Esperanza
New User
Hi,
I would appreciate any advise on the following. 12 weeks ago my gelding became slightly lame on his off fore. He had acute laminitis 3 years ago as he was overweight but since then has lived in paddocks that are strip grazes. We called to vet who took x-rays which showed slight rotation but this had not changed since he had laminitis originally. The vet said that our farrier had to change how he was trimming our horse and that once this was done, we would see an instant improvement. We called out our farrier and gave him the x-ray. 2 days later he was very lame but this time in his near fore. We called the vet out 3 times who said that all we could do was give him bute and " starve him" which I thankfully no better than to do. My gut instinct was that this lameness and laminitis was not becaused by his weight, he is thinner than ever before but that there was another issue. Also he is only lame in 1 foot which I know is unusual with Laminiti.Also the farrier had trimmed his feet right back to the white line in one go! We did some further research on line and found that when he was sore, styraphome pads and vet wrap gave him instant relief. We got a new farrier who said that his feet were completely unbalanced and that because of the way that his feet were being trimmed he was getting no support and that the issue was not his weight.
The problem is he has been on 2 bute for the last 12 weeks, after the new farrier came he became almost 100% sound so I cut back on 1 bute and 3 days later he was showing lameness. I now have a vet bill of £300 pounds for a vet that only comes and tells me that he is too fat and offers no other supprt. I am concerned that the continual bute will give him ulcers although he shows no signs of it and is a very happy horse. Also why is he not getting sound, should we be looking at another cause? He lives in barren paddock with a friend and has HI fi lite and soaked hay.
I am sorry that this is so long, but this has been going on so long! Any advise would be more than appreciated?

I would appreciate any advise on the following. 12 weeks ago my gelding became slightly lame on his off fore. He had acute laminitis 3 years ago as he was overweight but since then has lived in paddocks that are strip grazes. We called to vet who took x-rays which showed slight rotation but this had not changed since he had laminitis originally. The vet said that our farrier had to change how he was trimming our horse and that once this was done, we would see an instant improvement. We called out our farrier and gave him the x-ray. 2 days later he was very lame but this time in his near fore. We called the vet out 3 times who said that all we could do was give him bute and " starve him" which I thankfully no better than to do. My gut instinct was that this lameness and laminitis was not becaused by his weight, he is thinner than ever before but that there was another issue. Also he is only lame in 1 foot which I know is unusual with Laminiti.Also the farrier had trimmed his feet right back to the white line in one go! We did some further research on line and found that when he was sore, styraphome pads and vet wrap gave him instant relief. We got a new farrier who said that his feet were completely unbalanced and that because of the way that his feet were being trimmed he was getting no support and that the issue was not his weight.
The problem is he has been on 2 bute for the last 12 weeks, after the new farrier came he became almost 100% sound so I cut back on 1 bute and 3 days later he was showing lameness. I now have a vet bill of £300 pounds for a vet that only comes and tells me that he is too fat and offers no other supprt. I am concerned that the continual bute will give him ulcers although he shows no signs of it and is a very happy horse. Also why is he not getting sound, should we be looking at another cause? He lives in barren paddock with a friend and has HI fi lite and soaked hay.
I am sorry that this is so long, but this has been going on so long! Any advise would be more than appreciated?