The prevalence of headshaking in horses with primary and secondary dental sinusitis and computed tomographic evidence of infraorbital canal pathology

Author:

Labbe Karyn A.1ORCID,Allshouse Kimberly A.1,Gilmour Lindsey J.1ORCID,Arnold Carolyn E.1ORCID,Whitfield‐Cargile Canaan M.1ORCID,Griffin Cleet E.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences School of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSinusitis is a common disease of horses yet there are a limited number of reports in the literature that describe the prevalence of infraorbital canal (IOC) pathology and headshaking behaviour in horses diagnosed specifically with primary sinusitis and secondary dental sinusitis. Given the impact that these behaviours can have on horses' intended athletic use, investigation is warranted.ObjectivesTo determine the occurrence of IOC pathology in horses with concurrent primary or secondary dental sinusitis based on computed tomography (CT) findings and to assess whether the frequency of headshaking behaviour is influenced by the presence of IOC pathology.Study designRetrospective case series.MethodsComputed tomography studies were assessed for sinusitis (unilateral or bilateral), IOC pathology (unilateral or bilateral) and description of IOC disease including displacement, deformation, periosteal proliferation, hyperostosis, osteolysis and infraorbital nerve exposure. Behaviour outcome was determined by client questionnaire five or more years following CT scan.ResultsA total 65 out of 66 horses diagnosed with primary or secondary dental sinusitis demonstrated IOC changes on CT. Hyperostosis (86%), periosteal proliferation (85%) and osteolysis (86%) were common CT findings. Hyperostosis was frequently found to involve both the IOC and supporting bone structure. Five cases were euthanized immediately after CT acquisition or during hospitalisation following diagnostic investigations. Follow‐up was obtained in 48/61 cases, with five horses showing headshaking behaviour.Main limitationsInfraorbital nerve histopathology was not performed. The limited number of cases with no IOC pathology prevented direct comparison between sinusitis groups both with IOC pathology and without IOC changes. The client questionnaire carries a memory bias.ConclusionComputed tomography changes involving the IOC may not predict headshaking behaviours in sinusitis secondary to dental disease. This finding is important in the context that these behaviours render some horses unusable and unsafe for their intended riding discipline.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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