The horse is naturally, by right of birth and genetics, an elite athlete. Pound for pound, the horse is able to run faster and longer than any of the other domesticated species, including humans!
Any horse that performs with its rider or driver, be it competitively or recreationally, is an athlete and sports medicine allows for exercise without pain and without limitation to the horse's genetic potential.
© 2012 by Debra Krall
In addition to speed and endurance, the horse has the gift of natural athletic grace - the Lippizaner's airs above the ground are foreshadowed by the balletic leaps of the foal at pasture with its mare, and the patterns inscribed by a good reining horse can be seen in the quick turns and spins of yearlings out at pasture.
Horses seem to be naturally amenable to working with humans, and the best of them have not only a competitive nature, but a desire to please. Altogether, their speed, endurance, grace, trainability, and competitive nature allow us to enjoy the beauty and excitement of a large variety of competitive and recreational equine sports.
Like human athletes, competitive horses have a tendency to push their bodies higher, further, and faster than nature might have intended. The injuries that result, even when not catastrophic, can limit a horse's ability to perform at the expected level.
Illnesses can limit their ability to perform. In order to compete as athletes, horses need to be sound, they need to be able to breath well, they need to have an efficiently functioning heart and vasculature, and their neurologic systems, which orchestrate the whole, need to be intact.
The role of equine sports medicine is to determine how each of these body systems enables the horse to perform at a maximum level, and, if the horse's performance has decreased, to determine which body system is malfunctioning.
Although it is relatively easy to spot a horse that is limping badly, or coughing severely, or has advanced heart disease, identifying minor disruptions of any of these systems can be very difficult indeed! A joint injury that would never bother, for instance, a broodmare, may be significant enough to a racehorse to keep it out of the winner's circle.
Inflammation of the lower airways might not be noticed for several years in a pleasure horse, but a 10-goal polo pony might have trouble keeping up even in medium-goal polo. In general, even small problems can have significant effects on high performance horses. Moreover, the longer physical ailments go untreated, the greater is their potential to cause catastrophic breakdowns in future.
Is sports medicine only for elite horses? Absolutely not! Any horse that performs with its rider or driver, be it competitively or recreationally, is an athlete. Whether poor performance means coming in 4th rather than 1st in the Derby, or whether it means having an unpleasant trail ride because your horse was coughing - limitations to a horse's physical ability means that the horse cannot do his job happily or well.
Sports medicine is for the 4-H pony, the 3-Day Event horse, the barrel racer, the endurance horse, and the multi-million dollar racehorse.
Equine sports medicine services offer support to the equine athlete with the latest therapeutic, diagnostic, and rehabilitation techniques from birth through adolescence, competition, injury, rehabilitation, and retirement.
Equine sports medicine usually includes the following services:
- Lameness and follow-up examinations
- Digital radiography
- Digital ultrasound
- Extracorporeal shockwave therapy
- Laser therapy
- Joint injections
- Therapeutic management of back pain
- Regenerative therapies
- Rehabilitation consultations
- Pre-purchase examinations
- Assistance with physical or behavior issues that limit your equine athlete
Yes, sports medicine is for any rider and horse team that wants to be able to exercise without pain and without limitation to the horse's genetic potential.