T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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171.1 | | ERASER::FRISSELLE | | Wed Jun 17 1987 14:49 | 19 |
| Sorry I can't offer any better answer, but aside from the type of
treatment you're already doing, I don't really remember what else
I did a few years ago when my horse had a stone bruise.
It's frustrating, but you basically have to give it time. If your
turnout area is rocky, you probably shouldn't turn the horse out
without some kind of pad or boot to prevent further damage. If
you're fortunate enough (as I was) to have an indoor ring or some
other area with good footing, you can still exercise him lightly.
I recommend the use of pads in the future, though -- again, especially
if the turnout area is rocky or if the horse goes out on trails.
I do a lot of hacking, so my horse has worn pads on the front ever
since his stone bruise.
Good luck,
steve
|
171.2 | symptoms? | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Mudluscious and puddle-wonderfull | Wed Jun 17 1987 15:32 | 9 |
| Just what does a stone bruise look like and what are the symptoms?
I ride a lot on gravel roads and over rocky trails (Colorado has
an abundance of rocks). My mare's feet have finally grown out such
that her sole does not seem so near the ground but I have wondered
if I might hurt her where I ride.
BTW, a few issues back in Equus I saw a product that was poured
into the horse's foot (it dries in 30 sec, they say) that provides
an instant pad.
|
171.3 | Just a crazy question | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Wed Jun 17 1987 16:30 | 8 |
| This may be crazy but what happens to a wild horse who gets stone
bruises? I mean there no one there to soak the feet. Do they go
lame????
Curious..
Bobbi
|
171.4 | heal but slower | ZEPPO::FOX | | Wed Jun 17 1987 17:06 | 7 |
| I imagine that either the wild horse's soles toughen up enough so
that they don't bruise or they just heal slower. Someone please
correct me but I think about the only thing that the Epsom salt
soaks do is hasten the bruises healing so if wild horses get stone
bruises, they probably heal but maybe just slower.
Linda
|
171.5 | Nature provides! | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Thu Jun 18 1987 13:39 | 14 |
| Horses in the wild have much more going for them such that I would
think that stone bruises are very rare. For example, they never
have to carry a riders weight, they are used to walking on the same
terrain all the time, they are more surefooted, food is scarce so
they carry less of their own weight and spend more time eating than
running, they don't have pent up energy from eating grain, they
don't wear shoes so their feet are tougher. If they do get a bruise,
they get lame by the amount appropriate amount and nature takes
over. If they are extremely lame, its probably because they have
tender soles (a genetic trait) so they get slow and probably eaten.
Its a very harsh system which doesn't lend itself to producing pretty
animals but they sure get tough. The best part is that its a time tested
formula.
|
171.6 | Riderless horses - Wild horse concept! | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Thu Jun 18 1987 15:06 | 10 |
| re 5:
That's true they don't have riders do they??? I guess they can
walk wherever they want to. (Unless they are being chased)
Also they don't have shoes. Do you
think that's good? What about domestic horses? Do shoes help as
far as stone bruises go?
Bobbi
|
171.7 | Pads help... but not shoes alone | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Fri Jun 19 1987 13:49 | 14 |
|
My opinion is that shoes only exacerbate the problem of stone bruises.
The application of shoes to the horses foot stiffens the bottom
of the foot and prevents the normal expansion and contraction of
the hoof material. While the unshod foot does not expand and contract
all that much with impact it does serve the purpose of aiding capillary
action inside the foot. Less blood mobility means less tone and
elasticity which leads to feet that bruise easier and take longer
to heal. A popular solution is to apply a pad between the shoe
and the sole of the foot. It works reasonably well until you take
them off, then you get a real tenderfoot. Alas if you have Arabs
pads are less practical because you cannot show with them.
|
171.8 | Air out the frog? | BUGCHK::DINGEE | Julie Dingee, VAX Forms Development | Fri Jun 19 1987 14:59 | 17 |
| > and the sole of the foot. It works reasonably well until you take
> them off, then you get a real tenderfoot.
Terrific! My horse was just shod this a.m. and, since he's had
pads on for about a year now, the farrier suggested I leave them
off for a few weeks to air out the frogs. (Incidentally, I've
never smelled such stinky feet - not even thrush is that bad!)
Is this a regularly accepted practice, leaving the pads off for
a few weeks out of the year? I haven't been jumping him much
lately, so I figured it was okay, but the terrain around where
I live is very rocky.
How long does it usually take for a stone bruise to heal?
- julie
|
171.9 | | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Mon Jun 22 1987 13:11 | 12 |
| I've never heard of leaving them off unless there was a problem
(e.g. thrush etc). If you trail ride you may want to watch what
you travel over for a while especially if your horse has a propensity
for bruises. Take all the usual precautions... walk don't run
over loose sharp rocks like crushed stone, let the horse pick its
own way, etc. After you ride pay particular attention to the soles
for soreness. Why did you have pads in the first place? I don't
remember any bad smell associated with one of ours that has pads.
Does your farrier pack your horses feet before the pads go on?
Bob
|
171.10 | Pads go back on, next time! | BUGCHK::DINGEE | Julie Dingee, VAX Forms Development | Mon Jun 22 1987 17:19 | 21 |
|
The farrier said the frogs looked a little "mushy", so I may
want to give them the chance to air out. She packs it with a
ropey material - hemp? I had them put on a year ago because I
was jumping him. Also his angles were way out of wack, so the
pads, proper trimming, and the shoes were all used to bring them
back up. I've kept the pads since, espcially now that were in
a very rocky neck of the woods.
The smell is not as though there were any rot in progress, just
damp, dirty smelly horse feet that have been covered with the
pads for a couple months. That can do it!
Anyhow, we did a 3-hour ride this weekend, and I let him pick
his way over the rough areas, and he went quite gingerly! But
he was more than willing to race down the railroad bed and the
pine-needle-carpeted trails. That was Saturday a.m., and there
is no sign of soreness, so I guess we're going to be okay. But
those pads go back on for the next shoeing!!
-julie
|
171.11 | Some bruises last a long time | ATLAST::WAYER | | Tue Jun 23 1987 09:15 | 29 |
| I live in Charlotte NC, last year we had the terrible drought.
By august the ground was as hard as concret and my horse got a
whopper of a stone bruise. Somehow while we were riding a stone
got between her hoof and her shoe, she didn't show any pain
during the ride but the following day she was lame.
It took 3 months for her to recover from the bruise. The
vet had me soak her foot 2 to 3 times a day for 2 weeks. The
vet told me to keep her out in the pasture and not to ride her
for a few more weeks. She would appear to be fine we would
put her in her stall over night and the next morning she was lame
again. After a month of rest we had pads put on her front feet.
I was told to work her at a walk no trotting or cantoring. It took
2 more months for her to be back to normal.
No one could understand how a stone bruise could last so long and
cause so much pain. After the first 2 weeks when she did not improve
I had the vet xray her hoof. The xrays did not show any problems.
The vet cut at the hoof and found that the bruise went way up the
hoof.
When we removed the 2nd set of pads her frogs were soft and her
feet did smell. The vet told me not to keep pads on her, she said
that after the foot was healed that I should go back to just shoes
no pads. It has been almost a year since the bruise and she has
not had any additional problems.
Mary Ann
|
171.12 | KOPERTOX TO TOUGHEN THE SOLES/NOT THE FROG | MED::D_SMITH | | Fri Sep 30 1988 14:35 | 29 |
|
My horse also got a stone bruise this summer. We were on our every
day ride, the same route we usually go. We got to our destination,
stopped for a rest, and on the way home, no more than a few strides,
I noticed he would be off almost every step he took. I got off him,
looked for sharp objects in his feet, found nothing so I got back
on him. Same thing. I couldn't find a thing wrong, so we tried walking.
Same thing. If he stepped on anything sticking up, I could almost
hear him scream inside, so I got off his back and walked him home.
Four miles up the main road during rush hour/fun fun fun!
Once I got home, a close check-up revealed the stone bruise. Rear/
right toe. I soaked his foot once a day in epsom salt w/ warm water
for the first 4-5 days. The next week I continued to work him on
hard/flat ground, just lightly to keep him in shape. The following
week, I brushed the soles of all four feet with Kopertox (for thrush)
in an attempt to harden the soles, once a day untill the soles appeared
dry, but not flaky and brittle.
The next shoeing revealed the slight abcess that had drained, but
was cut off with no trace of it remaining.
Till this day, we have had no more bruises. And I still travel the
same rocky roads at an extended trot with no problems, although
in the back of my mind, I still remember that day, and still wonder
if it will reaccure, but I still refuse to have pads put on...there
should be no need for them. He is allowed to pick his way, and his
speed (for the most part) throught each ride, unless I see a better
route to go, then it's my way.
|
171.13 | stone bruise? | AIMHI::DOYLE | Lisa Doyle | Tue Oct 01 1991 11:54 | 23 |
| My horse turned up lame about 2 weeks ago. He is currently shoed
with pads on the front. He is lame on his right front leg. After
looking at his leg and hoof we found nothing. A few days later he was
getting better but definitely not 100%. I then saw a stone inside the
pad, I had the black smith out and cut out the pad and out came this
somewhat pointed stone!
It's been a week and 1/2 since the stone was removed and he is still
pretty lame and doesn't want to put much weight on his foot. I am
wondering if it really was/is a stone bruise? Would a stone bruise
last this long? Could it be something else? Like navicular? Lately
when I had been riding is alittle clumsey (ie tripping and stumbling).
I should also add he is 20ish years old and has NEVER been lame on his
front feet. He has not been worked very hard.. for the past 6 years
he's just been ridden on trails and small amounts of ring work.
The blacksmith is coming out tonight, I am hoping he will be able to
tell the serverity of the stone bruise or if it's something else.
Any ideas would be apreciated.
Lisa
|
171.14 | Abcess? | KALE::ROBERTS | | Tue Oct 01 1991 12:05 | 6 |
| Sounds like this could be a really bad stone bruise. If there was a
pointed rock between the pad and his hoof, then he would have been
stepping on this rock *every* time he put his foot on the ground. Much
worse than stepping on it once and getting a bruise. He could have an
abcess caused by it, etc. I'd have a vet check him and maybe do an
x-ray.
|
171.15 | sounds familiar | SMAUG::MORENZ | JoAnne Morenz DTN 226-5870 | Tue Oct 01 1991 12:20 | 8 |
| I agree with .1, and if a stone worked it's way in, then something else may have
worked in and have caused an abcess.
I had a similar experience with one of mine this spring. Off and on lame, even
three legged lame at one point. I was afraid it was a coffin bone fracture,
then my blacksmith found the abcess.
I know several people who have had problems with abcesses this year.
|
171.16 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Spare a horse,ride a cowboy | Tue Oct 01 1991 12:47 | 9 |
| Yep, our Thoroughbred was laid off for 7 months last year with an
abcess. X-rays finally revealed it, after several attempts at
guess work before having them taken. I'd recommend having them right
off the bat, we'd began worrying about navicular and finally requested
that the vet take them (she didn't want to x-ray originally). They
revealed the abcess, relieved our minds by revealing no signs of
navicular, and after a hoof-resection horse is just fine now. Good
luck, I know it's how frustrating lamenesses can be!
|
171.17 | we've had 3 abcesses this summer... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Oct 01 1991 13:01 | 4 |
| And the added advantage to finding out what it is is that then you can
treat it properly to help it heal.
Mary
|
171.18 | x-rays\ | AIMHI::DOYLE | Lisa Doyle | Tue Oct 01 1991 13:43 | 6 |
| I have never had to have my horse x-rayed. Can anyone tell me
approximately how much it costs and where is it done?
Thanks.
L
|
171.19 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Oct 01 1991 13:57 | 5 |
| I don't know what the price tag is these days, but your vet should be
able to do it right where your horse is. They've been using portable
machines for some 20 years now.
Mary
|
171.20 | X-rays not a big deal | KALE::ROBERTS | | Tue Oct 01 1991 13:57 | 3 |
| It's done in your barn. Costs vary.
-ellie
|
171.21 | check the foot for heat | TFOR2::GOODNOW | | Tue Oct 01 1991 14:38 | 9 |
|
A good blacksmith should be able to tell you if it's an abcess or not -
sometimes they can get to it and drain it if it's not too deep.
Usually abcesses will cause a LOT of heat in the foot.
Good luck
Amy
|
171.22 | Poltice... | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Tue Oct 01 1991 15:41 | 17 |
|
If you had the pads cut out of both feet, you could try polticing them.
Poltice will make the feet grow faster so you'd want to do both feet
not just the injured one. Here's how I do it, first I cut the corner
of a grainbag, a square of about 10"x10" for the cover. Take poltice
and smear it all over the bottom of the foot, then put the foot in a
1 gallon plastic bag. Put the foot down with the plastic bag on it and
fill around the foot with poltice. Pick the foot back up and put it
into the grain bag you cut, so the toe is right in the corner. Wrap
the two "wings" of the grainbag firmly around the ankle and tape well
with black electricians tape. Also run a strip or two of tape around
the heel and over the whole hoof. I have also wrapped the foot in
vet wrap, which seems to keep them from chewing it. If its an abcess
or gravel, this will help draw it out, I've had very good luck with
this method. The only problem is the horse has to stay in or it will
just wear off.
|
171.23 | | AIMHI::DOYLE | Lisa Doyle | Tue Oct 01 1991 16:04 | 4 |
|
If it is a stone bruise or an abcess should he be kept as quiet as
possible? Also what type of poltice do you use?
|
171.24 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Oct 01 1991 16:11 | 9 |
| If its a stone bruise, you want to keep the horse on soft footing, so
if his turnout is rocky or if he won't stay quiet, you may have to keep
him in.
Soaking the foot in warm water and epsom salts for 15-20 minutes/day
is good for either problem. Add as much epsom salts to the water as
will be dissolved.
Mary
|
171.25 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Oct 01 1991 16:13 | 3 |
| Also, did the tripping start before or after the lameness? If he was
tripping before the lameness, then it could indicate a more serious
problem, such as navicular or ringbone.
|
171.26 | | AIMHI::DOYLE | Lisa Doyle | Tue Oct 01 1991 17:54 | 18 |
| The tripping began before this lameness. He sort of stumbles, like he
is being lazy picking up his feet. He has been doing this for about 1
year or so usually when we are doing ring work... (He HATES ring work)
so just attributed it to that.
I never thought to seriously about it before. Now that I read up on
navicular I am worried.
The lameness came on all of a sudden and it
was severe, after a few days it was much better. You can tell he is
favoring it at the walk and at the trot is very noticeable. When I ask
him to trot he gets pretty mad.
The blacksmith is coming tonight, hopefully he'll tell me it's just a
stone bruise.
Lisa
|
171.27 | Another possibility and best wishes | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | | Tue Oct 01 1991 18:05 | 19 |
| We had a similar problem last year which was neither a stone bruise nor
an abcess. The horse had been a bit "ouchy" on one foreleg for a couple
days, so I thought it was a stone bruise. We live on a gravel road and
he limps like a cripple the minute he picks up a stone in his shoe!
But, the symptoms went on too long for a simple stone bruise so we had
the vet come out to take a look at it.
The original problem was in the vet's opinion a laceration
to the sole which was possibly caused by a sharp stone. A pocket of
blood had later formed inside the hoof at the site of the cut. The vet
pared the sole to drain the blood and bandaged the foot. After a few
days, the bandage wore off and we had to rinse the foot with Betadine
compund for about a week. Then we had him shod with pads to protect the
sole until it healed up. After he was re-shod, he went back to work.
There was no pus or other sign of infection, just a pocket of blood
from the original injury. This was another horse who had never been
lame in his 16 years. Hopefully, your horse's lameness will be as easy
to resolve.
|
171.28 | Tendon injury? | AIMHI::DOYLE | Lisa Doyle | Wed Oct 02 1991 11:13 | 21 |
| The blacksmith didn't find anything wrong with the hoof. There were
not signs of a stone bruise or an abcess. We did find some swelling in
the tendon running behind the knee to the ankle. I put a poultice on it
last night. If it's not better in a few days I'll call the vet. I
didn't see this swelling when he was first lame and after we found the
stone under the pad I assumed that was the cause. Since I didn't really
inspect the leg real close I don't know how long the swelling has been
there.
I could tell it was real sore, he didn't like putting weight on the
sore leg while the blacksmith was shoeing him. I wish I would have
continued checking his legs instead of assuming the stone was the
problem. I have no idea how he could have injured himself. He had not
been ridden when he turned up lame. I don't know the specific name of
the tendon that is swollen, it runs down the back of the leg behind the
knee to the ankle. It is swollen is two places and there is heat
associated with it. Has anyone experience this type of injury? If so,
how did your horse do it?
Lisa
|
171.29 | One step at a time! | DEMON::RHODAN::DIROCCO | | Wed Oct 02 1991 11:14 | 24 |
| This past spring, my mare came up lame all of a sudden also. After
speaking about the lameness with the vet on the phone, we put her on
1 bute morning and evening and just hand walked her.
The lameness persisted and we opted for x-rays. The x-ray showed
a slight seperation of the hoof at the 'white line'. This, so it
seems, is a rather sensitive area in the hoof.
So, I started to poultice it, (I had been previously soaking with
warm water and epsom salt thinking it could be an abcess), and
put her back on bute for 1 week. My blacksmith trimmed her when
she was long enough and put toe clip type shoes on the front.
She's fine now, and going great once again. My advice, don't think
too much about the worst possible cases, (I did this initially, and
it only made me crazy), approach it as a minor lameness, and go
from there.
By the way, my mare is 19...and she does trip occasionally...they
all do to some extent don't they?
Good luck, and try not to worry too much! ;)
Deb
|
171.30 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Lynne a.k.a. HRH | Wed Oct 02 1991 11:33 | 23 |
| Yep....my QH had swelling and heat in one of his front
legs from the back of the knee to the ankle. At first,
it was thought he had bowed a tendon, but it was actually
the casing (?) above and surrounding the tendon that he
had injured.
The vet speculated that he had injured it by stepping in a
hole while galloping out in the turnout field, causing him
to twist the leg and injuring it......
Anyway, the treatment was: 6 weeks in the stall, no turnout,
with a "sweat leg treatment". That is, I had to smear his
leg with furazone paste, wrap it in saran (plastic) wrap,
then wrap a quilted leg wrap around the plastic wrap,
and then wrap a bandage around to hold it on. He was to be
wrapped for twelve hours, and then it left off for twelve hours.
Every day, for six weeks. This caused the fluid to come out
of the leg, hence "sweating". By the end of the six weeks,
he was being hand walked. He healed perfect....
Lynne
|
171.31 | shoes off for the pictures | REGENT::WIMBERG | | Wed Oct 02 1991 11:41 | 14 |
|
Since nobody mentioned, everybody must think it is obvious but I'm
going to point it out anyway -
Shoes are removed when the xray is taken. Most (if not all) vets can
remove the shoes. So, in addition to the expense of having the xrays
taken, you have to pay the farrier to replace the shoes.
I advocate talking the vet as soon as possible - why wait? Your regular
vet surely would talk to you on the phone without charge. He or she
will have an opinion about taking pictures.
Nancy
|
171.32 | Sooner rather than later | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | | Wed Oct 02 1991 15:45 | 7 |
| That's interesting, our vets have never pulled a shoe to take foot
Xrays. I wonder why the difference in practice? Oh well
If the horse is that lame that he doesn't want to put weight on it to
be shod, CALL THE VET! Even if the problem is a minor one, you'll
sleep easier and the horse will recover quicker if you get it looked at
sooner rather than later.
|
171.33 | :) ;) | DEMON::DEMON::DIROCCO | | Wed Oct 02 1991 16:34 | 10 |
|
Funny thing about removing the shoe before X-raying, my mare
inadvertantly pulled the shoe off on the leg that was bothering
her--all by her lonesome!
I found it in her stall before I called the vet...maybe she's
got hoof pullers in there somewhere...! ;)
Deb
|
171.34 | why shoes are removed for x-rays | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | some assembly required... | Thu Oct 03 1991 11:43 | 3 |
| Vets pull the shoe before x-raying so that they get a clearer picture of
what's in the hoof. Steel shoes reflect a lot and take away from the general
clarity of the 'internals' of the hoof.
|
171.35 | I ain't *THAT* dumb! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Il Rosso Vecchio | Thu Oct 03 1991 17:14 | 5 |
| I figured that out, Kathy. I used to track airplanes with radar for a
living so I know metal reflects energy beams. What I was asking is why
some vets *DON'T* pull the shoes!
John
|
171.36 | hide and seek | REGENT::WIMBERG | | Fri Oct 04 1991 15:00 | 6 |
|
Maybe they were looking at something besides the hoof but I'd ask a lot
of questions if it was my vet.
Nancy
|
171.37 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | some assembly required... | Fri Oct 04 1991 17:57 | 7 |
| John,
That was more for general reference, not insinuating that you weren't
intellegent.
As for *why* a particular vet opts to not pull shoes? maybe they're
being lazy? (I've also seen vets really shred a hoof by not being careful
about how they remove the shoe)
|
171.38 | Gee, I was just kidding! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Il Rosso Vecchio | Fri Oct 04 1991 18:35 | 2 |
| I knew that, Kathy. I was just teasing. But you should notice that I
used "dumb" instead of trying to spell something longer!
|
171.39 | Bowed tendon, not a stone bruise | AIMHI::DOYLE | Lisa Doyle | Mon Oct 07 1991 15:14 | 4 |
| Infact my horse did not have a stone bruise at all. He has a bowed
tendon. The vet says rest till spring.
Lisa
|