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The
Liphook Equine Hospital
SEEDY TOE
What is seedy toe?
Seedy toe is a separation
of the horse’s hoof wall from the underlying sensitive
laminae at the white line, resulting in a cavity which fills
with crumbling dirt, horn and debris and is prone to associated
infection.
What causes seedy toe?
It can occur as a complication
of chronic laminitis with rotation and sinking of the pedal
bone (P3 or distal phalanx), followed by secondary infection.
It can also occur in non-laminitic feet with long toe/low
heel conformation, where the hoof wall separation and subsequent
infection are the primary features. It may also occur in
feet with poor dorso-palmar (front to back) balance and
as a sequel to 'club foot' and may be predisposed by poor
quality hoof horn.
Infection with anaerobic
bacteria and yeasts, which are common hoof contaminants
and an important feature in all forms of seedy toe, can
liquefy hoof keratin, separating the sensitive laminae,
progressing to rotation of the pedal bone as in laminitis.
How is seedy toe diagnosed?
When cleaning or searching
the horse’s foot, a cavity is found between the hoof
wall and underlying sensitive laminae, i.e. along the white
line, usually at the toe. The associated hoof wall is often
very poor quality crumbling horn. The condition does not
usually cause lameness, unless there is active infection
within the cavity, or the condition is secondary to chronic
laminitis, both of which exert pressure on the sensitive
laminae of the hoof.
Radiographic (x-ray)
examinations will define the extent (depth) of the separation
and whether pedal bone rotation or pedal osteitis has occurred.
How is seedy toe treated?
The separated and necrotic
infected horn should be removed by your farrier or veterinary
surgeon with a hoof knife, establishing drainage and exposing
the infected tissues to air, discouraging growth of anaerobic
bacteria. The edges of the normal horn should be tapered
to prevent the collection of infected dirt and debris. Antiseptics
and astringents, e.g. dilute povidone iodine or antibiotic
wound spray are applied to the cleaned, raw tissues and
the horse should be treated with antibiotics, active against
both aerobic and anaerobic bacterial infections, if the
deeper tissues of the foot are involved.
Tetanus antitoxin must
be given, if the horse is not fully vaccinated up-to-date
or if vaccination status cannot be confirmed.
Afterwards, the horse
should be stabled in clean, dry conditions while the hoof
wound is regularly cleaned and treated until the infection
is controlled and the tissues heal. The horse should then
be shod with a seated-out, flat, broad-webbed shoe, fitted
long at the heels, or a full-bar shoe, to help support the
foot until the hoof re-grows. Where large amounts of hoof
have been removed it may be necessary to use a glue-on shoe.
Feed supplements containing
zinc, biotin and methionine may help to aid good quality
hoof growth, especially for those horses with naturally
brittle feet. Those with naturally brittle feet may also
benefit from being fed gelatine.
How can seedy toe be
prevented?
Your horse should be exercised regularly and stabled in
clean dry conditions. Your horses' feet should be regularly
trimmed and shod, by a competent farrier, to avoid the development
of long toe conformation which may pre-dispose to laminitis,
which can predispose to seedy toe. Keep your horses' feet
regularly picked out and cleaned to avoid the development
of infection.
Caution
The prognosis for complete
resolution is good for cases of seedy toe which are diagnosed
and treated early, unless laminitis is involved, and/or
there is already extensive involvement of deeper tissues.
However, the prognosis for chronic cases is less good and
these can only be managed at best by regular hoof trimming
and skilful shoeing.
It may take considerable
time for the hoof defect to fill with new horn. Remember
that hoof wall horn grows down from the coronary band at
approximately 1 cm per month.
Make sure that your
horses are always fully vaccinated against tetanus, an invariably
fatal infection which can gain access through a seedy toe.
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