Shared Science: Human and Equine Health Similarities

Studying diseases across species can benefit horses as well as people.
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Shared Science: Human and Equine Health Similiarities
There are many similarities between veterinary medicine and human medicine, particularly when it comes to horses. | Photo: iStock

Studying diseases across species can benefit horses as well as people

Similarities between veterinary medicine and human medicine abound, particularly when it comes to horses. Horses, after all, suffer from many of the same conditions people do: cardiovascular disease, salmonellosis, Lyme disease, joint disease, the eye disease uveitis, tendon issues, and cancers such as melanoma. The two species also exhibit similar clinical signs, even though the root conditions can be different. For example, equine grass sickness and Alzheimer’s; self-mutilation in horses and cutting disorders in humans; foal rejection in mares and postpartum depression in women; equine metabolic syndrome in horses and diabetes in people; and asthma in humans versus what was classically called heaves in horses.

Enter the “One Health” movement, which has evolved over the years to mean “one medicine for all” and involves the collaboration of more than 850 physicians, osteopaths, veterinarians, nurses, dentists, health officials, behaviorists, and environmental and other scientists.

Craig Carter, DVM, PhD, Dipl. ACVPM, DSNAP, is the director of the University of Kentucky’s Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, as well as a visiting professor in the school’s College of Public Health, in Lexington. As such, he researches and teaches One Health principles

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Sarah Evers Conrad has a bachelor’s of arts in journalism and equine science from Western Kentucky University. As a lifelong horse lover and equestrian, Conrad started her career at The Horse: Your Guide to Equine Health Care magazine. She has also worked for the United States Equestrian Federation as the managing editor of Equestrian magazine and director of e-communications and served as content manager/travel writer for a Caribbean travel agency. When she isn’t freelancing, Conrad spends her free time enjoying her family, reading, practicing photography, traveling, crocheting, and being around animals in her Lexington, Kentucky, home.

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