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Horse Disorders and Diseases
Lung and Airway Disorders of Horses
Exercise-induced Pulmonary Hemorrhage (Bleeder) in Horses
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Chapters in Horse Disorders and Diseases
  • Blood Disorders of Horses
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders of Horses
  • Digestive Disorders of Horses
  • Hormonal Disorders of Horses
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  • Ear Disorders of Horses
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  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders in Horses
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders of Horses
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  • Skin Disorders of Horses
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders of Horses
  • Metabolic Disorders of Horses
  • Disorders Affecting Multiple Body Systems of Horses
Topics in Lung and Airway Disorders of Horses
  • Introduction to Lung and Airway Disorders of Horses
  • Accumulation of Fluid or Air in the Chest Cavity of Horses
  • Aspiration Pneumonia in Horses
  • Choanal Atresia in Horses
  • Diaphragmatic Hernia in Horses
  • Disorders of the Larynx in Horses
  • Disorders of the Nasal Septum in Horses
  • Disorders of the Paranasal Sinuses in Horses
  • Dorsal Displacement of the Soft Palate in Horses
  • Epiglottic Entrapment in Horses
  • Equine Herpesvirus Infection (Equine Viral Rhinopneumonitis)
  • Equine Influenza
  • Equine Morbillivirus Pneumonia (Hendra Virus Infection)
  • Equine Viral Arteritis
  • Exercise-induced Pulmonary Hemorrhage (Bleeder) in Horses
  • Foal Pneumonia
  • Guttural Pouch Empyema in Horses
  • Guttural Pouch Mycosis in Horses
  • Guttural Pouch Tympany in Horses
  • Inflammatory Airway Disease in Horses
  • Lungworm Infection in Horses
  • Nasal Polyps in Horses
  • Pharyngeal Lymphoid Hyperplasia (Pharyngitis) in Horses
  • Pleuropneumonia in Horses
  • Recurrent Airway Obstruction (Heaves) in Horses
  • Strangles (Distemper) in Horses
  • Subepiglottic Cyst in Horses
 
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Exercise-induced Pulmonary Hemorrhage (Bleeder) in Horses

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Exercise-induced pulmonary (lung) bleeding occurs in the majority of racehorses and is observed in many other equine sports (such as polo, barrel racing, and 3-day events) that require strenuous exercise for short periods of time. Bleeding from the nose is actually observed in only about 5% of horses with exercised-induced lung hemorrhage; however, examination of racehorses has shown that bleeding in the airways is present in a majority of horses.

Possible causes include high lung blood pressures during intense exercise, new blood vessel formation caused by lung inflammation, and shear forces within the chest generated during exercise. Some research suggests that exercise-induced lung hemorrhage results from failure of the horse's lungs to accommodate the massive increase in heart output to meet the demands of high-intensity exercise.

Diagnosis of exercise-induced lung hemorrhage involves observation of blood in the airways 30 to 90 minutes after exercise. This can be detected using an endoscope. Other sources of bleeding in the upper airway must be exluded during the examination. Examination of fluid from the lungs is sometimes used if the horse cannot be examined after exercise.

The use of a specific diuretic drug, furosemide, can reduce the severity of exercise-induced lung hemorrhage by 70% and improve race performance, although it does not prevent bleeding entirely. Nasal dilator bands also appear to reduce bleeding by approximately 30%.

Last full review/revision July 2011 by Bonnie R. Rush, DVM, MS, DACVIM; Neil W. Dyer, DVM, MS, DACVP; Joe Hauptman, DVM, MS, DACVS; Ned F. Kuehn, DVM, MS, DACVIM; Stuart M. Taylor, PhD, BVMS, MRCVS, DECVP; Wendy E. Vaala, VMD, DACVIM; Maureen H. Milne, BVMS, MVM, DCHP, MRCVS

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