Callaghan admits that, in this regard, he has a bit of a leg-up on his Stateside counterparts. He’s already considering longer, slower works to reduce stress on horses prone to bleeding, taking them out when the track’s quieter.

Not that he’ll stop using Lasix during morning training altogether.

“I’m going to probably breeze a lot of 2-year-olds on Lasix, particularly when they’re doing their stronger works,” Callaghan said. “Preventing a horse from bleeding in the mornings is very important.”

Another key issue is air quality–in particular, the ubiquitous problem of dust and spores from bedding and barn floors circulating around the environment where most racehorses spend the bulk of their days.

“Most racehorses, in my experience, have some degree of small airway disease,” said Greg Ferraro, CHRB chair, adding that chronic small airway disease is a “big contributor” to EIPH. “I’ve always believed that the reason Lasix is so popular is it’s a mild bronchial dilator.”

As such, the stabling conditions in California are at the back of many trainers’ minds. “It’s horrendous–there’s a ton of dust,” said Ellis, about the backstretch at Santa Anita lined with low-ceilinged narrow wooden barns with dirt floors. “The air doesn’t move around at all. That’s no good.”

As is often the case, it might pay to turn to Hong Kong–where Lasix is prohibited in both training and racing–for a glimpse into an alternate way to do things. At Sha Tin, four new state-of-the-art stable blocks with concrete flooring were built for horses competing in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

“All have air conditioning,” wrote Bill Nader, the Hong Kong Jockey Club executive director of racing, in an email, adding that further modifications are planned at these barns. “Horsemen here are always keen to reduce or eliminate any dust in the stables.”

“The big thing is fear”

Given the phalanx of new rules and regulations adopted over the past 16-months in California, trainers are understandably wary that the Lasix landscape is still a transforming picture.

“I can tell you that the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition’s position is this: no Lasix for 2-year-olds. No Lasix for stakes races starting next year,” said Donna Brothers, strategic advisor for the coalition, which comprises The Stronach Group and Del Mar among other groups. “And their position on that is not intended to change.”

In terms of California, the rules as written mean that this year’s crop of 2-year-olds will be permitted to use Lasix when they turn three. According to Ferraro, the aim in California is to take steps to prohibit Lasix in stakes races next year, too, as per the coalition’s stance.

“We’d go through that year that way and see what happens as to what the next step would be,” he said. As for that next step?

“The ultimate goal is to do away with Lasix altogether, obviously,” he said.

“The big thing you’ve got to realize about this, the withdrawal of Lasix is probably the biggest fight the industry has,” added Ferraro. “It’s hard to find a trainer or veterinarian that’s ever trained or practiced without Lasix. So, the big thing is fear.”

For Ellis, the big thing for him as a trainer and businessman is to remain competitive in a jurisdiction with arguably the most prohibitive medication regulations in the country.

Ellis said that he agrees with the vast majority of medication changes that have been instituted in California, but he worries about the impacts from an all-encompassing Lasix prohibition. “If they phase out Lasix,” he said, “it’ll phase out racing in California.”

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