Laura1812
Well-Known Member
Help!!
I have inadvertantly just taken on a Strassered horse - he is a new horse on a yard that I already trim on and when I went to trim other horses he was flat out in the field with an abscess - leg blown up the whole schebang...
I was asked my opinion on what I would do - so basically the horse was brought in (could barely walk), hot tubbed in epsom salts, poulticed, and given bute. I know the whole bute thing, but this actually was in so much pain it wasn't fair to not give pain relief. Vet is coming today.
Soles are paper thin -flexible to me just pushing with my thumbs - is walking on heels (slightly underrun) and toe callous - no wall, outer or inner any where near the ground. Quarters have previously been scooped, but horse has not had a trim for 8 weeks (to look at it basically has no foot - looks like its foot was hacked away yesterday and this is after 8 weeks growth), toes dumped, although flaring at the front.
The most odd thing is that there are quarter cracks (large ones) running from the ground to the coronary band on the lateral side of every hoof, front and back. There is not excessive flaring, or a clover shaped hoof that you would normally expect with quarter cracks.
Have any of you seen anything like this before? Any ideas on cause?
My main theory ATM is that they are due to just general complete lack of structure in the foot - virtually no inner wall - thin outer wall that has been dumped away at the toe. The toe can't be functioning correctly becuse of this so i'm guessing the quarters have taken most of the impact and they cant cope either?
The strasser trimmer used to trim every 5 weeks and heavily scooped the quarters which kept the cracks under control although they were always there. This horse always abscessed on more than one foot after every trim.
Poor owner was told that it was because the foot was so unhealthy before Strasser lady took it on - she is just uncovering abscesses that were waiting to come out?!!
Anyway, ideas on the cracks would be appreciated and this horse is esentially lame on all 4 feet.
I have inadvertantly just taken on a Strassered horse - he is a new horse on a yard that I already trim on and when I went to trim other horses he was flat out in the field with an abscess - leg blown up the whole schebang...
I was asked my opinion on what I would do - so basically the horse was brought in (could barely walk), hot tubbed in epsom salts, poulticed, and given bute. I know the whole bute thing, but this actually was in so much pain it wasn't fair to not give pain relief. Vet is coming today.
Soles are paper thin -flexible to me just pushing with my thumbs - is walking on heels (slightly underrun) and toe callous - no wall, outer or inner any where near the ground. Quarters have previously been scooped, but horse has not had a trim for 8 weeks (to look at it basically has no foot - looks like its foot was hacked away yesterday and this is after 8 weeks growth), toes dumped, although flaring at the front.
The most odd thing is that there are quarter cracks (large ones) running from the ground to the coronary band on the lateral side of every hoof, front and back. There is not excessive flaring, or a clover shaped hoof that you would normally expect with quarter cracks.
Have any of you seen anything like this before? Any ideas on cause?
My main theory ATM is that they are due to just general complete lack of structure in the foot - virtually no inner wall - thin outer wall that has been dumped away at the toe. The toe can't be functioning correctly becuse of this so i'm guessing the quarters have taken most of the impact and they cant cope either?
The strasser trimmer used to trim every 5 weeks and heavily scooped the quarters which kept the cracks under control although they were always there. This horse always abscessed on more than one foot after every trim.
Poor owner was told that it was because the foot was so unhealthy before Strasser lady took it on - she is just uncovering abscesses that were waiting to come out?!!
Anyway, ideas on the cracks would be appreciated and this horse is esentially lame on all 4 feet.
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