Monday, July 23, 2012

About Horse Arthritis

By Malcolm Mancini


There are a variety of home cures or treatments you can use for your senior horse companion if he is having a lot of pain and inflammation with his arthritis. They even be done at the same time. The thing to keep in mind is that your horse is an individual and may not take too kindly to some solutions, and be just fine with others. Always treat your horses appropriately. For more information, feel free to click BusinessInfusions.

Make a box stall with lots of hay and soft grass underfoot if your horse is required to be confined for at least 24 hrs due to arthritis. Some horses are herd sour and desires their buddy all of the time so make sure you place his buddy at a near distance. The last thing you want is your aching horse to be fretting and pacing more seeking his friend.

You can try making use of a flexible ice pack maybe a bag of frozen peas tucked in a towel on the swollen joint for 5 minutes. Repeat 3 times in a row with 15 minutes gap soon after every application. Wrap the joint using a standing bandage to relieve the swelling. We suggest trying Neo-Ice Equine bandages or an ice gel over the affected region.

There is certainly a tendency that the joint may get stiff if left unmoved so take your horse out twice daily for a hand walk. Get rid of his bandage first then stroll for about 15 minutes to get limber. After walking, you may rewrap the bandage as soon as you get back to his stall. Exercises should be gradually improved each day. You will need to do this about four times a day as he gets better and then also slow up the length of time he is to be confined to about half the original period of time.

It is recommended that you perform controlled exercises for your horse. Top examples are hand-walking, slow trot and ponying at a walk. The exact level of exercises may count on what shape your horse is in. We suggested you use this with discretion. If the swelling returns, you must slow down.

Slowly increased his exercises to his standard routines if there is no inflammation an hour after each exercise. However, if there are signs of swelling and inflammation, we urge caution by calling your vet immediately for reevaluation.




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