
04-19-2012, 11:07 PM
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Oriental Park
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,612
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
Well, you can read the 120 available studies on the subject over the past 40-50 years by clicking on this link and entering the words
EIPH equine
in the search term box at the top.
Then hit "search".
If you enter the terms EIPH equine lasix you'll get another 28 studies that are more specific.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/
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Sounds like an evasion.
I played along anyhow. Here's what I found:
-No significant differences were detected among treatments. (2009)
-At this time, there is no treatment that is considered a panacea, and the currently allowed treatments have not proven to be effective in preventing EIPH. (2003)
-In conclusion, although both modalities (nasal strip and furosemide) were successful in mitigating EIPH, neither abolished EIPH fully as evaluated via BAL. (2001)
-Although in the frusemide-control experiments, a significant reduction in mean pulmonary arterial, capillary and wedge pressures was observed both at rest and during galloping at 14 m/s on 3.5% uphill grade, all horses still experienced EIPH.(2001)
-Comparison of average and maximum EIPH scores of 44 horses with a minimum of 4 observations (2 nontreated, 1 saline-treated, and 1 furosemide-treated) indicated that although furosemide did not stop EIPH, it did reduce the EIPH score in 28 (64%) horses. (1985)
-Furosemide administered in different dosages and time intervals prior to exercise did not prevent EIPH. (1984)
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