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      • 2013
      • Introducing the Icons of Polo

        Jaeger-LeCoultre, a legend in movement

        May 8, 2013
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        May 2, 2013
      • World Polo Tour

        Facundo Pieres is the new Number 2

        April 24, 2013
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        April 17, 2013
      • Argentine Polo Association

        The board of directors approved Francisco Dorignac as next Chairman

        April 11, 2013
      • Road to the Final Four

        Ron Allen analyzes the last stage of the US Open

        April 8, 2013
      • Jaeger-LeCoultre Series 2013

        Jaeger-LeCoultre announce new partnership with Cowdray Polo Club

        April 4, 2013
      • A view on the US Open

        High Goal Horse Show

        April 1, 2013
      • Jaeger-LeCoultre joins WBFSH

        JLC will support the World Breeding Federation of Sport Horses

        March 26, 2013
      • International Polo Academy

        Shots at Goal and scoring opportunities

        March 26, 2013
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        Polo Republic 2013 season is coming up

        March 26, 2013
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        March 22, 2013
      • Peter Grace OBE

        Founder of Ascot Park Polo Club passed away

        March 18, 2013
      • The Sultan in Soto

        Polo Clinics at Santa María Polo Club

        March 13, 2013
      • The evolution of the polo pony

        From embryo transfers to clones

        March 5, 2013
      • Audi Awards

        Nominees to the Oscars of Polo

        March 2, 2013
      • A tribute to Norita

        Remembering the big mother of polo

        February 27, 2013
      • PQ International

        Winter Edition # 82

        February 18, 2013
      • Piaget in the Palm Beach Season

        Title Sponsor of the USPA Gold Cup

        February 18, 2013
      • Travel

        Lovely Switzerland in winter

        February 15, 2013
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        • Horses on travel
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      Horses on travel

      Polo ponies benefit on jet lag

      First study of its kind to investigate the effects of jetlag
      January 6, 2012
      By Aurora Eastwood
      
      Polo ponies are transported around the world almost as often as racehorses. But, unlike racehorses, they tend to stay in one place for several months, or permanently.
      
      It is a well known fact that polo ponies, when travelling from one hemisphere to another, don’t play as well in that first season, and come back the following year on significantly better form.
      
      Racehorses, on the other hand, fly across the world, race, and fly straight home with no loss in performance.
      
      Why is this? And is there anything we can do to mitigate these effects?
      
      Well, yes.
      
      Research conducted at the University of Bristol Faculty of Medical and Veterinary into the effects of travelling horses across different time zones threw up some startling results.
      
      Dr Domingo Tortonese, an Argentine vet and lifelong fan of polo who moved to the UK in the early 90’s, was the lead scientist.
      
      In short, travelling horses across time zones has a beneficial effect on performance. Travelling them across the Equator however, has the opposite effect.
      
      Therefore, in order to maximise performance, fly the ponies as close as possible to the date of the first match. Days, not months! 
      
      The accepted thinking of flying the horses several months early so that they can acclimatise actually has the opposite effect as the beneficial effect of the crossing of the time zones is lost, and the very slow process of adjusting to the cycles of the new hemisphere has begun.
      
      For the full explanation please read the following press release:
      
      Light dependency underlies beneficial jetlag in racehorses
      
      A new study has shown that racehorses are extremely sensitive to changes in daily light and, contrary to humans, can adapt very quickly to sudden shifts in the 24-hour light dark cycle, such as those resulting from a transmeridian flight, with unexpected benefits on their physical performance.
      
      The research led by academics in the University of Bristol’s Faculty of Medical and Veterinary Sciences is published in the Journal of Neuroendocrinology.
      
      This is the first study of its kind to investigate the effects of jetlag on the physiology and performance of racehorses under tightly controlled experimental conditions.  Horses are the only athletes, apart from humans, regularly flown across time zones for athletic competitions.
      
      Dr Domingo Tortonese, Senior Lecturer in Anatomy in the School of Veterinary Sciences, who led the study, said: "We tested the hypothesis that abrupt alterations in the 24-hour light dark cycle, such as those associated with the crossing of time-zones, would alter the molecular clockwork and neuroendocrine systems of racehorses with detrimental consequences on their athletic performance."
      
      "In humans, air travel-associated sudden changes in the 24-hour light-dark cycle disrupt biological rhythms with negative effects on cognitive and physical performance.  Indeed, jetlag has important implications for athletes who travel across time zones for competitive sporting events, particularly after an easterly flight."
      
      "Our study shows that racehorses are different from humans in that they rely on light cues for their daily rhythms of activity, rather than for the synchronisation of an endogenously generated rhythm to the 24-hour light dark cycle.  This light dependency underlies a rapid process of adaptation with critical scientific implications and unexpected practical benefits."
      
      Thoroughbred horses with previous race training were housed in light controlled rooms and put through a fitness program of daily sessions of exercise on a high speed treadmill at variable times of the day for three months.  They then experienced a shift in the 24-hour light dark cycle that mimicked an easterly flight across seven time zones.
      
      The 24-hour patterns of four clock genes, together with neuroendocrine systems involved in a variety of functions, including time measurement, homeostasis and the response to stress, were investigated before and after the shift.  The aerobic and anaerobic capacities were measured by standardised performance tests. Locomotor activity was also assessed continuously, under photoperiodic conditions and in the absence of light cues (constant darkness), to determine the expression and robustness of a 24-hour rest activity cycle. The speed of re-adaptation to a new light-dark cycle was also investigated. 
      
      Contrary to the prediction based on human and rodent data, the results show that whereas horses are extremely sensitive to sudden changes in the 24-hour light dark cycle, they can adapt very quickly to a phase shift. Importantly, this rapid adaptation is not accompanied by an increase in the level of stress, but by alterations in endocrine systems that favour an enhancement of the horse’s physical capacity during the process.
      
      The improvement in athletic performance following experimental jetlag resulted in the animals being able to run at full gallop for an additional 25 seconds before reaching fatigue.  This differs from humans who show a slow adjustment, particularly after an eastbound flight, with detrimental consequences on performance.  The difference between the two species can be attributed to the powerful masking effect of light on the horse’s daily locomotor activity, which, together with the absence of a robust sleep wake cycle, can be a part of a mechanism of adaptation to sudden changes in the environment.
      
      The results of this study have important practical implications, since equine athletes do not need to travel to be subjected to changes in daily light, and its beneficial consequences could help to reduce the level of injury in competitions.
      
      The research by the University of Bristol, in collaboration with academics from the University of Melbourne and the University of Cambridge, was supported by a research grant from the Horserace Betting Levy Board and by a Wellcome Trust Equipment Grant.
      
      Paper: Experimental jetlag disrupts circadian clock genes but improves performance in racehorses after light-dependent rapid resetting of neuroendocrine systems and the rest-activity cycle, Tortonese D J, Preedy D F, Hesketh S A, Webb H N, Wilkinson E S, Allen W R, Fuller C J, Townsend J, Short R V.  Journal of Neuroendocrinology 
      
      READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE IN THE NEXT ISSUE OF PQ INTERNATIONAL.
      
      
       
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