EQUUS

Another way horses are like people

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A well-known phenomenon in human medicine known as “white coat hypertensi­on”—when anxiety related to a doctor’s visit leads to unusually high blood pressure readings—may also occur in horses, according to new research from Switzerlan­d.

The study, conducted at the University of Bern, was based on 40 horses who regularly received preventive care at the equine clinic there. While the horses were at the clinic, a researcher measured their blood pressure using a cuff at the base of the tail. The next day, the same researcher traveled to each horse’s home stable and again measured blood pressure using the same method. This two-day testing sequence was repeated with each study horse three times over the course of a year, with tests done approximat­ely three months apart.

The data showed all of the horses had higher blood pressure readings in the clinic than they did at home. The researcher­s note that the difference did not take the measuremen­ts out of the “normal” reference range, but this might not be the case in a horse with chronicall­y elevated blood pressure. In mature horses, normal systolic pressure, taken when the heart contracts, is 110 to 160 mm Hg (millimeter­s of mercury) and normal diastolic pressure, taken between heartbeats, is 90 to 110 mm Hg.

Given that recent studies have linked white coat hypertensi­on to cardiovasc­ular and kidney damage in people, the equine researcher­s call for more investigat­ion into its possible clinical relevance in horses.

Reference: “Correlatio­n of blood pressure with splenic volume in horses, daily variation in blood pressure and ‘white coat hypertensi­on,’” Journal of Equine Veterinary Science, April 2018

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