Thursday, August 20, 2009

Addressing "Aftercare": NTRA Safety and Integrity Alliance Forms Retirement Subcommittee


The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) Safety and Integrity Alliance announced today that it has formed a special subcommittee focusing on the aftercare of retired Thoroughbreds.

The goal of the NTRA Safety and Integrity Alliance Subcommittee on Aftercare will be to work towards a national solution to issues surrounding retired Thoroughbred racehorses, including enhancement of aftercare funding and improvement of compliance and best-practice standards for racetracks and other industry participants.

“Our aim is to bring together the many outstanding leaders who do so much on behalf of our retired equine athletes,” said Mike Ziegler, Executive Director of the NTRA Safety and Integrity Alliance. “Through cohesiveness and cooperation among all parties, we think we can create a model that can make it easier for racetracks, owners and others to provide retired Thoroughbreds with a happy and productive life after their racetrack days are over.”

Members of the NTRA Safety and Integrity Alliance Subcommittee on Aftercare include: Madeline Auerbach, California Retirement Management Account (CARMA); Anna Ford, New Vocations; Liz Harris, Churchill Downs, Inc.; Lucinda Mandella, CARMA; Diana Pikulski, Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation; and Mike Ziegler, NTRA Safety and Integrity Alliance.

Information on the Alliance, including the Alliance Code of Standards, can be found at www.NTRAalliance.com.

The committee members and links in this blog post represent only a few of the organizations working hard to help racehorses find new jobs and new homes after their racing careers are over. Organizations can be found in most areas of the United States.

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Monday, June 29, 2009

Research Results: Furosemide and Bleeding in Racehorses Studied in South Africa

by Fran Jurga | 29 June 2009 | The Jurga Report

This press release from Colorado State University summarizes an important international research study conducted on South African racehorses. I am posting it as received today so you will be able to read the official version. I am sure much commentary will be available but this document describes the study and its results.

Furosemide, used in the United States and Canada to treat bleeding into the airways in thoroughbred racehorses, decreases the incidence of hemorrhage according to results of a recent study. The study, conducted by Colorado State University, the University of Melbourne and the University of Pretoria in the Republic of South Africa, provides a foundation for racing authorities to make decisions regarding use of this medication, which is the subject of heated debate and controversy around the world.

The study involved 167 horses randomly allocated to race fields of nine to 16 horses each. Each horse raced in two races, one week apart, in the same field and in races of the same distance. In the blinded study, each horse received furosemide before one race and saline solution before the other race. Horses raced under typical racing conditions. Endoscopy was performed within 30-90 minutes after racing to identify the presence of blood in airways. The study will be released in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medicine Association on July 1.

The research showed that giving furosemide before a race dramatically decreased the incidence and severity of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage, or EIPH. Horses were three to four times more likely to have any evidence of bleeding without furosemide, and were seven to 11 times more likely to have severe bleeding without it.

EIPH is the medical term for spontaneous bleeding that occurs within a horse's airways and lungs during exercise. Although furosemide has been used in the racing industry for several decades, no scientifically sound studies have been conducted to prove or disprove an effect on EIPH.

"The results of this study do not eliminate debate about the use of this medication in racehorses, but it does provide evidence needed to aid making sound policy decisions. Decisions are always easier when you have data," said Dr. Paul Morley, one of the principal investigators of the study and a veterinarian at Colorado State University.

Dr. Kenneth W. Hinchcliff of the University of Melbourne and Dr. Alan J. Guthrie of the University of Pretoria, also veterinarians, were the other principle investigators in the study.

"We designed this study to provide the highest quality evidence to address the use of furosemide in Thoroughbred racehorses," Hinchcliff said. "This study design was similar to those used to test the efficacy of treatments in human medicine, which, to date, have been uncommon in evaluating treatments for horses."

Furosemide is widely used in the horse racing industry in North America but is banned on race days in all other countries. More than 90 percent of racing Thoroughbreds and 50 percent of racing Standardbreds in the United States and Canada are given furosemide a few hours before racing to treat bleeding. However, despite this common practice, before this study there was no conclusive evidence that furosemide was effective in preventing or limiting lung bleeding in racehorses.

Use of furosemide, which is sold as Lasix and Salix, to treat pulmonary hemorrhaging in racehorses began in the 1970s. Today it is estimated that the racing industry spends about $30 million annually to treat Thoroughbred horses with furosemide on race days in the United States and Canada.

Use of the medication is controversial because work previously conducted by these scientists found that it enhanced the performance of Throughbred and Standardbred horses. Treatment is also controversial because some critics say that its use confirms animal welfare problems associated with horse racing.

Because of their unique physiology, all horses running at racing speeds experience varying degrees of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage, or bleeding into their airways. Because of blood pressure changes in the lung that are unique to horses during exercise, more than half of Thoroughbred racehorses have small amounts of blood in their trachea after a single race.

While severe EIPH is uncommon, this same research group confirmed the widely held belief that bleeding into the airways impairs athletic performance of horses.

Other than the use of furosemide, which was administered strictly adhering to research project guidelines, all races were under South Africa's standard rules and regulations for the industry. The horses and jockeys raced for purses to ensure competitive racing efforts. The five to eight furlong races were on a one-mile straightaway on the turf at the Vaal Racecourse in South Africa.

Furosemide is a diuretic; it reduces body fluids by increasing urination. It is used in many species, including humans, to control blood pressure and fluid balance.

"Support for this study from the racing industry in South Africa and the U.S. was tremendous," Guthrie said. "The Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation and the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium, both from the United States, and Racing South Africa and the Thoroughbred Racing Trust from South Africa provided grant support for this research, and numerous private donors included high profile private sponsors, such as golfing legend and horseracing enthusiast Gary Player provided monetary support, Phumelela Gaming and Leisure donated the use of The Vaal racetrack with all of its personnel and facilities, The National Horse Racing Authority of Southern Africa provided its staff to officiate at the races and the local trainers and owners enthusiastically allowed use of their valuable horses in this unique study."

Thanks to Colorado State University for providing this document; photo courtesy of Stock Exchange.

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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Kentucky's Maker's Mark Secretariat Center Helps Racehorses Begin a New Life

by Fran Jurga | 23 January 2009 | The Jurga Report at Equisearch.com



Darley Newman, host of the PBS television series Equitrekking, is usually off somewhere exotic, riding through vineyards or trotting up a mountainside in some place where I'd love to be.

Recently, though, Darley took a trip closer to home and visited the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation's Maker's Mark Secretariat Center at the Kentucky Horse Park outside Lexington, Kentucky.

In this brief clip, Darley interviews Susanna Thomas about the prospects of King Dee, a big gray Thoroughbred gelding who escaped slaughter but has needed many hours of careful, thoughtful rehabilitation as he begins his new career as a riding horse.

If you are headed to Kentucky and plan to visit the Kentucky Horse Park, make the center part of your tour. The center welcomes visitors between the hours of 9 and 2, Monday through Saturdays, with interactive demonstrations on Saturday mornings from 10 to 11. To contact the Secretariat Center about horse adoption, call 859-246-3080.

To learn more about Darley and her tv show, look not much further than where you already are. Darley is my fellow blogger here at Equisearch.com, and you can follow her adventures on PBS and watch for her posts here, on her blog.

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Wednesday, June 6, 2007

CBS News Visits "Old Friends" Retirement Home for Famous Racehorses

The "Old Friends" Thoroughbred retirement farm in Georgetown, Kentucky will be the feature of a segment on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric on Thursday, June 7th.

CBS News correspondent Richard Schlesinger and his producer, Chloe Arensberg, visited the 52-acre farm last week to tape the segment.

They spent several hours with the farm’s 23 retired racehorses, including Eclipse Award-winning turf champion Sunshine Forever, the first stallion ever to be returned to the United States after standing at stud in Japan; eight-time stakes winner Ruhlmann; hard-knocker Swan’s Way; West Coast star Special Ring; and Popcorn Deelites, a gelding that appeared in the Oscar-nominated film "Seabiscuit."

"Mr. Schlesinger had a great rapport with the horses, and I’m sure that will come out in the piece,” said Old Friends founder and president Michael Blowen, a former Boston Globe film critic.

Thanks to supporters' donations, Old Friends grew from a fund to a farm, and is now sanctuary to 23 former race horses, including four retrieved from Asian stud duty. Bowen launched the organization after learning that Kentucky Derby winner Ferdinand and stakes champion Exceller had both been sent to slaughterhouses overseas when they were deemed no longer useful at stud.

“One of my theories has always been that famous racehorses are tremendous tourist attractions,” added Blowen. “In retirement, they can generate a lot of income that could benefit less-fortunate horses.”

An interesting fact about Old Friends is that it is the only rescue farm that will accept stallions. In fact, most of the horses are stallions. The farm is open to the public for tours and many people enjoy seeing the famous horses in the flesh. Together, they can relive the glory days of thrilling stakes victories.

For a former racehorse, every long, lazy day at Old Friends is a glory day, of a different sort...the sort too many ex-racehorses never have a chance to experience.

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