Authors
Emma Jones, Ignacio Viñuela-Fernandez, Rachel A Eager, Ada Delaney, Heather Anderson, Anisha Patel, Darren C Robertson, Andrew Allchorne, Eva C Sirinathsinghji, Elspeth M Milne, Neil MacIntyre, Darren J Shaw, Natalie K Waran, Joe Mayhew, Susan M Fleetwood-Walker
Publication date
2007/12/5
Journal
Pain
Volume
132
Issue
3
Pages
321-331
Publisher
No longer published by Elsevier
Description
Laminitis is a common debilitating disease in horses that involves painful disruption of the lamellar dermo-epidermal junction within the hoof. This condition is often refractory to conventional anti-inflammatory analgesia and results in unremitting pain, which in severe cases requires euthanasia. The mechanisms underlying pain in laminitis were investigated using quantification of behavioural pain indicators in conjunction with histological studies of peripheral nerves innervating the hoof. Laminitic horses displayed consistently altered or abnormal behaviours such as increased forelimb lifting and an increased proportion of time spent at the back of the box compared to normal horses. Electron micrographic analysis of the digital nerve of laminitic horses showed peripheral nerve morphology to be abnormal, as well as having reduced numbers of unmyelinated (43.2%) and myelinated fibers (34.6%) compared to …
Total citations
200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241512812710867911710641
Scholar articles
E Jones, I Viñuela-Fernandez, RA Eager, A Delaney… - Pain, 2007