
Lily at 3 years old
I went back and forth about putting shoes on Lily. I used boots for a couple of rides after the last vet visit. She didn’t move much in her paddock and when I ran Vinnie around to take his movement video, I could really see the contrast when she moved. She was in pain. It was subtle, but I could really see it in comparison to him. So I went ahead and ordered Ground Control plastic shoes and had my trimmer put them on her front feet. The do not have the concussion that metal shoes do and they leave room for her heels to flex. She was slightly better with them, but still not 100%. I wanted to see if they made her move any better. It was only very slightly better.
Since then, she turned up very lame in her left hind while out on a trail ride. I had to hand walk her back the last 3 miles or so, stopping to rest frequently and massaging her rump to help the spasms relax. Two massage therapists looked at her and we all thought that the most pain was in the muscles around her hip joint. When I went to load her to go home, she winced every time she tried to lift that left hind. I gave her some Banamine and that made it easier for her to load.
The following Tuesday, my vet had a clinic at the barn down the road, so I took her for another lameness exam. He did flexions and palpation. She resisted the flexions on her hind legs, but trotted off relatively even. She was very short strided though and stands with her hips tucked more than she used to. All these things are subtle and would likely be missed on a pasture horse or broodmare. I can tell when I ride her, as her gaits (all of them) are choppy with a hitch, not her usual smooth, reaching strides. It actually hurts my back.Dr. Camp found that her hind tendons were both sore. DSLD/ESPA usually shows up bilaterally, so that could be a reason that she trots off evenly. Both legs hurt equally. She was still slightly off in the right front as well. We are going back to the clinic on the 17th for ultrasound of her right front foot and hind suspensories. He will also x-ray her hocks. He felt that she should have shown more improvement with shoes than she did. He thought that she may have a soft tissue injury low in her right front, possibly the insertion of the deep digital flexor tendon, or possibly hock problems, and he also admitted that she could be showing early signs of DSLD/ESPA.
So she is on stall/paddock rest, no riding…
She’s currently getting Thyro-L, MSM, Mag Ox, flax, whole psyllium and Equerry Plus supplements in a bit of Triple Crown Low Starch and I’ll be adding the herbs that are being used experimentally with D/E horses as soon as they come in the mail. I’ve been learning about D/E for the last year or so, as I had the suspicion in the back of my mind about it. This yahoogroup is a wealth of information. http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/DSLD-equine/
I certainly hope that it is something other than D/E. Something that is treatable would be really nice. If it is D/E, then I will be on a search to find out the source in her pedigree. I hope that research will soon produce a genetic test to see if a horse is a carrier or not. If our breed does have D/E in it, it should be discussed.
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I am soo sorry for you & lily , my heart just breaks reading on this and also kinda causes a lil panicky feeling
. Waste’ came up lame today and i had thought he had maybe picked up a stone bruise as we worked pretty hard yesterday, but after watching him for some time, i checked his rear fetlock and it was a bit puffy. so i put an icetight wrap on him to see if it helps. its always scary when they get an ouch, because sooo many things big and small have similair symptoms….yeesh ! I pray for you & lily and will keep you both in my thoughts .
I certainly hope that Waste only has a stone bruise. That was one of the first things my vet mentioned 3 visits ago. I wish that they would tell us just where it hurts and how it feels. They can be so stoic though. I think that they just don’t want to show weakness.
Simrat, give her DMG, and Cetyl-M, DMG is helpful for detoxing the muscle tissue, by increasing the circulation at the cellular level, Cetyl-M is a fabulous and potent snti-imflamatory, (…..I have Monte on it and he is doing the best ever at age 33!!). I would also use Triger point Therapy, combined with Energy healing! You might have thought of this, I haven’t traced back in this thread. Good Luck, my thoughts and prayers are with you and Lily!!
I’m so sorry to hear about this Simrat. It touches my own worst fears as something similar happened to my CDE horse last year (that’s why I was volunteering instead of competing at Inavale when I ran into you) and I know it’s absolutely horrible trying to track down mystery symptoms. My prayers are with you and Lily and I hope you find the answer soon. I second the recommendation to use an energy healer- it’s something I’d never felt drawn to in the past but it seemed appropriate when traditional Western medicine couldn’t help Kody and he responded very positively to it.
Off to research all those mysterious acronyms you used!