AshTay
Well-Known Member
Hi
New to the forum; I've been reading for a while but not yet posted.
My 21 year old connie X TB gelding suffered severe damage to his superficial digital flexor tendon last November while in the field. He was immediately brought in, hosed and bandaged and then hosed twice a day for the first week or so.
He was taken into the vets for an ultrasound scan which revealed how bad the injury was (not quite severed but a mess- I've googled ultrasound scans of tendon injuries on the net and not seen one as bad as his). The vet said the prognosis was poort but we decided to try stem cell therapy. Due to the bad weather over the winter, we weren't able to start this until 8 weeks after the injury but when we finally did get the cell harvest done, it was found they wouldn't grow (possibly because of his age). We then tried injection of platelet ruch plasma. He was scanned very 8 weeks or so for the first few months and it didn't start to look any better for about the first 3 months and then it started to heal but often we'd see that it had gotten worse again. He was being a good boy on boxrest - not stressed or boxwalking so we couldn't explain it.
At one point it looked well enough for us to begin in-hand exercise but after about 8 weeks of this it looked worse and we were advised to stop (we hadn't gotten beyond 15 mins walk a day). In July, after the latest scan, the vet pretty much said that there wasn't much else we could do other than keep him on boxrest (but even on boxrest, with no exercise, the injury was getting worse again).
So I decided to just turn him out and see what happened. Best case scenario was that the constant very gentle exercise in a field would help the healing. Worse case was he had a few weeks of being a horse again before we threw in the towel.
So he was turned out (with the aid of sedalin and after building up in-hand grazing to get his system used to grass again) in a small-ish dry flat paddock on his own. At first he got noticeably lamer (he had been almost sound in walk at his best) and there was some more swelling. It's now been 7 weeks and he's still out and he's not loads better but he's not worse. He's on and off lame in walk but the swelling has gone (it's still bowed, as it will no doubt always be). He's on a half sachet of danilon a day and seems happy and chilled in his paddock. He does tend to be a little more active than I would like but that's just who he is. I can't stop him trotting over to me but if he does look like something is upsetting him he's brought in to calm down.
I don't know whether I did the right thing turning him out but the alternative was neverending boxrest. I've had a lot of people come out with their "my horse had a tendon injury but 6 months later he was out competing again" which isn't helpful.
What I'd like to hear about are peoples experiences of really bad SDFT injuries in older (i,e, 20+) horses. Were you advised to PTS? Did you turn out? How lame was the horse? did he ever come sound again?
My horse will now be left out in his paddock (he comes in for grooms and pampering) and the plan is to ultimately get him living out with his friends again. I have all the time in the world to get to this stage so I'm not rushing anything.
Thanks for reading
New to the forum; I've been reading for a while but not yet posted.
My 21 year old connie X TB gelding suffered severe damage to his superficial digital flexor tendon last November while in the field. He was immediately brought in, hosed and bandaged and then hosed twice a day for the first week or so.
He was taken into the vets for an ultrasound scan which revealed how bad the injury was (not quite severed but a mess- I've googled ultrasound scans of tendon injuries on the net and not seen one as bad as his). The vet said the prognosis was poort but we decided to try stem cell therapy. Due to the bad weather over the winter, we weren't able to start this until 8 weeks after the injury but when we finally did get the cell harvest done, it was found they wouldn't grow (possibly because of his age). We then tried injection of platelet ruch plasma. He was scanned very 8 weeks or so for the first few months and it didn't start to look any better for about the first 3 months and then it started to heal but often we'd see that it had gotten worse again. He was being a good boy on boxrest - not stressed or boxwalking so we couldn't explain it.
At one point it looked well enough for us to begin in-hand exercise but after about 8 weeks of this it looked worse and we were advised to stop (we hadn't gotten beyond 15 mins walk a day). In July, after the latest scan, the vet pretty much said that there wasn't much else we could do other than keep him on boxrest (but even on boxrest, with no exercise, the injury was getting worse again).
So I decided to just turn him out and see what happened. Best case scenario was that the constant very gentle exercise in a field would help the healing. Worse case was he had a few weeks of being a horse again before we threw in the towel.
So he was turned out (with the aid of sedalin and after building up in-hand grazing to get his system used to grass again) in a small-ish dry flat paddock on his own. At first he got noticeably lamer (he had been almost sound in walk at his best) and there was some more swelling. It's now been 7 weeks and he's still out and he's not loads better but he's not worse. He's on and off lame in walk but the swelling has gone (it's still bowed, as it will no doubt always be). He's on a half sachet of danilon a day and seems happy and chilled in his paddock. He does tend to be a little more active than I would like but that's just who he is. I can't stop him trotting over to me but if he does look like something is upsetting him he's brought in to calm down.
I don't know whether I did the right thing turning him out but the alternative was neverending boxrest. I've had a lot of people come out with their "my horse had a tendon injury but 6 months later he was out competing again" which isn't helpful.
What I'd like to hear about are peoples experiences of really bad SDFT injuries in older (i,e, 20+) horses. Were you advised to PTS? Did you turn out? How lame was the horse? did he ever come sound again?
My horse will now be left out in his paddock (he comes in for grooms and pampering) and the plan is to ultimately get him living out with his friends again. I have all the time in the world to get to this stage so I'm not rushing anything.
Thanks for reading