Marnie
Well-Known Member
My big cob mare was struck with laminitis towards the end of June. She is 22, it is the first time she has ever had it and it was totally unexpected. She has been tested for a number of metabolic conditions but no apparent cause. She wasn't really overweight and has been on richer grass in the past.
She has been x rayed twice, first time showed a very small amount of rotation. She became more uncomfortable so I arranged to have her x rayed a second time - by the time she was x rayed, she was actually more comfortable. Rotation had increased - the vet didn't give me a %, but said it had gone from 2/10 to 4/10. The fact that she was more comfortable suggested things had stabilised.
After a period of time after the first x ray with no shoes, she is currently shod in wide webbed shoes. She is on 1 bute and 10 paracetamol twice a day, on a deep shavings bed and having 1 1/2 hours turnout in a muzzle. She occasionally missteps on turning or on hard ground but generally looks pretty sound, isn't weight shifting etc. The pain relief is being reduced.
When I spoke to the vet yesterday to check that she could have her shoes re-done, he suggested heart bars. The farrier came today and said that he could put heart bars on but he would have to make them as he wouldnt be able to buy them large enough for her feet.
Couple of questions... Can you really not buy large heart bars 'off the shelf'? My previous experience from years ago (via a friends pony) was that they had to be refitted very regularly to be effective - about every 2 weeks, is that correct? Her feet had grown quite a lot in the last 5 weeks and she had laid down a lot of sole and frog.
Part of me thinks that she is making good progress as she is at the moment and it may cause more problems to change now.
Any thoughts welcomed!
She has been x rayed twice, first time showed a very small amount of rotation. She became more uncomfortable so I arranged to have her x rayed a second time - by the time she was x rayed, she was actually more comfortable. Rotation had increased - the vet didn't give me a %, but said it had gone from 2/10 to 4/10. The fact that she was more comfortable suggested things had stabilised.
After a period of time after the first x ray with no shoes, she is currently shod in wide webbed shoes. She is on 1 bute and 10 paracetamol twice a day, on a deep shavings bed and having 1 1/2 hours turnout in a muzzle. She occasionally missteps on turning or on hard ground but generally looks pretty sound, isn't weight shifting etc. The pain relief is being reduced.
When I spoke to the vet yesterday to check that she could have her shoes re-done, he suggested heart bars. The farrier came today and said that he could put heart bars on but he would have to make them as he wouldnt be able to buy them large enough for her feet.
Couple of questions... Can you really not buy large heart bars 'off the shelf'? My previous experience from years ago (via a friends pony) was that they had to be refitted very regularly to be effective - about every 2 weeks, is that correct? Her feet had grown quite a lot in the last 5 weeks and she had laid down a lot of sole and frog.
Part of me thinks that she is making good progress as she is at the moment and it may cause more problems to change now.
Any thoughts welcomed!