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  2. Pastern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastern

    The pastern is a part of the leg of a horse between the fetlock and the top of the hoof.It incorporates the long pastern bone (proximal phalanx) and the short pastern bone (middle phalanx), which are held together by two sets of paired ligaments to form the pastern joint (proximal interphalangeal joint).

  3. Equine conformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_conformation

    There is a delay time to get the feet off the ground to accelerate, and thus long pasterns make the horse poor for speed events. The horse is best for pleasuring riding, equitation, and dressage; Short, upright pasterns. Pasterns Short and Upright. A horse's pasterns are short if they are less than 1/2 length of cannon.

  4. Mud fever - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mud_fever

    Mud fever, also known as scratches or pastern dermatitis, is a group of diseases of horses causing irritation and dermatitis in the lower limbs of horses. Often caused by a mixture of bacteria, typically Dermatophilus congolensis and Staphylococcus spp., mud fever can also be caused by fungal organisms ( dermatophytes ).

  5. Laminitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laminitis

    Laminitis is an inflammation of laminae that affects the feet of ungulates and is found mostly in horses and cattle. Clinical signs include foot tenderness progressing to inability to walk, increased digital pulses, and increased temperature in the hooves.

  6. Soring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soring

    The horse's pasterns have darker hair than the rest of the horse's coat. The horse at rest stands with its weight unnaturally shifted to its hind legs, sometimes described as "standing in a bucket". The horse carries its hocks low and may twist them outward when moving. The horse lies down for extended periods of time, and is resistant to ...

  7. Limbs of the horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limbs_of_the_horse

    Skeleton of the lower forelimb. Each forelimb of the horse runs from the scapula or shoulder blade to the third phalanx (coffin or pedal) bones. In between are the humerus (arm), radius (forearm), elbow joint, ulna (elbow), carpus (knee) bones and joint, large metacarpal (cannon), small metacarpal (splint), sesamoid, fetlock joint, first phalanx (long pastern), pastern joint, second phalanx ...

  8. In Luigi Mangione's Maryland hometown, questions swirl ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/luigi-mangiones-maryland...

    TOWSON, Maryland – In a suburb of Baltimore, Thomas J. Maronick Jr., sat in his law office struggling to understand why the promising scion of a prominent local family he knows well now sits in ...

  9. Navicular syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navicular_syndrome

    The prognosis for a horse with navicular syndrome is guarded. Many times the horse does not return to its former level of competition. Others are retired. Eventually all horses with the syndrome will need to lessen the strenuousness of their work, but with proper management, a horse with navicular syndrome can remain useful for some time.