Jesstickle
Well-Known Member
My horse was intermittently lame for a few days about six weeks ago. Vet looked at him and he was sound, my friend the vet looked at him on a lame day and the only thing she could suggest was a suspensory branch.. He had two weeks box rest, two weeks turnout out and then I rode him in walk for a couple of weeks. He was sound for all of this. Nitty chased him round on Friday and he was lame but sound again by Saturday.
The vet can't really advise anything apart from to ride him until he is lame to nerve block and work up. My other option is to turn him away.
I am really torn. I don't want to ride him and make him lame, it seems wrong somehow but equally I'd like to know what is going on.
But then the other half of me says 'what's the point of knowing'. They're going to prescribe lots of rest as it's soft tissue so why the need to know which particular ligament or tendon, they're all treated pretty much the same anyway? He'll either come right with rest or he won't. Part of me is tempted to just leave him mooching for 3 or 6 months and see what happens. Obviously if he goes lame in the field I'll try and rush him in to the vet to get an answer.
If it he were yours, what would you do?
The vet can't really advise anything apart from to ride him until he is lame to nerve block and work up. My other option is to turn him away.
I am really torn. I don't want to ride him and make him lame, it seems wrong somehow but equally I'd like to know what is going on.
But then the other half of me says 'what's the point of knowing'. They're going to prescribe lots of rest as it's soft tissue so why the need to know which particular ligament or tendon, they're all treated pretty much the same anyway? He'll either come right with rest or he won't. Part of me is tempted to just leave him mooching for 3 or 6 months and see what happens. Obviously if he goes lame in the field I'll try and rush him in to the vet to get an answer.
If it he were yours, what would you do?