Originally published on TheHorse.com
Many horses struggle with stifle dysfunction due to injury, surgery, immobility, or disease. According to Jennifer H. Brooks, PT, MEd (Masters of Education), of Equine Rehabilitation Services, in Brookline, N.H., the stifle joint (comparable to a human’s knee) is the largest, most complex joint in the horse, and dysfunction left untreated can lead to additional joint degradation.
Brooks described her physical therapy approach for restoring strength and coordination to horses with intermittent upward fixation of the patella or other hind-limb weakness issues at the 2011 American Association of Equine Practitioners convention, held Nov. 18-22 in San Antonio, Texas.
“Treatment of both intermittent upward fixation of the patella in horses and anterior knee pain in humans involves client education, increase in activity level, a stretching program, and an ascending therapeutic strengthening exercise progression,” she said. “A thorough veterinary examination should first clear the horse for physical therapy treatment referral. Horses recovering from injuries, surgery, or systemic diseases are appropriate for this program.”
Brooks said owners often report that affected horses are clumsy, frequently stumble, trip, get their hind legs stuck behind them, have a hind limb that gives out or collapses, and/or have an audible click or pop when shifting weight on or off of the involved leg(s). She also noted that affected horses tend to be overweight (body condition score 6 or higher on a scale of 1 to 9), have weak abdominal and/or topline muscles, generalized deconditioning, and atrophied (muscle wasting in) hind end muscles. The patellae (knee caps) might also visibly jump when the horse initiates a weight shift or steps forward.
“Horses with stifle dysfunction will show poor hind-end awareness, presenting as if their hind end is not attached to their trunk or seeming to be dragged along by the forehand,” Brooks described. “Often, these horses do not step up or track up well at the walk or trot.”
The Physical Therapy Program
“This program is owner- and horse-intensive in terms of time and energy for successful outcomes,” she continued. “After the equine is symptom-free, a cross-training maintenance program should be used to prevent recurrence.”
1: Horse Owner Education
Affected horses need more movement, not less (unless your veterinarian prescribes stall rest). Keep horses moving throughout the day, Brooks recommended, allowing 24-hour turnout (but with access to shelter), ideally in a large pasture with slight hills. Have a companion animal, horse, or pony to maximize the herd instinct, and provide multiple separated feed piles to keep horses moving around the paddock. Your veterinarian can help manage any pain your horse might have.
“Often, the horse with stifle problems will opt to rest the involved or atrophied limb frequently,” Brooks noted. “This rest allows or feeds into the commonly known adage in physical therapy that the weak get weaker, further facilitating the problem of nonuse of the weaker limb.”
2: Stretching ("Flexibility should be assessed by a professional and instruction of proper stretching techniques should be provided again by a licensed qualified physical therapist," Brooks stressed.)
3: Strengthening
Strengthening starts with isometric exercise, which involves contracting or tightening a muscle without moving the limb (like if you push on a wall but remain still). Effective isometric muscle contractions are held for at least six seconds.
Next step:
After about a week of this, many owners notice improvement of the horse’s tolerance of lateral tail pull and stretching, Brooks reported. The next step is isotonic (dynamic) exercise, including the following:
If patellar fixation signs have decreased and no lameness is present after about eight weeks of therapy, riding may begin with a slow progression of conditioning through walk, trot, and canter. Maintain strength gains and soundness with a vigorous cross-training program, using a variety of these exercise regimens three to four times a week, Brooks advised.
Most horses have responded favorably to this program when owner compliance was achieved, she said.
“Consider equine physical therapy in conjunction with veterinary medicine approaches for optimal outcomes after injury or during recovery from systemic diseases and surgeries,” she concluded.
Disclaimer: Seek the advice of a qualified veterinarian before proceeding with any diagnosis, treatment, or therapy.
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