Services Offered
Preventative Care
We provide a wide range of preventative care to our patients.
Services include routine vaccinations, Coggin's tests, Health
Certificates for travel, insurance exams, dental exams, and general
wellness evaluations (focusing on the horse's eyes, heart, lungs,
gastrointestinal and musculoskeletal systems).
Dentistry
Proper dental care is essential to peak performance for equine
athletes. We provide dental examinations and both hand and
power floating.
Surgery
We perform minor surgeries in the field such as castrations,
laceration repair, biopsy sampling, and Vet-Stem procedures. If
more extensive surgery is required, we will refer you to one of the
local equine veterinary hospitals.
Emergency Services
To provide the highest level of care for our patients, we are
available for emergencies, for our regular clients, 24 hours a day,
7 days a week.
Lameness Exam
The lameness examination uses a combination of history from the
owner, visual examination of the horse in motion, musculoskeletal
palpation and manipulation, and variably using advanced imaging
diagnostics (digital radiography, digital ultrasonography, nuclear
scintigraphy and MRI) to determine the source of pain or decreased
performance in the equine athlete. If a problem is diagnosed, we
can provide numerous therapeutic treatments (from simple physical
therapy or medications to IRAP, Stem Cell, or Shockwave) and will
design a lay-up and rehabilitation program specific to your horse's
needs.
Digital Radiology
With our DR system made by Eklin Medical Technologies, we can
provide the following benefits compared to traditional radiographs:
·
More consistent image quality
·
Reduced number of repeat exposures because of ability to adjust
brightness, contrast, magnification, and edge enhancement (less time
per study = less sedation for horse)
·
More efficient to identify small bone detail and soft tissue
·
Images can be e-mailed immediately as .jpeg pictures to referring
veterinarians
·
Portable unit allows images to be evaluated at horse shows or
stables with trainers and owners within seconds.
·
Rules out fractures or catastrophic bone injuries at competitions or
farm calls
·
Radiograph results for time sensitive issues such as pre-purchase
exams are known immediately.
·
Radiographs can be burned to CD allowing owners or trainers to keep
their radiographs with them at all times.
Digital Ultrasound
Ultrasound is a practical imaging modality to evaluate soft tissue
injuries of the equine limb and other soft tissue structures in the
body. It allows for visualization of tendons and ligaments, and to
identify, confirm, and monitor soft tissue injury. Evaluation of
tissue size, shape, echogenicity (whiteness or brightness of a
structure), fiber pattern, and surrounding inflammatory reactions is
possible with this machine. As with digital radiography, these
images are stored electronically and available to e-mail to
referring veterinarians as needed. They are also available for
review to compare with new images obtained during a recovery period
to determine rate of healing and prognosis.
Endoscopy
We use the flexible endoscope to diagnose and evaluate numerous
nose, throat, and respiratory problems. The flexible endoscope has
a camera chip at the end of a long, narrow tube, which allows for
the visualization of certain conditions without invasive exploratory
surgery. It is also useful for taking samples of the fluid in the
trachea, lungs, or guttural pouches for diagnostic purposes.
Nuclear
Scintigraphy
Nuclear Scintigraphy or "bone scanning" offers high sensitivity for
detecting early bone disease and it is an ideal tool for diagnosing
difficult or multi-factorial lameness. Your horse will need to go to
Southern California Equine Foundation Inc. Nuclear Medicine Facility
at the Santa Anita Racetrack. The horse is catheterized and
injected with a radioactive isotope (Technetium) which aggregates in
areas of bone remodeling (due to binding the Tc to Phosphorous,
which bones need to make new cells). A specialized Gamma camera
detects the gamma rays emitted by the radioactive isotope. Your
horse is given a standing sedation only for this procedure and it
takes approximately one to two hours to obtain all the images
needed. The gamma camera is on a crane and can move all around the
horse. This procedure allows for the evaluation the entire equine
skeleton or just a specific region. The computer takes the
information from the camera and generates an image of the horse’s
bones. The areas of increased isotope activity, “Hot Spots,” are
the areas that are currently undergoing increased bone remodeling
(this can include growth plates, bone infection, fractures, stress
fractures or trauma). It is more sensitive than radiographs in
detecting lameness related to bone inflammation, as it allows us to
see on a cellular level where the body is trying to “fix” itself.
Once these “Hot Spots” identify where the problem is, then we can
follow up with X-rays or Ultrasound to clearly identify what the
problem is. Due to the radiation involved, albeit minimal, your
horse will need to stay overnight in our facility before being
released back home.
Shockwave
Therapy
Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy (ESWT) is an efficient noninvasive
therapy used to treat common musculoskeletal and orthopedic
disorders in equine patients. The unit generates focused shockwaves
(positive pressure acoustic waves) of low and high energy that can
be transmitted to deeper structures in the body. This energy
stimulates the areas of interest to increase healing. Treatment
sessions range from one to four times with an interval of 1 to 3
weeks apart, depending on the injury. Use of this treatment has led
to astonishing results in the treatment of pain in the region of
tissue located close to bones and in the healing of tendinopathies,
desmopathies, fractures, and degenerative joint disease. Use of
ESWT has also had some great success in treating chronic back
soreness and kissing spine lesions.
Stem Cell Therapy
Stem cell therapy is designed to regenerate injured tissues using
stem cells derived from the horse’s own body. There are multiple
protocols for harvesting stem cell, from obtaining them from the
bone marrow to collecting them from the adipose (fat) tissue. These
cells have the ability to mature into bone, tendon, or ligament
cells (depending on where they are injected), which can aid in the
healing of injured areas that typically do not regenerate well.
Our practice employs the Vet-Stem system of stem cell collection and
injection. Please visit the Vet-Stem website for more information and to look at some of the excellent
research that has come about from this exciting new therapy.
This procedure is a two step process that can be performed in a
standing, sedated horse at the barn or stable, which minimizes
having to transport to a hospital. That also means fewer
complications than general anesthesia. The first step is a small
incision on the rump, next to the tail head, where the fat tissue is
harvested. The area is then sutured closed. The fat tissue is then
sent to Vet-Stem, where the stem cells are harvested, counted, and
in some cases specially stored for future use, if enough cells were
collected. The cells are then returned for immediate injection into
the affected site. This is done with the horse, again sedated, at
the barn, and is usually aided with x-ray or ultrasound to guide the
needle to the direct location where the cells are needed. A lay-up
program will be discussed with you, depending on the type and
location of injury.
Common applications are strains or tears of suspensory ligaments,
bowed tendons and other soft tissue injuries, chronic
osteoarthritis, or fracture repair.
IRAP Therapy
Interleukin-1
Receptor Antagonist Protein Procession System or IRAP is designed to
block the excessive production of interleukin-1 in joints affected
by osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis, or secondary degenerative joint
disease (DJD) is a primary cause of lameness in the horse.
Cartilage destruction, which leads to secondary DJD, occurs due to
inflammatory mediators in the joint, such as interleukin-1. IRAP
blocks IL-1 from binding to the tissues and causing damage.
To perform IRAP treatment, a sample of blood taken from the affected
horse is incubated with substances that encourage healing, such as
growth factors and anti-inflammatory aids. The sample is then "spun"
to separate these beneficial substances in the serum from red blood
cells. This serum is then injected into the injured joint, halting
the inflammatory cycle and encouraging healing. Multiple samples
are usually harvested and injected at one to two week intervals.
Although research in IRAP therapy are still ongoing, the results are
promising.
AVID
Microchipping
Permanent identification for horses
has taken a huge step forward with development of a modern network
for tracking and recovery of missing and stolen animals.
Microchips provide permanent, positive identification for all
ownership issues:
- Positive I.D. by law enforcement in theft recovery cases.
- Emergency response teams scan all recovered animals
following disasters. Microchipped horses that have been
registered in
HORSEtrac™ can be quickly reunited with owners.
- Verification that a horse to be transported is in fact the
correct animal.
- Provides quick identification of look-alike foals and
yearlings
- Microchips have been recommended as one method of permanent
ID by the Equine Species Working Group for the USDA's National
Equine ID Program.
Included in the cost of the chip is lifetime enrollment in the
AVID recovery network (nominal fee for change of registered
information or ownership of horse).