Development of a body condition index to estimate adiposity in ponies and horses from morphometric measurements

Author:

Potter Samantha J.1,Erdody Madison L.1,Bamford Nicholas J.1ORCID,Knowles Edward J.2ORCID,Menzies‐Gow Nicola2ORCID,Morrison Philippa K.3,Argo Caroline McG.3,McIntosh Bridgett J.4,Kaufman Katelyn4,Harris Patricia A.5ORCID,Bailey Simon R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Melbourne Veterinary School, Faculty of Science The University of Melbourne Parkville Victoria Australia

2. Royal Veterinary College Hertfordshire UK

3. Scotland's Rural College Aberdeen UK

4. Virginia Polytechnic and State University Blacksburg Virginia USA

5. Equine Studies Group Waltham Petcare Science Institute Leicestershire UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThere is a high prevalence of obesity in ponies and pleasure horses. This may be associated with equine metabolic syndrome and an increased risk of laminitis. Body condition scoring (BCS) systems are widely used but are subjective and not very sensitive.ObjectivesTo derive a body condition index (BCI), based on objective morphometric measurements, that correlates with % body fat.Study designRetrospective cohort study.MethodsMorphometric measurements were obtained from 21 ponies and horses in obese and moderate body condition. Percentage body fat was determined using the deuterium dilution method and the BCI was derived to give the optimal correlation with body fat, applying appropriate weightings. The index was then validated by assessing inter‐observer variation and correlation with % body fat in a separate population of Welsh ponies; and finally, the correlation between BCI and BCS was evaluated in larger populations from studies undertaken in Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States.ResultsThe BCI correlated well with adiposity in the ponies and horses, giving a Pearson r value of 0.74 (P < 0.001); however, it was found to slightly overestimate the % body fat in leaner animals and underestimate in more obese animals. In field studies, the correlation between BCI and BCS varied particularly in Shetlands and miniature ponies, presumably due to differences in body shape.Main limitationsFurther work may be required to adapt the BCI to a method that is more applicable for Shetlands and miniature ponies.ConclusionsThis BCI was able to provide an index of adiposity which compared favourably with condition scoring in terms of accuracy of estimating adiposity; and was more consistent and repeatable when used by inexperienced assessors. Therefore, this may be a useful tool for assessing adiposity; and may be more sensitive than condition scoring for tracking weight gain or weight loss in individual animals.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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