Contact: Donna Krupa
Office: (301) 634-7209
Cell: (703) 967-2751
dkrupa@the-aps.org
What Do Racehorses, Asthmatics And
Meatpackers Have In Common? Horses Exercising In Sub-Freezing Air Could
Indicate How Asthma Develops; May Lead To Equine ‘Heaves’ Cure
Is winter flu worse
because of exercise-induced ‘window of susceptibility’?
BETHESDA, Md. (May 23, 2005) – When you exercise or
work outside in winter, that dry feeling at the back of your throat
indicates the cold air has irritated your throat. Racehorses share a similar
experience: exercising in below-freezing air causes mild airway injury.
Recent research suggests these kinds of experiences,
also shared by winter athletes, sled dogs, meatpackers and even fisherman,
may be the beginning of a cascade of events leading to more serious
conditions later.
Similarly, both athletes and horses seem open to
infection after such strenuous bouts of activity as handicap races or
marathons. Exercise physiologists and others have long thought that
over-exertion might open a kind of “window of susceptibility” for sickness,
but most of the evidence is anecdotal.
Physiologists at Oklahoma State University reporting on
new research believe they may have found evidence that could link the
problems suffered by horses, athletes and cold-air workers that potentially
could lead to progress in understanding the development and perhaps give
hints toward cures for asthma and related diseases. Specifically, the
Oklahoma State team reported that their research “data are the first to
provide a specific mechanism for the exercise-induced open-window effect as
a local pulmonary phenomenon.”
The research involved horses exercising while breathing
air at 23 degrees Fahrenheit and may “help explain why flu season occurs in
the winter, how asthma develops in humans, and why race and other active
horses get ‘heaves,’” lead researcher Michael S. Davis said.
Research was funded by National Center for Research
Resources, U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Thoroughbred Charities of
America.
Editor’s note: A copy of the research paper by
Davis et al. is available to the media. Members of the media may obtain an
electronic version and interview members of the research team by contacting
Donna Krupa at the American Physiological Society, (301) 634-7209, cell
(703) 967-2751 or
dkrupa@the-aps.org.
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