KitchenKitten99
01-28-2013, 11:28 PM
FYI--I have minor surgery coming up on the 12th. Nothing concerning, just something that will have me on the couch for about a week, and out of saddle for about 8 weeks after.
Without getting into too many details, I discovered my little mare to be lame (again) on Sunday. She has had various issues with the one leg/hoof since I started leasing her (I finally purchased her last summer).
This time... it isn't obvious what source of the problem is. Previous issues were due to a severe abscess that took a long time to heal and for the cavity to grow out of her hoof. That has since resolved itself and she has been fine for over 8 months now.
I did a pressure test on her hoof and she didn't object to any of it. But she shows obvious pain while walking and pivoting/turning, especially clockwise which would force her to put half her weight on it.
At this point... she may or may not be treatable based on her symptoms. She's not old, only about 14 or so. Plenty of spunk and spirit (half Arab, and all redhead).
Her last issue that required the vet to come out ended up with him taking x-rays (with a cool portable x-ray machine that put the image right on an HD monitor). No previous injuries or damage so it couldn't be that.
So tomorrow I have her vet coming out again. I know and have known that when you own a horse, you need to be prepared (at least somewhat) to say goodbye at any time because they come with 1,000 ways to hurt themselves or have health issues requiring euthanasia. Doesn't make it any easier with the prospect of having to do it for real.
I keep telling myself that it is probably minor and will just need minor treatment. Then I keep getting the feeling I may need to make the choice to say goodbye to my little mutt of a mare. All this two weeks before surgery.
While I won't reschedule my surgery because of this (my last day to be able to voluntarily reschedule is tomorrow as well), it will make my recovery a bit harder emotionally. I planned to take a couple mornings after about a week post-op and go out and just groom her and feed her treats, etc. She's cheaper (and smarter) than most therapists.
:(
Without getting into too many details, I discovered my little mare to be lame (again) on Sunday. She has had various issues with the one leg/hoof since I started leasing her (I finally purchased her last summer).
This time... it isn't obvious what source of the problem is. Previous issues were due to a severe abscess that took a long time to heal and for the cavity to grow out of her hoof. That has since resolved itself and she has been fine for over 8 months now.
I did a pressure test on her hoof and she didn't object to any of it. But she shows obvious pain while walking and pivoting/turning, especially clockwise which would force her to put half her weight on it.
At this point... she may or may not be treatable based on her symptoms. She's not old, only about 14 or so. Plenty of spunk and spirit (half Arab, and all redhead).
Her last issue that required the vet to come out ended up with him taking x-rays (with a cool portable x-ray machine that put the image right on an HD monitor). No previous injuries or damage so it couldn't be that.
So tomorrow I have her vet coming out again. I know and have known that when you own a horse, you need to be prepared (at least somewhat) to say goodbye at any time because they come with 1,000 ways to hurt themselves or have health issues requiring euthanasia. Doesn't make it any easier with the prospect of having to do it for real.
I keep telling myself that it is probably minor and will just need minor treatment. Then I keep getting the feeling I may need to make the choice to say goodbye to my little mutt of a mare. All this two weeks before surgery.
While I won't reschedule my surgery because of this (my last day to be able to voluntarily reschedule is tomorrow as well), it will make my recovery a bit harder emotionally. I planned to take a couple mornings after about a week post-op and go out and just groom her and feed her treats, etc. She's cheaper (and smarter) than most therapists.
:(