Pain Measured

Horses don’t speak, but we can ‘hear’ what they’re telling us if we pay attention. That’s what pinned ears, tail swishing, and lip-licking are all about. Problems arise, though, with the our interpretations: one person can ‘hear’ something different than the next.

Temple Grandin recognized that subjectivity in the cattle industry, where terms like “Properly,” “Adequate,” “Sufficient,” and “Undue Pain and Suffering” once ruled the day.

“What do those terms mean?” she asked rhetorically.

Grandin helped bring measurable protocol to stockyards and slaughter facilities. As a result of her research and lobbying, an increasing number of plants and individual handlers are now scored on the percentage of animals in their care that run, fall, vocalize, and are moved by electric prod. She has arguably made that world a better place for those animals in their final moments. Read article.

Now, researchers have taken steps to quantify what horses ‘say’ about pain. In the recently published “Development of the Horse Grimace Scale (HGS) as a Pain Assessment Tool in Horses Undergoing Routine Castration“ an international team of scientists developed protocol for assessing and measuring horse pain as interpreted through facial expressions. Read their research.

This horse demonstrates low pain, according to HGS.

This horse demonstrates low pain, according to HGS.

They monitored 40 stallions undergoing castration. The studs were divided into two groups, receiving different medications before and after surgery. Another six horses were monitored and managed similarly, but did not undergo surgery. (They had their teeth floated or hooves trimmed.)

The changes in facial expressions were assessed and ranked using the Horse Grimace Scale before and after castration. The Horse Grimace Scale (HGS) asks, for example:

  • Are chewing muscles strained?
  • Are nostrils strained?
  • Is there tightening around the eye?
  • Are the ears back?
The same horse now shows significant pain, according to HGS

The same horse now shows significant pain, according to HGS

The group recorded video footage with two cameras in each stall and selected random still frames to grade the presence or absence of six indicators. Five trained observers evaluated and scored the facial expressions. The researchers pooled and tabulated the results, arriving at HGS scores for all of the horses, before, during, and after the procedures.

Only horses undergoing castration showed high HGS scores.

  • Does this study mean that ranchers, who routinely castrate horses in the field with no sedation or painkillers, are going to change their ways?
  • Might the findings lead to increased scrutiny of those practices which ignore or fail to acknowledge horses’ suffering?
  • Can it help vets, vet techs, trainers, and us Regular Joe horse owners with identifying horses’ discomfort in a wide array of scenarios?

Horses don’t fake it. We can take their expressions at face value and infer that they are experiencing pain. We also assume that heart rate and blood cortisol levels increase with pain. It should be noted that the researchers also collected heart rate and other physiological data in order to study the relationship of those changes with facial expression changes.

Developing a standard to recognize pain in horses is an excellent step towards treating them more humanely. In addition, the Horse Grimace Scale is easy to understand and requires no special equipment. Everyone – from veterinarians to barn workers – can learn to identify HGS markers.

Dr. Emanuela Dalla Costa

“I think that pain assessment in animals is really difficult and probably this is the reason why it is often underestimated. I hope that this study can help people to understand that horses can suffer from painful conditions,” said Dr. Emanuela Dalla Costa, co-author of the study, and a veterinarian and PhD at the University of Milan.

“Horses are a very expressive species. They communicate their emotions and feelings not only with the body posture, but also with their facial expressions. I personally hope that this method can help horse owners in identifying and assessing pain.”

Posted in Health, Management and tagged , .

3 Comments

  1. Humans are the most inhumane species to walk the planet. This article would make those who had a fit about the unattended haltered horse in a piece of artwork pass out!!

  2. Pain assessment is essential if you own a horse or you work around them. Pain indicates injury, illness, or is a reaction to something being done to them. Lip curling, biting at sides during saddling, head tossing, tail switching, shifting weight, even bucking and rearing can be added to the list of pain indicators. I won’t even attempt to address training methods or tack, but the ability to ‘read’ equine expressions of the face along with other behaviors related to pain will result in early intervention and treatment. That’s good for horse and human.

  3. I have a stallion that shows all the grimace scale indicators, yet its only when i ask if he wants a pat and he answers no, with a shake of his head, ears back, mouth clamped, ears pinned, and head goes vertical and tucks in, away from me.
    If someone took a photo at that exact moment he would be a 20 on this scale.
    I believe it is important to keep context in mind as he is completely different on a lead after a treat of a 🥕 or 🍎 :-).

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