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Differences in the ventilatory responses of horses and ponies to exercise of varying intensities
Author(s) -
KATZ LISA M.,
BAYLY W. M.,
HINES MELISSA T.,
SIDES R. H.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
equine veterinary journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.82
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 2042-3306
pISSN - 0425-1644
DOI - 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05187.x
Subject(s) - horse , medicine , physical therapy , physical medicine and rehabilitation , biology , paleontology
Summary Horses exercising at ˜90% V̇ o 2max develop arterial hypoxaemia with concurrent hypercapnoea, whereas ponies exercising at comparative levels become hypocapnoeic and maintain arterial oxygen tensions close to resting values. We sought to investigate the possibility that these differences relate to the ventilatory responses of these animals to exercise. Six Thoroughbred horses weighing mean ± s.e. 501 ± 27 kg and 5 ponies weighing mean ± s.e. 164 ± 18 kg exercised for 2 min on a 10% slope at speeds calculated to require 60% V̇ o 2max and for at least 1 min at speeds calculated to require 115% V̇ o 2max . Oxygen consumption (V̇ o 2 ), arterial oxygen (Pa o 2 ) and carbon dioxide (Pa co 2 ) tensions, acid‐base balance, tidal volume (V T ), minute ventilation (V̇ E ), peak inspiratory (V̇ Imax ) and expiratory (V̇ Emax ) flow, and maximal changes in transpulmonary pressures (ΔPtp max ) were measured immediately before exercise and in the last 15 s of exercise at each intensity. The results confirmed that, unlike horses, ponies do not become hypoxaemic or hypercapnoeic during exercise. Despite having a higher ΔPtp max , higher V̇ Imax and V̇ Emax and V̇ E /kg 0.75 at the same relative intensities, horses were less capable of mounting an appropriate ventilatory response to exercise. This was reflected by lower mass specific and metabolic weight‐based ventilations at similar absolute workloads, and their higher Pa co 2 and arterial [HCO 3 − ]> and lower ventilatory equivalent for oxygen (V̇ E /V̇ o 2 ). This suggests that horses become hypoxaemic and hypercapnoeic at work loads ˜90% V̇ o 2max because their metabolic demand surpasses the capacity of their ventilatory system to meet this demand. Because ponies are less capable athletes, they can match their ventilatory response to their metabolic requirements.

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