HoneyMonster1
Active Member
This will probably be quite long so I apologise in advance!
Around the beginning of April, my horse became difficult with picking up her off hind. She would pick it up and hold it for a while, but wrench it off you and glue it to the floor after a few seconds. Now she is a true mare, and stubborn is her middle name so we assumed that she was simply being difficult- not picking up feet is something she's done before, and with persistence she suddenly decides she will allow us to pick them out!
However, this continued for a few weeks and we began to get suspicious that there may be an issue. Around this time, she needed shoeing, so we decided we would ask the farrier if he could tell if there was any issue. The farrier came and had the same problems with picking up this foot, to the point where he was unable to shoe her hind feet. This resulted in her back shoes being taken off. She was not in any way lame though, and the foot itself is very healthy. She will pull it forwards, but not flex it backwards, and this is how the farrier was able to take her shoes off.
At this point, we rang the physio, who came and found multiple points of muscle tightening, and treated accordingly. Also, she saw the horse was not crossing her hind feet too well, along with a bit of stiffness in that leg, but nothing major that was causing obvious lameness. She found particular tension in her hindquarters on the side of the foot that she won't pick up. After treatment, she suggested a week of rest, with reassessment today- and today, she still would not pick up the foot (I should mention that by this point she is no longer picking up and slamming down, but moving around to evade you even trying to pick it up, although there is no swelling and she is very happy for you to touch the leg if you don't try to pick it up). Today, the physio found that all areas she had treated had seen great improvements, other than her hindquarters, where she had tightened up dramatically again, although she had seen some very minor improvements there.
So she treated her again today, but with the advice that if she was not making any improvements towards picking it up by next week, we ring the vet. It is also worth noting that the physio noticed a slight toe dragging in the off hind, although she is now crossing her hind feet well when turning in small circles.
I suppose all I'm really looking for is any potential diagnosis. The physio said it could be a deep tissue muscle tear but that this was unlikely as there is very minor muscle wastage, but she would expect to see much more if this was the case. Could it be hock arthritis- despite the fact it seems to have manifested very quickly? Or is it more likely that it is genuinely just a painful twist that will take more sessions of physio to sort out?
Any advice/ ticks to try in the meantime to try to get any improvement? I will be ringing the vets on monday if I cannot get her to even lift it slightly by this weekend, but I am keeping my fingers crossed it is nothing really serious!
Thank you!
Around the beginning of April, my horse became difficult with picking up her off hind. She would pick it up and hold it for a while, but wrench it off you and glue it to the floor after a few seconds. Now she is a true mare, and stubborn is her middle name so we assumed that she was simply being difficult- not picking up feet is something she's done before, and with persistence she suddenly decides she will allow us to pick them out!
However, this continued for a few weeks and we began to get suspicious that there may be an issue. Around this time, she needed shoeing, so we decided we would ask the farrier if he could tell if there was any issue. The farrier came and had the same problems with picking up this foot, to the point where he was unable to shoe her hind feet. This resulted in her back shoes being taken off. She was not in any way lame though, and the foot itself is very healthy. She will pull it forwards, but not flex it backwards, and this is how the farrier was able to take her shoes off.
At this point, we rang the physio, who came and found multiple points of muscle tightening, and treated accordingly. Also, she saw the horse was not crossing her hind feet too well, along with a bit of stiffness in that leg, but nothing major that was causing obvious lameness. She found particular tension in her hindquarters on the side of the foot that she won't pick up. After treatment, she suggested a week of rest, with reassessment today- and today, she still would not pick up the foot (I should mention that by this point she is no longer picking up and slamming down, but moving around to evade you even trying to pick it up, although there is no swelling and she is very happy for you to touch the leg if you don't try to pick it up). Today, the physio found that all areas she had treated had seen great improvements, other than her hindquarters, where she had tightened up dramatically again, although she had seen some very minor improvements there.
So she treated her again today, but with the advice that if she was not making any improvements towards picking it up by next week, we ring the vet. It is also worth noting that the physio noticed a slight toe dragging in the off hind, although she is now crossing her hind feet well when turning in small circles.
I suppose all I'm really looking for is any potential diagnosis. The physio said it could be a deep tissue muscle tear but that this was unlikely as there is very minor muscle wastage, but she would expect to see much more if this was the case. Could it be hock arthritis- despite the fact it seems to have manifested very quickly? Or is it more likely that it is genuinely just a painful twist that will take more sessions of physio to sort out?
Any advice/ ticks to try in the meantime to try to get any improvement? I will be ringing the vets on monday if I cannot get her to even lift it slightly by this weekend, but I am keeping my fingers crossed it is nothing really serious!
Thank you!