TJ wrote:casallc wrote:TJ wrote:Hi cas,
I agree with that statement of yours as well....it seems to be very relevant in coming up with the solution to the lasix issue on both sides. TJ
The solution is simple - to allow lasix or not. Nothing is difficult about that. As the previous post with the Thoroughbred Times excerpt confirms, we got along without lasix for hundreds of years and every other country in the world still does. It has not benefitted racing OR horses in the least. As a matter of fact, the evidence suggests otherwise. The reason people want lasix is because they are afraid to train horses without help from a bottle; it is easier to get from a needle that, that can be achieved by time, training and proper husbandry. Lasix is the greatest scam that has ever been conceived on horseracing.
Hi cas,
I know you have seen bad bleeders in your years of experience and being in the business. In the hundred's of years prior to using lasix on race day there just wasn't enough definitive knowledge of bleeders to devise a helpful treatment. Hence the widespread administration of lasix began after the introduction of the fiberoptic endoscope in the 70's. Prior to that, bleeders were thought to be bleeding from their nostrils. With this new piece of equipment it was proven the bleeding originated from the lungs and that many horses bled to some degree during heavy respiration. It is for this reason lasix was adopted and used on race day. The worse a horse bled and the frequency with which it occurred left scarring in the lungs which reduced elasticity and lung performance during deep respiration adding to EIPH in itself. Some horses were so bad that they bled under normal respiration if the scarring was severe enough.
I have seen horses bleed horrifically after a race in my early days working for other horseman, as I am sure you have. The reason they got this bad was because they were not scoped to see what was going on. A horse gradually reaches the point where he bleed out his nostrils....that point is reached by not monitoring his internal activity from race to race. That is why a horse that shows a touch of blood is taken seriously because it is proven under continued stress they will reach a stage 4 bleeder status. I am not taking the high road when I say it is inhumane to race horses without lasix in todays world...just common sense and experience talking when I say it is essential in the preventing, healing or limiting of EIPH in race horses. In the industry today, some of the most respected horseman in the business agree with the use of race day lasix for a number or reasons. I like Graham Motions statement...."It's better the devil you know than the devil you don't know" when asked why Barry Iwin couldn't convince him not to run on lasix:>) TJ
Yes, I have had horses that bled by the bucket full - I culled them the next day.
Allen Jerkens pointed to a fitter, sturdier animal as another reason why bleeding was considered atypical in the 1950’s and 1960’s. He said none of his good horses were bleeders.
“Horses worked a lot harder in those days,” he said. “The strain on them in the race wasn’t as much as the strain is on them now. They trained almost as hard in the morning as they did when they ran.”
The best horses would often work the full distance of an upcoming race five or six days before, breeze a half-mile two days out, and maybe even an eighth of a mile the morning of the race. As but one example, three days before Assault finished off the Triple Crown, Max Hirsch sent the colt out for a 12-furlong breeze in 2:32 at Belmont.
In summary, all horses bleed, and if we are going to race them, they are going to bleed more. Yes, controlling these episodes is necessary and humane, but Lasix is a shortcut that most likely diminishes proper skeletal development at its most crucial stages – and the same effects can be achieved through the conditioning protocol of the old timers.
http://thoroedge.wordpress.com/2011/11/ ... -bleeding/
I noticed you didn't address how lasix has improved racing or helped horses achieve a longer career.