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A hoof abscess is
a purulent inflammation of the corium, where the pressure produced
by the accumulation of pus between the corium and the hoof causes
the horse great pain and leads to pronounced lameness.
Hoof abscesses
occur both in shod as well as unshod horses. In the following, we
are only considering the unshod hoof.
According to
conventional educated opinion, a hoof abscess occurs when the horse
has pierced the sole with a foreign object--that is, the abscess
occurs through infection from the outside.
Hoof abscesses,
however, only very rarely arise due to external infecting agents.
More commonly, the following occurs: Corium or lateral cartilage
areas, which have been compressed for a long time, die off. After
circulation is returned to these areas, the dead pieces of tissue
are removed from the living tissue and carried to the outside by
pus, since the dead pieces of tissue cannot be transported away
through the microscopically small blood vessels of the corium.
This process is
very common in the transition from shod hoof to barefoot. When
contracted hooves open, sole and heel abscesses must be expected.
They are predominantly found in the area of the heels and bars, and
sometimes also by the frog, especially near the tip. They also form
in places where shoes' clips are, and near the rearmost nails. Often
excessively long bars which have grown over the sole cause pressure
points which later become noticeable as abscesses.
It provides the
horse with some relief from pain if the abscess is found and opened
by an expert.
A small round hole
cut in the right place allows the pressurized fluid to drain. The
abscess is then cleaned with a mild disinfectant, and the hole
closed with clean loam, clay, or healing earth. Bandaging is not
necessary--quite the opposite, it can be damaging because it
restricts circulation. The horse should be let out onto a soft and
level pasture or paddock. Movement on soft ground is helpful as it
increases blood flow into the hoof, allowing for quicker healing.
After 24 hours the hoof should be bathed, the cleaning repeated
(with chamomile tea, for example), and the hole again closed with
clay.
Then the hoof
should be left alone for two days. After three days, the corium will
be covered with a whitish-yellow skin, the newly-formed sole horn.
After one week the sheet of horn will already be thick enough for
the horse to walk smoothly on even ground. For sharp stones,
however, the sole requires two further weeks of growth.
Sometimes a hoof
abscess cannot be found, for example if it is deep in the
heel/frog/bars region.
In this case,
rather than cutting away a large part of the sole or frog (it would
be a long time before the horse could bear weight on this foot
again!), applying bandaging and leaving the horse in a box--as is
often done--one should wait until the abscess finds it own way to
the outside. Poultices with warm linseed mush, which soften the
horn, are helpful. The pain will lessen as soon as the pus comes out
by the coronary band; however, this can take a few days.
For several days
afterward, one should bathe the hoof daily in water with a bit of
fruit vinegar.
Natural hooves
with normal circulation (and therefore good blood supply) are very
regenerative.
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