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Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible

Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible, unedited, by Gudrun Buchhofer. Blog 58, case # 58

CHAPTER 1

Atrophy, the fundamental cause for most all hoof pathology and upper body injuries

Ringbone/sidebone/ossification/arthritis

Case # 58

Mo

trimmed from spring 2020 until spring 2023

photo: Betty Jordan

 

The senior Appaloosa gelding was rescued by my clients. Mo was trimmed by a professional barefoot trimmer for a number of years and then under my hoof care for the last three years of his life. He was previously treated for thrush. I recommended to discontinue any thrush treatment because I found the back of all four hooves fundamentally atrophied. Three of Mo’s hooves were slipper feet. The front hooves were pretty twisted. I literally entangled them, one divergent hoof at a time.

Fronts pre-trim of my first trim in April 2020

Fronts post-trim November 2021

 

Left front pre-trim of my first trim in April 2020

Left front post-trim March 2023

 

The soles of Mo's hooves were protected by a layer of hard horn. Months into the healing the hooves began to shed the protective layer.

Left front pre-trim of my first trim in April 2020

Left front mid-trim November 2020

Left front post-trim February 2023

 

The left hind foot was Mo’s worst hoof. I found the entire hoof in atrophy (back of the foot; sole protected by a layer of hard horn; weak internal structures). This hoof almost looked like an enlarged atrophied fetal foot. There was ossification in the left hind. Mo has been bracing on the medial side and bull-nosed the toe. I also found a scar in the medial heel bulb. This most likely was an injury from the unreleased “false” heel. (Please find more about scars in the heel bulbs in part I: “Freedom from Pain” of my trilogy Hoof, Body & Soul.)

Left hind pre-trim of my first trim in April 2020 — atrophy of the back of the foot; sole protected by a layer of hard horn; weak internal structures; a scar running along the medial heel bulb

Left hind pre-trim April 2021

Left hind post-trim July 2021 — the sole is shedding — a big bruise on the lateral side is coming to the light

 

Left hind post-trim November 2020

Left hind post-trim July 2021

Left hind post-trim February 2023

 

Left hind post-trim November 2020 — there was ossification in the left hind — Mo has been bracing on the medial side and bull-nosed his toe on the left hind.

Left hind post-trim May 2021

Left hind post-trim March 2023


About a year after I started him, we noticed that Mo’s forelocks began to grow. He literally had none before. His mane changed as well. His shoulders, neck and throat clearly looked better. He had a happier face and did not hold his lips tight anymore.

July 2021

November 2021

Mo lived together with a companion horse and died suddenly at the age of thirty. ♥

photos: Gudrun Buchhofer

Stay tuned for the upcoming cases (under my care for up to 20 years) in this blog series as a replacement for the unpublished part III: Mission Impossible of my trilogy Hoof, Body & Soul.

What did all my client horses over the last 20+ years have in common? They needed to heal from atrophy of the back of the foot as well as other atrophied hoof structures.

Q: Why do we need to change the upbringing of our baby horses and donkeys? A: To prevent senseless suffering.

Gudrun Buchhofer