Bringing
Back the Foundered
by:
Burney Chapman, C.J.F, Lubbock tx
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In terms of
it's potential for long, drawn-out agony, laminitis is the worst
malady that can strike a horse. Unless somehow the owner and vet
manage to catch and reverse the process of inflammation and deterioration
in the laminae -- the tissues that connect the coffin bone, or
third phalanx (PIII), to the inside of the hoof wall -- early
enough, the coffin bone sinks within the hoof capsule, turning
laminitis into founder.
Once that
happens, in some way even a horse with acute colic is luckier.
But a severely foundered horse, whose coffin bone rotates out
of alignment and descends, perhaps far enough that it goes through
the sole, may go on and on in severe pain until his owner decides
that putting the horse down is the only decent thing to do.
Even if the
acute problem eventually subsides, the horse is likely to be left
with a considerable residue of chronic discomfort. He may habitually
stand rocked back to minimize the amount of weight he puts on
sore front feet; his bones may be so misaligned that every step
he takes puts some degree of unnatural stress on them; and periodically
he may feel even more pain when inflammation flares up in the
old trouble spots.
Within the
last twenty years, however, the chances of catching laminitic
deterioration in time and turning the condition around before
things get that bad have greatly improved -- thanks to advances
in veterinary research and in my own field of farriery, and thanks
also to a growing understanding and cooperation between the two
fields. We still don't fix every one of these horses, but we are
fixing a lot of them that we wouldn't have twenty years ago.
In this article
I'm going to tell you about some of the changes in treating, in
technology, and in the thinking behind both that have enabled
us to do so much better than we used to (though still not as well
as we'd like). I'll also be talking about how, if laminitis strikes
your horse, you can take advantage of these better treatment methods
and help them work to best effect.
Heart-bar
shoes and hoof-wall resections, two of the advances I mentioned
earlier, are part of the reason for our improving record with
victims of laminitis, and I'll be telling you about them. But
besides all the insights and improvements that veterinary science
and farriery have come up with, there are two other crucial factors
that affect a horse's chances of surviving and returning to some
degree of soundness. One is the horse himself -- how much he's
suffered, how much infection is present in his feet and elsewhere
in his body, and how much of a survivor he is -- how much he's
willing to keep fighting. The other, as you'll see in the comeback
program I sketch out, is a partnership of owner, farrier, and
veterinarian committing themselves to work together to give the
horse the best chance they can.
The commitment
is demanding, as I try to make clear to anyone who calls in to
work on a laminitic horse: It's expensive, it may need to go on
for months or years--for the rest of the horse's life in some
cases -- and it carries no guarantee of a positive outcome. But
in the horses I've worked with that have come back, it has been
a major reason for our success.
A
MISUNDERSTOOD PROBLEM
Before going into the "how" technicalities of working
with a foundered horse, I want to tell you a little about the
"why" -- because besides being the worst malady that
can befall a horse, laminitis has long been one of the least understood.
For hundreds
of years, horsemen understandably saw laminitis as a problem of
the feet; when a horse foundered, they concentrated on fixing
his feet. Along the way, they came up with a number of treatments--hoof
casts, nailing the shoes on backward, stretching down the tendons,
and so forth -- that became accepted (and were written down in
books, some dating back to the 1850's or before) as "standard"
because the produced relief in some cases, although they did nothing
(or even did damage) in others.
Those some
treatments got carried on to the next generation of books and
the next. Even today some horsemen and farriers -- and some veterinarians
who don't see many horses, and who don't manage to attend many
continuing-education courses or come to national conventions --
regard them as appropriate for any foundered horse.
Despite such
lingering misunderstanding and misinformation, however, most veterinarians,
farriers, and horsemen have come to understand that in laminitis,
the feet are normally the secondary problem. While some cases
of are caused mechanically, by long work on hard surfaces or by
trimming and shoeing that put excessive stress to the feet themselves,
others -- those with the greater potential for threatening feet
and life -- result from some internal problem that is causing
toxic substances called endotoxins to collect in and interfere
with blood supply to laminae. In these cases, until we correct
that "something", we can't have a hope of correcting
the laminitis.
The breakthroughs
we've achieved in our understanding of laminitis have come as
we've become increasingly able to observe what is going on inside
the horse. For example, horsemen long thought (and every book
on equine physiology used to say) that the frog pumps blood through
the foot. The first researchers who said that it didn't, and that
it was actually more of an arch support than anything else, nearly
got run out of town. (As the late Louis L'Amour, the Western novelist,
once pointed out, "Ideas are welcome as long as they do not
contradict theories on which scholarly reputations have been erected.")
This revised view of the frog's role gained acceptance only when
researchers were able to examine blood circulation through the
foot by means of scintigraphy -- visually following the progress
of a small injected radioactive substance through the vascular
system of the foot.
Like veterinary
science, farriery has been and is still learning and revising
old ideas about laminitis. The heart-bar shoe (its name comes
from its shape -- a V-shaped piece of stock extends from the heels
in along the frog to a point about three eighths of an inch short
of the apex) has been around for years; the earliest I know of
is in a book published in the 1820's, where if was called a "veterinary
frog-support plate." Still, there was terrific resistance
when we first started using it on laminitic horses. Now, though,
there are veterinarians and farriers -- a couple on the East Coast,
two or three in the Southeast, two or three in Texas, three or
four on the West Coast, as well as some in Canada, Mexico, England,
Scotland, and Australia (where some of the best recent work on
understanding the vascular system on the foot has been done) --
who have studied it and who have had really good results using
heart-bar shoes on hundreds of foundered horses. The number of
successes is important because (as all the recent brouhaha about
cool-temperature nuclear fusion has reminded us) research is no
good unless the results can be reproduced. Enough different veterinarian-farrier
teams have had success in enough cases that we believe we can
say we have a standard method for working with a laminitic horse.
I'll show
you how that method works, including your role as owner, for three
hypothetical horses: The fellow who got into the grain bin last
night and whose problems haven't progressed beyond simple laminitis;
the foundered horse, in whom the coffin bone has begun to tear
away from the laminae and descend; and the horse in chronic founder,
whose disease is no longer active (except, perhaps, for an occasional
bout of inflammation) but who's living with damaged feet. In the
first two, as you'll see, our aims are threefold: to stabilize
the coffin bone and prevent it from descending any farther than
it already has, to relieve the pain caused by inflammation and
the swelling that typically accompanies it, and to prevent the
infection that might set in if problem sites were not found and
treated. In the third, the deterioration is basically done; our
focus is on making the horse comfortable.
(Before we
go on, however, let me point out that while most veterinarians
and farriers are aware of this treatment method today, not all
of them have had the opportunity to work with it. And as Dr. Jim
Coffman at Kansas State University once said, "Don't just
draw a heart-bar shoe on a napkin, hand the napkin to your farrier,
and ask him to go put a hear-bar shoe on a horse -- you'll be
sorry if you do." If you have a horse with severe laminitis
and your own veterinarian or farrier hasn't worked with the techniques
I'm talking about, you may want to call the nearest veterinary
school with a large-animal clinic, such as Texas A & M or
the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton center, for a reference.
As the health consumer, you have a right and responsibility to
ask questions, and if the answers you hear leave you uneasy --
if, for example, someone proposes putting a hoof cast on your
horse who's newly foundered -- you should look for a second opinion.)
CASE
1: CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
The evidence is clear when you arrive at the barn: Your horse
is out of his stall and in the feed room, the grain-bin lid has
been nosed open, and the bits of grain scattered about the floor
and sticking to his muzzle seem to outnumber the few left in the
open feed sack. But he's having little joy from his night of stolen
delights -- he's extremely stiff, glued to the ground, and his
pulse is pounding. He may seem to be trying to keep his weight
back toward the rear, because his front feet (which normally carry
about sixty percent of a horse's weight) feel especially tender.
His insides are in an uproar, with the carbohydrate overload he's
taken in working all sorts of havoc on the natural chemistry of
his gut (although he probably won't be running a fever of showing
signs of diarrhea or constipation).
Your first
step, of course, should be a call to the veterinarian. If he arrives
quickly enough, he may be able to reverse the problem with medication
while it is still just a chemical one. While you're waiting for
the vet to arrive, though, you can make the horse more comfortable
if you apply a temporary frog support. At this point only a small
percentage of laminae (if any) are likely to be damaged; if you
support the frog from below now, you may prevent further tearing.
The material
I recommend for this kind of first aid is indoor-outdoor carpeting.
Cut it in triangular pieces the shape and size of the frog (with
a little extra at the base to go up over the heels), stack enough
pieces on the frog that the pile projects a quarter to three eighths
of an inch beyond the bearing surface of the foot, and tape the
support up around the hoof. If you don't happen to have indoor-outdoor
carpeting, you can tape a roll of gauze under the frog instead;
just don't use anything hard or unyielding, such as plywood, which
could create additional problems by applying too much pressure.
(You can buy temporary frog-support pads, but they're expensive,
they're not reusable on any other horse, and I don't think they
do any better job than indoor-outdoor carpet does.)
Once the veterinarian
arrives, he'll administer medication to counteract the internal
effects of your horse's binge; he'll instruct you to call him
immediately if you see any recurring signs of discomfort. (He
may warn you to be particularly watchful fifteen to thirty days
after the original incident, which is the time abscesses typically
take to form if a foot has any dead tissue entrapped within it.)
Unless the
x-rays show a change form normal bone position -- which they probably
won't if this is in fact a simple case of carbohydrate overload
and you've caught it early enough -- the vet probably won't suggest
having the farrier for anything particular for the foot. If there
is change, he may confer with the farrier about putting heart-bar
shoes (which I'll go into in more detail below, under "The
Long Haul" -- because a long haul is what you'll be facing).
If you do
detect a return of soreness, it's time to call the vet again.
He'll open and drain any abscesses he finds (more about this below,
too), and he may run blood counts to make sure no previously unsuspected
infection is complicating your horse's recovery.
CASE
2: THE LONG HAUL
While a simple carbohydrate overload may not turn into founder
if it's caught early enough, I regard every case of laminitis
as an emergency -- because the crossover line is a very thin one,
and a horse who's gone into founder is a horse in real trouble.
This is where all the time and expense and potential heartbreak
come in -- not so much in the initial day or two, but in the ninety
to 120 days (or more) of intensive care the horse is to need to
survive and come back. And this is where I try to do a lot of
work up front, making people aware of the kind of commitment they're
going to have to make -- in terms of time, money, and cooperation
with the vet and farrier -- to have a chance of bringing back
the horse to some degree of soundness.
Many of the
foundered horses I get called in on are those in which the condition
had progressed so far -- for any of a number of reasons, including
inappropriate treatment -- that they have no hoof left at all;
they're lying in the stall, covered with decubitus ulcers (bed-sores).
These horses are the ones that have the least chance of being
saved. I spend a lot of time with the owner of a horse like this
(and with his regular veterinarian and farrier), making sure he
understands that this is the horse's last chance, that it's going
to expensive -- at least $12 or $15 a day in bandaging costs alone
if the horse requires a hoof-wall resection, not to mention all
the rest of the fees -- and that there's no guarantee of success,
no matter how hard we try. All I can do is promise him that the
vet and I will give it 110 percent, and that if the owner will
work along with us we'll see where we are after, say, twenty days
or so.
That extreme
picture isn't where things start off, of course, so let's begin
talking about founder at the beginning -- with a horse whose treatment
begins fairly early but who has more go wrong internally than
did our grain-bin raider.
A horse whose
coffin bone has started tearing away from the hoof wall needs
both medical and mechanical attention: from the vet, who works
on identifying and correcting the underlying condition that's
creating laminitis, and from the farrier, who concentrates on
stabilizing the bone and keeping it from dropping and farther.
If that bone is stabilized early, when maybe only fifteen or twenty
percent of the laminae have been damaged, the rest of them are
less subject to fatigue and tearing, and less likely to swell
and shut off circulation to the rest of the foot (a major cause
of tissue death or necrosis, which can actually cause the hoof
to sough off).
One reason
for regarding every case of laminitis as an emergency is the fact
that there's no way to tell how quickly a horse may founder. I've
known cases where an unsupported third phalanx has detached completely
and come through through the sole, without even rotating (a condition
called "sinker," which I'll tell you more about shortly),
in as little as eight hours. That's why I recommend applying a
temporary frog support while you're waiting for the vet to look
at any horse whose feet have come up sore, and why I put heart-bar
shoes on any horse who comes to me with laminitis as soon as I
see the x-rays and know how much support he needs. (Given the
amount of work I've done in this area and the relationship I have
with the vets I work with, most of them simply give me the x-rays
and say, "Burney, go and put a set of heart-bars on that
horse." If either the vet or the farrier isn't so experienced
in this area, the two of them would want to do more conferring
beforehand.)
The Heart-Bar
Shoe Fix -- Stabilizing the Bone
Each heart-bar shoe has to be built individually -- even different
feeton the same horse are likely to show different degrees of
the problem. If a radiograph shows that the bone is still normally
positioned, even though there is some swelling of the laminae,
I elevate the heart-bar portion of the shoe so that it puts no
more than 1.5 to 2 millimeters (about the height of a quarter
and a dime to two quarters) of support under the frog -- I don't
want to run the risk of cutting off circulation and causing pressure
necrosis. For the same reason, I'm careful not to let the shoe
touch the sole.
The heart-bar
shoe I put on a horse whose hoof wall is in tact and whose laminitis
is in an early stage is made out of half-round stock with a toe
turned up in front like a sled runner. That moves the fulcrum
point for the foot back to where it's nearly right under the point
of the third phalanx, so that when the horse moves forward, he
needs less energy -- and puts less pull on the bone -- to break
the foot over.
Normally the
horse walks off more comfortably as soon as he's had heart-bar
shoes put on. If we're lucky, that may be the end of the problem,
although the owner should keep keep an eye out for soreness, and
the heart-bars should be reset (and the shoes replaced if changing
foot shape requires it) every thirty days for the next six months
or so. Their horse should also be given plenty of chance to exercise,
since exercise stimulates circulation and so brings the tissues
in his feet the oxygen and other nutrients they need for repair.
I like to
have the horse radiographed when I reshoe at the end of the first
thirty days. I want to see whether there's been any change in
the position of the bone and how I may need to change the setting
on the support bar. If I see no change then, and if his condition
progresses smoothly, I may not ask for new x-rays when I reshoe
at the end of sixty days -- but I will want them again at the
end of the third month to see if he's actually lost any bone (a
problem that takes ninety to 120 days to show up). If he hasn't,
his chances of coming back athletically sound are good.
Six months
after the initial shoeing, I may try a horse out with half-round
shoes without the rolled toe, or even normal shoes -- and let
him go back to them permanently if he walks off comfortably. If
he doesn't, though, he may always need the support of a heart-bar
shoe -- just as some people always need arch supports in their
shoes.
Abscess Drainage
and Hoof-Wall Resections
Unfortunately, with a lot of horses, things don't go as smoothly
as I've just described. There are many problems that can appear
along the way; the sooner they're detected and corrected, the
better the horse's chances.
For
example:
1.
The horse walks off fine, but fifteen to thirty days later he
comes up really lame in one foot. There's no need to panic; as
I mentioned earlier, this is just about the time required for
an abscess to form if some dead material (probably tissue crushed
by the descending bone, or torn laminae too badly damaged to be
repaired) is entrapped within the foot. You should call your veterinarian,
who will radiograph the foot again and compare the x-ray with
his earlier ones to see how much swelling is present. If there's
not much, he (or the farrier, depending on the vet-farrier relationship)
may simply take off the shoe, open a small hole in front at the
junction of the distal laminae (the white line) and the horny
sole, let the abscess drain and then put the shoe back on. (This
early in the going, the abscess should be aseptic -- the serum
that flows out should be just clear, pale yellow, with no odor.)
The same problem
may show up in the other foot at a later date; if so, the vet
and farrier will probably follow the same procedure.
2.
In some cases, simply opening a small hole is not enough to relieve
pressure on the laminae and clear up an abscess. The horse may
need to have an anterior hoof-wall resection -- removal of part
of the front hoof wall, which not only gives swollen tissue room
to expand without shutting off blood supply to the laminar corium
(the "nail bed") and the bone but also allows access
to any necrotic tissue trapped between the coffin bone and the
hoof wall. (Systemic antibiotics won't help the problem here.
The whole reason you have a problem is that swelling has shut
off blood flow -- so a systemic medication just isn't going to
get where it needs to go.)
The hoof-wall
resection (again, something performed by a qualified farrier under
a vet's guidance) is a serious procedure, involving a convalescence
of ninety days to a year. During the first sixty to ninety days,
the horse will need daily soaking and bandaging of the foot, regular
exercise, diet supplementation, visits from the farrier to keep
the hoof trimmed appropriately as well as to reset the shoes,
and (less frequently) visits from the vet. The owners role in
bringing the horse through this procedure is critical; if he doesn't
follow the advice of the vet and farrier, and follow up on all
the tasks they assign him, everybody's efforts are wasted.
A correctly
performed hoof-wall resection is basically bloodless and painless
-- it's not surgery, but more like the removal of a fingernail.
(It may not look bloodless at first if, as happens in a lot of
cases, there is a hematoma -- a pool of accumulated blood -- trapped
between the coffin bone and the hoof wall; but once that material
runs out, there should be no bleeding to speak of.) Because it
is a painless procedure, and because the vet and farrier need
to see whether if relieves the horse's basic discomfort, no local
anesthetic should be used.
Once the hoof-wall
resection is completed, the horse needs frog support so that he
can begin the healing process with his hoof wall and coffin bone
properly aligned. If the foot is not too painful, and if the horse
has sufficient hoof wall left, I normally nail on a heart-bar
shoe; if he's really sore, though, I use a glue-on shoe instead
(sort of a space age spin off, and a real blessing for horses
in this condition). Most glue-on shoes start out as a piece of
strong polyethylene plastic, eight or ten inches square. I trace
the horse's foot on the pad, then use a jigsaw or band saw to
cut out the basic shape and add any configuration I need for the
center, like a heart-bar, adding pieces to thicken the heart-bar
insert until I have the amount of support I want. Then I weld
plastic tabs to the shoe and glue them to the foot. (Another option,
particularly for a horse whose foot needs more protection than
the glue-on shoe alone can provide, is a glue-on adaptor rim pad
that can be riveted to the bottom of a steel shoe; tabs are then
welded to the pad and glued to the hoof.)
Follow-Up
Care
After a hoof-wall resection, the area needs to be kept bandaged
until the hoof wall has regrown. I like to use Elastikon or Vetrap
for the bandaging material and cover the sole with several thicknesses
of duct tape to keep the bandage from wearing through quite so
fast. The bandage itself simply covers the foot, much the way
an Easyboot would (but don't consider using an Easyboot instead
of a bandage -- it can rub the horse's heels raw if it stays on
for any length of time).
As long as
there is any drainage in the area, a good topical dressing to
use under the bandage is sugardine: a mixture of betadine and
table sugar, and something that veterinary medicine had borrowed
from human medicine. (The sugar is very compatible with new tissue,
not harsh and drying like some of the things we used to apply,
and it draws fluids, so it promotes drainage.) Additionally, for
the first ninety days or so, it's wise to keep a thick line of
ichthammol around the coronary band -- for two reasons: First,
the ichthammol is a drawing agent, which will draw to a head any
abscesses that can't be drained through the bottom of the foot.
Second, the ointment keeps the top of the hoof capsule soft and
pliable, allowing maximum blood circulation to the coronary band,
which is where new hoof starts to grow.
Soaking or
turbulating the foot twice a day, for ten to fifteen minutes at
a time -- in hot water and betadine one time, hot water and Epsom
salts the next -- will help bring any lurking abscesses to a head;
it also increases circulation, and it just seems to make the horse
feel better. Once the foot has stopped draining (which means you
no longer run the risk of trapping inside it any material that
ought to come out), you can change topical medications from sugardine
to merthiolate, which speeds up the process of keratinization
-- turning the new tissue to horn.
Exercise,
like soaking, helps the healing process by increasing circulation
and encouraging drainage. In my barn, for example, as soon as
a recuperating horse's hoof wall and bone are stabilized, he goes
outside and stays out as long as the weather's good; he comes
in (to a box stall deeply bedded in clean straw -- which is less
abrasive and less likely to ball up than shavings -- or, better
yet, shredded newspaper) only if the weather's bad. If you don't
have that option, you should still get your horse out of his stall
and walk him at least six or seven times a day, for for five or
ten minutes at a time, so that he gets a total of about an hour's
exercise but gets it in small increments. (Don't hang him on a
hot-walker for an hour straight -- you'll do him no good at all.
Giving him short periods of work over a whole day comes much closer
to what nature intended).
One element
of promoting hoof growth is diet -- specifically, supplementing
the regular diet with methionine and biotin. Methionine is an
amino acid that's essential for hoof development, and biotin seems
to act as a catalyst to methionine. Most horses don't like the
taste of methionine and refuse to eat it by itself, but there
are alfalfa-based methionine-biotin supplements, such as Farrier
Formula or Nutri-Tone, that they find much more palatable. (Don't
simply feed a supplement that's high in all amino acids; what
your horse needs if he's had a hoof-wall resection is something
with very high methionine levels to stimulate his hoof growth).
Reshoeing
a horse that's had a hoof-wall resection presents special problems.
His feet feet are likely to change shape quite a bit -- the heel,
which hasn't undergone the circulation squeeze that the toe has,
has been growing as much as four times faster and may have started
to bend forward under the foot. The farrier needs to trim the
foot regularly to keep it as close to its original shape as possible,
and perhaps to back up the shoe each time he resets it.
Re-Resection?
Following a resection, the horse may be a little sore at first
because the repositioning of his coffin bone puts a pull on his
deep flexor tendon. Muscle soreness normally decreases as he walks
more; if he continues to be sore, however, especially if he's
still rocking back off his front feet when he stands, you can
safely figure that you're seeing foot soreness -- and that he's
still got some inflammation. Any of three things could be causing
this problem: The preexisting condition that caused the laminitis
in the first place may still be active, the feet may still be
harboring some necrotic tissue not found in the resection, or
the laminae may have sealed up before all the serum from an abscess
drained.
The vet or
farrier will have to attend to the horse in either of the first
two cases, but in the third you may be able to correct things
on your own -- so you'll want to see what you can do first. You
must get the horse moving briskly (if he's reluctant, have somebody
snap a towel at his hindquarters), and keep him going for several
minutes. If the problem is trapped serum, there's an excellent
chance that this will open up the laminae enough to get it seeping
again -- and the horse will immediately move more easily. Then
you can go back to your routine of soaking and sugardine until
you're certain you've gotten all the fluids out.
If exercise
doesn't produce results, however, your next step should be notifying
the vet to come out and reassess the situation. Depending on what
he finds, he may decide to reopen the sole or even (though more
rarely) to do another hoof-wall resection and clean out the problem
area.
Sinker
-- Quick and Deadly
Once in a while a horse goes into endotoxic shock so sever that
it disrupts circulation to the laminae entirely. They just die
and let go so fast that the bone doesn't rotate; it simply sinks
straight down -- through the sole of the foot. This is the condition
called "Sinker".
This kind
of horse doesn't rock back on on his feet like a foundered horse;
he stands square, but he's very reluctant to move -- so he may
be diagnosed as having Monday-morning sickness of myositis. One
way to detect that the condition is actually sinker, however,
is to run your finger down the horse's leg; if it comes to the
coronary band and stops there, and you find there's a distinct
depression behind the top of the hoof capsule all the way around
the foot -- not just in front -- you're looking at a sinker. The
horse isn't in the kind of pain normal laminitis creates -- but
because there's nothing holding his feet together, he'll walk
out of his hoofs in thirty days if he's not treated.
A sinker should
be treated with immediate application of a heart-bar shoe (if
the quarters and heel of his hoof are intact) or a glue-on heart-bar
device, with a rim pad as well if more height is needed for the
prolapsed bone to clear the ground. Then he should undergo a hoof-wall
resection. As long as he still has circulation to the coronary
plexus (the "circle" of the hoof -- just above it's
top, where horn growth begins) and the circumflex artery and vein,
which supply the face of the coffin bone and are one of the principal
routes of blood to and from the foot, there's a chance that his
foot can be saved and his hoof can grow back. Time is of the essence
in this kind of case. The chances grow dimmer if circulation here
had been impaired, dimmer still if the horse had begun to lose
bone.
CASE
3: CHRONIC FOUNDER -- LIVING WITH PAIN
At his worst, the chronically foundered horse is the fellow you
see in the books: the one with the upturned toes and the feet
the always hurt to some degree. Depending on how much discomfort
he feels, his radiographs may show a severely deformed or remodeled
coffin bone, possibly with much of its distal (lower) end gone,
way out of alignment with the two bones immediately above it (the
first and second phalanx) -- which means that the deep flexor
tendon is also deformed. His hoof wall may look dished, the white
line may be distorted and as much as half and inch wide, and he
may have "seedy toe" -- a big wedge of old laminae trapped
behind the hoof wall adding to his pain. A horse with less severe
pain may also have seedy toe; on x-rays, the the end of his coffin
bone will probably look rough -- evidence of pedal osteitis (inflammation
of the bottom of the bone).
A horse with
chronic founder is like somebody who's survived polio and is living
with the aftereffects. He's not in danger of dying; but depending
on the damage he's sustained, he can be pretty miserable. What
the vet-farrier-owner team can do for him is provide constant
care to make him as comfortable as possible. Anything that gets
his foot up off the ground is likely to provide him some relief
(he's the one kind of horse who may feel better if somebody nails
his shoe on backward). Fixing his foot means doing as much as
possible to return it to normal alignment -- rasping his toe back
and backing up the foot with a heart-bar shoe to give support
under the frog. If the deep flexor tendon has been deformed, he
may need his check ligament or even the deep flexor tendon itself
cut to relieve the tension on it -- decisions in which the owner
must be an active and understanding participant.
A horse with
seedy toe severe enough to make him lame may need nothing more
than to have his toe rasped back and and a heart-bar shoe fitted
to support and help realign his foot. In a few cases the vet or
farrier may need to so a resection to get all the laminar wedge
-- but the horse probably won't need bandaging; in his case, what's
being removed is old dead tissue (a lot like a corn in a human
being).
With care,
even a horse with severe chronic founder can be brought back to
being pasture-sound, or even riding sound in a few cases; a horse
with a milder case, though, may do yet better. In either case,
though, the need for care never stops. If an owner decides after
a year or two that his horse has had enough special pampering,
so he stops having the feet trimmed and the shoes reset regularly,
he's very soon going to have himself a lame, sorry horse.
Additional
Information
ENDOTOXIN
RELEASE -- CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
In most cases, a horse's laminae begin to deteriorate and die
because something has made his internal chemistry go haywire,
upsetting the delicate balance that normally allows dozens of
different bacteria to coexist peacefully and productively within
him. The "something" may be a uterine or lymphatic infection,
an infection from a puncture wound, an abscess, a hormonal imbalance,
kidney failure, pancreatic malfunction, allergic reaction, gastroenteritis,
carbohydrate overload (the aftermath of the classic grain-bin
break-in), or perhaps some cause science hasn't yet linked with
endotoxemia. Whatever the cause, the results are disruption and
destruction.
When a horse
breaks into the grain bin, for example, lactobacillus bacteria
(which thrive on carbohydrates, and which produce lactic acid)
in his gut rapidly begin multiplying. The proliferating lactobacilli
increase the acidity of the gut, which heightens the activity
of a second acid-producing bacterial form, streptococcus. The
resulting highly acid environment wipes out a whole group of other
bacteria; as these organisms die, their disintegrating cell walls
release endotoxins -- internally produced poisons -- which erode
the lining of the intestine and so escape into the bloodstream.
The horse's
body reacts defensively to the rise of endotoxin and lactic-acid
levels by releasing other chemicals, including prostoglandins
-- unfortunately, in such high levels that they create damage
of their own, such as constricting the smaller blood vessels and
closing down some normal circulatory routes. That can set off
one or more additional problems, including complete circulatory
collapse (leading to shock and death), colic and all it's attendant
complications and dangers, and laminitis.
The laminae
are vulnerable to endotoxic damage because the blood vessels that
bring oxygen and nutrients to them are so fine that a very little
constriction is enough to close them down. When that happens,
the laminae become damaged and die in short order. As they do,
the horse's coffin bone begins to break free from them; depending
on how quickly and completely that happens, the bone may either
rotate out of normal alignment and gradually begin descending
toward the sole of his foot (founder) or may simply drop straight
down (sinker -- a condition in which all of the laminae die within
a very short time, before any rotation can occur).
In the early
stages, laminae being deprived of circulation become inflamed
and swollen, causing pain under the hoof wall that is pinching
them in. Later -- normally anywhere from two to four weeks after
the problem begins -- abscesses formed around the dead laminar
tissue may create additional pain, especially if the fluid-filled
abscess is pressing against both the hoof wall and the wedge of
dead corium. And the unsupported bone itself, out of alignment
and pressing down on the sole from inside, is another source of
pain.
A horse who
survives his initial bout with endotoxic damage isn't necessarily
out of the woods. If infection sets in (a danger greatest where
the bone is actually exposed, or where an abscess remains undetected
long enough that it turns purulent), there is danger of the bone
itself becoming infected. If severe bone infection (osteomyelitis)
sets in, the only way to save the horse may be to curette (scrape)
the bone to remove dead or infected areas, or even to amputate
the leg -- an option few veterinarians would recommend.
First published
in The Blood Horse Magazine July, 1989.
© Burney
Chapman
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