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Dive into the research topics where Dagmar S. Trachsel is active.

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Featured researches published by Dagmar S. Trachsel.


Equine Veterinary Journal | 2010

Performance parameters and post exercise heart rate recovery in Warmblood sports horses of different performance levels.

C. Bitschnau; Thomas Wiestner; Dagmar S. Trachsel; Jörg A Auer; M. A. Weishaupt

REASONS FOR PERFORMING STUDY Standardised exercise tests are used for fitness evaluation of sports horses. Standards are described for Thoroughbreds and Standardbreds; however, limited information is available for Warmbloods. OBJECTIVES To establish normative standards of performance parameters and heart rate recovery (HRR) in Warmblood riding horses of different levels of fitness using a submaximal incremental exercise test (SIET) performed on a treadmill. METHODS A SIET was carried out with 29 healthy and treadmill-accustomed Warmbloods: eleven 3-day event horses (TDE) and 18 horses from the National Equestrian Centre (NEC) competing in amateur jumping and/or dressage events. After a warm-up phase, horses performed 2 stages at trot and 3-5 stages at gallop at 6% incline. The first stage lasted 120 s, all others 90 s. Velocity (V) and heart rate (HR) were measured continuously and blood lactate concentration (LAC) at the end of each exercise stage. V at HR 150 and 200 beats/min (V(150), V(200)), V and HR at 2 and 4 mmol/l LAC (V(2), V(4) and HR(2), HR(4), respectively) were calculated and compared between discipline groups. For reference values, horses were divided on the basis of the V(4) -results in good (GP) and average performers (AP) (performance groups). Five minute passive HRR was compared between performance groups. Fifteen NEC horses were retested within 1-3 months. Groups were compared with t tests and P < 0.05 considered significant. RESULTS Three-day event horses had higher V(150), V(2) and V(4) values than NEC. GP had higher values in all performance parameters compared to AP. No differences were found between test and retest. GP mean recovery HR was different from that of AP from 120 s of recovery onwards. CONCLUSION Treadmill SIETs are suitable to objectify aerobic capacity in Warmblood riding horses. Normative standards were assessed for well and averagely-trained horses. The results can be referred to when diagnosing patients with exercise intolerance.


Veterinary Journal | 2012

Plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentrations in horses with heart disease: a pilot study.

Dagmar S. Trachsel; Beat Grenacher; M. A. Weishaupt; Colin C. Schwarzwald

Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is a cardiovascular biomarker that might be useful in assessing the severity of cardiac disease in horses. Plasma ANP concentrations (Cp(ANP)) were compared between horses with heart disease but normal chamber size and function (Group A; n=6), horses with heart disease associated with left atrial (LA) enlargement, LA dysfunction, and/or left ventricular (LV) enlargement (Group B; n=5), and horses with no clinically apparent cardiovascular disease (Group C; n=13). The median (min-max) for Cp(ANP) was significantly higher in Group B (53.5 (36.0-70.7) pg/mL), compared to Group A (12.5 (6.3-19.8) pg/mL) and Group C (13.4 (7.2-34.0) pg/mL). Backwards stepwise multiple linear regression showed that Cp(ANP) in horses with heart disease was related to LA dimensions, but not to LV size, LA function, and LV function. The results indicated that Cp(ANP) in horses might be useful in detecting LA enlargement and that Cp(ANP) could be related to the severity of cardiac disease. Larger prospective studies are necessary to confirm these results.


Journal of Veterinary Cardiology | 2013

Atrial natriuretic peptide and cardiac troponin I concentrations in healthy Warmblood horses and in Warmblood horses with mitral regurgitation at rest and after exercise.

Dagmar S. Trachsel; Colin C. Schwarzwald; C. Bitschnau; Beat Grenacher; M. A. Weishaupt

OBJECTIVE Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and cardiac troponin I (cTnI) serve as biomarkers for increased cardiac pressure/volume loading and for myocardial stress or damage. The objective was to describe the time course of plasma ANP concentrations (CpANP) and plasma cTnI concentrations (CpcTnI) in horses with mitral regurgitation (MR) compared to healthy horses at rest and after exercise, and to describe the relationship of CpANP with cardiac dimensions and intracardiac pressures. ANIMALS 15 healthy Warmblood horses and 7 Warmblood horses with MR. METHODS Cardiac dimensions at rest were measured using echocardiography. All horses underwent standardized treadmill exercise. Biomarker concentrations and intracardiac pressures were measured at rest and after exercise. Hypotheses were tested using statistical methods. The level of significance was P < 0.05. RESULTS Horses with MR showed increased left atrial (LA) and left ventricular (LV) dimensions but similar exercise capacity compared to healthy horses. Pulmonary capillary wedge pressures (PCWP) and CpANP increased with exercise. Horses with MR had higher PCWP and higher CpANP at rest and after exercise compared to healthy horses, with the maximum difference in CpANP reached 10 min after exercise. CpANP was significantly related to PCWP and - although inconsistently and only in healthy horses - to echocardiographic indices of LA and LV size and function. CpcTnI was low throughout the study in both groups. CONCLUSIONS CpANP is increased in horses with MR and is related to LA pressures and to left heart dimensions. MR is not necessarily associated with exercise intolerance and exercise-induced myocardial stress or damage.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2014

Analytic validation and comparison of three commercial immunoassays for measurement of plasma atrial/A-type natriuretic peptide concentration in horses.

Dagmar S. Trachsel; Colin C. Schwarzwald; Beat Grenacher; M. A. Weishaupt

Measurement of atrial/A-type natriuretic peptide (ANP) concentrations may be of use for assessment of cardiac disease, and reliable data on the analytic performance of available assays are needed. To assess the suitability for clinical use of commercially available ANP assays, intra-assay and inter-assay coefficient of variation and dilution parallelism were calculated for three immunoassays (RIAPen, RIAPhoen, and an ELISAPen) using blood samples from healthy and diseased horses to cover a wide range of ANP concentrations. Further, agreement between assays was assessed using linear regression and Bland-Altman analyses. For all assays, precision was moderate but acceptable and dilution parallelism was good. All assays showed analytic performance similar to other immunoassays used in veterinary medicine. However, the results from the three assays were poorly comparable. Our study highlights the need for an optimised species-specific assay for equine samples.


Journal of Veterinary Cardiology | 2016

Differences in the electrocardiographic QT interval of various breeds of athletic horses during rest and exercise

Philip J. Pedersen; M. Karlsson; Mette Flethøj; Dagmar S. Trachsel; Joergen K. Kanters; Dan A. Klaerke; Rikke Buhl

OBJECTIVES Quantitative measurements of cardiac repolarization, defined as the electrocardiographic QT interval, have important diagnostic implications in humans, as irregularities can trigger potentially fatal ventricular tachyarrhythmia. In both humans and horses, cardiac repolarization is influenced to some extent by heart rate, age, body weight (BW), sex, autonomic tone, and environment. In horses, there is substantial inter-breed variation in size and training, and the aims of this study were therefore to determine the best model describing the QT to RR relationship in breeds of various athletic horses and to test for differences in the QT interval. ANIMALS Ten Icelandic horses, 10 Arabian horses, 10 Thoroughbreds, 10 Standardbreds, six Coldblood trotters, 10 Warmbloods (dressage) and 10 Warmbloods (show jumping). All horses were geldings. METHODS QT intervals were measured from resting to peak exercise level and plotted against RR intervals. Data points were fitted with relevant regression models, and the effect of breed, BW, and estimated exercise intensity was examined. RESULTS For all breeds in this study, the QT interval was best described as a function of RR by the piecewise linear regression model. The breed of horse had a significant effect on the model. There was no systematic effect of BW or estimated exercise intensity, but a high inter-horse variability was observed. CONCLUSIONS The equine QT interval should preferably be corrected for heart rate according to breed. In addition, the results indicate that equine studies of the QT interval must be designed to eliminate the influence of a large inter-horse variation.


Frontiers in Veterinary Science | 2017

Agreement between Electrocardiogram and Heart Rate Meter Is Low for the Measurement of Heart Rate Variability during Exercise in Young Endurance Horses

Augustin Lenoir; Dagmar S. Trachsel; Mohamed Younes; Eric Barrey; Céline Robert

Analysis of the heart rate variability (HRV) gains more and more importance in the assessment of training practice and welfare in equine industry. It relies on mathematical analyses of reliably and accurately measured variations in successive inter-beat intervals, measured as RR intervals. Nowadays, the RR intervals can be obtained through two different techniques: a heart rate meter (HRM) or an electrocardiogram (ECG). The agreement and reliability of these devices has not been fully assessed, especially for recordings during exercise. The purpose of this study was to assess the agreement of two commercially available devices using the two mentioned techniques (HRM vs ECG) for HRV analysis during a standardized exercise test. Simultaneous recordings obtained during light exercise and during canter with both devices were available for 36 horses. Data were compared using a Bland–Altman analysis and the Lin’s coefficient. The agreement between the assessed HRV measures from the data obtained from the ECG and HRM was acceptable only for the mean RR interval and the mean heart rate. For the other studied measures (SDNN, root mean square of successive differences, SD1, SD2, low frequency, high frequency), the agreement between the devices was too poor for them to be considered as interchangeable in these recording conditions. The agreement tended also to be worse when speed of the exercise increased. Therefore, it is necessary to be careful when interpreting and comparing results of HRV analysis during exercise, as the results will depend upon recording devices. Furthermore, corrections and data processing included in the software of the devices affect largely the output used in the subsequent HRV analysis; this must be considered in the choice of the device.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2017

Molecular cloning and functional expression of the K+ channel KV7.1 and the regulatory subunit KCNE1 from equine myocardium

Philip J. Pedersen; Kirsten Thomsen; Jon B. Flak; Maria de los Angeles Tejada; Frank Hauser; Dagmar S. Trachsel; Rikke Buhl; Theodore S. Kalbfleisch; Michael Scott DePriest; James N. MacLeod; Kirstine Calloe; Dan A. Klaerke

BACKGROUND The voltage-gated K+-channel KV7.1 and the subunit KCNE1, encoded by the KCNQ1 and KCNE1 genes, respectively, are responsible for termination of the cardiac action potential. In humans, mutations in these genes can predispose patients to arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death (SCD). AIM To characterize equine KV7.1/KCNE1 currents and compare them to human KV7.1/KCNE1 currents to determine whether KV7.1/KCNE1 plays a similar role in equine and human hearts. METHODS mRNA encoding KV7.1 and KCNE1 was isolated from equine hearts, sequenced, and cloned into expression vectors. The channel subunits were heterologously expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes or CHO-K1 cells and characterized using voltage-clamp techniques. RESULTS Equine KV7.1/KCNE1 expressed in CHO-K1 cells exhibited electrophysiological properties that are overall similar to the human orthologs; however, a slower deactivation was found which could result in more open channels at fast rates. CONCLUSION The results suggest that the equine KV7.1/KCNE1 channel may be important for cardiac repolarization and this could indicate that horses are susceptible to SCD caused by mutations in KCNQ1 and KCNE1.


Equine Veterinary Journal | 2012

Association of admission L-lactate concentration in hospitalised equine neonates with presenting complaint, periparturient events, clinical diagnosis and outcome: a prospective multicentre study.

A. Borchers; Pamela A. Wilkins; P. M. Marsh; J. E. Axon; J. Read; C. Castagnetti; L. Pantaleon; C. Clark; L. Qura'n; R. Belgrave; Dagmar S. Trachsel; M. Levy; Daniela Bedenice; Montague Newton Saulez; Raymond C. Boston


Equine Veterinary Journal | 2010

Observer agreement for detection of cardiac arrhythmias on telemetric ECG recordings obtained at rest, during and after exercise in 10 Warmblood horses

Dagmar S. Trachsel; C. Bitschnau; Nina M. Waldern; M. A. Weishaupt; Colin C. Schwarzwald


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2004

Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic effects of amiodarone in plasma of ponies after single intravenous administration.

Dagmar S. Trachsel; P Tschudi; Christopher J. Portier; M Kuhn; Wolfgang Thormann; G Scholtysik; Meike Mevissen

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Dan A. Klaerke

University of Copenhagen

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Rikke Buhl

University of Copenhagen

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A. Giraudet

École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort

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C. Robert

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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D. Maso

École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort

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