It’s been almost a week since I
last wrote anything. Mort had a very
positive flex test Wednesday morning. I’ll
make this post about his soundness and the advice of my vets (and other horse
friends). Originally the vet at MU
(lameness specialist and who did Mort’s ultrasound) said that injections could
help Mort someday and that we should have our regular vet check his soundness
level every 6 months to a year. She also
said a lot of other things that just make decisions more complicated. Why can’t horses just talk to us?
I spoke with our regular vet and MU
vet and both said that if Mort isn’t showing unsoundness in our regular work
injections may not make a big difference in our day-to-day (which makes sense
but obviously I’m a bit paranoid about his fetlocks). They both still also recommended that my
regular vet take a look at him and do a lameness exam so that she can monitor
him over time for changes. The regular
vet was coming out Monday to inject two other horses at the barn, so it was
perfect timing.
The results were what I was
expecting—nothing showing at w/t without flexion. After flexion he showed positive on both
sides slightly, but more so on the left.
Our vet did mention that next time we do it we should flex to a point
where Mort just starts getting tense and keep it there instead of flexing him
the way you would a ‘normal’ horse. When
she did this he had much less of a dramatic result then when BM and I did it last
Wednesday.
Her opinion was unchanged—injections
probably won’t help him much yet as he’s still going sound in our regular
work. She further encouraged me to push
him more physically as he will show obvious signs when he starts having
pain. So the plan for now is simply to
continue along our path with more of a focus on forward (just because that’s where
we are in our training).
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