Gamebird
Well-Known Member
Personally if my horse made a noise at the lower levels and I intended to try to get it to CCI4* I would get it a wind op ASAP.
Tie backs and hobdays are commonplace in the racing industry. Sprinter Sacre and Denman both had wind ops.
I very much doubt either the 4* horses or the racehorses made an audible noise. Most are investigated as a result of subtle drops in performance, often at the limits of endurance. For example horses that are fine round 3/4* track of around 10mins but seem to 'die' at the end of a very hilly and long track or one that is 11mins. The racehorses are often the ones travelling well for 2m 4f but the jockey finds the tank empty when pushed in the last furlong, or when they're stepped up to 3 miles. They are almost never 'roarers' and a problem is often not even suspected until the horse is really pushed. In the case of 4* horses it is extremely unlikely that there will have been anything to notice when they were at Novice.
Lots of horses that do actually make a noise cope perfectly well to a certain level - eg. one I knew that was fine, and making times, at BE100. The suspicion is that it may have struggled with the times at Nov but that wasn't an issue as neither the horse nor the jockey had the ability nor inclination to move up. Horses making an audible noise may well be fine at the levels that most people wish to event at, though scoping may be prudent. Static scoping (at rest) is adequate for cases of laryngeal paralysis. Overground endoscopy (whilst galloping) is generally used for the more dynamic airway conditions such as DDSP, aryepiglottic entrapment etc.
For what it's worth I have a horse which makes a mild noise. He has made XC times at BE Nov and is an extremely fast team-chase horse. He has never seemed to struggle and I perceive no problems with his performance so I have done nothing about it.
OP - there is no reason why your horse shouldn't event, at least to a level, but I'd at least get him scoped and graded and have the discussion. If indicated surgery is generally done standing with laser these days and the horse can be back galloping in 5-6 weeks.