Upper Airway Function during Maximal Exercise in Horses with Obstructive Upper Airway Lesions Effect of Surgical Treatment

Abstract
Upper airway pressure was measured during maximal exercise in 10 Thoroughbred racehorses with naturally occuring upper airway obstruction. Left laryngeal hemiplegia and arytenoid chondropathy resulted substantial increases (30-40 cm H2O) in inspiratory upper airway pressure (PI), whereas complicated aryepiglottic entrapment and subepiglottic cysts produced only modest increases (15 cm H2O) in PI. Uncomplicated aryepiglottic entrapment and grade IV pharyngeal lymphoid hyperplasia produced only slight increases (3-5 cm H2O). In general, surgical procedures restored airway pressures to within normal limits. Subtotal arytenoidectomy improved but did not normalize airway pressures in horses with arytenoid chondropathy. Pharyngeal lymphoid hyperplasia appeared to have little effect on upper airway function.