YOU ARE OBSERVING
Lacks Stamina, Tires Quickly or Easily
Summary
Disease or illness that affect any body system can decrease stamina. Tying-up, lameness, poor saddle fit and dozens of other conditions can be confused with or contribute to an apparent lack of stamina. Behavioral factors may overlap with physical factors, complicating the picture even more. In some cases, lack of training or rider ability are confused with a horse's lack of stamina.
The most common reason for a horse to be exercise intolerant is lack of cardiovascular fitness. Optimal conditioning requires consistent exercise. Heart and respiratory rates should return to normal fairly quickly following exercise. How quickly these return to normal following intense exercise is an indication of physical fitness.
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Code Yellow
Contact Your Vet at Your Convenience for an Appointment
your role
What To Do
Assess your horse's general health using the Whole Horse Exam (WHE). Pay particular attention to body condition score (BCS), muscle tone, and resting heart and respiratory rates. Assess the horse for lameness at walk and trot, and evaluate the limbs carefully for swellings or other abnormalities.Exercise the horse for a given time period or until they fatigue. Monitor the time it takes their respiratory and heart rates to return to normal. Listen for excessive breathing sounds at rest and during exercise.
Share your findings and concerns with your vet, along with a detailed history of the horse's training, exercise and feeding program.
Skills you may need
Procedures that you may need to perform on your horse.
your vet's role
Most vets will also recommend a lameness evaluation to watch the horse at exercise both with and without a rider up. They may assess fitness by using stress tests, and monitor respiratory and heart rates during recovery from exercise.
Once this basic information has been gathered and analyzed, your vet is in a better position to diagnose the underlying cause and suggest a treatment plan.
- What is the horse's age, sex, breed and history?
- What is the horse's exercise and performance history leading up to this?
- What is the horse's Body Condition Score (BCS)?
- Does the horse have a history of any illness or condition?
- Does this horse have a history of lameness?
- Do you notice respiratory noise when the horse is ridden?
- Do you consider the horse to be fit?
- What are the results of the Whole Horse Exam (WHE)?
Diagnostics Your Vet May Perform
Figuring out the cause of the problem. These are tests or procedures used by your vet to determine what’s wrong.
Diagnoses Your Vet May Consider
The cause of the problem. These are conditions or ailments that are the cause of the observations you make.
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Poor Conditioning
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Obesity, Overweight or Fat
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Handler, Trainer or Rider Issue
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Within Normal Limits, Normal for this Horse
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Conditions Affecting Red Blood Cells, Generally
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Respiratory Conditions, Generally
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Lameness, Conditions Causing, Generally
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Myopathy & Muscle Conditions, Generally
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Heart Conditions, Generally
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Chronic Systemic Disease, Generally
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Acute Systemic Disease, Generally
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Viral Upper Respiratory Tract Infections, Generally
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Respiratory Conditions, Generally
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Laryngeal Hemiplegia
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Tying-Up, Recurrent Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
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Exercise Induced Pulmonary Hemorrhage, EIPH
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Polysaccharide Storage Myopathy, PSSM
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Anhidrosis, Dry Coat Syndrome
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Blood Loss or Acute Hemorrhage, Generally
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Cardiac (Heart) Valvular Disease
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Congestive Heart Failure, CHF
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Pharyngitis
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Pharyngeal Dysfunction
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Dorsal Pharyngeal Lymphoid Hyperplasia, DPLH
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Pharyngeal Sub-Epiglottic Cyst
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Arytenoid Chondritis & Epiglottiditis
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Epiglottic Entrapment in Aryepiglottic Fold
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Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia
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Iron Deficiency, Caused by Anemia Caused
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Atrial Fibrillation
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Equine Piroplasmosis, EP
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Botulism
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Neoplasia, Tumor or Cancer, Generally
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Nasopharyngeal Cicatrix Syndrome
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Adrenal Insufficiency
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Diaphragmatic Hernia, Ruptured Diaphragm
Treatments Your Vet May Recommend
A way to resolve the condition or diagnosis. Resolving the underlying cause or treating the signs of disease (symptomatic treatment)