Barbaro

R. Richard

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For those of you who don't follow horse racing, a bit of an explanation. Barbaro won the Kentucky Derby and was favored in the Preakness. Instead Barbaro shattered his right rear leg. Normally a horse would be put to death following such an injury. Veternarians say that a horse is so constructed that it needs to be able to walk on all four legs at all times. If a horse can't walk on all four legs, it tends to develop illnesses that will kill it. What is going on with Barbaro is high drama. The original injury is healing as well as might be expected. Unfortunately, other problems have developed and it is not at all certain the Barbaro will survive. How about a kind thought for an ailing horse? Comment?

Barbaro walks outside, grazing on grass
By DAN GELSTON, AP Sports Writer
August 15, 2006

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Barbaro is enjoying his change of scenery.

For almost a week, the Kentucky Derby winner has been allowed daily outings outside his intensive care stall to pick his own grass, enjoy the warm weather and stretch his recovering legs.

"I thought he was thrilled the first time he went out," Dean Richardson, chief surgeon at the New Bolton Center, said Monday. "He just seemed very happy to be out. You can tell he's looking forward to it every day. It's absolutely normal. Horses love to be outside, obviously, and he's pretty excited about it."

Barbaro stepped outside his ICU stall and started daily walks on a grassy area near the unit last Wednesday for the first time since having catastrophic injuries in the Preakness nearly three months ago. The Kentucky Derby winner, also recovering from a severe case of laminitis on his left hoof, continues to show signs he's on the road to recovery.

"It's a big step just to know he feels good enough that you can take him out of the stall and walk him around like a normal horse and he eats grass like a normal horse," Richardson said in a telephone interview from New Bolton. "That doesn't mean he's healed. It just means things are going well right now."

The 3-year-old had made only a couple of brief walks back and forth from his stall to the surgery room at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center until last week. Now Barbaro is walked daily for about 15 to 20 minutes in a secluded area not far from the George D. Widener Hospital ICU.

Richardson said if Barbaro remains this comfortable, he'll be hand-grazed daily.

Of course, not even the simplest tasks are easy for the colt.

"He doesn't like the flies," Richardson said with a chuckle. "He lost a lot of the tail and it's short, so it's hard for him to swish flies."

Barbaro was shown on video released by the University of Pennsylvania grazing on grass, with Richardson walking him around.

Barbaro has a cast on his right hind leg that encloses the foot and extends up to just below the hock. There's a bandage on the laminitis-stricken left hind foot, and support wraps on Barbaro's front legs.

The colt's comfort level has taken a surprising turn since Richardson said in early July the prognosis for a full recovery was "poor."

"He is more comfortable in his left hind than I thought he would be," Richardson said. "I am very happy with his progression. The right hind is about where I thought it would be."

Barbaro had the cast on his injured right hind leg changed last Tuesday and Richardson said it might not need to be changed for about another three weeks. The left hoof, which needs to completely regrow if the colt is to have any shot of walking, remains the biggest concern.

"He's got to get this left hind foot to the point where it's a solid structure that can sustain long-term weight bearing," Richardson said. "Could there still be some major things resulting in him having to be put down? Yeah. He's absolutely not out of the woods yet."
 
My first reaction was "Glue," but only time will tell.
 
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Barbaro's biggest threats are:

Bot Fly Infection
Digestive Failure due to inactivity

But since he's made it this far it would seem he has an excellent chance for a long, uesful life of SEX FOR HIRE :D
 
Jenny_Jackson said:
But since he's made it this far it would seem he has an excellent chance for a long, useful life of SEX FOR HIRE :D

Yeah! Did I ever mention that I used to run track? If it is so good for race horses, don't you think that . . .?
 
Two years ago I visited a horse hospital in Yorkshire.

They have a swimming pool to exercise injured horses who have suffered similar injuries and lesser conditions. I watched several horses swimming around in a circle and moving their legs in ways that were impossible before treatment.

The cost of in-patient care is horrendous and months of treatment are required.

It can only be justified (by accountants) if stud fees are likely.

Many of the horses being treated were elderly and had no real value except to their loving owners. The only thing each horse had in common was a friendly nature despite their pain.

Those horses were loved by owners who saw beyond the cost.

They were also friendly to inquisitive visitors like Og.
 
oggbashan said:
Two years ago I visited a horse hospital in Yorkshire.

They have a swimming pool to exercise injured horses who have suffered similar injuries and lesser conditions. I watched several horses swimming around in a circle and moving their legs in ways that were impossible before treatment.

The cost of in-patient care is horrendous and months of treatment are required.
There is another thing to think about, Og. A horse the size of Barbaro weighs something like 1600 pounds. That's 400 pounds per leg just walking or standing on a long bone not much larger than the upper arm bone of a normal human male. of course the horse will never run again, but his life span will be shortened by the length of time it takes to either rebrake that lower leg bone or the calcifcation becomes so bad he can no longer walk - maybe 7 to 10 years rather than 20 to 25.
 
Jenny_Jackson said:
There is another thing to think about, Og. A horse the size of Barbaro weighs something like 1600 pounds. That's 400 pounds per leg just walking or standing on a long bone not much larger than the upper arm bone of a normal human male. of course the horse will never run again, but his life span will be shortened by the length of time it takes to either rebrake that lower leg bone or the calcifcation becomes so bad he can no longer walk - maybe 7 to 10 years rather than 20 to 25.

Yeah, but think what he gets to do for the rest of his life!
 
R. Richard said:
Yeah, but think what he gets to do for the rest of his life!

With my luck I'd come down with some tropical equine STD the first time around :rolleyes:
 
Jenny_Jackson said:
With my luck I'd come down with some tropical equine STD the first time around :rolleyes:

With the value of the mares Barbaro will be breeding, I doubt it!
 
A bulletin in the Barbaro story. Comment?

A quick look at Barbaro

A quick look at Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro and how he's progressing from lifesaving surgery and a severe case of laminitis at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa.:

MEDICAL UPDATE: Barbaro remained comfortable as he recovers from the laminitis in his left hind foot and the catastrophic injuries in his right hind.

"Barbaro is doing well on both hind limbs," Dean Richardson, chief surgeon at the New Bolton Center, said Tuesday. "Because of this, we do not plan to change his right hind cast in the next two weeks."

QUOTE: "He is gaining weight and has had his pain medications reduced without any effect on his well-being," Richardson said. "His strength and overall appearance have been improving since he became well enough to be walked outside each day."
 
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A quick look at Barbaro
August 28, 2006

A quick look at Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro and how he's progressing from lifesaving surgery and a severe case of laminitis at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa.:

MEDICAL UPDATE: The cast on Barbaro's broken right leg was changed Sunday because a small crack had developed in it. The bandage on the Kentucky Derby winner's laminitis-stricken left hoof continues to be changed daily.

QUOTE: "Based on new radiographs that were taken, the leg looked excellent under the cast," said Dean Richardson, chief surgeon at the New Bolton Center. "The pastern joint looks completely fused, and there is only a small area in the long pastern bone that has a little farther to go before we take him out of the cast completely."

Radiographs showed that there were no signs of infection, Richardson said Monday.
 
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