Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible, unedited, by Gudrun Buchhofer. Blog 29, case #29
Author: Gudrun Buchhofer
Dedicated to all the horses suffering because of an unfinished foundation — their hooves.
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.
CHAPTER 1
Atrophy, the fundamental cause for most all hoof pathology and upper body injuries
Navicular syndrome
Case # 29
CJ
trimmed from May 2014 until August 2023
When I was hired to work on him CJ, a Quarter Horse/Thoroughbred cross, was just diagnosed with navicular syndrome in both front feet. The pain and the pathology he carried everywhere else were unnoticed and not diagnosed.
February 2016
Notes from my first assessment:
"Fronts placed close to each other with weight on the toes; toe walls worn down; not able to straighten his front legs; buckled with the fronts; both hinds involved: he toed out and put his weight on the medial side as well as the toes with both hinds; he snubbed the toes and injured the toe wall in the hinds; weak fetlock joints in hinds; standing out of his body line in the hind (bringing up his bump about one foot higher than the withers); extreme difficulties to pick up his hind hooves (in the beginning he literally collapsed when I asked him to pick up a hind foot); the joints and muscles of the front legs as well as the shoulders appeared to be under a lot of stress and tension; atrophy of the back in all four hooves; lots of soft tissue bruising especially the hind feet."
April 2018
April 2018
July 2014
November 2017
Right hind July 2018 — still lots of soft tissue bruising and the scar in the lateral bulb is visible
Right hind June 2016
Over the years the placement of CJ’s hinds improved. Eventually, he could lift his hind hooves with ease. In May 2023, nine years after I started trimming him, CJ did not wear down the toe wall in the fronts anymore. Hand-in-hand I allowed him to grow back the self-bull-nosed toes. Frogs, bulbs and internal structures filled out nicely. However, he was still not able to straighten his front legs completely.
Right front pre-trim May 2023 — he finally stopped wearing the toe
Fronts post-trim May 2023
Right hind post-trim September 2018 with the scar in the lateral bulb visible
Right hind May 2023 — the pad is under the bone column of the leg, soft tissue bruising down, placement more straight
June 2022
CJ remained a companion horse and was not ridden. He lived outside 24/7 all year round.
CJ was put to rest at the age of twenty-three due to breathing issues. ♥
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