Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Pitcher plant extract injection to ease horse foot pain and lameness
By Livesey, Leanda et al.·Published in Journal of equine veterinary science·2024·Department of Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The efficacy of injecting a distillate of the pitcher plant (Sarraceniaceae) adjacent to the palmar digital nerves of horses to ameliorate lameness caused by digital pain.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A group of five mixed breed horses was treated for lameness caused by pain in their front legs. The horses received a nerve block using a common anesthetic, which temporarily improved their lameness, but the relief didn't last long. Researchers then tried injecting an extract from the pitcher plant around the same nerves to see if it would help with the pain, but unfortunately, it did not provide any significant improvement in lameness at any point after the treatment. This suggests that the pitcher plant extract is not effective for treating chronic pain in horses when used in this way.
People also search for: horse lameness treatment · pitcher plant extract for horses · horse pain relief options
Abstract
This study aimed to determine the efficacy of instilling extract of the pitcher plant around the palmar digital nerves of horses to ameliorate digit pain causing lameness. Five mixed breed horses were recruited. Horses were determined to be lame because of pain in the distal portion of one or both thoracic limbs by a positive response to a basisesamoid nerve block using 2%^mepivacaine hydrochloride. Gait was evaluated pre- and post-nerve block at 30 min, 3, 7,14 and 21 days. At the 3-week evaluation, the basisesamoid nerve block was repeated using the extract, and the gait was evaluated at similar times. Lameness was evaluated objectively using a wireless, inertial, sensor-based, motion analysis system. The basisesamoid nerve block significantly ameliorated lameness at 30 min when gait was evaluated, but it had no significant effect on lameness after this time. The product containing extract of the pitcher plant had no significant effect on lameness when administered as a basisesamoid nerve block at any time. Extract of the pitcher plant administered adjacent to the medial and lateral palmar digital nerves (i.e., a basisesamoid nerve block) had no efficacy in ameliorating lameness in the distal portion of one or both thoracic limbs. Extract of the pitcher plant likely has no value for treating horses for chronic pain when administered as a regional nerve block.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38145776/