Diseases of the Horse's Foot
PREFACE
Stimulated by the reception accorded my 'Common Colics of the Horse,' both in this country and in America, and assured by my publishers that a work on diseases of the foot was needed, I have been led to give to the veterinary profession the present volume.
While keeping the size of the book within reasonable limits, no effort has been spared to render it as complete as possible. This has only been achieved by adding to my own experience a great deal of the work of others. To mention individually those who have given me permission to use their writings would be too long a matter here. In every case, however, where the quotation is of any length, the source of my information is given, either in the text or in an accompanying footnote. A few there are who will, perhaps, find themselves quoted without my having first obtained their permission to do so. They, with the others, will, I am sure, accept my hearty thanks.
The publishers have been generous in the matter of illustrations and diagrams, and although to the older practitioner some of these may appear superfluous, it is hoped they will serve to render the work an acceptable textbook for the student.
H. CAULTON REEKS.
SPALDING, January, 1906 .
Lungwitz
The importance of that branch of veterinary surgery dealing with diseases of the horse's foot can hardly be overestimated. That the animal's usefulness is dependent upon his possession of four good feet is a fact that has long been recognised. Who, indeed, is there to be found entirely unacquainted with one or other of such well-known aphorisms as: 'Whoever hath charge of a horse's foot has the care of his whole body'; 'As well a horse with no head as a horse with no foot'; or the perhaps better known, and certainly more epigrammatic, 'No foot, no horse.'
Without taking these sayings literally, it will be admitted by almost everyone that they contain a vast amount of actual truth. This allowed, it at once becomes clear that a ready understanding of the diseases to which the foot is liable, the means of holding them in check, and the correct methods of treating them should figure largely in the knowledge at the command of the veterinary surgeon.
H. Caulton Reeks
DISEASES
THE HORSE'S FOOT
DISEASES OF THE HORSE'S FOOT
A. THE BONES.
B. THE LIGAMENTS.
C. THE TENDONS
D. THE ARTERIES.
E. THE VEINS.
F. THE NERVES.
G. THE COMPLEMENTARY APPARATUS OF THE OS PEDIS.
H. THE KERATOGENOUS MEMBRANE.
I. THE HOOF.
A. DEVELOPMENT OF THE HOOF.
B. CHEMICAL PROPERTIES AND HISTOLOGY OF HORN.
C. EXPANSION AND CONTRACTION OF THE HOOF.
D. THE FUNCTIONS OF THE LATERAL CARTILAGES.[A]
E. GROWTH OF THE HOOF.
B. INSTRUMENTS REQUIRED.
C. THE APPLICATION OF DRESSINGS.
D. PLANTAR NEURECTOMY.
E. MEDIAN NEURECTOMY.
F. LENGTH OF REST AFTER NEURECTOMY.
G. SEQUELÆ OF NEURECTOMY.
H. ADVANTAGES OF THE OPERATION.
I. THE USE OF THE HORSE THAT HAS UNDERGONE NEURECTOMY.
A. WEAK HEELS.
B. CONTRACTED FOOT.
C. FLAT-FOOT.
D. PUMICED-FOOT, DROPPED SOLE, OR CONVEX SOLE.
E. 'RINGED' OR 'RIBBED' HOOF.
F. THE HOOF WITH BAD HORN.
G. CLUB-FOOT.
H. THE CROOKED FOOT.
B. CORNS.
C. CHRONIC BRUISED SOLE.
B. PUNCTURED FOOT.
C. CORONITIS (SIMPLE). TREAD, OVERREACH, ETC.
D. FALSE QUARTER.
E. ACCIDENTAL TEARING OFF OF THE ENTIRE HOOF.
B. CHRONIC.
B. QUITTOR.
C. OSSIFICATION OF THE LATERAL CARTILAGES, OR SIDE-BONES.
B. PYRAMIDAL DISEASE, BUTTRESS FOOT, OR LOW RINGBONE.
C. FRACTURES OF THE BONES.
A. SYNOVITIS.
B. ARTHRITIS.
C. NAVICULAR DISEASE.
D. DISLOCATIONS.
INDEX
THE END