EventingMum
Well-Known Member
I wondered if anyone had any experience of a horse fracturing their lower jaw?
We were returning from a dressage competition yesterday only a short half hour journey away. Just a few hundred yards from home there was a slight noise from the horses, at the time I assumed that one had given a little kick out, nothing more as both travel well usually. However when we dropped the ramp my son unloaded the mare and I went to undo the partition to get Sam out I saw a lot of blood around his mouth.
Initially I assumed he had bitten his tongue but it soon became clear that his jaw was mis-aligned. Son managed to hold the jaw to stabilise it - fortunately he has a good knowledge of oral anatomy being an EDT - and vet came within 20mins only to confirm what we already knew. We spent the evening at Weipers Centre (Glasgow Vet School) while they x rayed and wired his jaw. It was a compound fracture on one side and closed on the other and they initially thought it would be reasonably straight forward to wire to the tush on one side and the molars on the side where it was fractured behind the tush. However it was more difficult than the x rays indicated and took nearly four hours to do and whilst doing it they inadvertently fractured it further back so both sides are now wired to the molars.
Today poor Sam is very sore and swollen, he is also not happy with the vet school food but did perk up when I took some of his own feed and was desperate for a cuddle. He is to have the wires in for at least 8 weeks, assuming they hold and no complications set in with bone slivers needing to be removed. Hopefully we will get him home in the next week or so and will monitor the wires ourselves. However he is always very mobile with his jaw, he does a great rabbit impression twitching his nose and loves to mouth things so I am concerned this habitual movement will cause problems with his recovery. In fact we think this was the cause of the injury as it seems he had had his lead rope in his mouth in the lorry as it was covered in blood near the tie up ring.
Anyway to get to my point; any experiences of recovery from this type of injury would be most welcome. Also to possibly give us hope, have many horses returned to competitive work afterwards? As well as being a great character Sam is an intermediate eventer (did his first CCI2* last year) and means the world to us but doesnt take kindly to the quiet life. He is incredibly strong xc so bitting and nosebands may be an issue if we get that far. We know there is a long road to recovery (fingers crossed) and his welfare is the paramount consideration so any spare vibes going would be much appreciated. (Sorry for the length of this too)
We were returning from a dressage competition yesterday only a short half hour journey away. Just a few hundred yards from home there was a slight noise from the horses, at the time I assumed that one had given a little kick out, nothing more as both travel well usually. However when we dropped the ramp my son unloaded the mare and I went to undo the partition to get Sam out I saw a lot of blood around his mouth.
Initially I assumed he had bitten his tongue but it soon became clear that his jaw was mis-aligned. Son managed to hold the jaw to stabilise it - fortunately he has a good knowledge of oral anatomy being an EDT - and vet came within 20mins only to confirm what we already knew. We spent the evening at Weipers Centre (Glasgow Vet School) while they x rayed and wired his jaw. It was a compound fracture on one side and closed on the other and they initially thought it would be reasonably straight forward to wire to the tush on one side and the molars on the side where it was fractured behind the tush. However it was more difficult than the x rays indicated and took nearly four hours to do and whilst doing it they inadvertently fractured it further back so both sides are now wired to the molars.
Today poor Sam is very sore and swollen, he is also not happy with the vet school food but did perk up when I took some of his own feed and was desperate for a cuddle. He is to have the wires in for at least 8 weeks, assuming they hold and no complications set in with bone slivers needing to be removed. Hopefully we will get him home in the next week or so and will monitor the wires ourselves. However he is always very mobile with his jaw, he does a great rabbit impression twitching his nose and loves to mouth things so I am concerned this habitual movement will cause problems with his recovery. In fact we think this was the cause of the injury as it seems he had had his lead rope in his mouth in the lorry as it was covered in blood near the tie up ring.
Anyway to get to my point; any experiences of recovery from this type of injury would be most welcome. Also to possibly give us hope, have many horses returned to competitive work afterwards? As well as being a great character Sam is an intermediate eventer (did his first CCI2* last year) and means the world to us but doesnt take kindly to the quiet life. He is incredibly strong xc so bitting and nosebands may be an issue if we get that far. We know there is a long road to recovery (fingers crossed) and his welfare is the paramount consideration so any spare vibes going would be much appreciated. (Sorry for the length of this too)