Publication | Open Access
Characteristics of Respiratory Function during Swimming Exercise in Thoroughbreds.
31
Citations
8
References
1998
Year
Animal PhysiologyVeterinary PhysiologyPhysical ActivityKinesiologyPhysical FitnessExercisePhysiologyExercise PhysiologyVeterinary ScienceAnnular PoolPulmonary PhysiologyEducationEquine Respiratory PatternsApplied PhysiologyNormal HorsesRespiration (Physiology)Respiratory FunctionHealth Sciences
Equine respiratory patterns during swimming were examined in five normal horses. The experiment included a preliminary warming-up stage and 6 circuits of swimming around an annular pool of a 50-meter-circumference. The horses were examined for respiratory rates, intratracheal pressures, inspiratory time (TI), expiratory time (TE), respiratory cycle (T; TI + TE), heart rates, blood lactate concentrations, hematocrit and blood gases. The respiratory rates were maintained around 25/min. Blood gas values changed significantly during swimming. The intratracheal pressures during expiration and inspiration increased significantly with exercise duration compared to the immediately after the warming-up stage. The duty ratio (TI/T) averaged 0.33, which implied that the expiratory time was roughly doubled the inspiratory time. We considered that a longer expiratory time may limit sudden collapse of airways by water pressure during swimming and prevent a radical decrease of air space volume, thus maintains buoyancy.
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