Unappetizing, greasy substances
in the creases of the frog often lead the horse owner to suspect thrush.
Frequently, this diagnosis will be confirmed by a vet or farrier on
the basis of this symptom. On closer investigation, however, it turns
out that only a small percentage of the hooves with damp frog sulci
actually have thrush.
Sweat glands in the frog
sulci provide for a damp climate in the tight folds. In this way, the
elasticity of the frog horn is ensured, and the anaerobic bacteria which
live here (as everywhere in tight folds on mammalian skin) and which
suppress germs, disease and putrefaction, find a suitable environment.
In the confines of the frog
sulcus the continually formed horn cannot be worn away in any other
way (so that is does not become ever tighter in the sulcus) than through
decomposition to a fluid mass.
This decomposition is done
by the anaerobic bacteria. The acid produced is well known for preventing
rot and putrefaction, which is why we have, from time immemorial, preserved
vegetables in acidic form (pickled cabbage, etc.) A decomposition of
frog horn into an acidic or caseous mass is therefore the natural course
of events in the frog. It is illogical to remove this moist, acidic
environment (with thorough cleansing), because without it, disease and
putrefaction can take hold in this region.
If, however, this decomposition
grease does not smell acidic-caseous, but rather musty-rotten, a high
sensitivity in the frog region is also noticeable, even lameness. In
this case we are dealing with thrush.
In most hoof textbooks (Ruthe,
Koerber, et al.) poor hoof care and insufficient stable hygiene are
usually cited as causes of thrush. Frequently the blame will also be
given to incessant wetness or dampness. As control measures, desiccating
and disinfecting treatments are advised, in the form of covering bandages,
specialized shoeing, cleansing with iodine-mixtures, etc.
However, many years of studying
hooves and investigating successful treatments of thrush have brought
to light another picture of the cause of this disease. Moisture, at
any rate, is not responsible (think of the Camargue horses, which live
for weeks in flooded pastures and retain healthy hooves). Poor hoof
care can only partly be identified as a cause (for example, with horses
kept standing most of the time, unable to move freely), for who looks
after the hooves of the wild, large breeding herds?
The cause of thrush, as with
most other hoof problems, lies in reduced circulation and thus restricted
blood supply to the hoof.
Even in the old books on
hoofcare, thrush was depicted as a contracted hoof. In a contracted
hoof, the lateral walls are parallel to one another, i.e. they do not
diverge ground ward, as would be the case in a healthy hoof. When a
healthy hoof becomes contracted, the sheets of sole horn are compressed
laterally, at the expense of the frog, which is pinched.
A cross-section through a
healthy and a contracted hoof show the changes inside the hoof. The
horn pressure against the transition between sole and frog corium (where,
in the area of the heel, the bars are formed) flattens the corium and
so impedes circulation in the region of the frog sulci. Too little oxygen
and nutrient rich blood reaches the frog corium, and too little horn
is produced in relation to the constant decomposition of the soft horn
by bacteria. The frog becomes weaker and weaker. With dehydration of
the hoof, cracks appear in the thin sheet of soft horn, possibly in
as far as the corium, which then become infected. Wound discharge is
a slightly alkaline environment and further helps the putrefactive agents.
Because of the poor blood supply, the corium cannot heal. The frog region
is sensitive to pressure to the point of lameness. The situation cannot,
of course, be improved by drying and immobilization (stall rest), but
rather only by the removal of the cause, i.e. the contraction of the
hooves. The contracted hoof must therefore be brought to a normal, open
shape, in which the frog corium will again be optimally supplied with
blood. It does not help--as is commonly done--to use circulation-enhancing
or anti-infectious agents, intravenously or through the alimentary tract,
because they do not reach the problem area on account of the reduced
blood supply.
To achieve the opening of
contracted hooves, optimal living conditions for the horse are necessary
(freedom of movement 24 hours/day), as well as frequent, knowledgeable
hoofcare and proper trimming.
It is obvious that thrush can not be healed through shoeing.
Copyright Dr. vet. med. H.
Strasser
Blaihofstr. 42/1, 72074 Tuebingen, Germany
Tel/Fax: (011) 49-7071-87572
Ed. & Canadian contact: Sabine Naujoks
Box 44, Qualicum Beach, BC, V9K 1S7