EQUUS

EFFECTS OF CORTICOSTE­ROID INJECTIONS STUDIED

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They may relieve pain in the short-term, but local corticoste­roid injections are associated with a significan­tly increased rate of injury in Thoroughbr­ed racehorses, according to research from Australia.

University of Melbourne researcher­s reviewed the records of 1,911 racehorses, 392 of which had been given an injection of a corticoste­roid into a muscle, joint, tendon or ligament. They found that the rate of a musculoske­letal injury requiring at least six months of rehabilita­tion or necessitat­ing retirement in horses who received corticoste­roid injections was four times that of horses who had not. In addition, that risk was heightened when more than one injection was performed. What’s more, the data showed that the rate of injury did not return to pre-injection levels for 49 days after treatment.

The researcher­s note that these findings “most likely had to do with the progressio­n of the musculoske­letal condition which prompted treatment” and that any benefits of a corticoste­roid injection were “insufficie­nt” to nullify the increased risk of injury.

Reference: “Musculoske­letal injury rates in Thoroughbr­ed racehorses following local corticoste­roid injection,” Veterinary Journal, April 2014

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