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  2. Horse leg protection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_leg_protection

    Bell boots or overreach boots are bell-shaped boots which encircle the horse's pastern and drape over the hoof. They help protect the back of the pastern and the heel bulbs from being injured from strikes by the toe of the hind hoof (overreaching), striking the rear of the hoof bottom (forging), and stepping on the edge of the shoe with the adjacent hoof potentially pulling it loose.

  3. Bumblefoot (infection) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bumblefoot_(infection)

    Alternately, the swelling could contain a hard lump [3] when these materials harden, or if the abscess becomes impacted with substrate (e.g. soil, straw, etc.) [3] Bumblefoot may also present as redness, swelling, small red sores, and depending upon severity and length of time with the condition, lesions, cracks, or discoloration.

  4. Limbs of the horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limbs_of_the_horse

    A shoe boil is an injury that occurs when there is trauma to the bursal sac of the elbow, causing inflammation and swelling. Multiple occurrences can cause a cosmetic sore and scar tissue, called a capped elbow, or infections. Shoe boils generally occur when a horse hits its elbow with a hoof or shoe when lying down. [29]

  5. Lameness (equine) - Wikipedia

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

    Capped hocks. Capped joint: Inflammation leading to the development of a "false" or acquired bursa over the point of the elbow (capped elbow, also known as a "shoe boil"), point of the hock (capped hock), or knee (capped knee, or carpal hygroma) which causes an obvious swelling in the area. [10] These are generally considered blemishes.

  6. Hock (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hock_(anatomy)

    Because the hock takes a great deal of strain in all performance disciplines, correct conformation is essential if the horse is to have a sound and productive working life. Common conformational defects include sickle hocks, post-legged conformation/straight hocks, cow hocks, and bowed hocks. Depending on the use of the horse, some defects may ...

  7. What Is a Ham Hock? 3 Southern Chefs Explain, and Share ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/ham-hock-3-southern-chefs-163448347.html

    “A ham hock, also called a pork knuckle, is the bottom part of the pig's leg that attaches the foot,” says Kelsey Barnard Clark, chef and owner of Eat KBC in Dothan, Alabama and the author of ...

  8. Soring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soring

    Soring is the use of chemicals, pressure or devices to cause pain to the front feet and legs of horses when they touch the ground. This results in the horses picking up their front feet higher and faster than they would do naturally.

  9. Bog spavin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bog_spavin

    Bog spavin is a swelling of the tibiotarsal joint of the horse's hock which, in itself, does not cause lameness. The joint becomes distended by excess synovial fluid and/or thickened synovial tissue bringing about a soft, fluctuant swelling on the front of the joint, as well as in the medial and lateral plantar pouches. Bog spavin is generally ...

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