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The White Series | Enzymes & Pigments |
Working the Horse with a Nasal Discharge| Thyroid Function in Racing & Breeding Thoroughbreds
Part One
The Red Series
Blood analysis has been part of horse racing now for over forty years with
Dr Percy
Sykes in Sydney being the major contributor to linking detectable variations
in the
blood picture with performance traits in the horse. Extensive work has been
carried out
both on horses and humans to assess response to training, signs of early
over-training
and correction of problems which allow horses to work closer to that knife-
edge that
will have them finishing off their races to the best of their ability.
In this article, we will look at the components that make up the red series.
That is, the
measurements to do with the red blood cells. In later articles, we will
examine the
white series and the chemistry of the blood which will give an overall
picture of the
horse.
Firstly, it should be stated that the taking of blood samples needs to be
standardised as
much as possible. To this end, two separate blood sample times are
preferable to assess
the bloods. I believe that the best time is first thing in the morning
before feeding and
working and as soon as the lights are switched on. This gives a constant
reference as it
is the lowest metabolic point for the day for the horse. The other
acceptable time is
two hours after work but variations in work days, temperature on the day,
sweating
patterns and stable routine will all cause variations in the red series.
Best to sample first
thing and then get it off to the lab as quickly as possible.
With a red series, there are six standard readings which I will discuss
separately.
- Haemoglobin: This is the protein within the red blood cell which carries the
oxygen.
The more haemoglobin present, the more oxygen can be carried. However, when the
amount of red cells gets too large then the blood flow is restricted by the
density
(thickness) of the blood and flow is then affected.
Most laboratories measure
haemoglobin the same way and the range for optimum oxygen capacity is 14.5 -
15.5
gm/100 ml of blood. Levels below 12.5 and above 16.0 will affect
performance. The
lower reading indicates an anaemic state and the higher reading can indicate
dehydration. Excitement at collection time can also cause high readings.
These can be
differentiated from dehydration by the examination of the blood proteins.
The only thing that causes haemoglobin to rise is work. All that additives
do is provide
the raw materials to make haemoglobin, no work means no rise in haemoglobin.
Horses in the paddock do perfectly well on 10.5 - 12.5 and when they return
to the
stables, these are normal readings. The aim of training is to stress the
system so the
bone marrow makes more haemoglobin for the workload, thus, a gradual increasing
workload is best. When we get up to fast work, a strong, hard workout for
that stage of
the preparation will destroy up to a gram of haemoglobin/100 ml of blood,
that is 13
drops to12. So when we are fast working, we need time to rebuild after a
fast day and
putting too many fast days close together, can drop the haemoglobin.
Haemoglobin
levels do not indicate fitness but they can indicate how well the horse has
built-up and
whether the build-up prep was uneventful.
- Packed Cell Volume: This is mostly the percentage of cells within the blood.
The red
cells have the larger percentage as there are usually 6-8 million/ml as
against white cells
of 6-8 thousand/ml. PCV is used to assess dehydration and anaemia. Optimum
levels
are close to 40% with levels below 35% and above 45% likely to indicate
problems.
This reading is also affected by excitement at collection. PCV also rises
as fitness
increases, often though, it keeps rising when problems occur because
dehydration is a
common sequel of work-related problems.
- Mean Corpuscular Haemoglobin Concentration: MCHC is a measure of the
amount of haemoglobin in each red blood cell. Usually this is in a tight
range of 35-
39%. It cannot be above 40% so any reading with a figure greater than 40%
is wrong.
Variations in MCHC usually reflect problems in the other readings as most labs
calculate MCHC by dividing the haemoglobin by PCV and multiplying by 100.
- Mean Corpuscular Volume: MCV is the size of the red blood cell and is
important in
two fields. One relates to anaemia cause diagnosis. If the figure is high
the horse has
anaemia, the cause is usually blood loss (ulcers, bleeder), Vitamin B6, B12,
Folic Acid
or niacin deficiencies or gut upsets causing reduced production of these
vitamins. If the
figure is low with anaemia, this usually indicates iron deficiency but also
copper or
pyridoxine.
The other relates to the efficiency of the bone marrow. A
fresh horse has
a high MCV and is making good quality, new (large) red blood cells. A horse
that is
stale is not making new cells and his MCV is lowish. This varies between
labs but a
common numerical assessment would be that if the lab range was 43-50, then 50 is
very fresh, not fit. 48 is good activity in a horse tightening up and ready
to race. 46 is
a horse nearing its peak or needing tapering. 45 is a horse that is losing
it and starting
to train off and 43 is in the paddock. This assessment must be done looking at
a total
blood but it is a good indicator of freshness. Thus sprinters may be raced
pre-peak if
freshness and excitement is their main virtue. Meanwhile, stayers are best
pushed to
good activity pre-race and usually will be in taper mode when stringing
staying races
together.
- Total Red Cell Count: This is rarely used except as a crosscheck on
calculations of PCV, MCHC and MCV.
- Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate: This is the rate that red blood cells settle
in a
solution. That sounds like "no big deal" but it is important because red
blood cells have
an electric charge and as the horse gains fitness, this charge can increase
while stress,
disease states and pregnancy can cause a decrease in the electric charge and
so cells
clump together and fall faster. The density of the blood influences ESR and
so each
PCV reading has an ESR range. In horses without other stresses in their
blood, the
ESR can give an indication of wellness and I believe cardiovascular fitness.
The lower
the ESR, the fitter the horse.
Ranges are:
PCV = 35 ESR = 43 -13
PCV = 37 ESR = 28 - 8
PCV = 39 ESR = 19 -3
PCV = 40 ESR = 8 - 0
PCV = 45 ESR = 3 - 0
Horses with figures closer to the lower end of the range are fitter and
healthier than
horses that are at the higher end of the range or above.
Finally, one interesting factor with red blood cells is the recent USA work
which
indicates that horses have two types of red blood cells. The first is a
rigid cell similar in
consistency to a basketball. The other is more like a water-filled balloon
which is able
to change shape in confined areas. Horses with more of the less rigid cells
will find it
easier to move blood into the muscles and the lungs and so may be able to
maintain
greater period of stamina work than their more rigid cell competitors. On
average
though, horses have 40% rigid and 60% fluid cells. A horse with 5% rigid
cells would
have a tremendous advantage, all else being equal, and this may be an area
that explains
why some horses are superior to their fellows. It is very interesting and
its only problem
is that you need an electron microscope to tell the difference. However,
possibilities in
assessment of future performance ability will mean this area will continue to be
researched.
We will continue blood interpretations in the next article.
Dr A McGregor
Next Article - "The White Series"
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