
Some body types may be more prone to laminitis than others.
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These days, and for every horse that is correctly diagnosed and
treated as a result of that, great. However, as often happens with a disease du
jour, some folks are carrying things too far, seeing laminitis in hoof changes
that can have other explanations and leading owners into management changes and
supplements that just aren’t necessary.
What is laminitis?
Laminitis is simply inflammation of the laminae, microscopic
finger-like projections that bond the hoof wall to the coffin bone. Inflammation
can range from mild, causing minimal pain and swelling, to severe destruction
that causes the laminae to "let go" of the coffin bone, which may drop away from
the anterior connections to the hoof wall and rotate into a position where its
tip is pointing down toward the ground (rather than being parallel with it). The
coffin bone may even let go entirely with the result that the coffin bone sinks
down lower into the hoof capsule, "sinking."

Vaccine reactions, though rare, may trigger laminitis.
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The possible causes of laminitis include:
1) Drugs (especially corticosteroids)
2) Toxic plants (e.g. Black Walnut, Hoary Alyssum)
3) Severe systemic reactions (e.g. a large parasite die-off after
deworming, severe vaccine reaction)
4) Circulating bacterial products that reduce blood flow and/or
trigger inflammatory enzymes (e.g. retained infected placenta in mares, severe
colic with damage to the intestine, colitis caused by Salmonella, Clostridia or
Potomac horse fever, grain overload causing severely acidic conditions in the
bowel)
5) "Road founder," prolonged work on hard surfaces (now rare)
6) Autoimmune or immune complex diseases (e.g. Pemphigus or
purpura from Strangles infections, Lyme disease)
7) Hormonal disruptions like Cushing’s disease or insulin
resistance/metabolic syndrome (which includes so-called grass founder).
In the first six categories, the cause is usually known or
strongly suspected. However, the hormonal category likely causes far more cases
of laminitis than the others, especially in horses that have had repeated bouts
of laminitis.
External Indicators There are few reliable outward indicators of laminitis, and they
only relate to severe cases. One is a pronounced "dip" of the tissues at and
above the coronary band that occurs with sinking. The other is the appearance of
growth rings in the hoof that are close together in the center of the front of
the hoof wall and wider at the quarters and heels. These are seen with rotation
of the tip of the coffin bone.
Radiographs are the ideal way to diagnose laminitis. In addition
to easily detecting sinking and rotation, X-rays can be used to measure the
"horn lamellar zone," the distance between the edge of the coffin bone and the
hoof wall on a lateral view X-ray. This will be increased with either the
swelling of acute inflammation or the scarring that accompanies long-term
smoldering laminitis.
Rings in the hoof wall can indicate inflammation, but many other
things do, too including change in diet or supplements, or an illness. Rings
that are wider at the heels than at the center of the toe are commonly seen with
laminitis involving rotation.
Some unreliable signs being suggested to indicate laminitis
include:
Dropped/flat soles: This can occur
with laminitis and sinking but is also commonly seen in horses that have overly
long toes, especially combined with underrun heels. Many shod horses have
flatter soles than barefoot horses. Extensive white-line disease can lead to
dropped soles. Although there’s debate about whether flat feet can be genetic,
many drafts do tend to have flat feet. Over-trimming of the sole can lead to
bruising and sole thickening, which makes the feet appear flat.
Finally, although debatable, some lines of horses do appear to
have weak hoof horn that is predisposed to "collapsing," making the heels
underrun and causing both flat soles and laminar stress/stretching just like
letting the toe get too long does. But, it’s not a conclusive finding for
laminitis.
"Toe flare": This term has been
used to describe widening/stretching of the white line at the toe.
Heel contracture: Again, mechanical
causes. Heel contracture can occur with longstanding laminitis pain also simply
because the horse is reluctant to fully bear weight on the foot. Any nagging
pain in the foot, including the heel area, or anywhere else on the leg, can
cause this.
Widening of the white line (not just at the
toe): This can be seen with laminitis, but also
with feet that are simply in need of a trim. Measurement of the horn lamellar
zone on an X-ray, as well as other measurements veterinarians use, is much more
reliable than the appearance of the hoof at ground surface.
Crumbling of the white line: This
is a common finding at the ground surface in horses that need a trim or have
mechanical stretching on the white line as above. It is not a sign of laminitis
per se.
White-line disease: True white-line
disease is a fungal infection in the white line that extends well up the hoof
wall, above the junction of the live and dead tissues. While it might seem to
make sense that horses with damage to the laminae/white line would be
predisposed to this, fact is that white-line disease is not seen more often with
laminitis and can occur in any horse.
Thrush and/or "fungal" infections of the
frog: Any horse that is not using the foot
normally will tend to pack manure into the frog clefts and be more prone to
thrush if the hoof is not properly trimmed and cared for. Horses with laminitis
are not any more prone to thrush simply because of the
laminitis.
Overweight/fat: Easy weight gain
can be a symptom of insulin resistance, which prediposes horses to laminitis.
However, not all fat horses are insulin-resistant and laminitic. If insulin
resistance is suspected, the horse should have blood tests. This also gives you
a set of numbers that can be used to make sure changes in diet and management
are adequate.
Bottom Line
Not every flat-footed horse with a stretched white line and hoof
wall flares is laminitic. The best way to diagnose laminitis is with X-rays. If
insulin resistance is suspected, confirm this with blood testing before making
major diet changes or buying pricey supplements. Being proactive if laminitis is
suspected is a good thing, but make sure that’s what you are dealing with. The
horse may just need to have a good trim.