Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Equine exudative canker causing chronic hoof disease in a pony
By Jongbloets, A M C et al.·Published in Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde·2005·Destijds Hoofdafdeling Gezondheidszorg Paard·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: [Equine exudative canker: an (auto-)immune disease?].
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old New Forest pony-cross mare was brought in with severe swelling and thickening of the horn-like structures on all four feet, a condition known as equine canker. Despite testing negative for common infections, the vet suspected an (auto-)immune reaction might be causing the problem. The treatment involved surgically removing the affected tissue and giving the pony a corticosteroid medication called prednisolone. Within eight weeks, all the affected areas healed completely, suggesting that this treatment was effective and supporting the idea that the condition may be linked to an immune response.
People also search for: pony canker treatment · equine foot swelling · autoimmune disease in horses · corticosteroids for equine canker
Abstract
Equine canker is a chronic, hyperplastic, exudative pododermatitis affecting one or more feet. Although many causes and treatments have been suggested, the cause of the disease is still unknown and most probably multifactorial. Local treatments include radical surgical debridement of the diseased hoof tissue and application of caustic substances, antibiotics, and pressure bandaging. Nevertheless, the number of recurrences is high (45%). This article presents a 3-year-old New Forest pony-cross mare in which all horny structures (frogs, coronets, spurs, chestnuts) of all feet were affected. Bacteriological and fungal cultures of the frogs were found negative for the pathogens tested. Papilloma virus was not found. Clinical findings raised the hypothesis that the non-specific hyperplastic inflammation of these horn-like structures might have been caused by an (auto-)immune reaction. On the basis of the clinical findings, the pony was treated with surgical debridement of the frogs of a diagonal pair of feet and oral administration of prednisolone (1 mg/kg sid). The frogs, coronets, spurs, and chestnuts of all four feet healed completely within 8 weeks, thus making an (auto-)immune reaction more likely. In conclusion, this case report raised the hypothesis that an aspecific, hyperplastic inflammation of all four feet ('equine canker') and other horny structures may be caused by an (auto-)immune reaction, and that corticosteroids (prednisolone 1 mg/kg sid per os) are effective as treatment.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15754903/