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Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible

Hoof, Body & Soul, Part III: Mission Impossible, unedited, by Gudrun Buchhofer. Blog 30, case #30

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 # 30

The barrel racer was saved by clients of mine from going for meat after a navicular diagnose in both fronts.

He always placed the left front forward. The back of the foot did not support the bone column of the leg.



When I started trimming the Quarter Horse I realized the fronts were not the only problem. I noticed the horse was reluctant to put weight on the right hind foot.

When he did, he turned the right hind foot outwards, placed weight on the medial half only and braced with both front legs.

From a solar view, the long shank (false heel) on the lateral heel of the right hind was crooked. The tip of the false heel was flared.

The lateral bar was always laid over and there was a scar further up in the bulb.

I believe the scar was from the unreleased and flared long shank (false heel) cutting into the internal structures. (Part I: Freedom from Pain, Hoof, Body & Soul, 45-58). That would explain the reluctance to put weight on the foot.

The gelding had extreme muscle tension throughout his body from holding himself via muscle effort. The fundamental cause was the unfinished and atrophied back of the foot in all four.

Drastic improvements happened between year six and seven in to my trimming. In the right hind hoof mass had shifted around the coffin bone. The horse held the foot straight (not toeing out anymore). The scar at the lateral bulb of the right hind changed.

Frog and bulbs were more balanced as before the hoof was overloaded on the medial side. The internal structures strengthened. In the front, the hooves finally supported the bone column. The placement of the left front leg (diagonal counterpart of the right hind) normalized.

The left front was clearly more under the bone column of the leg after true heels emerged on both sides. Also, the horse stopped wearing down the toe.

Left front pre-trim year seven

Left front pre-trim year seven

Left front pre-trim year eight — true heels emerged again from further back

Left front pre-trim year eight — true heels emerged again from further back

I trimmed this horse for almost nine years when he passed suddenly at the age of twenty-two. ♥

 

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