Evaluation of the Equine Upper Respiratory Tract Flashcards

1
Q

What is the speed of horses like? What is required to reach this?

A

1200 lb horse can run ~55 mph (440 yards in 21 s)

efficient gas exchange

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2
Q

Equine upper respiratory tract:

A
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3
Q

What is labeled in this endoscopic view of the larynx?

A
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4
Q

What is the normal resting an exercising respiration rates of horses?

A

RESTING = 8-20 bpm
- tidal volume = 5 L
- total lung capacity = 40 L
- minute ventilation = 40-100 L

EXERCISING = 80-100 bpm
- minute ventilation = ~1500 L

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5
Q

How do horses breathe?

A

obligate nasal breather that exhales as forehand contacts the ground

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6
Q

What limits horses’ exercise capacity?

A

URT resistance to airflow (highest at the nares!)

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7
Q

What is the mechanics of airway flow like with inhalation and exhalation? What commonly increases pressure disparity?

A

INHALATION = negative pressure collapses URT and pushes air into lungs

EXHALATION = positive pressure dilates URT

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8
Q

What is airway resistance primarily determined by?

A

airway diameter —> cutting the radius in half increases resistance by a factor of 16

R = (8ul)/r^4

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9
Q

What are the 4 major areas of resistance in the upper airway?

A
  1. external nares
  2. nasal mucosa
  3. pharynx - soft palate, pharyngeal walls
  4. larynx - epiglottis, arytenoids
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10
Q

Lower airway resistance:

A
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11
Q

Airway resistance, upper vs. lower:

A
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12
Q

What is the major contributor to airway stabilization? How does it maintain stability?

A

muscle tone

  • nervous innervation of cranial nerves
  • autonomic effects of adrenaline constricting blood vessels during exercise
    (enlarges the lumen!)
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13
Q

Flexing the neck and airway resistance:

A

constricts larynx

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14
Q

What is the normal inspiration to expiration ratio in horses?

A

1:1

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15
Q

What muscle of the larynx should be palpated on URT evaluation?

A

cricoarytenoid dorsalis muscle

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16
Q

What are some ancillary diagnostic aids for the URT?

A
  • endoscopy - at rest, dynamic
  • radiographs
  • CT, MRI
  • ultrasound
  • blood work
  • lower respiratory tract work up
17
Q

What is used for URT endoscopy? How is it performed?

A

1 m, 1-cm flexible endoscope

advanced through the ventral meatus (Y-shaped)

18
Q

What landmark is used for the pharynx?

A

dorsal pharyngeal recess

19
Q

Guttural pouch, endoscopic anatomy:

A
20
Q

Larynx, endoscopic anatomy:

A
21
Q

What is the preferred way to perform an URT endoscopy at rest? What is it used to diagnose?

A

no sedation —> drugs can alter arytenoid function (scope trachea and GP, too!)

static lesions

22
Q

What is the purpose of nasal occlusion during URT endoscopy?

A

creates negative pharyngeal pressure similar to exercise, which can help visualize arytenoid abduction

(abduction better correlated to swallowing)

23
Q

What is treadmill-dependent dynamic endoscopy preferred for? What are some concerns?

A

diagnosing dynamic conditions - DDSP occurs during fatigue, so horse needs to exercise for extended periods

  • high intensity (220 bpm)
  • safety
  • doesn’t perfectly mimic real life
24
Q

What is considered the best method for performing dynamic endoscopy? How does it compare to the treadmill?

A

portable endoscope (brings scope to horse)

  • more difficult to get to max intensity for racehorses
  • mimics real life
  • able to review in slow motion (120 breaths/min!)
25
Q

How do dynamic and resting endoscopies compare?

A
  • start with resting for baseline
  • dynamic to make definitive diagnosis, since many lesions are not apparent at rest —> maximum intensity, flexion, tack
26
Q

URT radiographs:

A

challenging to interpret!

27
Q

What is indicated in this radiograph?

A

fluid lines within sinuses

28
Q

What is indicated in this radiograph?

A

cyst on the epiglottis

29
Q

What is the best mode of diagnosis for the sinuses?

A

CT