Breath characteristics and adventitious lung sounds in healthy and asthmatic horses

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Abstract

Background: Standard thoracic auscultation suffers from limitations, and no systematic analysis of breath sounds in asthmatic horses exists. Objectives: First, characterize breath sounds in horses recorded using a novel digital auscultation device (DAD). Second, use DAD to compare breath variables and occurrence of adventitious sounds in healthy and asthmatic horses. Animals: Twelve healthy control horses (ctl), 12 horses with mild to moderate asthma (mEA), 10 horses with severe asthma (sEA) (5 in remission [sEA−], and 5 in exacerbation [sEA+]). Methods: Prospective multicenter case-control study. Horses were categorized based on the horse owner-assessed respiratory signs index. Each horse was digitally auscultated in 11 locations simultaneously for 1 hour. One-hundred breaths per recording were randomly selected, blindly categorized, and statistically analyzed. Results: Digital auscultation allowed breath sound characterization and scoring in horses. Wheezes, crackles, rattles, and breath intensity were significantly more frequent, higher (P

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Greim, E., Naef, J., Mainguy-Seers, S., Lavoie, J. P., Sage, S., Dolf, G., & Gerber, V. (2024). Breath characteristics and adventitious lung sounds in healthy and asthmatic horses. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 38(1), 495–504. https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16980

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