cands
Well-Known Member
Hi,
2 weeks ago my mare came in from the paddock noticeably lame. After waiting 3 days she was no better so got the vet out. The horse was worse on hard ground and had a throbbing pulse on the inside of her left fore, so vet suspected abcess/stone bruise. Did some nerve blocks in the foot which confirmed this. Vet went searching and found no abcess, although horse was sore (with hoof testers) on her heel. Shoe taken off and yarded for 5 days, polticed and was on bute for 3 of these days. Shoe then put back on and she trotted up sound as a bell. Put her back in her paddock with her mates, came to check her 3 hours later and she was dog lame. Able to walk but not overly happy about it. I'm relatively confident its the opposite front leg but not 100% sure. Lameness is worse than before. Can't find any swellings, heat, kicks etc.
What do people think could be causing the problem?
She has good, strong feet (vet thought previous stone bruise was therefore deep)
2 weeks ago my mare came in from the paddock noticeably lame. After waiting 3 days she was no better so got the vet out. The horse was worse on hard ground and had a throbbing pulse on the inside of her left fore, so vet suspected abcess/stone bruise. Did some nerve blocks in the foot which confirmed this. Vet went searching and found no abcess, although horse was sore (with hoof testers) on her heel. Shoe taken off and yarded for 5 days, polticed and was on bute for 3 of these days. Shoe then put back on and she trotted up sound as a bell. Put her back in her paddock with her mates, came to check her 3 hours later and she was dog lame. Able to walk but not overly happy about it. I'm relatively confident its the opposite front leg but not 100% sure. Lameness is worse than before. Can't find any swellings, heat, kicks etc.
What do people think could be causing the problem?
She has good, strong feet (vet thought previous stone bruise was therefore deep)