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Old 09-06-2007, 03:29 PM
boswd boswd is offline
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Location: Boston
Posts: 414
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This was taken from a horse veterinarian


Although bucked shins are commonly accepted by
veterinarians, trainers, and owners as a normal
training event in young Thoroughbred racehorses,
with estimated losses to the industry of only
$10,000,000/yr in lost training and racing days, it is
far more important than that! Approximately 12%
of horses that buck their shins go on to develop
stress or saucer fractures later in their career.
Besides the aggravation of yet another lameness
occurring at the peak potential earning period in the
horse’s career, these are the animals at risk for
mid-cannon bone fractures, which represent approximately
10% of the fatal catastrophic musculoskeletal
breakdown injuries that occur on the racetracks
in North America each year.
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Old 09-06-2007, 03:33 PM
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paisjpq paisjpq is offline
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 5,020
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Quote:
Originally Posted by boswd
This was taken from a horse veterinarian


Although bucked shins are commonly accepted by
veterinarians, trainers, and owners as a normal
training event in young Thoroughbred racehorses,
with estimated losses to the industry of only
$10,000,000/yr in lost training and racing days, it is
far more important than that! Approximately 12%
of horses that buck their shins go on to develop
stress or saucer fractures later in their career.
Besides the aggravation of yet another lameness
occurring at the peak potential earning period in the
horse’s career, these are the animals at risk for
mid-cannon bone fractures, which represent approximately
10% of the fatal catastrophic musculoskeletal
breakdown injuries that occur on the racetracks
in North America each year.
the horses that go on to develop stress and saucer fractures are often the ones who, when they buck shins are put up and given complete rest....the bone does not properly remodel and then when they go back into training it happens again....a horse with bucked shins needs to be kept in light work.
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