Part 42 (1/2)
While there are no positive premonitory symptoms of these fractures known, we believe that there are signs and symptoms which come but little short of being so, and the appearance of which will always justify a strong suspicion of the truth of the case. These have been indicated when referring to the soreness in standing, the short, mincing gait, and the tenderness betrayed when pressure is made over the sesamoids on the sides of the fetlock, with others less tangible and definable.
_Prognosis._--These injuries can never be accounted less than serious, and in our judgment will never be other than fatal. If our theory of their pathology is the correct one, and the cause of the lesions is truly the softening of the sesamoidal bony structure and independent of any changes in the ligamentous fibers, the possibility of a solid osseous union can hardly be considered admissible.
_Treatment._--In respect to the treatment to be recommended and inst.i.tuted it can be employed only with any rational hope of benefit during the incubation, and with the antic.i.p.atory purpose of prevention.
It must be suggested by a suspicion of the verities of the case, and applied before any rupture has taken place. To prevent this and to antagonize the causes which might precipitate the final catastrophe--the elevation of the toes--resort must be had to the slings and to the application of firm bandages or splints, perhaps of plaster of Paris, with a high shoe, as about the only indications which science and nature are able to offer. When the fracture is an occurred event, and the toes, one or more, are turned up, any further resort to treatment will be futile.
DISEASES OF JOINTS.
Three cla.s.ses of injury will be considered under this head. These are, affections of the synovial sacs, those of the joint structures, or of the bones and their articular surfaces, and those forms of solution of continuity known as dislocations or luxations.
DISEASES OF THE SYNOVIAL SACS.
Two forms of affection here present themselves, one being the result of an abnormal secretion which induces a dropsical condition of the sac without any acute, inflammatory action, while the other is characterized by excessive inflammatory symptoms, with their modifications, const.i.tuting synovitis.
SYNOVIAL DROPSIES.
We have already considered in a general way the presence of these peculiar oil bags in the joints, and in some regions of the legs where the pa.s.sage of the tendons takes place, and have noticed the similarity of structure and function of both the articular and the tendinous bursae, as well as the etiology of their injuries and their pathological history, and we will now treat of the affections of both.
WINDGALLS.
This name is given to the dilated bursae found at the posterior part of the fetlock joint. They have their origin in a dropsical condition of the bursae of the joint itself, also of the tendon which slides behind it, and are therefore further known by the designations of articular and tendinous windgalls, or puffs. (See also p. 401.)
They appear in the form of soft and somewhat symmetrical tumors, of varying dimensions, and generally well defined in their circ.u.mference.
They are more or less tense, according to the quant.i.ty of secretion they contain, apparently becoming softer as the foot is raised and the fetlock flexed. Usually they are painless and only cause lameness under certain conditions, as when they begin to develop themselves under the stimulus of inflammatory action, or when large enough to interfere with the functions of the tendons, or again when they have undergone certain pathological changes, such as calcification, which is among their tendencies.
_Cause._--Windgalls may be attributed to external causes, such as severe labor or strains resulting from heavy pulling, fast driving, or jumping, or they may be among the sequelae of internal disorders, such as strangles or the resultants of a pleuritic or pneumonic attack.
Unnecessary anxiety is sometimes experienced respecting these growths, with much questioning touching the expediency of their removal, all of which might be spared, for, while they const.i.tute a blemish, their unsightliness will not hinder the usefulness of the animal, and in any case they rarely fail to show themselves easily amenable to treatment.
_Treatment._--When in their acute stage, and when the dropsical condition is not excessive, the inflammation may be checked during the day by continuous, cold-water irrigation by means of a hose or soaking tub and at night by applying a moderately tight-roller bandage. Later absorption may be promoted by a Priessnitz bandage,[2] pressure by roller bandages, sweating, the use of liniments, or if necessary by a sharp blister of biniodid of mercury. This treatment should subdue the inflammation, abate the soreness, absorb the excess of secretion, strengthen the walls of the sac, and finally cause the windgalls to disappear, provided the animal is not too quickly returned to labor and exposed to the same factors that occasioned them at first.
If the inflammation has become chronic, however, and the enlargement has been of considerable duration, the negative course will be the wiser one. If any benefit results from treatment it will be of only a transient kind, the dilatation returning when the patient is again subjected to labor, and it will be a fortunate circ.u.mstance if inflammation has not supervened.
Notwithstanding the generally benignant nature of the swelling there are exceptional cases, usually when it is probably undergoing certain pathological changes, which may result in lameness and disable the animal, in which case surgical treatment will be indicated, especially if repeated blisters have failed to improve the symptoms. Line firing is then a preeminent suggestion, and many a useful life has received a new lease as the result of this operation timely performed. Another method of firing, which consists in emptying the sac by means of punctures through and through, made with a red-hot needle or wire, and the subsequent injection of certain irritating and alterative compounds into the cavity, designed to effect its closure by exciting adhesive inflammation, such as tincture of iodin, may be commended. But they are all too active and energetic in their effects and require too much special attention and intelligent management to be trusted to any hands other than those of an expert veterinarian.
BLOOD SPAVIN, BOG SPAVIN, AND THOROUGHPIN.
The blood spavin is situated in front and to the inside of the hock and is merely a varicose or dilated condition of the saphena vein. It occurs directly over the point where the bog spavin is found, and has thus been frequently confused with the latter.
The complicated arrangement of the hock joint, and the powerful tendons which pa.s.s on the posterior part, are lubricated with the product of secretion from one tendinous synovial and several articular synovial sacs. A large articular sac contributes to the lubrication of the shank bone (the tibia) and one of the bones of the hock (the astragalus). The tendinous sac lies back of the articulation itself and extends upward and downward in the groove of that joint through which the flexor tendons slide. The dilatation of this articular synovial sac is what is denominated bog spavin, the term thoroughpin being applied to the dilatation of the tendinous capsule.
The bog spavin is a round, smooth, well-defined, fluctuating tumor situated in front and a little inward of the hock. On pressure it disappears at this point to reappear on the outside and just behind the hock. If pressed to the front from the outside it will then appear on the inside of the hock. On its outer surface it presents a vein which is quite prominent, running from below upward, and it is to the preternatural dilatation of this blood vessel that the term blood spavin is applied.
The thoroughpin is found at the back and on the top of the hock in that part known as the ”hollows,” immediately behind the shank bone. It is round and smooth, but not so regularly formed as the bog spavin, and is most apparent when viewed from behind. The swelling is usually on both sides and a little in front of the so-called hamstring, but may be more noticeable on the inside or on the outside.