Azbo
Well-Known Member
The horse I ride has recently been diagnosed with damage to the supraspinous ligament. We are currently most of the way through 6 weeks lunging and long lining in Pessoa with two weekly shock wave treatments. The last being today. He goes back to the Vets in two weeks for assessment.
The horse is a 6 year old WB/arab with not a lot of experience, only being taken over by me last year as a 'badly behaved' 5 year old. I was only going to ride him once a week as I havent had a horse for a few years and I weanted to get back into riding again. I now look after him 5 days a week as it was clear he needed much more. He had not done a lot of anything really and this last year has mostly hacking and building his strength. Schooling, started with lots of work to get him working forward, only since new year starting taking contact and and gradually getting to him to work more rounded over his back and starting to work into an outline. We haven't done a lot of jumping as he need so much work to increase his balance on the flat. He'd never really cantered in a school until I started with him last year. We have no idea how or when this injury occurred but he has never been the easiest horse who has always had a buck.
The last year has very much been about trying to get to the bottom of his behaviour. He took to stopping backing up and bucking when I started taking more contact - turns out his teeth needed doing. He grow out of his saddle and this had caused him some discomfort. All of these have been addressed and sorted. Then end of May he started to run into canter, no clean transition would go a few strides and go disunited. Then he just stopped dead and refused to move. My trainer was nearly bucked off when he got on. This was the last straw and I got his owner out and got her to get the Vet. Initially they thought he may have kissing spine but after x-ray scan and then a bone scan. It was discovered that it is the ligament is the problem.
I've never come across this injury before. I just want to know if anyone one else has experience of this injury and what happened? I have read through some of the treads here, but would really like to know what to we could expect next and how long the horse was in recovery for.
The horse is a 6 year old WB/arab with not a lot of experience, only being taken over by me last year as a 'badly behaved' 5 year old. I was only going to ride him once a week as I havent had a horse for a few years and I weanted to get back into riding again. I now look after him 5 days a week as it was clear he needed much more. He had not done a lot of anything really and this last year has mostly hacking and building his strength. Schooling, started with lots of work to get him working forward, only since new year starting taking contact and and gradually getting to him to work more rounded over his back and starting to work into an outline. We haven't done a lot of jumping as he need so much work to increase his balance on the flat. He'd never really cantered in a school until I started with him last year. We have no idea how or when this injury occurred but he has never been the easiest horse who has always had a buck.
The last year has very much been about trying to get to the bottom of his behaviour. He took to stopping backing up and bucking when I started taking more contact - turns out his teeth needed doing. He grow out of his saddle and this had caused him some discomfort. All of these have been addressed and sorted. Then end of May he started to run into canter, no clean transition would go a few strides and go disunited. Then he just stopped dead and refused to move. My trainer was nearly bucked off when he got on. This was the last straw and I got his owner out and got her to get the Vet. Initially they thought he may have kissing spine but after x-ray scan and then a bone scan. It was discovered that it is the ligament is the problem.
I've never come across this injury before. I just want to know if anyone one else has experience of this injury and what happened? I have read through some of the treads here, but would really like to know what to we could expect next and how long the horse was in recovery for.