Horse lame on soft ground and sound on hard ground any ideas

ebonyallen

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 April 2009
Messages
2,832
Location
Kent South East England
Visit site
Wonder if anyone can help, tonight one of our horses came in sound from the field, taken up to the sand school and went lame, brought back to yard trotted up road to have a good look sound again, then back to the school on the lunge lame. It is the nearside front no heat swelling lumps etc. Does anyone have any idea what this might be, thanks in advance.
 

LIP2806

Member
Joined
18 June 2011
Messages
17
Location
Hertfordshire
Visit site
Hi, I'm no expert but possibly a tendon? Tendons have to stretch further on soft ground. Also a horse is always more likely to look lame on a circle than on a straight line anyway.
Is the horse lame on one rein or both? Have you checked down the back of the tendons?
Hope I haven't stated the obvious! Hope your horse is well soon anyway :)
 

unbalanced

Well-Known Member
Joined
30 January 2011
Messages
1,142
Visit site
Does it make a difference if it is on the straight or turning? That would tell you whether you are looking at a foot or limb lameness. I agree with other posters though, get the vet. Navicular would show up as lame on a tight circle on a soft surface before anywhere else.
 

alsxx

Well-Known Member
Joined
7 January 2006
Messages
3,153
Location
Kent
Visit site
Normally that would indicate some kind of soft tissue injury. Best to call the vet out I'm afraid. :-( Hope your horse is better soon!
 

ebonyallen

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 April 2009
Messages
2,832
Location
Kent South East England
Visit site
Thanks every one, not my horse but a friends. She took her up the school at said she just did not feel right, was as if she was not walking properly in a straight line, she carried on for a bit and then she just fell in and was lame, even going up the long straight of the school. She was going to phone blacksmith tomorrow to see what he thought and to see if he would come out and have a look.
 
Joined
28 February 2011
Messages
16,451
Visit site
Ever the optimist here :D It could be a bruised sole or a hole in the bottom of the hoof where the horse has previously stood on a stone or the likes and punctured it. Thus the horse would be lame on a surface or soft ground where stuff is being packed up into the sole of the hoof but on hard ground no such thing happens.

On the down side, if any swelling or heat or uneasyness upon palpitation shows up in tendons or ligaments then this needs seen to by a vet asap.
 

cptrayes

Well-Known Member
Joined
4 March 2008
Messages
14,749
Visit site
As EKW says, this is often a bruised sole, abscess in the sole or frog, or thrush, especially if the horse is in shoes and the frog only touches the floor on soft going.
 

Rainbow01

Well-Known Member
Joined
6 September 2011
Messages
64
Location
Yorkshire
Visit site
Hi, my boy has an injury at the moment, symptoms sound kinda the same, he is slightly lame on the flat, but in the school on a circle is very lame. Had vet out and he has soft tissue damage (think someone else mentioned that earlier).

Obviously none of us are vets and havent seen the horse so prob just best to get checked out by the vet. Hope all is ok soon!
 

ebonyallen

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 April 2009
Messages
2,832
Location
Kent South East England
Visit site
As EKW says, this is often a bruised sole, abscess in the sole or frog, or thrush, especially if the horse is in shoes and the frog only touches the floor on soft going.

We had gone down this route thinking that it might be something to do with the hoof, when we looked nothing jumped out at you, will check first thing tomorrow I will tell her what everyone has suggested and see what she thinks, once again thank you every one :)
 

The Fuzzy Furry

🦄 🦄
Joined
24 November 2010
Messages
29,502
Location
Ambling amiably around........
Visit site
As others have said, likely to be soft tissue prob.

Had the same with big Fuzzy in July with lame on soft, fine on hard.
Thought it wasn't foot, but got farrier out next day to check (without telling him what I suspected) and he said it was above knee.
Vet happened to be doing a routine visit to adjacent yard & amazingly popped in for a quick natter on way past as farrier was still chatting to me. (never had this luck before!)
So, I prised him out of car & got him to give opinion. (vet & farrier work together often)
Vet diagnosed shoulder strain. Week off out in field on bute for 5 days. Also got physio out to give once over after the week. Trotted up fine 10 days later (I was away for the final 4 days of rest).

Sorry, wittering on, but do also look higher too, hope you get it sorted :)
 

cellie

Well-Known Member
Joined
22 September 2007
Messages
4,944
Visit site
My mare bruised her hoof on flint I knew she had hurt herself and jumped off.She was sound on firm ground but pressure of sand in her hoof in school made her lame.When farrier dug out hoof next time he shod the bruise was very plain to see.Hope its only bruising.:)
 

mr fields

Well-Known Member
Joined
23 September 2011
Messages
55
Visit site
a muscle injury also shows up on clearer on soft ground rather than hard ground. if i was you i would try box resting him and lettin him walk in the school for 20 mins a day if he will walk sensibly if not walk him in hand, if would try this before u get a vet out and if u can see an improvement then you know what you are looking at and if there isn`t an improvment then i would get a vet :) hope this helps
 

The Fuzzy Furry

🦄 🦄
Joined
24 November 2010
Messages
29,502
Location
Ambling amiably around........
Visit site
Fuzzy thanks for that, she was going to call him this evening, so if no joy there the next step will be the vet, but thanks for your advise :)


I was going to box rest big Fuzzy for 3 days or so to see how things progressed, but with the devine intervention of vet passing by, circumstances changed :) always an opportunist, me :D

Hope you get it sorted - whatever it happens to be :)
Who's have horses eh? ;)
 
Top