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VL 10c

10.2 Dissimilar Transfer of Weight Between the Front and Hind End


A.


B.


VL 10c

VL 10d


VL 10d

It is important to keep in mind that the severity of the referred component may exceed that of its parent source. In fact, recognition of secondary and/or artificial lameness is often what prompts the horse owner to solicit veterinary intervention in the first place. Examiners who visually separate front and back halves of the animal, evaluate each half individually and actively seek potential relationships between coexisting deficits, will both clarify their assessment and enhance the quality of their interpretation.

11

axial skeleton,VL 11amedian anatomy


VL 11a

peripheral lameness.

Interestingly, horses with authentic axial lameness are more likely to avoid movement altogether as opposed to moving irregularly. As previously discussed (in ssss1—ssss1), the relative proximity between contralateral axial structures in combination with the horse’s emphatic desire to safeguard painful areas can make effective assessment of the median anatomy (by itself) very perplexing.

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