indie1282
Well-Known Member
Definitely stop riding him.
The longer you spend around horses the more you realise they can’t all be fixed and it’s usually less stressful for all concerned to give them a pat and say ‘happy retirement’
Ester- yes it looks exactly the same to me, when I showed the vets him doing this ( 3 vets) all said they think neurological but it went away so it can’t be.
9tails yes that is what I am seeing it’s like the right hind goes to far under then the left goes short possibly to take the weight off the right quicker :/
when he started doing this before I rested him for 2 weeks before his work up and they declared him sound.
Nudibranch - I’m really wondering about his si, perhaps that’s why the jock injections helped for a short while but actually it’s higher up, to me it just doesn’t look like it’s the hocks. We discussed a bone scan but vet said it will show either everything or nothing at all, sort of leading me to not doing it.
frustratingly he was rested around the time of the hock injections so it could have been the injections that helped or the rest.
when I hack him on the roads I won’t trot because of the arthritis but he feels a bit slow and short but not lame like he is in the video![]()
What i do know is his feltlocks x rayed clean, hocks mild arthritis (left worse than right but still mild) Passes flexion tests. Spine xrayed clean.
I wouldn't use up any more of your budget with your current vet.
Get a referral to a lameness specialist and go for a bone scan.
Good point. I'd ask for a referral to a good specialist vet who can do a thorough work up.Pretty sure vet should have been isolating the cause last time.
I would not be convinced that nerve blocking would be the way to go, especially if it might be mechanical or neuro.
when i was googleing her name it came up that she retired in Summer this year :/I'm late to this. Sorry you're both going through it.
I'd get him referred to Sue Dyson at the Animal Health Trust. She hasn't always had good news to tell me, but she's the one I trust implicitly to get to the bottom of what was going on with my horses. She'll do a full lameness work-up and you'll know where you stand.
when i was googleing her name it came up that she retired in Summer this year :/