Pop! It's Back
(Provided by American Association of Equine Practitioners and Larry
Bramlage, DVM, MS)
Recurring "popped splints" has sidelined many older equine
athletes, but a group of Kentucky surgeons may have come up with
a solution.
In the vocabulary of injuries a horse might received, "popping
a splint," is considered, at most, an inconvenience which requires
laying the affected horse off its normal routine. However, when
it keeps happening, that little inconvenience can become a surgical
problem.
The key issue surrounding what in veterinary terms is an exostosis,
the "popped splint" is actually where it occurs in relation
to the horse's cannon bone. The horse's splint bone is actually
what is left of what was once one of its toes. The bone is still
there, it just no longer reaches the ground. Therefore, it still
carries weight, and as a result, all of the weight the splint bone
carries is transferred to the cannon bone, which is the largest
bone of the lower leg.
To paint a picture of the injury, a popped splint occurs where
the splint bone lies against the cannon bone. The load (the pressure
the horse is applying as it is working) that is carried from the
splint bone to the cannon bone causes a tear between the attachment,
causing the splint bone to tear away from the cannon bone. Calcium
then builds in the affected area, sort of the body's repairing mechanism,
and reattaches the splint to the cannon bone. Problem solved - if
it's in the right place.
If the splint "pops" lower than normal, it's actually
in a weaker position. Although the horse's body dutifully sets about
repairing the area with calcium, it's in a weaker position. So,
as the horse goes back to work after the lamesness has subsided,
the repairing calcium cracks and breaks. So you're back to square
one or maybe even worse than the first time.
Sometimes the problem just keeps reoccurring each time the horse
becomes sound and goes back to work, whether that be racing, chasing
a calf or jumping a fence. The problem occurs in all athletic horses.
However, this particular type of splint will usually occur in an
older horse versus the higher splints that are so common in younger
horses.
The first approach to any popped splint is always the same which
is primarily rest to allow the calcium time to attach the splint
to the cannon bone. Rest is often accompanied with other treatments
which are directed at reducing the size of the splint blemish or
speeding the re-attachment. However, a new approach has been developed
by surgeons at Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital which may solve the
splints that tend to reoccur.
"Instead of trying to get the splint to calcify to the cannon
bone, we just took out the bottom part of the splint and the exostosis,"
said Larry Bramlage, DVM, an orthopedic surgeon who developed the
process. "This treatment is not applicable for the usual splint
where you cannot remove that much splint bone. It only applies in
splints that occur in the unnecessary part of the splint bone (the
bottom two-thirds)."
Bramlage and his team defined the process with their work on Thoroughbred
racehorses in the racehorse-rich Lexington, Kentucky, area. However,
this process could be used, if all else fails, on other athletic
horses, as well.
"It's important to realize that this is basically a final
effort to solve the problem," said Bramlage. "The first
line of treatment should always be in providing the horse with rest
and perhaps some other therapy, such as anti-inflammatory agents."
Bramlage also noted that work like this gives veterinarians concrete
information with which to advise owners so all options are presented.
Objective data needs to be used to determine the likelihood of a
horse recovering, no matter what the treatment.
Larry Bramlage, DVM, MS, is a world-renowned equine orthopedic
surgeon based at Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky.
He presented his findings during the 1997 AAEP Convention in Phoenix,
Arizona.
Permission has been granted by AAEP for this one-time reprint.
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