Taking
Technology out to the Pasture
MU Veterinarian Uses Motion-Capture Technology to Diagnose Horse
Diseases
December 8, 2005
(University of Missouri
News Bureau)
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Taking a page from the
scripts of Hollywood directors, a University of Missouri-Columbia
equine veterinarian is using motion-capture technology to
diagnose lameness and spinal ataxia, common and significant
medical conditions in horses. Both can lead to loss of limb
use or death of the animal, but this new technology might
help veterinarians identify the specific problems early enough
to seek a treatment.
"The problem with the current motion-capture
technology is that you need a laboratory and the equipment
is extremely expensive," said Kevin Keegan, associate
professor of veterinary medicine and surgery. "Our new
system allows a veterinarian to evaluate and diagnose a horse
in the pasture or in the barn."
Keegan, together with P. Frank Pai, a mechanical
engineer at MU, and Yoshiharu Yonezawa at the Hiroshima Institute
of Technology in Japan, developed a system that consists of
four small motion sensors that are attached to the horse's
head and legs. The sensors are so small and light that they
do not affect the horse’s movement. As the horse moves,
the sensors record the movement and relay the data to a portable
computer. Later, the data is analyzed and a diagnosis is made.
This technology is unique because diagnosing
lameness or spinal ataxia, which is inflammation of the spinal
cord, can be very difficult to do subjectively with the naked
eye. However, the sensors can detect the small irregularities
in the horse's movement and help a veterinarian make the proper
diagnosis.
"It can be especially difficult to
diagnose lameness if the problem is intermittent or if it
switches sides or changes intensity," Keegan said. "If
the motion-capture technology is attached to the horse, the
evaluation is more objective, taking the guesswork out of
the equation. This technology may also help veterinarians
diagnose lameness or weakness problems in horses that escape
the human eye."
Lameness is the most common medical condition
affecting horses, typically resulting in $600 million to $1
billion in losses for the horse industry each year. Spinal
ataxia, which can lead to death in the animal, can be caused
by several diseases including infection of the spinal cord,
malformation of the neck vertebrae, the herpes virus and the
West Nile virus.
Keegan's research has been published
in the American Journal of Veterinary Research and the Equine
Veterinary Journal.
This story is being used with permission
from the University
of Missouri News Bureau.
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