The present invention relates to equine hoof appliances primarily intended for animals afflicted with lameness but which can be useful for sound horses in some disciplines.
Equine lameness can be caused by a large variety of lower limb pathologies. Laminitis, ringbone and navicular inflammation are among the most common, all of which will favorably respond to a restriction of movement of the distal phalanges joints, as is achieved by the apparatus and method of the present invention. The present invention will be best explained by reference to its use in the exemplar treatment of one particular pathology, laminitis.
Basically, laminitis is an inflammation of the laminae in a horse's hoof caused by a number of different factors, including grain overload, steroid therapy, retained placenta, colic, toxins, generalized disease and others. More specifically, laminitis is a common, painful, and potentially disastrous condition of the horse foot where there is a partial or total failure of the attachment tissue between the coffin bone (distal or third bone of the distal phalanges) and the inner aspect of the hoof wall. The coffin bone is suspended in the hoof, attached by an arrangement of structures called laminae to the inside surface of the hoof wall. Finger-like dermal (sensitive) laminae grow outwardly from the laminar dermis attached to the coffin bone and interdigitate with corresponding epidermal (insensitive) laminae that project inwardly from the inner surface of the hoof. The interconnection of the dermal and epidermal laminae anchors the coffin bone to the hoof wall.
Acute laminitis, or founder, occurs when the dermal laminae no longer fully retain the epidermal laminae, resulting in lameness. As inflammation from this acute condition increases, edema may occur, causing ischemia and the resulting death of the laminae. As the condition continues and worsens, the laminae in the front of the hoof that carry most of the weight of the horse will stretch and tear, allowing the coffin bone to entirely pull away from the hoof wall. This allows the distal border of the coffin bone (the crescent shaped part of the coffin bone that is the bottom front of the bone) to drop, or rotate, to varying degrees. In severe cases all of the laminae die and the coffin bone sinks and may drop through the bottom of the hoof, resulting in a condition of chronic laminitis.
Proper treatment of laminitis includes many different therapies because the cause is usually systemic, however in addition to dietary restrictions and drugs, non-surgical regimes may be applied to the hoof to relieve pain and stabilize the coffin bone to promote the healing process. In the past these non-surgical treatments have included corrective trimming of the hoof, application of frog supports and the use of therapeutic shoes or pads, such as the heart bar shoe and the devices disclosed in U.S. Patents to Ovnicek, Nos. 5,253,715, 5,439,062 and 5,727,633. These methods and devices have, for the most part, achieved only limited success.
Because these prior art treatment regimens have shortcomings, it is the primary object of the present invention to avoid therapeutic horse shoes and instead provide a system of novel hoof pads and a method for their application that will significantly reduce the pain of laminitis and will accelerate healing.
A correlative object of the invention is to provide a hoof pad that will serve to move the break over in a horse's hoof posteriorly of its normal position.
A further object of the invention is to provide apparatus that will permit a wide range of break over adjustments, whether they are anteriorly, posteriorly, medially or laterally of the normal position.
A still further object of the invention is to provide apparatus and a method that will implement a wide range of adjustments that can be made easily and the results of which can be seen immediately.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent on a reading of the following description of a preferred form of the invention, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The present invention is based on the discovery that laminitis and other lower limb pathologies may be greatly benefited if the break over point of the affected hoof is moved posteriorly from its normal position at or below the toe of the hoof, to a position closer to or caudel to the dorsal distal border of the coffin bone. This relocation of the break over results in both immediate pain relief and the acceleration of healing by relieving stress on the laminae, in laminitis cases, and reducing irritation to the distal phalanx (P3) joint when ring bone or navicular problems are the concern.
Break over, as referred to in this specification, is that point in the movement of a horse's limb when the carrying function of the forelimb ends and the horse's knee bends, lifting the heel of the hoof off of the ground and beginning the rotation of the hoof about its toe.
While the normal load carrying function of the limb is reduced during break over, significant forces are still applied against various portions of the hoof until it is completely released from the ground. Because the most significant break over forces are brought to bear against the toe of the hoof, break over forces exacerbate the pain related to the pathology and tend to promote its continued development. Prior to break over, the force produced against the bottom of an unshod or normally shod hoof is distributed over the entire area of the hoof. However, at break over the upward force is concentrated on the hoof wall. The upward resultant force produced by the ground contact, together with the downward force generated by the horse's weight develops a force couple that tends to bend the wall of the hoof into slight concavity, pulling it away from the coffin bone. If the laminae are inflamed or already stretched or torn, the force produced on the toe of the hoof at break over increases the strain on the laminae, the attaching ligaments, tendons and joints of the phalanges bones, thus exacerbating an already injurious condition that intensifies the horse's pain and obstructs the healing process.
On the other hand, if the break over is reset to a position below the dorsal distal border of the coffin bone, the resultant upward force tends to restrain the coffin bone from further rotation and promotes the healing process by urging the coffin bone into its proper position with respect to the wall of the hoof.
Repositioning of the break over is accomplished in the present invention by securing a novel pad to the underside of the affected hoof. In its plan view, the pad is shaped similar to the ground-contacting surface of the horse's hoof. The depth or thickness of the pad will vary with the size of the foot the device is being applied to and is also a function of the distance that the break over is to be moved axially to the periphery of the hoof wall. The anterior or front surface of the pad is tapered or sloped rearwardly from the pad's hoof-contacting upper surface toward its ground-contacting surface. The line of intersection between the planar ground-contacting surface of the pad and the sloped anterior surface of the pad constitutes the modified break over line.
While the sloping front surface of the pad of the present invention is significant in accomplishing the objectives of the invention, a sloping forward edge of a hoof appliance is not new, in and of itself. See, for example, the horseshoes disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,566,765 and 4,253,526 and the U.S. patents referred to earlier in this specification that all have rearwardly sloping front edge surfaces. While these sloping front surfaces are disclosed in prior patents, none of the devices incorporating the tapered front portions can function to perform the same therapeutic function as specifically intended for the pad of the present invention, as will subsequently become apparent as the description proceeds.
In addition to the sloping anterior surface of the pad, its posterior, medial and lateral edge surfaces are also tapered inwardly toward the center of the pad. This novel aspect of the invention deals with the heretofore-overlooked issue of lateral movement and strain on ligaments, tendons and the digital phalanges' joints that aggravates and intensifies lower limb pathology. Because each case of laminitis or joint arthritis has special requirements for the relief of medial or lateral strain, it may be necessary to offer more break over relief to one side of the limb than to the other. Moreover, each limb may have separate requirements for optimal relief.
When specialized adjustments of the break over are necessary, it may not be sufficient to confine the adjustment mechanism to the primary pad, already described. Accordingly, the present invention includes the provision for attaching a supplemental pad to the flat bottom surface of the primary pad. The preferred supplemental pads significantly reduce the size of the ground-contacting footprint of the primary hoof pad and are shaped to perform a specific adjustment that may be required; including tapered anterior, posterior, medial and lateral surfaces. Similarly purposed supplemental pads can also be shaped as wedges that can raise or lower either of the respective sides of the hoof or its front or back portion, depending on the adjustment needed. Additional shapes may be used, including flat, square, round or crowned and are adapted to be attached to the primary pad in any configuration to obtain equilibrium for the distal phalanges. Unlike horseshoes that have sloping front edges, the pad of the present invention is unique in its ability to mount supplemental pads for more specific treatment.
To avoid further trauma to the patient, the primary or first pad is preferably attached to the hoof by screws and/or by gluing. Special screws are pre-set in the hoof wall from the top or proximal side and screwed downwardly into the upper hoof-contacting surface of the primary pad. Glue may complement the screws to further insure the attachment of the primary pad to the sole of the hoof.
a-1c are demonstrative lateral cross sectional fragmentary views of the lower limb and hoof of a horse showing, in
a-5c illustrate exemplary supplemental pads that can be attached to the bottom or ground contacting side of the primary pad.
a-1c respectively illustrate in diagrammatic form three typical states or phases of equine laminitis, mild, moderate and severe. In each case the coffin bone 12 of the horse's hoof 8 has prolapsed out of its normal position as a result of the partial or complete failure of the interdigitated laminae 9. As earlier stated, laminitis is it not the only pathology treatable with the apparatus and method of the present invention, however the accompanying drawings and this description will focus on laminitis to best explain the present invention.
The primary pad 2 of the present invention is shown in
As seen in
As discussed in the summary description of the invention, there are occasions when further modification of the break over lines is indicated, either laterally, medially or anteriorly.
Nailing the pad 2 to the horse's hoof 8 with pummeling of the hoof that is associated with nail driving hammer blows is too traumatic and painful for a horse with laminitis. Accordingly, the preferred method of attaching the pad 2 to the horse's hoof is illustrated in
If it is desired to compliment the screw attachments with adhesives, the outer surface of the hoof wall is prepared to receive the adhesive prior to inserting the screws 32. Unlike horseshoes or other foot treatment devices, the pad 2 is sized and dimensioned to be wider than the horse's foot in order to support and make contact with adhesive material 35. The adhesive is applied to the edges of the upper surface 4 of the oversized pad 2 and spread over the heads of the screws 32 protruding the from the outside wall of the hoof.
As seen in