Fetlock Arthrodesis Advances Provide Options

If pressed to pinpoint a single Achilles heel in the racehorse, it’s probably a fair bet to assume many would zero in on the fetlock–the intricate joint mechanism that in a racehorse travelling at top speed proves especially vulnerable to system failure. Indeed, 19 of the 22 horses that suffered catastrophic musculoskeletal injuries at Santa Anita during its benighted winter-spring meet nearly two years ago had sesamoid fractures.

In most cases, the prognosis for horses who suffer severe fetlock breakdowns is grim, but a procedure pioneered at the end of the 1970s called the fetlock arthrodesis suddenly provided a viable avenue to save some horses that would otherwise be euthanized.

Due to costs and limited range of activities for horses post-surgery, the fetlock arthrodesis–a procedure to stabilize the ankle, preventing joint movement by fusing it into a normal position for the leg–has been traditionally performed on horses with residual paddock value.

Perhaps the widest known fetlock arthrodesis recipient is Barbaro, the 2006 GI Kentucky Derby winner who suffered a complicated series of fractures to and around his right hind fetlock at the start of the 2006 GI Preakness S. In the end, Barbaro succumbed to these injuries, though only after an extended struggle.

But a program in California that has been underway for about a year has the aim of making the procedure a practical consideration for a wider net of injured horses.

“We have to recognize that there are times when we make decision based on finances,” said Ryan Carpenter, a SoCal-based veterinarian who performs the arthrodesis surgeries at Santa Anita. “So, we’re taking the approach that if you remove finances from the equation, what is the best course of action for this horse?”

As a rule of thumb, in the event an owner or trainer cannot afford the cost of surgery and convalescence–roughly $20,000 in total–expenses are shared between The Stronach Group (TSG), the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC) and the horse’s owner and/or trainer, said TSG Chief Veterinary Officer Dionne Benson. In some cases, TSG has picked up the entire tab, she said.

But the program–also employed at other TSG facilities in California, like Golden Gate Fields–has courted certain concerns. For one, the procedure is intricate and invasive, with the potential for a number of post-surgery complications. That horses who receive it are essentially paddock-bound raises long-term economic considerations.

Some have also suggested the program could be used to skew state fatality statistics, an assertion both Carpenter and Benson strongly deny.

“I would never do anything that I wouldn’t do on another horse,” said Carpenter, who added that the results of the program thus far are encouraging. Of the eight horses that Carpenter has performed fetlock arthrodesis surgery on over the past year, six have proven successful, he said.

“If American Pharoah needed the procedure, and we say it’s right and ethical and humane for American Pharoah to receive the procedure, then I think you have to say it’s right, ethical and humane for the $10,000 claimer to receive the procedure,” Carpenter added. “It’s either ethical or not, irrespective of value.”

What is Fetlock Arthrodesis?…

There are two primary candidates for fetlock arthrodesis, experts say: horses crippled with degenerative arthritis, and in racehorses, those that suffer a closed biaxial proximal sesamoid fracture (when both sesamoid bones break in the same leg).

The initial portion of the surgery concerns the removal of cartilage between the bones, to make the fusion as tight and stable as possible. “That’s the most important part of the procedure that’s often not done correctly,” warned Carpenter. “You need that bone-on-bone interface so that it can heal properly.”

A plate is placed across the front of the fetlock, which holds the whole joint in place. This plate is secured with screws that can be inserted into the fetlock, pastern, cannon bone and, when necessary, the sesamoids.

A “tension band,” which is essentially a wire that goes behind the fetlock joint, provides another layer of joint stabilization.

“When the sesamoid bones break, you have nothing that supports it back there, and the fetlock drops,” said Carpenter, of the need for this mechanism.

Not every horse that suffers a traumatic fetlock fracture is a candidate for the surgery. Compound fractures come with too great a threat of infection, for example.

Existing laminitis in the opposite limb is a serious problem, and “usually enough of a red flag that we would not proceed,” wrote Dean Richardson, chief of surgery at The University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center, in emailed answers to questions.

Most importantly, there needs to be a good flow of blood to the foot. “When a horse fractures its sesamoid bones and it drops its fetlock, they stretch the blood vessels,” said Carpenter, explaining the link between fetlock injuries and curtailed blood flow to the lower limb. “They don’t have a tremendous amount of collateral circulation when it comes to the foot, and that’s why tissue perfusion [the lack of adequate blood supply] is a big issue.”

Fetlock arthrodesis–pioneered by acclaimed veterinarian, Larry Bramlage–is long and complicated. In the course of perfecting the procedure, Carpenter reckons that he has shaved about an hour off the time he takes to complete the surgery, with it now taking him roughly two hours.

Because of the intensive nature of the procedure, coupled with the relative scarcity of viable equine candidates, there’s a limited number of surgeons across the country with the necessary skill sets to take the surgery on, experts say.

At the same time, “The procedure has evolved a lot from the way Bramlage first described it,” said Carpenter, pointing to the development over the years of locking compression plates, where the screws fix to the plate, making it a very “fixed, stable construct.”

And how successful is the fetlock arthrodesis surgery? In a 2008 article, Bramlage is quoted as saying that, “In the first group of horses we presented, the success rate of the primary treatment approached 70%.” For other kinds of injuries, such as degenerative arthritis, “It’s as high as 80%,” he added.

Likewise, Richardson said that success is inextricably linked to the severity of the original injury.

“Certain types of injuries such as complete disruption of the distal sesamoidean ligaments are much more difficult and the prognosis for success as defined above is probably only 50-60%, whereas fetlock arthrodesis in horses that need the joint fused for problems not related to being an active racehorse results in essentially a 100% success rate,” Richardson wrote.

Post-surgery, most horses are reasonably comfortable quickly after the fetlock is stabilized, say experts, though this is still the time when the risk of complication is high. “If you’re going to fail, you’re going to fail very quickly,” said Wayne McIlwraith, founder of the Orthopaedic Research Center at Colorado State University.

Laminitis and local infection are common medical hurdles to overcome in the short term–further down the road, experts warn of potential residual problems with the pastern region.

“The fetlock is meant to bend a lot for a reason,” said Carpenter. “Now that it can’t, you’re transitioning the stress to the other joints.”

For the first few months of convalescence, horses are restricted to box rest. After that, a process of light exercise can begin, leading eventually to a point where the horse can be turned loose in the paddock. This can take roughly six months, said Carpenter.

Though the overwhelming majority of horses will only ever be pasture or breeding-sound, Richardson said that a “small percentage” have been ridden at “low level work,” like trail riding. That these horses are essentially pasture-bound is not a reflection of pain in the fused joint, Richardson explained–rather, it’s due to the practicalities of a high-motion joint being fixed, immobile.

“Fusing it inexorably results in a marked asymmetry of gait that feels terrible when you sit on the horse,” Richardson wrote. “It is not painful to the horse but it looks bad and feels bad to the rider.”

Nevertheless, among some in the industry, the procedure carries a stigma. “When we started this, there were a lot of memories from these surgeries in the early days–how challenging they were, and how often they went poorly,” admitted Benson.

Several industry figures who spoke on the condition of anonymity also raised concerns about a lack–especially in the early days of the program–of clear guidance to determine which horses receive the surgery, and how the economics is structured.

According to Benson, TSG is in the process of developing standardized protocols to guide its California program. These primarily surround the funding mechanism, she said, but also include avenues to ensure others, like the attending veterinarian, weigh in on each case.

When asked if the CHRB, the state industry’s regulatory body, is overseeing the shape of these standards, equine medical director Rick Arthur said that, “I have certainly encouraged them to standardize protocols so all the horsemen understand what’s available, and what they’re being asked to do, and what they’re expected to do.”

The American Association of Equine Practitioners’ euthanasia guidelines outline five main points to assist veterinarian in making “humane decisions regarding euthanasia of horses.” These points are as follows:

A horse should not have to endure continuous or unmanageable pain from a condition that is chronic and incurable.

 

A horse should not have to endure a medical or surgical condition that has a hopeless chance of survival.

 

A horse should not have to remain alive if it has an unmanageable medical condition that renders it a hazard to itself or its handlers.

 

A horse should not have to receive continuous analgesic medication for the relief of pain for the rest of its life.

 

A horse should not have to endure a lifetime of continuous individual box stall confinement for prevention or relief of unmanageable pain or suffering.

The program, Benson said, has provided an opportunity to showcase the surgical advancements that have been made to the procedure over the years. “We’ve had far more successes, fortunately, than we’ve had issues,” she said, adding that ultimately, “Any decision that’s made on the medical side is made in the best interest of the horse.”

“Dr. Carpenter and the vets on our team are independent of the financial decision. They’re there to help make a medical decision for the horse,” added Benson. “And, if they say, ‘the horse has a reasonable chance of pasture soundness,’ then we turn it over to the people in the racing office to arrange the financial piece.”

Not Just Committed In The Short Term…

A not-inconsiderable sticking point to these surgeries is money. “I’ve long considered that if you’ve bred a horse and race it, or buy a horse and race it, you should be responsible for the welfare of that horse for the rest of its life” said McIlwraith. “Unfortunately, that’s an ideal that not everybody holds to.”

Which leads to the long-term economic considerations of caring for a pasture-sound horse. California’s aftercare program falls under the umbrella of the California Retirement Management Account (CARMA).

According to Madeline Auerbach, who founded the organization and remains on its board of directors, “CARMA’s position is that if this is veterinary driven, and the vets have determined that this is within their guidelines to operate on the horse, we support that and we support trying to provide services for the horse.”

Has the selection process for horses to receive the surgery thus far been vet driven? “It has been,” Auerbach replied. “It’s been vet driven in terms of: Is it worth trying or is it cruel and unusual punishment.”

Financially, CARMA is not “at this point struggling” to care for the horses, said Auerbach. But in the long-term, “We have to figure out a way that we get compensated for it,” she said, floating the idea of a fee or separate fund.

“We have not figured that out yet,” Auerbach said. “We’re still in the process of putting a dollar amount to it and trying to figure out trying to make sure that we do not deplete the funds. This year has been horrific, obviously, in terms of financial support, because we get most of our money from the purse account.”

(This recent TDN story breaks down the hit California purses have taken due to the COVID-driven betting shift towards ADW)

When asked if TSG will step in to provide additional funding in the event a horse who has undergone fetlock arthrodesis surgery finds itself in a financially precarious situation in the future, Benson replied: “If there comes a time when a horse in one of these situations, or a horse really in any risky situation, we want to help be part of the solution, not pass it down the road and assume it’s somebody else’s problem…We’re not just committed to the horses who race at our tracks for the short-term.”

Carpenter stressed the relatively small number of horses for which the surgery is applicable.

“If we have partnership from the industry to help decrease the financial burden to the owner, and we have well-respected lay-up facilities that are willing to take these horses on, maybe we find out that these horses can actually do more than we expected them to do, and we can place them at other places,” Carpenter said. “Then, this perceived burden may not be as big as it once was.”

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The Week in Review: Sparks of Brightness Amid the Winter Solstice

Leave it to one of the darkest days of the year to deliver two glimmering equine efforts that could combust into shining stars for the 2021 racing season.

On the cusp of the winter solstice, breakout races book-ended the Saturday Fair Grounds card. One was a smart, step-wise progression by a juvenile colt in a NW2L allowance who now has credible GI Kentucky Derby aspirations. The other was an admirably impressive comeback by a still-undefeated 3-year-old whose own chance at the 2020 Derby got derailed by injuries and untimely setbacks.

Both horses are campaigned by Godolphin, which is off to a rip-roaring start at the three-week-old New Orleans meet with a 7-1-5 record and $233,740 in earnings from just 17 starts through Saturday’s racing.

Proxy (Tapit) ably made the jump from the maiden-winning ranks to Derby relevancy in the first race Dec. 19. Even though his second lifetime two-turn win came against a short field, don’t hold that against him, as each one of the three rivals gave the Godolphin homebred a serious challenge.

Proxy brushed the gate at the break, recovered well, and emerged confidently from between horses to assume command onto the backstretch. The chart doesn’t show it, but he conceded the top spot between calls, giving up the rail and the lead to an eager pace prompter.

Proxy re-engaged and swatted away that foe at the entrance to the final bend, then braced for a tag-team attack from the two stretch-running colts who had been held in abeyance.

All four horses were within a length of one another three-sixteenths from the wire, and Proxy drifted out three times under left-handed pressure. He appeared to intimidate an outside rival, but being in close quarters only emboldened Proxy, and when asked for another level of torque in deep stretch he dug in and responded, opening up to win by 2 1/4 lengths at 7-10 odds for trainer Michael Stidham and jockey Angel Suarez.

Although Proxy’s final time of 1:45.56 was not stellar (76 Beyer Speed Figure), his effort impressed more from a “how he did it” perspective rather than “how fast.”

Proxy’s pedigree has a tantalizing, distance-centric slant. In 2007, his dam, Panty Raid, won the GI American Oaks Invitational S. at 10 furlongs on the turf, the GI Spinster S. at nine furlongs on a synthetic track, and the GII Black-Eyed Susan S. at nine furlongs on dirt.

Godolphin purchased Panty Raid for $2.5 million at the 2008 Fasig-Tipton November sale, and she most notably produced the Stidham-trained Micheline (Bernardini), who earlier this year was a MSW and GISP Godolphin filly who set a course record for 1 5/16 miles in a $500,000 grass stakes at Kentucky Downs.

Proxy, it should be noted, has raced on Lasix for both of his Fair Grounds wins after running second, beaten a neck, without it in his Monmouth Park debut. He’ll have to ditch the Lasix in order to stamp himself as a top-tier Derby candidate, because this year’s edition (and the major points-earning Derby prep races) will be conducted without that anti-bleeding drug.

‘Max’ is Back

A dozen races and nearly six hours later on Saturday, Maxfield (Street Sense) pranced onto the floodlit Fair Grounds main track for the Tenacious S.

If the passage of nearly seven months since his last start made you forget what a sleek and athletically gifted equine specimen he is, the dark bay’s presence in this relatively modest $75,000 nightcap would soon snap you back to those long, warm days of spring, when “Max” was ranked as high as third on the TDN Derby Top 12 and was last seen professionally dismantling a pretty decent field in the GIII Matt Winn S. even though he was not fully cranked for a prime effort that day.

Depending on which prism you choose to view him through, Maxfield is either the most unlucky four-for-four racehorse on the planet right now or the luckiest.

On the unlucky side, recall that Max unleashed the most visually impressive juvenile stakes effort of 2019 when he ransacked the GI Claiborne Breeders’ Futurity field at Keeneland that October. He loomed as one of the favorites for the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, but was forced to scratch the week of the race, and underwent ankle chip surgery in November that kept him sidelined until mid-winter.

Godolphin tasked trainer Brendan Walsh with mapping out a slow but steady 2020 comeback for Max. But just when he appeared poised to resurface in the entries, the pandemic hit, halting most racing and knocking the Triple Crown schedule askew.

Yet a few weeks later, this timing change appeared to work in Maxfield’s favor, because that May 23 Winn score would allow the homebred time for a summer prep race or two prior to the rescheduled Sept. 5 Derby.

But on June 10, Maxfield suffered a non-displaced condylar fracture in his right front leg while breezing a half-mile at Keeneland. Godolphin immediately issued a press release saying that it was looking forward to a 2021 campaign after the colt healed. But that prospect was hardly etched in stone.

So the fact that Max persevered through yet another long-haul rehab has to be considered the lucky part. The icing on the cake is that he thrived in Saturday’s comeback, and we still have yet to see his all-out best.

Shadowing the speed, the 1-2 favorite cut an intimidating presence while in stalk mode sitting second for most of an untroubled trip, and watching Max inch forward with metronomic precision down the backstretch gave the impression that he could have inhaled the frontrunner at will.

But jockey Florent Geroux instead waited until five-sixteenths out to cue his colt to quicken, with Max coming over the top at the three-sixteenths pole. He was hand-urged and not overly extended to win by 2 1/2 measured lengths in 1:43.35 (98 Beyer).

“I’m relieved,” Walsh said post-race. “It’s nice to get him back [to racing] and have him run so well. He was working so well going into it, you’re just looking for confirmation. He gave us what we needed to see…. He was a little fresh, so maybe he was a little more aggressive than normal. I don’t think he’s a deep closer by any means. He’s a stronger horse this year and I think we can ride him more prominently.”

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Secretariat Center Open for the Holiday Season

For the first time since opening their doors in 2004, the Secretariat Center at the Kentucky Horse Park will keep its reschooling operation up and running throughout the winter months.

Shelley Mann, who stepped on as the program’s executive director this September, spoke on their plans for the upcoming season.

“Typically in the past, we have fostered horses out or decreased our numbers for two or three months out of the winter,” she said. “This is the first year that we really want to stay open. We have an entirely brand new staff this year and we want to work.”

One reason why the facility has shut down in the past is the lack of an onsite indoor arena.

“There are going to be some days, unfortunately, where we won’t be able to get a ton of riding done,” Mann said. “But there are so many other things that we can do with the horses whether it’s handling them on the ground, teaching them to clip or doing things with them in the stalls- just handling them every single day that we can, rain or shine. We’re looking forward to it.”

For nearly two decades, the Secretariat Center has worked to prepare off-track Thoroughbreds for successful post-track careers by rehabilitating and training foundational skills that will help them succeed with their eventual adopters.

“We really pride ourselves on being the gold standard in Thoroughbred retraining,” Mann said. “I think what makes us unique is that we are not a rescue facility, we are a retraining facility. We have great relationships with our donors and our adopters, and we work to make that match between a quality horse that is athletic and versatile with a perfect home where they can be happy and healthy for the rest of their lives.”

In order to keep the barn open in the coming months, the Secretariat Center is conducting a ‘Be An Angel’ program this holiday season to help gather basic supplies the horses will use throughout the winter.

“We’re really working to provide as many opportunities for the horses as possible,” Mann said. “This year we have created a program where we have Be An Angel trees in a variety of locations around the Lexington area. Each ornament has a photo of a horse currently on the property and on the back is their Christmas wish list.”

Requests on the wish lists include girths, winter blankets, turnout sheets and more.

Be An Angel trees are located at the Secretariat Center main office, as well as KBC Horse Supplies, Rood and Riddle Veterinary Pharmacy and Hagyard Pharmacy. For those who wish to contribute, donations boxes are available at each of the tree host locations, as well as the Secretariat Center office lobby. Supply donations can also be made online through Amazon Smile and monetary donations can be made here.

The Secretariat Center sits on 22 acres at the Kentucky Horse Park and features various paddocks, riding arenas, a round pen and a 10-stall barn. The program typically houses between 10 and 15 horses.

While inquiring adopters are usually permitted to visit the facility and ride available horses, the process has been hindered this year due to the pandemic and ongoing travel restrictions. Mann and her team have had to adapt in order to continue adopting out their trainees.

“We do a lot of communications through live videos. Trainers can sit in on the calls. It’s been interesting to be able to branch out and think of new ways to find homes for these horses.”

One 3-year-old mare has been adopted out through online communication and will be going to her new home, quite appropriately, right before the holidays begin.

“Christmas Pickles (Awesome Again) has been very popular since we have put her up for adoption,” Mann said. “She’s a big girl at 17 hands, and was just recently adopted. She will be moving to North Carolina and will be our closest thing to a Christmas delivery.”

Mann said that with their location at the Kentucky Horse Park, she believes their team has a unique opportunity in terms of educating both the public and the industry on aftercare.

“It’s wonderful being here,” she said. “Education is really a focus of ours, whether it’s working within the industry with owners and trainers to educate on options for these horses after they’re done racing or reaching out to other facilities that want to promote and educate on aftercare.”

As she looks ahead to the new year, Mann said her team has even bigger goals for 2021.

“We have so many plans,” she said. “We’re so excited, but I would say really we’re trying to focus on how we can do things better in terms of increasing our outreach through education and within our community so that anyone that goes through the Secretariat Center has a memorable, positive experience.”

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Cool Day Belies Inexperience to Punch BC Ticket in Pellegrini

Making just the fourth start of his career, Cool Day (Arg) (John F Kennedy {Ire}) came with a daring late dash up the rail to upset Saturday’s G1 Gran Premio Carlos Pellegrini, earning a spot in the field for the 2021 GI Breeders’ Cup Turf in the process. Pinball Wizard (Arg) (Orpen), the narrow second betting favorite, photoed American-raced Village King (Arg) (Campanologist) to earn place honors.

Guided down to the inside to save ground down the long San Isidro backstretch, Cool Day raced with about three or four behind into the final half-mile. Full of run into the demanding straight, Cool Day was held up for a run with 500 meters to go and again with time ticking away. But, shifted back down to the fence, he knifed through underneath Pinball Wizard and rallied gamely to a narrow score.

Cool Day is one of six winners from the first crop of his sire (Galileo {Ire}–Rumplestiltskin {Ire}), winner of the 2014 G3 Juvenile Turf S. for Mrs. John Magnier, Michael Tabor and Flaxman Stables and Aidan O’Brien. The winner’s dam is a full-sister to Argentinian champion Cooptado (Arg), winner at home of the G1 Gran Premio Nacional (Argentine Derby) and third in the 2013 Pellegrini and a stakes  winner in Singapore, Dubai and in the U.S., where he took the 2017 Tenacious S. under the care of Tom Morley.

Saturday, San Isidro, Argentina
GRAN PREMIO CARLOS PELLEGRINI-INTERNACIONAL-G1, Ar$15,000,080 ($181,227), San Isidro, 12-19, 3yo/up, 2400mT, 2:27.78, gd.
1–COOL DAY (ARG), 118, c, 3, by John F Kennedy (Ire)
1st Dam: Cool Site (Arg), by Equal Stripes (Arg)
2nd Dam: Coordinada (Arg), by Ride the Rails
3rd Dam: Coqueterie (Arg), by Ringaro
1ST STAKES WIN. 1ST GROUP WIN. 1ST GROUP 1 WIN. O-Stud Estable C Mariana Eva; B-Haras Abolengo; T-Alfredo Franciso Gaitan Dassie; J-Eduardo Ortega Pavon; Ar$7,500,000. Lifetime Record: 4-2-1-0, $100,619. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating: C.
2–Pinball Wizard (Arg), 132, h, 5, Orpen-Pink Pony (Arg), by Pure Prize. O-Stud Don Teodoro; B-Haras Carampangue; T-Jorge Adrian Mayansky Neer; J-Juan Cruz Villagra; Ar$2,250,000.
3–Village King (Arg), 132, h, 6, Campanologist–Villard, by Pleasant Tap. O-Haras El Angel de Venecia; B-Haras Santa Maria de Araras; T-Juan Carlos Etchechoury; J-Brian Rodrigo Enrique; Ar$1,500,000.
Margins: HF, NO, 4. Odds: 8.65, 2.00, 5.70.
Also Ran: Tetaze (Arg), Emotion Orpen (Arg), Rohit Joy (Arg), Quiet Man (Arg), Enfermizo Paradiso (Arg), Last Corredor (Arg), Senor Fancy (Arg), Nunca Digas Never (Arg), Don Ringo (Arg), Negro Dream (Arg). Click for the Hipodromo San Isidro chart. Click for the free Equineline.com catalog-style pedigree.

WATCH: Cool Day earns a Breeders’ Cup berth in the Carlos Pellegrini

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