Basic foot balance and farriery Flashcards

1
Q

What is the static assessment of a horse

A

Assess the conformation
Front, lateral, long axis, solar view
3D foot balance

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2
Q

Describe the static assessment from the anterior view of the horses hoof

A

From the front
- Medial/lateral symmetry
- Assess coronary band in relation to the bearing surface
- Length and angulation of the medial/lateral hoof walls

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3
Q

Describe the static assessment from the lateral view of the horses hoof

A

Hoof pastern axis - Angle of the toe and heel should be parallel
Coronary band from dorsal to palmer
Dorsal hoof wall and heel angulation
Relation of dorsal hoof wall length and heel length

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4
Q

Describe how you would assess the medio-lateral balance of the hoof on a static exam?

A
  • 90 degrees to long axis
  • Assess symmetry
  • Evaluate heels/heel blub for shunting/sheared heels
  • Using the ‘T’ square to assess symmetry: heel heights medial and lateral - if one is higher it indicates where trimming needs to be carried out
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5
Q

Describe how you would assess the solar view of the hoof on a static exam?

A
  • Bisect midline
  • Central point of foot should be just back from the point of the frog
  • White line reflects the true shape of the foot
  • Length/shape of frog
  • Bar shape/angulation to hoof wall and heels
  • Concavity/convexity of sole
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6
Q

What other features of the hoof should be assessed?

A
  • Show fit, type and wear – shoes should always be slightly bigger than the actual hoof capsule
  • Horn quality/solar thickness
  • Cracks
  • Coronary band injury/defect
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7
Q

Which feature of the 3D static exam would differ on the hindlimbs compared to the forelimbs?

A

Assess as for forefoot except that hindfoot often has a steeper angulation

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8
Q

Which features of the horse would you assess when at a walk?

A
  • Soundness
  • Stride length and symmetry – is it fluid in its stride?
  • Footfall
  • Does the foot land laterally/toe/heel/medial first
  • Rotation/twisting on landing
  • Tracking up/over tracking/plaiting/foraging etc
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9
Q

Which features of the horse would you assess when at a trot?

A
  • Soundness and symmetry
  • Stride length/tracking up/over tracking
  • Footfall - May differ between a walk and trot
  • Interference
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10
Q

Describe a ‘broken back’ hoof and the correcting shoeing/trimming used

A
  • Hoof capsule and P1/P2 are not in alignment
  • Get a lower, weaker heel and a long toe
  • Can improve the hoof pastern axis by raising the heel
  • Need to then get the hoof capsule to try and regenerate
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11
Q

Describe a medio-lateral imbalance hoof and the correcting shoeing/trimming used

A
  • Lands on one side and loads on the other
  • Bulb on one side is much higher than on the other
  • Can present with low grade pain and a performance issue
  • Can put a shoe on that loads the foot on the affected side and trim the hoof capsule so it doesn’t touch the heel (floating)
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12
Q

How would palmar foot pain/navicular disease present, how is it treated using shoeing/trimming?

A
  • Long toe, low weakened heel
  • Shoe too small
  • Need to concentrate weight away from the heels – frog plates
  • Need a suitable sized shoe to support the caudal part of the foot
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13
Q

How will lameness due to a foot imbalance present? How is it treated using shoeing/trimming?

A
  • Appears to be slightly toe out – will land laterally
  • Long toe: nothing to remove so going to need to fit a shoe under the toe and try and support the heels
  • Some distortion in the bulbs of the heels
  • Solar view: last point of weight bearing is not near the bulbs of the heels
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14
Q

What is the most common cause of hoof cracks?

A

Conformation defects or poor foot balance

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15
Q

How can cracks be treated?

A

Need to balance the foot, re-shoe the horse, apply caudal support, shorten the toe. Can also float the heel to remove pressure
Stabilise the crack – small aluminium plate glued across the crack. Needs to be applied when the limb is non-weightbearing so when the plate is applied the crack is held apart and allows the horn tubules to grow down normally (may not work if there is coronary band damage)

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