Please find below a press release from the McTimoney Animal Association detailing some recent published studies in equine back care.
These studies raise some really interesting points and illustrate some great advances in back care.
I hope you will be able to use this and please do let me know if you would like an accompanying image or further information.
Kind Regards
Jenny
Jenny Viner
HoldsworthPR
Public Relations and Marketing
The Old Nursery Office, Rock Road, Washington, West Sussex, RH20 3BH
Tel: 01903 892060 or 07917 886851
Fax: 01903 891637
Email: jenny@holdsworthpr.co.uk
Website: www.rachaelholdsworth.co.uk
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
5th October
2016
What is new in the world of animal back care
Science is constantly challenging or confirming what we know
from daily practice, where we know what works when treating animals and seeing
a return to optimal health and performance. McTimoney Animal Practitioners are
at the forefront of this research, constantly looking to learn more about our
animal friends and how to provide the best possible care, in our role in therapists
and in the aftercare we give for owners to carry out too.
This year has seen several studies undertaken by McTimoney
Animal Practitioners relating to back care and pain in animals, presented at
prestigious International conferences. These include the 3rd International
Veterinary Congress, London, August 2016 and the International Society for
Equitation Science conference, Saumur, France, June 2016
This work has also been published in the Journal of
Veterinary Science & Technology (7) and Journal of Veterinary
Behaviour: Clinical Applications and
Research Sept/Oct 2016
However, we don’t just consider the usual suspects – horses
and dogs – we like to consider all animals and so this year let us start with
the more unusual elephant study...
This study, by McTimoney Animal Practitioner Jan Selfridge,
used African safari elephants to look at whether carrying a rider - or multiple
riders - effected the weight bearing on joint and limb segment angles in fore
and hind limbs of ridden elephants.
The results showed that the presence of riders significantly
influenced a greater number of limb segments and joint angles in mid-stance
than the presence of just a saddle. This study therefore concluded that the
presence of rider weight influences limb kinematics in elephants indicating
compensation for weight bearing and the potential for musculoskeletal
compromise. The use of a saddle may modify the potential for musculoskeletal
compromise. So we already knew that rider weight affected a horse’s back and
limb movement, but even an animal as large as an elephant is affected too.
Rebecca Stroud, a fellow McTimoney Animal Practitioner
conducted her research into the prevalence and progression of pelvic axial
rotations among neonate foals. The importance of symmetry and musculoskeletal
well-being in the ridden horse is widely acknowledged, hence the importance of
McTimoney treatment to re-establish symmetry and balance in mature ridden
horses across all equestrian disciplines.
However, there is little research to ascertain the incidence
of pelvic asymmetry and factors which may predispose to this occurring. This
study found that pelvic asymmetries may be present in new born foals, or
certainly develop very early in life and found positive evidence of pelvic
axial asymmetry from birth to 8-9 weeks of age in foals.
Another preliminary study, by Eulalia Speaight, McTimoney
Animal Practitioner, investigated the effects of head and neck position during
feeding on the alignment of the cervical vertebrae in horses. The method of
feeding hay to horses (floor, haynet, Haybar) affects the head and neck
position on a daily basis. Results from this study suggested an effect on the
musculoskeletal system, with notable differences in areas of muscle tension
which may imply a link between how horses are fed and their musculoskeletal
health, particularly in the neck area.
Research always throws up more questions that those it
answers and it is important to carry out ongoing studies of all possible
factors which affect or influence our animal’s health and wellbeing – it is
only by pushing the frontiers of knowledge, that we can help our animals be as
healthy and perform as successfully as possible.
Before either treating animals or undertaking research
projects, all McTimoney Animal Practitioners have completed an undergraduate
degree in a science and a three year post-graduate training course at the
McTimoney College in Abingdon, Oxfordshire. All practitioners have demonstrated
a high level of competency to pass the stringent exams required.
McTimoney Animal
Practitioners are registered with the McTimoney Animal Association.
For more information on your local practitioner go to www.mctimoney-animal.org.uk.
ENDS
For more
information, contact Holdsworth PR on 01903 892060 or email jenny@holdsworthpr.co.uk.
References:
Selfridge J., Hedderley S., Charlton S., Cunliffe C. (2016)
When it comes to back care, size really doesn’t matter. In African safari
elephants, does carrying a rider - or multiple riders -impact on
musculoskeletal integrity?
Journal of Veterinary Science & Technology. 7 (5) Proceedings of the
3rd International Veterinary Congress OMICS International
Stroud R., Ellis J., Hunnisett A., Cunliffe C. (2016)
A preliminary study to investigate the prevalence
and progression of pelvic axial rotations among neonate foals
Journal of veterinary Behaviour: Clinical Applications and Research Sept/Oct
2016; Journal of Veterinary Science & Technology. 7 (5) Proceedings of the
3rd International Veterinary Congress OMICS International.
Speaight E., Routledge N., Charlton S., Cunliffe C. (2016)
A preliminary study on the effects of head and neck position during
feeding on the alignment of the cervical vertebrae in horses
Journal of veterinary Behaviour: Clinical Applications and Research Sept/Oct
2016