Abstract

Horses chronically-instrumented with costal diaphragmatic electromyographic electrodes were studied during exercise while unencumbered by a breathing mask. Exercise-associated changes in esophageal (Pes), gastric (Pga) and transdiaphragmatic (Pdi) pressures were measured and related to diaphragmatic electromyographic activity (CS EMG) and to left forelimb impact. In all breaths examined, CS EMG always coincided with decrements in Pes. For all exercise trials, linear increases in CS EMG, Pga and Pdi and linear decreases in Pes, as a function of exercise intensity, always occurred. During all gaits, breathing frequency (f r) was entrained with stride frequency (fs) one for one. However, a constant phase-coupling relationship between f r and fs, observed when horses cantered and galloped, was absent when horses walked or trotted. We conclude that biomechanical forces contribute minimally to ventilation in exercising horses, that the diaphragm is always phasically active during each breath and its total electrical activity and mechanical output are proportional to the exercise hyperpnea.

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