Abstract

Simple SummaryIn 24-h video-recorded samples of 20 hospitalized equine orthopedic surgery patients, ongoing discomfort behavior conspicuously diminished or stopped altogether, when a caretaker approached or interacted with the horse, and then resumed after the caretaker’s departure. For all 20 patients, the degree of reduction was potentially important to clinical management decisions. Current state-of-the-art equine clinical composite pain scoring rubrics rely on observations of discomfort behavior in combination with physiologic measures, such as heart rate, respiratory rate, body temperature, and gut motility. All of these are typically assessed concurrently during a visit by a caretaker. This raises concern that discomfort in equine patients is routinely underestimated in ways that might compromise patient welfare. While this is especially of concern for veterinary hospitals, this natural characteristic of horses to show little indication of discomfort or disability in the presence of predators is also likely to delay recognition of disease in horses in general.Horses have evolved to show little indication of discomfort or disability when in the presence of potential predators, including humans. This natural characteristic complicates the recognition of pain in equine patients. It has been our clinical impression that, whenever a person is present, horses tend to “perk up” and ongoing discomfort behavior (DB) more or less ceases. The objective of this study was to quantitatively evaluate and describe this effect. For each of 20 orthopedic surgical patients, continuous 24-h video was reviewed to record all occurrences of DB during a caretaker visit (3.23 to 7.75 min), for comparison to the hour preceding as well as the hour following when undisturbed. The mean ± S.E. DB observed per minute during the preceding and following hours, respectively, were 1.65 ± 0.17 and 1.49 ± 0.22. The difference was not significant (p > 0.05). In contrast, mean DB per minute during the visit was 0.40 ± 0.11. This was significantly lower than during both the preceding and following hours (p < 0.0001). All 20 patients expressed fewer observable DB per minute during the visit, with a mean reduction of 77.4% ± 0.17%. For 30% of these patients, ongoing DB ceased altogether during the visit. These findings confirm our clinical impression that caretaker visits interrupt DB, resulting in under-appreciation of discomfort.

Highlights

  • Horses have evolved to show little indication of discomfort or disability when in the presence of potential predators, including humans

  • It has been our clinical impression that, regardless of a patient’s ongoing discomfort behavior, whenever people approach or interact, the horse “perks up” and discomfort behavior more or less ceases. This apparent tendency for interruption of observable discomfort behavior in the presence of people has been mentioned in the literature [1,2], it does not appear to be widely appreciated in equine clinical practice

  • For all 20 patients, fewer discomfort behavior (DB) per minute were observed during the visit, with a mean ± S.E. reduction of 77.4% ± 0.17 %, compared to the mean DB per minute observed during the preceding and following hours

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Summary

Introduction

Horses have evolved to show little indication of discomfort or disability when in the presence of potential predators, including humans. It has been our clinical impression that, regardless of a patient’s ongoing discomfort behavior, whenever people approach or interact, the horse “perks up” and discomfort behavior more or less ceases. This apparent tendency for interruption of observable discomfort behavior in the presence of people has been mentioned in the literature [1,2], it does not appear to be widely appreciated in equine clinical practice. The objective of this study was to quantitatively evaluate the effect of a caretaker visit on ongoing discomfort behavior of equine patients

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