njyr
Well-Known Member
Does anyone have any thoughts on what's wrong with this horse?
http://youtu.be/0qsTsuxm2CE (please excuse the delayed reaction, he is normally much better mannered on the lunge but given he is in pain I have forgiven his reluctance to move forward and come back down)
This video was taken after the physio found pain in the lumbar region of his back. The vets been and he reacts to flexion test of the fetlock. X-ray of the fetlock and ultrasound scan of suspensories didn't find anything significantly severe to account for the lameness observed and I am advised to taken him for a bone scan so that the suspensories can be ruled out completely. I'm not sure it is suspensories, my gut feel says its higher up - pelvis/back perhaps especially as lameness changes legs.
I've tried box rest (5 weeks with gradually increased hand walking on hard, flat surface) but that made it worse - he couldn't track up at all and his back end so so so stiff and together with his increasingly dangerously behaviour I've taken shoes off and turfed him out while I decide what to do next.
Which leads me to my final question - given he already has moderate damage to the soft tissues in the navicular region of both front feet, I have less than £1000 to spend on diagnostics and a year's turnout is out of the question what would you do?
http://youtu.be/0qsTsuxm2CE (please excuse the delayed reaction, he is normally much better mannered on the lunge but given he is in pain I have forgiven his reluctance to move forward and come back down)
This video was taken after the physio found pain in the lumbar region of his back. The vets been and he reacts to flexion test of the fetlock. X-ray of the fetlock and ultrasound scan of suspensories didn't find anything significantly severe to account for the lameness observed and I am advised to taken him for a bone scan so that the suspensories can be ruled out completely. I'm not sure it is suspensories, my gut feel says its higher up - pelvis/back perhaps especially as lameness changes legs.
I've tried box rest (5 weeks with gradually increased hand walking on hard, flat surface) but that made it worse - he couldn't track up at all and his back end so so so stiff and together with his increasingly dangerously behaviour I've taken shoes off and turfed him out while I decide what to do next.
Which leads me to my final question - given he already has moderate damage to the soft tissues in the navicular region of both front feet, I have less than £1000 to spend on diagnostics and a year's turnout is out of the question what would you do?