Systematic review of the association between intrasynovial corticosteroid use and laminitis—What is the evidence?

summary of:
Systematic review of the association between intrasynovial corticosteroid use and laminitis—What is the evidence?
vet examining horse foot
Author(s):
Tokawa, P.K.A., Baccarin, R.Y.A. and Zanotto, G.
Published in:
Date:
January 2023
DOI:
Type of access:

Requires membership/payment

This article can be accessed via RCVS Knowledge Library Membership (click here).

Find out more about the benefits of our membership.
In our edition of: Apr 2023
In our categories of: equine

our summary:

Tokawa, P.K.A., Baccarin, R.Y.A. and Zanotto, G. (2023) Systematic review of the association between intrasynovial corticosteroid use and laminitis—What is the evidence? Equine Veterinary Education, 35 (5), pp. 265– 270.

The aim of this systematic review was to examine the published evidence relating to the incidence of laminitis in horses following the use of intrasynovial corticosteroids.

Published papers were identified following a literature search carried out in 2022 on three scientific databases. Following screening four studies were included in the systematic review, all of which were observational studies – two were retrospective cohort studies, one included both a retrospective and prospective cohort, and the fourth was a case series. In one study the corticosteroid was administered via the intrasynovial route alone, whilst the others involved several administration routes.

Three of the four studies were classified as high risk of bias using the using the methodological index for non-randomised studies (MINORS) tool mainly due to their retrospective design and missing or incomplete information.

The reported incidence of laminitis in horses following intrasynovial application in the studies was low and similar to the controls when these were included.

Limitations include the limited number of studies available regarding the incidence of laminitis in horses treated with intrasynovial corticosteroids, and that the quality of evidence in the available studies was weak.

Take Home

This systematic review showed there is currently a lack of high quality evidence on the incidence of laminitis in horses following the use of intrasynovial corticosteroids. The evidence which is available suggests that there is no association between intrasynovial corticosteroid injection and laminitis in horses without concurrent risk factors.

The following may also be of interest:

Claiming CPD for reading inFOCUS articles

Reading and reflecting on articles can count towards your CPD, and we have a template to help you with the process.

Image copyright attribute: edu1971

Join the discussion

We encourage discussion on all material highlighted in each edition of inFOCUS. Use the button below to join the conversation on Twitter and include your comment in the feed for this issue.

Twitter feed is not available at the moment.
0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.