jessicabeau1
Well-Known Member
anybody had any experience? whats the long term prognosis? can horse still be ridden eg hacked once rested/healed?
Thanks
Thanks
I assume this is a front foot? I am sorry to say we lost one to this injury some years ago but things have progressed. Have had another since who returned to hack for a while...
Have a search on here - lots of posts on these problems.
It is a case of rest, foot balance, remedial shoeing or barefoot rehab, IRAP, shockwave and/or steroid injections. These things along with very careful rehab show some results but everyone has their own ideas. Personally I would look at Sue Dyson at the AHT. she is an expert in this.
What I can say is it is a bit of a lottery and you need a fab vet and farrier.
Good luck.
I just wish barefoot REALLY was the magic cure- i have had Jacob barefoot- properly trimmed every 4 weeks and he stands with his feet as a pair- not pointing the bad one BUT is NOT any sounderI believe barefoot is definately the way forwards with navicular but when its coffin joints, its nowhere near as effective.
ETA anyone wishing to post or PM me about why dont i give up and shoot Jacob now- Please dont bother.
I really feel for you. Barefoot is certainly not a magic cure but I still believe it is the best thing for all horses. As he is now standing without pointing a toe he would seem to be more comfortable than he was before, so that, at least, is something positive. However as it is a joint involved then there is always the possibility that the joint has degenerated too far for it to recover. Barefoot can't cure things like arthritis but it can make those suffering more comfortable. Barefoot simply gives the body the best chance it can to repair itself i.e. we let nature do it's thing without human interference, let the body function as it evolved to do... humans like to think we can do better than nature but we're merely a tiny blip in the history of evolution of the natural world and the more we interefer and try to fix things, improve on nature etc etc the more damage we tend to do.
Thankyou- i agree with your points, especially re the state of the joint. When he had arthroscopy on the joint, he had extensive cartilage damage between P2 and P3. The surgical vet did the best they could to tidy it and thought there was an excellent chance of recovery..especially as we still had 2 syringes of IRAP for post-op care.My vet has literally spent hours on the phone/internet- even sending Jacob's details to experts in USA and South Africa- all at no charge to us BTW..
My farrier has 3 apprentices (at various stages of qualification), all of whom have done research etc on Jacobs feet. Everytime they come, we pour over the latest xrays, even thermographic and MRI scans. My farrier is the one who actually persuaded me to try barefoot. He has been for barefoot trimming instruction as its something he is absolutely fascinated in. He also does all the imprint range and even showed me some of the new "rocker" style shoes that are supposed to reduce the lateral shear on collateral ligaments BUT he still thinks barefoot is the way forwards. My friend in the next field has the barefoot trimmer and i am not at all happy with how her horses feet look- or how it moves..
I will however put my hands up and confess that i havent tried the holy grail of Rockley Farm rehab- sorry. My husband broke his back last year and cannot bear to be parted from his horse for the 6 months they would need him for. That doesnt make either of us cr*p horse owners
*awaits slap from admin for rude word*