Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Horse with severe front leg lameness treated by neck epidural pain
By Watkins, Amanda R et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2021·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cervical Epidural Spinal Analgesia for Acute Management of Severe Unilateral Forelimb Lameness: Case Report.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A 20-year-old Quarter Horse gelding was brought in with severe lameness in his right front leg due to a tear in a muscle. Traditional pain medications didn't help enough, so the veterinarian used a special technique called cervical epidural analgesia, where a catheter was placed in the horse's neck to deliver morphine directly to the spinal area. This method significantly reduced the horse's pain over three days, allowing him to recover without complications. At a follow-up two months later, the gelding was walking normally and had no issues from the treatment.
People also search for: horse lameness treatment · epidural morphine for horses · Quarter Horse leg injury recovery
Abstract
A 20-year-old Quarter Horse gelding was presented with severe right forelimb lameness (5/5 AAEP Lameness Scale) due to a tear of the superficial digital flexor muscle which was diagnosedpalpation of swelling and ultrasonography revealing major muscle fiber disruption and hematoma formation. When traditional systemic therapy (non-Steroidal anti-inflammatories) did not restore clinically acceptable comfort and the risk of supporting limb laminitis became a reasonable concern, a cervical epidural catheter was placed between the first and second cervical vertebrae in the standing, sedated patient using ultrasound guidance. The gelding was treated with epidural morphine (0.1 mg/kg every 24 h then decreased to 0.05 mg/kg every 12 h) and was pain-scored serially following treatment. Spinal analgesia was provided for 3 days. Pain scores significantly decreased following each treatment with morphine, and the gelding was successfully managed through the acutely painful period without any adverse effects associated with the C1-C2 epidural catheter placement technique, the epidural morphine, or contralateral limb laminitis. At the 2-month follow-up, the gelding was walking sound with no complications seen at the catheter insertion site. In this case, spinal analgesia using epidural morphine administereda cervical epidural catheter was an effective and technically achievable option for pain management associated with severe forelimb muscle injury in a horse.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34805340/