Traks
Well-Known Member
Hi there, just wondering what others have done with long term management of hock arthritis?
Our almost 15yr old pony had hock arthritis diagnosed last year in January, bilateral with the off hind being the worst. She had Arthramid injections to both hocks in February and was massively improved. She does mainly pony club jumping, rallies and hacking your typical pony club pony! She struggled a bit on the hard summer ground and started refusing jumps but we put it down to the hard ground and she was generally a lot better on a soft surface.
Fast forward to November, physio said she looked great compared to January but recommended a course of cartrophen to help her over the winter (was stabled a lot as last yard had minimal turnout) so we had that and she’s been looking very well indeed. Had the vet do a lameness check on her and he said she actually looked good, failed a flexion test but said for riding and what we were doing she’d be fine.
In December she Started refusing jumps at competitions (70-80cm) but never refused at home, lessons, clinics, arena hires etc so we carried on but stepped down the height back to 50-60cm competitively for now and seeing how she goes…never really got to the bottom of why she refuses at competitive things bar picking up on tension/nerves? She refused again on Sunday at a couple of fences at 60cm which she could really trot over so something is clearly not right.
Anyway today she’s clearly very stiff and unsound
particularly on that same leg. I’ve got the physio tomorrow by chance anyway so I’ll ask her to see what she thinks and call the vet tomorrow…
Insurance has paid out for arthritis and it’s now excluded so anything more we have to pay for ourselves. The vet did suggest some steroid injections into the hocks of things deteriorated further as Arthramid is so expensive….so I’m guessing this is our next step? I know steroids only work for 3-6 months so I would hope that this might help her in the short term.
Prior to the new lameness we were actually planning on moving on after the summer and getting something bigger and more competitive for my daughter. Obviously with full disclosure, although we hadn’t decided if we were going to go down the loan route or sell her (we are at livery and will struggle to afford 2). I guess can add retirement to the list of options
How long has your steroid management worked for? I suppose it depends what you are doing and how bad the arthritis is! I just wonder if we are doing too much with her although the vet said in December we weren’t but I’m not so sure..
Thank you!
Our almost 15yr old pony had hock arthritis diagnosed last year in January, bilateral with the off hind being the worst. She had Arthramid injections to both hocks in February and was massively improved. She does mainly pony club jumping, rallies and hacking your typical pony club pony! She struggled a bit on the hard summer ground and started refusing jumps but we put it down to the hard ground and she was generally a lot better on a soft surface.
Fast forward to November, physio said she looked great compared to January but recommended a course of cartrophen to help her over the winter (was stabled a lot as last yard had minimal turnout) so we had that and she’s been looking very well indeed. Had the vet do a lameness check on her and he said she actually looked good, failed a flexion test but said for riding and what we were doing she’d be fine.
In December she Started refusing jumps at competitions (70-80cm) but never refused at home, lessons, clinics, arena hires etc so we carried on but stepped down the height back to 50-60cm competitively for now and seeing how she goes…never really got to the bottom of why she refuses at competitive things bar picking up on tension/nerves? She refused again on Sunday at a couple of fences at 60cm which she could really trot over so something is clearly not right.
Anyway today she’s clearly very stiff and unsound
Insurance has paid out for arthritis and it’s now excluded so anything more we have to pay for ourselves. The vet did suggest some steroid injections into the hocks of things deteriorated further as Arthramid is so expensive….so I’m guessing this is our next step? I know steroids only work for 3-6 months so I would hope that this might help her in the short term.
Prior to the new lameness we were actually planning on moving on after the summer and getting something bigger and more competitive for my daughter. Obviously with full disclosure, although we hadn’t decided if we were going to go down the loan route or sell her (we are at livery and will struggle to afford 2). I guess can add retirement to the list of options
How long has your steroid management worked for? I suppose it depends what you are doing and how bad the arthritis is! I just wonder if we are doing too much with her although the vet said in December we weren’t but I’m not so sure..
Thank you!
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