Running like the wind: Studying asthma in horses helps lead human health insights

Man standing in front of a horse outdoors with his arms crossed, smiling
Dr. Laurent Couëtil, a Purdue Veterinary Medicine professor of large animal internal medicine and equine asthma expert, studies asthma solutions that help both horses and humans breathe easier. (Purdue University photo/Kelsey Lefever)

Purdue Highlights PVM Equine Research and Dr. Laurent Couëtil in One Health Feature

As Purdue focuses attention on research that is part of the university’s One Health strategic initiative, the spotlight is shining on Purdue Veterinary Medicine studies linking animal health with human health.  One example, highlighted by the university this week, involves equine asthma research explained in an article by Purdue Brand Studio Senior Science Writer Brittany Steff.

Ask a person to picture someone with asthma, and despite famous asthmatic athletes including David Beckham and Emmitt Smith, they’ll likely picture a knobby-kneed kid clutching an inhaler on a park bench.

They certainly won’t picture a horse — and yet, a surprising number of horses struggle with asthma. Now, veterinarians are studying the condition to help horses and humans alike. Dr. Laurent Couëtil, an equine veterinarian and horse respiratory expert at the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine, studies asthma in horses, which has relevance for advances in human health.

Asthma afflicts nearly 1 in every 12 people in America, including 5 million children. It is one of the most common and costly human diseases in the U.S.

As it turns out, asthma in horses is much easier to study, leading to insights that may guide the way to therapies and treatments to help both humans and horses breathe easier.

“There are so many similarities between asthma in humans and asthma in horses,” Couëtil said. “Children tend to have a type of asthma we call atopic asthma, which they tend to grow out of. We see that same kind of asthma in very young horses, but not in older horses. In older horses, and in humans, one of the biggest triggers for asthma is dust in the environment. And that’s what we’ve found over and over again — it’s the dust. Managing that dust and medicating the symptoms are what we work on.”

As a member of the College of Veterinary Medicine faculty, Dr. Couëtil serves as a professor of large animal internal medicine, director of the equine research program, and director of the Donald J. McCrosky Equine Sports Medicine Center. His research is part of Purdue’s One Health initiative, which is a presidential initiative that involves research at the intersection of human, animal and plant health and well-being.

A gift horse

Couëtil, who grew up on a horse farm in Normandy, France, and colleagues formally identified equine asthma as a distinct condition in 2016. Asthma is an inflammation of the airways: they fill with mucus and swell, making it difficult for the body to get the oxygen it needs to live.

Asthma is notoriously difficult to diagnose because it is so easy to confuse with other conditions. In humans, diagnosis often involves tests measuring lung capacity, known as “peak flow tests,” which require the patient to take the deepest possible breath and blow the breath out for as long and as hard as possible to measure the amount their lungs can hold. Couëtil also developed a “peak flow test” for horses; however, it can only be done in his research laboratory and requires the horse to be sedated.

Man holding a medical device and standing next to a horse
Horses and humans use similar medicines — called corticosteroids and bronchodilators — to calm the inflammation caused by asthma flares. Horses use special nebulizers strapped to their noses, while humans use inhalers they can hold in their hands. (Purdue University photo/Kelsey Lefever)

But peak flow can vary due to a variety of conditions that have nothing to do with asthma: time of day, muscle condition, energy level, mood, stress, hormones, general well-being and whether the patient is currently in an asthma flare-up.

One of the only surefire ways to assess asthma is to conduct a test called a bronchoalveolar lavage, or BAL, a procedure that doctors and veterinarians also call a liquid biopsy. The process involves putting a long, thin, hollow tool down through the patient’s airways into their lungs and pumping saline through it, then sucking the liquid back up. The returned liquid includes cells from the lining of the lungs. When analyzed, those cells can tell veterinarians and doctors a great deal about the state of the pulmonary system — including whether the patient has asthma.

In humans and most other animals, this procedure can only be performed under deep sedation or general anesthesia. However, due to their unique anatomy, horses can undergo a BAL while they are awake and under only light sedation.

The ability to conduct a BAL in field conditions gives veterinarians a diagnostic capacity that human doctors treating asthma lack. They can directly assess what conditions aggravate the lung cells and to what degree. Studies of asthma in humans must rely on larger sample sizes, much larger datasets and much greater variances in the data to get similar confidences in their results.

While humans and horses do not share one-to-one correlations on what causes asthma, Couëtil’s research on horses illuminates sources of irritation as well as some preliminary possible treatments. The links could offer powerful insights into drivers of asthma in both horses and humans.

Healthy as a horse

In the middle of an asthma flare, often called an asthma attack, the first course of action is rescue — opening the airways and calming the inflammation. For a human, that’s usually accomplished with a handheld inhaler. Since horses lack thumbs, Couëtil and his team use a nebulizer strapped to the horse’s nose to deliver corticosteroids and bronchodilator medication — often the same medication used to treat a human asthma attack. Like a toddler or an infant who needs a nebulizer rather than an inhaler, horses need either a nebulizer or an adapter to use the same inhalers that humans with asthma use, since neither can consciously coordinate their breathing with the medication distribution.

Calming the inflammation before it gets to the point of emergency is a priority. One promising substance Couëtil and his team are investigating is fish oil rich in omega-3s.

In a double-blind study conducted with the help of racehorse trainers in Indiana, California, New Mexico and Florida, Couëtil’s lab tested a fish oil supplement in nearly 100 horses’ food to see if the omega-3 oils might help calm the inflammation in the lung cells in a way that helps ameliorate their asthma symptoms.

Horses fed with fish oil had reduced lung inflammation within four weeks, while horses fed with a look-alike placebo oil — to fool horses and suspicious trainers alike — saw none.

Additional studies are needed to see if the link continues to hold true in humans, though research by other teams is encouraging. But such a strong preliminary result is promising, exciting and enticing.

“The goal is better breathing,” Couëtil said. “If we can understand what’s causing the inflammation, the driving causes, we can reduce it. And a lot of the same things work in humans as in horses.”

Man standing in a hallway with horse stalls on both sides of him. He is smiling with his arms crossed.
Dr. Laurent Couëtil’s lab is the premier — and one of the only — labs in the world equipped to diagnose, track and study the causes of equine asthma. (Purdue University photo/Kelsey Lefever)

Writer(s): Brittany Steff | pvmnews@purdue.edu

Recent Stories

Purdue Veterinary Medicine’s Connection with Wildlife Rescue in Guatemala Highlighted during International Education Week

Hidden amid the dense forests near the shores of Lake Petén Itzá, the ARCAS Wildlife Rescue Center is one of Central America’s most active sanctuaries for endangered and trafficked wildlife. In addition to their conservation efforts, ARCAS (Asociación de Rescate y Conservación de Vida Silvestre) offers unparalleled hands-on experience for veterinary and biology students from around the world. The Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine has proudly collaborated with ARCAS for many years, and International Education Week this week (November 16-22) provided the perfect opportunity to showcase this invaluable educational partnership.

Immersive Mixed Reality Experience Helps Purdue Veterinary Students Learn Cardiac Physiology

First year Doctor of Veterinary Medicine students at the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine recently stepped into a new era of learning — an immersive Mixed Reality (MR) experience at Purdue’s Envision Center. This cutting-edge session allowed students to interact with a dynamic, 3D representation of the heart, deepening their understanding of cardiac physiology in ways traditional methods cannot match.

Feathered Fame: Purdue Veterinary Medicine Research Featured on Journal Cover

The Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences (VCS) at Purdue University is proud to announce that a recent study from its anesthesiology team has been selected as the cover feature for Veterinary Sciences (MDPI), Volume 12, Issue 11. Chosen from among 82 articles, the publication highlights the College of Veterinary Medicine’s growing impact in avian clinical research.

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

Time to shine a spotlight on some “paws-itively” amazing work by one of our newest Purdue Veterinary Medicine staff members, Jennifer Hartman, VCS Curriculum Technologist in the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences.

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

Today we are highlighting Rebecca Hoffman, BS, RVT, who is a veterinary technologist with the Bovine Field Service.

Learning Specialist Joins PVM Student Success Center Team

Purdue Veterinary Medicine’s Student Success Center is pleased to welcome Kelsey Luse Spille, who joined the team Monday, November 4, as a learning specialist.  In her new role, she will be supporting students with their academic needs while also serving as a member of the Veterinary Education Support Team (VEST), which assists faculty in developing inclusive teaching practices.

Purdue College of Veterinary Medicine Hosts Reception to Welcome New Dean Bret Marsh

Faculty, staff and students gathered at a reception in the Veterinary Medical Library Friday, November 8, to help extend a warm welcome the new dean of the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine, Dr. Bret Marsh.  The event marked the conclusion of the first week on the job for Dr. Marsh, who just started in the role Monday, November 4, after wrapping-up 30 years of service as Indiana State Veterinarian – the state’s top-ranking animal health leader.

Awareness Week to Shine Spotlight on Antimicrobial Resistance Next Week

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a growing, significant One Health issue across the world. The WHO estimates that AMR was directly responsible for 1.27 million global deaths and contributed to 4.95 million deaths, with additional significant economic costs. AMR affects all countries and all income groups, and to tackle this urgent problem, researchers, producers, and practitioners from all areas must address the critical shortage of new antimicrobial drugs, and the use of antimicrobial drugs in medicine, farming, and industry. The week of November 18-24 is US Antibiotic Awareness Week and World AMR Awareness Week, and the College of Veterinary Medicine is taking advantage of these national and global campaigns to raise awareness about AMR and antimicrobial stewardship, and to highlight some of the research and practices being conducted at the college to address AMR.

PVM Faculty Honored for Research Success with Purdue Seed for Success Acorn Awards

When Purdue University’s Office of Research honored the accomplishments and innovative ideas of a host of researchers this week, several Purdue Veterinary Medicine scholars were among those recognized. At a ceremony Wednesday, November 14, in the Purdue Memorial Union North and South Ballrooms, the annual Seed for Success Acorn Awards were presented to Purdue Principal Investigators (PIs) and co-PIs who secured research awards of $1 million or more for a single proposal in fiscal year 2024.

Unlocking the Mysteries of the Brain

Despite more than six decades of research in the field of neuroscience, many functions of the brain — the most complex organ in the human body — remain a mystery. Recent research conducted in the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine and the Bindley Bioscience Center revealed that scientists are one step closer to understanding the process that activates and deactivates specific proteins within our cells. This breakthrough could one day lead to enhanced treatments that may slow down or perhaps reverse the advance of neurogenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and multiple sclerosis.