Naiad
Member
My gorgeous horse was diagnosed with mild hock arthritis/bony spavin last fall 2010 via full lameness exam/joint block/xrays. He had a few episodes of lameness at trot pre-exam. We did a steroid injection and it worked for 6+ months. I ride low-level dressage with him (nothing collected yet), and since the hock injection we rode in a nice relaxed frame doing large patterns etc.
Fastforward to this summer. He started going intermittent lame at trot, and the lameness was more obvious. So I rested him initially, but then got another hock injection (the new vet preferred a different steroid) which did not help at all. So I was worried if something else was going on (ligament issue etc.), so my horse had a very thorough lameness workup done a few days ago to rule out other things (more nerve blocks, more xrays etc.). We ended up at bony spavin again - only the radiographic changes showed much deterioration of the arthritis, incl. relatively large bony spurs at front of lower hock bones etc. The vet thinks that his hock arthritis is bad enough now that hock injections may not control it any longer.
We could try one more hock injection using the initial steroid that had worked last fall, but I am not counting on that helping. I've been resting him for quite a bit of the summer and early fall, but in hindsight since I know that this was arthritis all along, this rest may not have helped matters so I am going to try some light walk work etc. to see if this helps.
My questions etc.:
(i) I would appreciate hearing anyone's stories of horses with bony spavin, especially those with notable lameness at trot.
(ii) What I cannot find out is how often "natural" hock fusion happens. Some sources say not often, some suggest that if I wait long enough that the bones will fuse, and my horse will become pain-free. But that this can take years. Again, I would like to hear about people's stories in this regard.
(iii) What about the drilling surgery to encourage hock fusion? Vets usually follow conservative route first but if hock injections don't work, then this is an option. Has anyone had this surgery for their horse or some horse they have heard about? Was it a success? How long did they wait for natural hock fusion to occur, before turning to surgery?
My biggest concern is that if the hock injections don't work any more due to degree of arthritic change, I've lost my main management tool (other than some conversative use of bute or other supplements - but if steroids won't work, then that says something about how severe things are). Riding aside, I don't like that my boy is sore in his paddock.
Fastforward to this summer. He started going intermittent lame at trot, and the lameness was more obvious. So I rested him initially, but then got another hock injection (the new vet preferred a different steroid) which did not help at all. So I was worried if something else was going on (ligament issue etc.), so my horse had a very thorough lameness workup done a few days ago to rule out other things (more nerve blocks, more xrays etc.). We ended up at bony spavin again - only the radiographic changes showed much deterioration of the arthritis, incl. relatively large bony spurs at front of lower hock bones etc. The vet thinks that his hock arthritis is bad enough now that hock injections may not control it any longer.
We could try one more hock injection using the initial steroid that had worked last fall, but I am not counting on that helping. I've been resting him for quite a bit of the summer and early fall, but in hindsight since I know that this was arthritis all along, this rest may not have helped matters so I am going to try some light walk work etc. to see if this helps.
My questions etc.:
(i) I would appreciate hearing anyone's stories of horses with bony spavin, especially those with notable lameness at trot.
(ii) What I cannot find out is how often "natural" hock fusion happens. Some sources say not often, some suggest that if I wait long enough that the bones will fuse, and my horse will become pain-free. But that this can take years. Again, I would like to hear about people's stories in this regard.
(iii) What about the drilling surgery to encourage hock fusion? Vets usually follow conservative route first but if hock injections don't work, then this is an option. Has anyone had this surgery for their horse or some horse they have heard about? Was it a success? How long did they wait for natural hock fusion to occur, before turning to surgery?
My biggest concern is that if the hock injections don't work any more due to degree of arthritic change, I've lost my main management tool (other than some conversative use of bute or other supplements - but if steroids won't work, then that says something about how severe things are). Riding aside, I don't like that my boy is sore in his paddock.
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