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Second Chances
Compiled with the assistance of
Katie Merwick www.secondchanceranch.org
Frankie
Letter to the Editor
Following is a story about a life-threatening
injury and the remarkable recovery of a racehorse named Frankie. The story is
written by Vanessa DeRoux and shares her experience in providing a racehorse
with a last chance at life.
I believe your readers
will enjoy learning that there are opportunities to heal horses with
innovative methods and will be touched by the second career that Frankie is
given at the end of the story. I believe its
also time to increase awareness that our industry is overflowing with
physicians, veterinarians, veterinarian tech-nicians, rehabilitation personnel,
trainers and grooms who willingly step up to solve difficult problems. They all
do this without compensation because they truly love these wonderful equine
athletes. Pegasus Equine Rehabilitation and Training Center is just one of
several centers which are stepping up every day throughout this country.
Sincerely, Bethea
Hill Pegasus Equine Rehabilitation Director
t was a sunny spring day in late
April 2007 when five-year-old racehorse Frankie stepped off the trailer at
Pegasus Equine Rehabilitation in Redmond. The 30-hour van ride from California
would have been tiring for even a healthy horse, but for Frankie, who had been
battling an infection in his left front leg for over two months, it was
grueling. His ribs were visible even underneath the dullness of his thick gray
coat and his eyes lacked any spark of energy. Frankie had come to Pegasus as a
last resort. His life rested solely on the hope that hyperbaric oxygen therapy
would heal him. A few months prior to his arrival
at Pegasus, Frankie had sustained a severe injury to his left front digital
flexor tendons. As a result, he had a large infected wound on the inside of his
left front leg that wouldnt heal. Despite numerous attempts to control
the infection and heal the wound, nothing seemed to work. Unwilling to give up,
Frankies owners networked within the equine industry to fathom a way to
help him. Through their contacts, they got in touch with Dr. Mark Dedomenico,
owner of Pegasus Equine Rehabilitation and Training Center, who generously
offered to take in Frankie as a case study. Upon
his arrival at Pegasus, due to the severity of his wound, Frankie was confined
to a stall with a minimal amount of hand-walking. A pressure bandage was kept
on his leg at all times and he received a course of antibiotic and
anti-inflammatory medications. The wound on Frankies leg measured 8.6 cm
in length and 4.7 cm in width. The first course of business was to cut away all
the dead and damaged tissue that was hindering his recovery. He also
immediately began to receive the oxygen therapy treatments.
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) consists of
placing the horse in a large chamber, where it receives 100 percent oxygen at
two to three times the normal atmospheric pressure. This increases oxygen
saturation in the bloodstream and body tissues, achieving up to 15 times the
normal tissue-oxygen level. This high level of oxygen enhances the bodys
ability to heal itself, bolsters the effects of any antibiotics that the animal
might be on and reduces recovery time from surgery, infection, illness or
injury. Frankies initial course of treatment
was to receive oxygen therapy daily for 60 minutes. Within the first week of
receiving oxygen therapy, the swelling in Frankies leg had decreased
dramatically. After just two weeks, Frankie was
able to come off both the antibiotics and the anti-inflammatory medications.
Within three weeks, the wound was visibly shrinking and the tissue healthy and
pink. The changes were so positive that Frankie now only needed oxygen therapy
every three days. Thirty days after his arrival at Pegasus and 22 HBOT
treatments later, Frankies wound had shrunk to 4.9 cm in length and 3 cm
in width. On June 12, 2007, Frankie received his
final HBOT treatment. His wound measured only 3 cm in length and 1.5 cm in
width. He had put on weight, was playfully spunky and frisky, and enjoyed
walking on the Eurociser twice a day with the other horses. In July, Frankie
began working in the swimming pool and on the underwater treadmill to gain back
his cardiovascular fitness and begin strengthening the damaged tendons. In
addition, he began walking under tack again, albeit in a western saddle! Over
the next few months, his improvement continued. His muscle tone developed, his
fun-loving personality returned, his coat gleamed with health and his wound had
all but disappeared. He would never race again, but he was healthy and happy
and ready to move on to another career. On
September 13, 2007, less than five months after his arrival at Pegasus, the
staff gathered to say goodbye to Frankie as he stepped onto a trailer for his
return to California. As everyone waved goodbye, he headed off to his new life
on a ranch where he would help troubled youth by being a friend and companion
and giving them a second chance at life when everyone else had given up on them
the same second chance that Frankie had been given at Pegasus.
Rehabilitation Team
All services and care for Frankie were donated
by the following: Pegasus Equine Rehabilitation
Center Dr. James Bryant, Pilchuck Veterinary
Hospital in Snohomish Dr. Fairfield Bain
Whitty Boome, Re-Wrap
Bob Hubbard Horse Transportation
A native of Alaska, Vanessa DeRoux spent nine
years in Southeastern Pennsylvania, where she received her BS in equine science
from Delaware Valley College. Upon graduation, she managed the 1,000-acre
non-profit Bucks County Horse Park, overseeing the facility, staff,
membership-base, and helping to run over 50 annual horse shows in almost every
discipline. In addition, she co-managed the private boarding facility where she
stabled her Thoroughbred mare. DeRoux moved back to the Pacific Northwest in
early 2007 when she joined the Pegasus rehabilitation team.
Washington Thoroughbred, January 2009, page
44
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