Thursday, January 14, 2010

Coffin Bone Fracture Horse Bones?

Horse bones? - coffin bone fracture

It's a complicated story, but my horse stepped on a nail, while in another stall. Well, the vet said he had a broken bone. Is that bad?

10 comments:

twhrider said...

I had a horse (step on something we think has been broken as a result of an old t, but do not know) and broke the bones in his coffin. It was plain lame. 3 feet. He had a hold-up in individual form of a page, remove about 1 / 4 the side of his coffin bone. In accordance with the instructions from the vet, who sedated him heavily and had a plate full of clothes from the hospital. It was much better protection of their discretion. There were 4 weeks holiday for 2 weeks on foot in the hand of light again after 2 weeks then work for normal participation in the next two weeks. After 12 weeks after the injury, I took a revaluation / rad, and the vet told me, "to his fat a ** gray." We were lucky and there was no real difficulty. Were on the other side, we have a horse step on a nail, she went into the navicular scholarship. We are about to lose the horse. It was horrible, lame, and also with many antibiotics and intensive care, the infection has progressed in its sheath. I had to use a wedge shoe to relieve pressure on the heel and tendon pain. It was touch and go for WUROPEAN if I live or not, then the sound when it was convenient. Because it is a pasture ornament, their performance is not so much a problem as the healthy enough to have a good life. Good luck with your horse, but I do not take it lightly.

Jenn said...

It's really hard to treat and heal properly. You need your horse have a lot of the rest position and ensure that they do nothing to break the damage and it already is. This would be a long nail to a broken coffin bone, the cause of poor horse, wow, I hope he heals well.

Bonsylar said...

YES!

Coffin bone lesions at the end of a utility horse / race.

Depending on the damage and how it heals, it may never be able to bear the weight again.

Follow all instructions of the veterinarian to the letter!
Do not skimp, do not jump.
You must do everything in their power to that horse again full seet.

Few people can afford to keep an animal "Willow", can not be mounted.

Me said...

yes! Sorry to hear that! :-(

and why is the sound that I care more about the horse that you?

Mulerein... said...

Yes, and that the training may have the same prognosis if surgery is appropriate or not.

Mulerein... said...

Yes, and that the training may have the same prognosis if surgery is appropriate or not.

Tommy Onions said...

It is hard to believe that just may break walking on the nails on the pedal (coffin) bone. The nail should be large enough to penetrate bone fractures, so that it would have been difficult to leave, there would be no damage to soft tissues and the vaulting horse was lame. Presumably there are X-rays. What does this show? If the fracture affects how it heals.

All this seems very strange. More?

The combination of Google Haflinger provides interesting. They say the horse broke its wing bones of the foot near the joint. The horse's feet are (almost a U-shape), with long fingers - the degree of contraction of the employment effects of long fingers, exerts enormous pressure on the bones of the foot in the city - (the capsule on the inside of shell buried in the bone), which it (the performance of bone weakening under pressure) and could be the result of the palmar process fracture.

Jeff Sadler said...

Whoa! Coffin bone fractures? However, not limp? Something does not fit here. If the horse has a split distal phalanx is then displayed on a degree of lameness. If time is a slight break is not severe lameness and fracture should heal properly. However, if the fracture is bad, then there is a significant limp and refused to put weight on it. It is unlikely that the cracks a nail in the coffin bone that the bone has more than a crack. However, a nail can make a broken coffin bone and the horse could deteriorate even further. Keep prevent the animal from pain, and soft surfaces.

No lameness? Then there is no break! I speak with your veterinarian and make sure that the horse was examined by a veterinarian.

- Edit, I must say that without a limp, no pain, then there is a break. Three weeks could forge a split hairs together again, but love.

Jeff Sadler said...

Whoa! Coffin bone fractures? However, not limp? Something does not fit here. If the horse has a split distal phalanx is then displayed on a degree of lameness. If time is a slight break is not severe lameness and fracture should heal properly. However, if the fracture is bad, then there is a significant limp and refused to put weight on it. It is unlikely that the cracks a nail in the coffin bone that the bone has more than a crack. However, a nail can make a broken coffin bone and the horse could deteriorate even further. Keep prevent the animal from pain, and soft surfaces.

No lameness? Then there is no break! I speak with your veterinarian and make sure that the horse was examined by a veterinarian.

- Edit, I must say that without a limp, no pain, then there is a break. Three weeks could forge a split hairs together again, but love.

Mhm. said...

No, it is not so serious. Well ..... From what I read, but I think it may be starting on the severity. Read this link, and it shows what a veterinarian was thinking .....

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=h ...

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