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Update on dorsal displacement of the soft palate
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The clinical implications of this condition are three-fold: airflow obstruction, abnormal upper respiratory noise and dysphagia. DDSP results in a marked airway obstruction during exhalation (i.e. expiratory resistive breathing) [1,2] which in racehorses results in performance impairment quickly after the occurrence of palate displacement. Typically an abnormal upper respiratory noise of a ‘gurgling noise, rattling and rough noises’ is reported [3]. In sport horses abnormal upper respiratory noise may be the only complaint associated with this condition. This gurgling noise (i.e., also described as snoring or rattling noise) during exhalation has been associated with fluttering of the caudal free edge of the soft palate displacement ...
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Affiliation of the authors at the time of publication
Department of Clinical Sciences at Cornell University Hospital for Animals, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University,
Ithaca New York 14853 and Cornell Ruffian Equine Specialists (CRES), 111 Plainfield Ave., Elmont, New York 11003, USA.
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