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  2. Saddle sore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saddle_sore

    In animals such as horses and other working animals, saddle sores often form on either side of the withers, which is the area where the front of a saddle rests, and also in the girth area behind the animal's elbow, where they are known as a girth gall. Saddle sores can occur over the loin, and occasionally in other locations.

  3. Poll evil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poll_evil

    Poll evil is a traditional term for a painful condition in a horse or other equid, that starts as an inflamed bursa at the cranial end of the neck between vertebrae and the nuchal ligament, and swells until it presents as an acute swelling at the poll, on the top of the back of the animal's head.

  4. Withers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Withers

    Most horses have 18 thoracic vertebrae. The processes at the withers can be more than 30 centimetres (12 in) long. Since they do not move relative to the ground as the horse's head does, the withers are used as the measuring point for the height of a horse. Horses are sometimes measured in hands – one hand is 4 inches (10.2 cm). Horse heights ...

  5. Lameness (equine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lameness_(equine)

    Additionally, horses with a hind limb lameness will tend to reduce the degree of leg use. To do so, some horses will reduce the contraction time of the gluteals on the side of the lame leg, leading to a "hip roll" or "hip dip" and appearance that the hip drops a greater degree on the side of the lame leg. [10]

  6. Horse pain caused by the bit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_pain_caused_by_the_bit

    Like all mammals, the horse has a conscious experience of pain, [1] which it seeks to avoid in favor of comfort. [2] This sensation of pain is triggered by a noxious stimulus. [3] Pain then acts as a warning system to minimize tissue damage. [3] [4] As horses are flighty animals, their reaction to pain stimuli will typically be to flee the ...

  7. Equine conformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_conformation

    Many breeds characteristically have high and prominent withers, such as the TB. In these horses the withers may be higher than the croup giving the impression of an uphill build while the horse's actual spine levelness is downhill. Common in well-built warmbloods. A "croup-high" horse. Withers Lower than Croup/Rump High/Downhill Balance

  8. Covering sickness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covering_sickness

    Mohler, John R., Dourine of horses – its cause and suppression (1911) Covering sickness, or dourine (French, from the Arabic darina, meaning mangy (said of a female camel), feminine of darin, meaning dirty), [1] is a disease of horses and other members of the family Equidae.

  9. Horse colic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_colic

    Colic in horses is defined as abdominal pain, [1] but it is a clinical symptom rather than a diagnosis. The term colic can encompass all forms of gastrointestinal conditions which cause pain as well as other causes of abdominal pain not involving the gastrointestinal tract.