Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding

Hippotherapy in patients with neuromuscular dysfunction creates high focal pressure on the pony’s back due to bareback riding and an asymmetrical riding position. This study aimed to investigate the acute effect of asymmetrical bareback riding on the pony’s spinal kinematics, blood lactate, serum cr...

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Main Authors: Nuttawut Nuchprayoon, Pattama Ritruechai, Krisana Watchararat, Weerawat Limroongruengrat, Tuempong Wongtawan, Nlin Arya
Other Authors: Walailak University
Format: Article
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/79171
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spelling th-mahidol.791712022-08-04T18:37:02Z Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding Nuttawut Nuchprayoon Pattama Ritruechai Krisana Watchararat Weerawat Limroongruengrat Tuempong Wongtawan Nlin Arya Walailak University Mahidol University Veterinary Hippotherapy in patients with neuromuscular dysfunction creates high focal pressure on the pony’s back due to bareback riding and an asymmetrical riding position. This study aimed to investigate the acute effect of asymmetrical bareback riding on the pony’s spinal kinematics, blood lactate, serum creatine kinase, heart rate, and temperament score. Eight ponies were selected, and they were walked on a treadmill for 45 min on each experimental day, including warm-up (5 min), weight-loading by mannequin (30 min), and cool-down (10 min) sessions. During the weight-loading session, three different weight distributions on the pony’s back were applied between the left and right side: 50:50 (treatment M), 70:30 (treatment L), and 30:70 (treatment R) on the first, second, and third day of the experiment, respectively. The spinal kinematics at the end of the weight-loading session revealed a slight reduction in range of motion in both flexion-extension and lateral bending during treatment R. Stride length and stride duration showed no differences between treatments. The levels of blood lactate and serum creatine kinase and results of a back examination were normal. Heart rates and temperament scores revealed that all ponies were calm throughout loading of the mannequin. This information suggests that asymmetrical bareback riding did not cause acute or serious back injury, which indicates good equine welfare in ponies used for hippotherapy. 2022-08-04T11:37:02Z 2022-08-04T11:37:02Z 2021-01-01 Article Journal of Equine Science. Vol.32, No.3 (2021), 81-89 10.1294/jes.32.81 13477501 13403516 2-s2.0-85115014136 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/79171 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85115014136&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Veterinary
spellingShingle Veterinary
Nuttawut Nuchprayoon
Pattama Ritruechai
Krisana Watchararat
Weerawat Limroongruengrat
Tuempong Wongtawan
Nlin Arya
Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding
description Hippotherapy in patients with neuromuscular dysfunction creates high focal pressure on the pony’s back due to bareback riding and an asymmetrical riding position. This study aimed to investigate the acute effect of asymmetrical bareback riding on the pony’s spinal kinematics, blood lactate, serum creatine kinase, heart rate, and temperament score. Eight ponies were selected, and they were walked on a treadmill for 45 min on each experimental day, including warm-up (5 min), weight-loading by mannequin (30 min), and cool-down (10 min) sessions. During the weight-loading session, three different weight distributions on the pony’s back were applied between the left and right side: 50:50 (treatment M), 70:30 (treatment L), and 30:70 (treatment R) on the first, second, and third day of the experiment, respectively. The spinal kinematics at the end of the weight-loading session revealed a slight reduction in range of motion in both flexion-extension and lateral bending during treatment R. Stride length and stride duration showed no differences between treatments. The levels of blood lactate and serum creatine kinase and results of a back examination were normal. Heart rates and temperament scores revealed that all ponies were calm throughout loading of the mannequin. This information suggests that asymmetrical bareback riding did not cause acute or serious back injury, which indicates good equine welfare in ponies used for hippotherapy.
author2 Walailak University
author_facet Walailak University
Nuttawut Nuchprayoon
Pattama Ritruechai
Krisana Watchararat
Weerawat Limroongruengrat
Tuempong Wongtawan
Nlin Arya
format Article
author Nuttawut Nuchprayoon
Pattama Ritruechai
Krisana Watchararat
Weerawat Limroongruengrat
Tuempong Wongtawan
Nlin Arya
author_sort Nuttawut Nuchprayoon
title Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding
title_short Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding
title_full Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding
title_fullStr Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding
title_full_unstemmed Equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding
title_sort equine spinal kinematics derived from different riding positions during asymmetrical bareback riding
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/79171
_version_ 1763494244794761216