A number of air quality factors in barns can make it harder for your horse to breathe, compromising his health and performance. How can you keep your barn's air clean and your horse's respiratory system healthy?
Sorry, the player was unable to load.
To play the media, try the following:
- Update your browser to a recent version
- Update your Flash plugin
- Download the media to play on your computer.
About the Experts
Dorothy Ainsworth, DVM, PhD
Dorothy Ainsworth, DVM, PhD (respiratory and exercise physiology), is a professor of medicine in the Department of Clinical Sciences at Cornell University. Her research interests include equine pulmonary (lung) disease and neonatal infectious disorders.
Melissa Mazan, DVM, Dipl. ACVIM
Melissa Mazan, DVM, Dipl. ACVIM, is an associate professor and director of the Equine Sports Medicine program at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine's Hospital for Large Animals (Tufts University). Lung function, she notes, is essential to an equine athlete’s success, and optimizing performance for competing horses is an important goal of hers. Mazan has extensive experience in the area of equine inflammatory airway disease, which affects up to 80% of stabled horses.
Related Articles
- Managing Bacterial Pneumonia in Adult Horses (AAEP 2011)
- Are Stabled Horses at Increased Risk for Developing Colic?
- 'Map' Airborne Particles in Barns to Minimize Airway Disease
- Air Quality in Barns Critical for Horse and Human Health
- Advancements in Understanding Airway Diseases
- Reducing Your Horse's Exposure to Dust
- Soaking Hay Key to Stable Dust Reduction
- Controlling Ammonia in Horse Stalls
- Study Shows Stall Cleaning Impacts Stable Air Quality
- Heaves Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prevention: AAEP 2008









