Suspensory Ligament Injuries: Mending With Marrow

“Our hypotheses were that horses with suspensory ligament desmitis, treated with bone marrow components from their own body, would hopefully return to soundness more rapidly than horses with conventional treatments, and have a lower rate of recurrence, which is a common problem in suspensory desmitis cases,” says Herthel.
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Suspensory ligament injury is a common problem in athletic horses, and it is often slow to heal, with a high recurrence rate when a horse returns to work. Douglas Herthel, DVM, of Alamo Pintado Equine Clinic in Los Olivos, Calif., has been using bone marrow in a new technique for treating these injuries. He began his study in 1995, looking at bone marrow, which contains stem cells, monocytes, platelets, and fat.

"A recent unpublished survey that was done at UC Davis indicates this is the single most common cause of lameness in the show horse," says Herthel of suspensory ligament injury. "It can affect almost any horse that is in athletic performance.

"The experience we had in treating these during the past 25 years–prior to stem cell therapy–was fairly dismal," he continues. "Ours is a referral practice, and we usually got the cases after they'd been looked at and treated numerous times. We were averaging only 20% success in return to full work."

Most of the horses used in his early studies were in dressage and jumping. "Our basis for using bone marrow in treating damaged ligaments was that it is a tremendous source of tissue healing components–growth factors, stem cells, and matrix," he says. The angiogenesis effect (formation of new blood vessels) is important for healing, along with increase of cellularity, fibroblast (connective tissue cell) numbers, and biomechanical strength. These traits had already been shown with stem cell therapy in rabbit collateral ligament studies

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Heather Smith Thomas ranches with her husband near Salmon, Idaho, raising cattle and a few horses. She has a B.A. in English and history from University of Puget Sound (1966). She has raised and trained horses for 50 years, and has been writing freelance articles and books nearly that long, publishing 20 books and more than 9,000 articles for horse and livestock publications. Some of her books include Understanding Equine Hoof Care, The Horse Conformation Handbook, Care and Management of Horses, Storey’s Guide to Raising Horses and Storey’s Guide to Training Horses. Besides having her own blog, www.heathersmiththomas.blogspot.com, she writes a biweekly blog at https://insidestorey.blogspot.com that comes out on Tuesdays.

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