Thu 23 May 2013
Comparison of an inertial sensor system with a stationary force plate for evaluation of horses with bilateral forelimb lameness
American Journal of Veterinary Research March 2012 73 3 368-374
Objective—To assess the analytic sensitivity of an inertial sensor system for detection of the more severely affected forelimb in horses with bilateral lameness.
Animals—18 adult horses with forelimb lameness.
Procedures—Horses were fitted with inertial sensors and evaluated for lameness with a stationary force plate as they were trotted in a straight line. Inertial sensor-derived measurements for vertical head movement asymmetry (HMA) and vector sum (VS) of maximum and minimum head height differences between right and left halves of the stride were used to predict differences in mean peak vertical force (PVF) as a percentage of body weight between the right and left forelimbs. Repeatability was compared by calculation of the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for each variable. Correct classification percentages for the lamer forelimb were determined by use of a stationary force plate as the standard.
Results—SEs of the prediction of difference in PVF between the right and left forelimbs from HMA and VS were 6.1% and 5.2%, respectively. Head movement asymmetry (ICC, 0.72) was less repeatable than PVF (ICC, 0.86) and VS (ICC, 0.84). Associations were positive and significant between HMA (R2 = 0.73) and VS (R2 = 0.81) and the difference in PVF between the right and left forelimbs. Correct classification percentages for HMA and VS for detecting the lamer forelimb were 83.3% and 77.8%, respectively.
Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Results suggested that an inertial sensor system to measure vertical asymmetry (HMA and VS) due to forelimb lameness in horses trotting in a straight line has adequate analytic sensitivity for clinical use. Additional studies are required to assess specificity of the system.
Jobs
Clinical Assistant Professor of Small Animal Orthopedic Surgery - Department of Clinical Sciences at NCSU
The Department of Clinical Sciences at NCSU, College of Veterinary Medicine is seeking a non-tenure track Clinical Assistant Professor of Small Animal Orthopedic Surgery.
Qualifications: DVM or equivalent degree. Board certification in the European or American College of Veterinary Surgeons is preferred with ECVS/ACVS board eligibility required. Expertise in small animal orthopedic surgery is preferred.

OrthoVet Books

MUIR
Advances in the canine cranial cruciate ligament
1st ed., 289 pages, 350 ill., John Wiley & Sons, September 2010
List price: €
Sell price: €

MONTAVON-VOSS-LANGLEY-HOBBS
Feline orthopedic surgery and muscoloskeletal disease
1st ed., 563 pages, 1200 ill., Elsevier, November 2009
List price: €
Sell price: €

MAY
Self-assessment colour review of equine orthopaedics and rheumatology
1st ed., 192 pages, 320 ill., Manson Publishing/The Veterinary Press, June 1998
List price: €
Sell price: €

LEWIS
Self-assessment colour review of small animal orthopaedics
1st ed., 192 pages, 500 ill., Manson Publishing/The Veterinary Press, June 1998
List price: €
Sell price: €

COUGHLAN
Manual of small animal fracture repair and management
1st ed., 348 pages, 500 ill., BSAVA Publications, June 1998
List price: €
Sell price: €

