Barbaro ~ America's Horse

Against all odds, Barbaro perseveres

From usatoday.com
By Tom Pedulla, USA TODAY

KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. — To see ailing Kentucky Derby champion Barbaro graze in a backyard at the University of Pennsylvania’s New Bolton Center is to barely recognize him.
The coat that gleamed at Churchill Downs in Louisville the day after he dominated the May 6 Kentucky Derby is blistered near his left shoulder, a complication of surgery. His tail is half its normal size because he ripped it as he struggled to wake up from anesthesia.
His right hind leg, shattered into more than 20 pieces when he took a misstep in the Preakness Stakes two weeks after the Derby, is protected by a fiberglass cast.
His left hind leg, which in early July developed laminitis — a painful, deadly disease caused by putting excessive weight on one leg because of injury to another — is bandaged for support.
And yet the horse many feared would have to be euthanized walks almost every day. Once viewed as a Triple Crown threat, he now takes deliberate steps as Dean Richardson, the surgeon heading the fight to save his life, leads him outside the intensive care unit to graze in a field. His appetite is good, and he grazes voraciously. He has been closely monitored since a police escort rushed him from Baltimore to New Bolton on Preakness night.
This scene is brightened when Barbaro attempts to rear up and is kept on the ground only by Richardson’s secure hold. The boundless spirit that enabled Barbaro to rattle off victories in his first six career starts remains strong, convincing owners Gretchen and Roy Jackson that he can overcome huge odds in his fight for survival.
“Barbaro is going to be a miracle when he makes it out because the odds were so stacked against him,” Gretchen Jackson says.
The Jacksons considered euthanasia after the onset of laminitis, which causes inflammation and usually devastating structural damage to the tissue that bonds a horse’s bone to the inner wall of the hoof. Most owners would’ve likely chosen that option in May at Pimlico Race Course, where the sight of Barbaro’s dangling right hind leg caused some racegoers to scream and cry.
“We discussed that maybe this was it,” Gretchen recalls of their mid-July conversation. “Dean felt he had a 10% chance of making it. That’s terrible.”
But the surgeon felt he had a very good chance “of controlling the pain,” she says. “If he failed in that regard, the horse would be put down.”
A surgical resection was done July 12, resulting in the removal of 80% of the hoof wall from Barbaro’s left hind foot. That also explains the white sign with blue lettering that greets visitors at the entrance to the facility: “Grow Hoof Grow.”
Support has been amazing
The sign is the first indication, but hardly the last, of an unwavering show of support for Barbaro.
The New Bolton lobby is filled with tributes, including 12 oversized cards from Churchill Downs. Beneath the heading “Once a Derby winner, always a Derby winner” are greetings from scores of fans:
“Hi, Barbaro. I hope you get well soon. Love, Mia.”
“Best wishes, Barbaro. You’re a winner and you’ll pull through. Much love, Jim.”
Then there was this note, signed by all of the children from Kelly Sumner’s second-grade class at Furry Elementary School in Sandusky, Ohio. “Barbaro, you have the world behind you, praying for a complete recovery,” it reads. “You are an inspiration to us.”
Says Sumner: “We were hoping to uplift Barbaro. Everyone at the school thought I was crazy.”
The card makes all the sense in the world to Lauren Goff, one of the children involved in sending it. “We were sad because he got hurt,” she says. “I hope he gets better.”
There have been other tributes:
• Soldiers presented the Jacksons a U.S. flag that had flown in the Middle East. They asked not to identify their Special Forces unit.
• A Bermuda teenager received permission to visit the equine star before she went to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore this summer to be treated for leukemia.
• The Barbaro Fund has raised more than $1.2 million for New Bolton.
Corinne Sweeney, associate dean at New Bolton, suggests the Jacksons’ willingness to stay the course with the high-profile case will aid the fight against laminitis. Increased attention should encourage more research funds, she says.
The hospital website has received more than 4 million views since its famous patient was admitted. Well-wishers include a couple from Edinburgh, Scotland, who repeatedly e-mail the colt simply to say, “Good morning.”
Of Barbaro’s stature and popularity, Gretchen Jackson says, “I think there’s a crying need for some high standards to live up to. There’ve been so many disappointments among our human athletes.”
Barbaro knows he’s special
While the son of Dynaformer cannot understand the meaning of the thousands of get-well cards or of the gift baskets of carrots and apples that are still delivered regularly, his body language suggests he is aware that he is something special.
“He loves pushing people around. He absolutely knows he’s the big boss horse,” Richardson says. “He’s got lots of star power — and he knows it.”
Barbaro has not required pain medication for close to six weeks. His right hind leg, with 27 screws used to repair fractured cannon, sesamoid and long pastern bones, is becoming increasingly stable. His cast was changed Monday. His left hoof is growing gradually.
If it’s too soon to declare Barbaro a medical marvel, his comeback is further evidence of the fortitude that helped him to the largest Derby winning margin, 61/2 lengths, since Assault’s 8-length rout in '46.
“I’ve had plenty of horses with the same types of problems who pretty much gave up,” Richardson says. “This horse has never shown anything like that. He’s always been trying.”
Barbaro seemingly never broke a sweat in the 1¼-mile Derby in storming home the final quarter-mile in 24.37 seconds, the most powerful closing kick since Triple Crown winner Secretariat in 1973.
“I patted him, and he wasn’t wet,” marvels Gretchen Jackson, recalling the moment before leading Barbaro into the winner’s circle.
Sadly, Barbaro sweated so profusely during his initial six-hour operation that the blistering on his left side resulted. White hair will eventually fill in. The part of the tail he lost just after surgery will regrow, the doctor says.
Laminitis is biggest problem
Cosmetic issues are insignificant compared with dreaded laminitis.
“If he did not have laminitis,” Richardson says, “at this point I’d be relatively confident we were going to get him out the door … because the fractured leg is at the point where nine times out of 10 we could manage it.”
Laminitis can be compared to the human loss of a nail. The key difference: The nail of a human being regenerates with relative ease. A horse’s hoof does not.
“You don’t walk on your nail. He walks on his leg,” Richardson says. “So it’s much, much more serious.”
More than two months after he characterized the long-term prognosis as “poor,” he is upgrading that to “pretty guarded.”
Larry Bramlage, an equine surgeon from Lexington, Ky., emphasizes that the beloved 3-year-old is exceeding most expectations.
“For most horses, when they lose the hoof wall, it’s usually fatal,” Bramlage says. "But he’s exceptional in many ways, and that’s why people hold out optimism.
“There are some individuals, just like people, who heal better than others. You have to be encouraged by a strong individual who should be the pinnacle of healing.”
Trainer Michael Matz knows of that inner strength firsthand. “He’s obviously come a long way. Each day is a day to the good,” he says, adding, “I always thought he would make it.”
While there is still hope Barbaro can eventually support himself on his hind legs well enough to serve as an extremely valuable stallion — and he would surely be valued at millions of dollars if that happens — everyone involved insists that possibility does not drive them.
“If gelding this horse would save his life, they would have me castrate him in a heartbeat,” Richardson says of the Jacksons.
Says Gretchen Jackson: “Our focus has just been on getting him back to being a horse. I can’t stand to see him in a stall like this. … I can’t wait for him to get out and be himself.”
If Barbaro cannot make it to the breeding shed, the Jacksons say they would be delighted to add him to the 18 horses stabled at their 190-acre spread near West Grove, Pa.
Doctor bills not an issue
The Jacksons say they have yet to receive bills for the hospitalization, for which there is no end in sight. New Bolton’s daily housing rate of $72 only scratches the surface of what they’ll owe in veterinary and surgical costs. Their financial commitment is extraordinary, even to those in the veterinary community.
“We’re all in this business because we love these animals and want to do what’s right for them,” says Gregory Beroza, chief of staff at the Long Island Equine Medical Center in Huntington, N.Y. “But there’s always a point where that financial number comes into it.”
Even in a best-case scenario, Richardson estimates Barbaro must remain hospitalized for at least another six months or even a year.
Roy Jackson, 69, is not shaken by that prospect. He knows all about adversity in sports.
Jackson used to own minor league baseball teams in Arizona and Pennsylvania. He also was president of Convest, a company that represented professional baseball players, from 1983 to 2000.
“We’re both pretty positive,” Roy Jackson says of himself and his wife. “There is nothing to be gained by asking what might have been or feeling sorry for yourself.”

Candles getting LOW!!!

Thanks for the article VB. This one does remind us of the still serious nature of his condition.

Everyone needs to go and light some candles NOW please!!!

Super article! Thanks also VB & Co…off to light candles!

Update 809: A great article from the UPenn Bellwether: How New Bolton Center Staff Joined Forces to Help Barbaro. It really details pretty much everything that has occured thus far.

And more importantly, another comfortable day for Barbaro. Alex recently spoke to Peter Brette (6:45 pm), who had heard from Michael, who visited Barbaro as usual. Barbaro did also get out to graze.

It was a wondeful inclusive article and wriiten by the hospital so that was neat… Barbaro has touched a lot of hearts and I hope that it continues it has been an eye opening experience for all…
JIngling in NY!

Thursday Morning~

Update 813: No update yet this morning. I saw Michael Matz as they were returning from the track. Michael had not yet heard from Dr. Richardson (not unusual for the time I saw Michael). Michael did mention Barbaro was well yesterday evening. It will be a few hours now until I do get an update, probably around 10:30 ish. In the meantime, here is an update on Stephanie’s (Miracle Horse Rescue) work via Michelle: IN HONOR OF BARBARO RESCUE CHALLENGE.

Thanks, Alex.

Update 814: Still no update.
Alex recently spoke to Michael (10 am) and he still had not heard. Since we all operate under the notion that no news is good news, there is no concern. Of course when Alex does get an update (will call Peter later) I will post it. Alex did speak to someone from New Bolton about the possibility of an interview with someone there, and he thinks that is his next interview project.

That’s OK. It would probably just be another one of those boring “another comfortable day” things.
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
Bring 'em on–all 100 of them.

Thanks for all your hard work, VB. I check this site 2-3 times a day, still.

Candles are a respectable 1200 + .

I wish they’d just say, “He’s FINE, don’t worry.”

Update 818: Rachel, from Kennett Florist just left this comment (timestamp: 8:51 pm)

Sorry we haven’t posted in a few days, it’s been busy and we’re still a bit short handed. It was a beautiful trip up to NBC today. Looks like we get one more nice day before the cold snap hits. I had a chance to talk to Dr Sweeney when I went up to drop off the big guy’s carrots and stud muffins. She said he’s doing well. He’s really enjoying his time outside to graze and she commented on how remarkable he’s doing. Of course we all know he’s a remarkable horse, with amazing spirit!

WE BELIEVE!!

Update 817: Jeannine Edwards just sent this e-mail, which includes a nice anecdote concerning Tom Albertrani and Bernardini as well as a quick preview to ESPNs racing coverage on saturday:
[I]
Last weekend at Belmont it was great to witness the breathtaking performance of a champion in the making, Bernardini. In the paddock before the race, Bernardini just stood out… he was like Adonis. He was a man among boys, even though he was competing against older horses. One touching moment was when he paraded around the walking ring of the Belmont paddock, and the large crowd that had assembled started applauding him, as if he were a rock star. It was something to see. Tom Albertrani, his trainer, is truly in awe of the horse. He says each race the colt seems to get stronger, and it just seems to get easier, he does everything effortlessly. I think Tom was nearly in a state of shock after the race. What was cute the day before the race, was Tom brought his wife Fonda (who used to gallop Cigar) and his two daughters Teal and Noelle, to our TV truck. I gave them a tour of our “production unit/control room on wheels” and they loved it. Tom’s 13-year-old daughter Teal would like to get into broadcasting one day, so she was truly amazed at the whole setup and how everything comes together. I asked the girls if they missed Dubai, where they were born and raised, and they said, rather melancoly, “Oh yes!!” Let’s wish them the best of luck on Nov 4 in the BC Classic! They are wonderfully genuine people who deserve all the success in the world.

This weekend is our last regular show of our summer horse racing series. (ESPN, 4-6pmET) We just have the BC telecast left after this. We have a 2-hour show that features 4 live races, the Queen Elizabeth and First Lady, both for F&M on turf at Keeneland, and the Champagne and Frizette, for 2-year-olds at Belmont. We also have a feature on female turf standout Gorella, and on the latest European runners pointing for BC. We also have planned a feature on the new Polytrack and other changes here at Keeneland, a preview of Todd Pletcher’s numerous and talented BC runners (he may set a record for number of starters), taped coverage of the Emirates Airline Champion Stakes from Newmarket Sat morning, as well as various interviews. It’s a packed show!
[/I]
Update 816: Peter just called (1:45 pm) and had just visited Barbaro. Barbaro remains comfortable. He groomed him and changed his bandages. Michael is now on his way over to take him out grazing etc. Its a lovely breezy and sunny afternoon.
update, 1:45 pm, thursday, october 12

Heaven help us, don’t go there. They changed the wording from “another comfortable night” to “feeling better” or some such thing and everybody 'bout had a heart attack! I prefer the same old boring thing. That way we know where we are. Boredom is GOOD with this boy. Enough excitement already.

:lol: :yes: :smiley:

You know what I really like, even more than the boring ‘he’s had another comfortable night’, is the ongoing devotion that both Peter and Michael show to this horse. The daily trips up and the grooming, etc. I’d expect the owners, Gretchen and Roy Jackson, especially as close as they live to NBC, to make regular trips to see him, but after all this time, I think it’s just stupendous that Peter and Michael are taking time out of their busy days to go see him. :smiley: More power to all of them. :smiley: :smiley: :smiley:

O that’s so true! We all freaked when they simply said, “there will be a press conference this afternoon”!!! :smiley: :smiley: :lol: :lol: :lol:

My heart sang when reading one of the recent posts that Bobby tried to rear when Dr R had him out grazing. Just the fact that he feels good enough to be stupid was delightful. How many of us have been in similar situations taking our horses out for the first time after a lengthy stall rest to have them go ballistic and end up staying up for weeks longer?!:yes: So glad Dr. R was there to control the big boy. I’ve been very surprised that they haven’t had chains galore on his halter each time they’ve taken him out to maintain control…what a good boy he must be. :yes:

It is nice to see New Zealand continues to follow Barbaro’s progress: Barbaro healing ‘surprisingly well’.

Friday Morning~

Thanks, Tim/Alex:
Update 821: Another comfortable night last night for Barbaro (thursday night). I saw Michael Matz as I was on the track for my second set … jogging Chappy, after her breeze the other day. Michael had heard from Dr. Richardson. It is positively chilly here this morning (my hands are still a little cold as I try to type) although it is also a cloudless sky, so hopefully a nice day ahead.
update 7:38 am, friday, october 13

DOC STEADY

Barbaro’s surgeon relentless through stress, critics, rehab

By DICK JERARDI

jerardd@phillynews.com

WHEN YOU have been doing something for nearly 30 years, you know what can go right and what can go wrong. Still, as June blended into July, Dr. Dean Richardson began to believe that his case of a lifetime was going to end with the outcome that everybody wanted. Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro’s fractured right hind leg was healing. Just about every sign was positive.
Perhaps all those people who are so attached to animals and really became attached to this animal, who had sent all those flowers and all those posters to the New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, were going to able to see Barbaro walk out of the hospital.
Then, with no warning, everything changed. Even now, weeks after that first week in July, Richardson - the chief of surgery at New Bolton and the doctor who performed the May 21 surgery on Barbaro the day after the colt shattered that right hind leg in the Preakness, a man who has seen just about everything there is to see in his business - finds those days hard to relive.
Seated at one of the desks in the auditorium where he first explained Barbaro’s injuries and then made the grim prognosis in mid-July, he went back to the weekend of July 8-9, describing all that went down before then and all that has transpired since.
Late that Sunday afternoon (July 9), Richardson attended a party honoring Gov. Rendell at Mark Reid’s Walnut Green Farm, a farm a few miles from New Bolton. He had just finished approximately 20 hours of surgery on Barbaro. He knew the issues had gone from serious to life-threatening. Outwardly, he was calm and relaxed. That belied how he felt.
“I was in tears by the end of that day, at home,” said Richardson, whose eyes were getting moist during the telling. "I almost get emotional just thinking about how upset I was about that day, because I thought we were going to lose him.
"Then, I was exhausted, physically and mentally. I don’t even like to think about that day.
"Getting him up was so stressful. Getting him up out of the pool and not having him stand and then fight us.
"It’s one thing for everybody else who was there, because there were tons of other people involved in this. They were all stressed. But I’m sure that on that one day, as stressed as everybody else was, that’s the one day I would say I’m sure I was more stressed than anybody else, because I knew that every decision that was made basically was mine - good decisions, bad decisions were my responsibility.
“That was an awful day. That’s when he was foundering. At that point, I knew we were in trouble. You second-guess every single thing you did from the day after the Preakness.”
It would be several days later when Richardson would tell the world that Barbaro had foundered, contracted the often-deadly hoof disease, laminitis, in his left hind foot. It was then that he would call the colt’s long-term prognosis “poor.”
"We had an awful lot of things going on, including very, very extensive discussions with Gretchen and Roy [Jackson, Barbaro’s owners] and Michael [Matz, his trainer] about whether or not that was the time to call it quits. I think everybody’s happy that we didn’t call it quits. The horse really has not suffered since that time. Minor discomfort at worst. The horse has had a lot of good quality time since then, and I can look myself in the mirror easily and say I haven’t put this horse through pain.
“I can’t say that that’s true for every single horse I’ve worked on. I know that I’ve had horses where I deeply regret that I kept them going longer than I should have kept them going. I make mistakes. Everybody makes mistakes. Sometimes, you think you’re going to pull them out of the fire and sometimes that doesn’t work out.”
When you decide in college that you want your life’s work to be with horses, as Richardson did at Dartmouth, you get attached to the animals. You really have no choice. And when you lose a patient, you don’t forget.
“It’s pretty devastating and it’s not just me,” Richardson said. “It’s all my colleagues, my residents, my interns, the nursing staff, everybody that gets involved in these horses, people really should understand that we get pretty tied up with these animals and I don’t mean like in a kind of schoolgirlish, ‘Oh, isn’t he a cute pony?’ type thing. You know, that’s your job, and you take it seriously. And the whole reason you became a vet is because you wanted to help animals.”

Richardson has been a surgeon at New Bolton for 27 years. He went to Dartmouth wanting to be an actor, but when the would-be drama major took a class in horseback riding, he was hooked almost immediately, reading “100 books about the theory of riding.”
Riding morphed into an all-encompassing infatuation with everything to do with horses.
“I just got very serious about it very quickly,” Richardson said. "Finally, it dawned on me that I was a crappy actor. I was in a bunch of stuff and I just learned after watching people that were better.
“The whole time, I was taking some science courses because, for me, science was relatively easy. I finally decided to become a vet.”
After spending a year working for a vet in North Carolina, he went to Ohio State Vet School. To this day, Richardson has never regretted his choice of profession.
“A lot of veterinarians have [had second thoughts], because the fact is, the more specialized, particularly when you do very, very sophisticated types of surgery and you recognize what you are getting paid, a pittance compared to what a human surgeon would get for a similar surgery, some people let that worry them,” Richardson said. “The fact is, I love my job. I’ve always loved my job.”
It was that mind-set that would not let Richardson give up on Barbaro, even when it seemed a reasonable alternative.
“It was always an issue of everyone agreeing that we would go on, because we thought we could manage his pain [with medication],” Richardson said. "That was the determining factor. You could walk up to his stall and look at him in the eye and he looked back at you. He’d eat carrots out of your hand. He wasn’t lying on his side and groaning.
“I know what painful horses are like. I’ve seen a lot of them. He wasn’t a horse that was in distress. It wasn’t hard for me to want to go on. What was hard for me to acknowledge, the reality was that the long term was going to be very, very long term. That was what we discussed. The Jacksons grasped that. We all basically bought into this notion that we’re just going to go and go until he tells he doesn’t want to go on.”
A perfect, if graphic description, of laminitis by Dr. Austin M. Moore, in Bloodhorse magazine, explains just what Richardson and his team were dealing with.
“Imagine that your shoe was actually part of your foot and inside the shoe are the bones in your foot,” Moore wrote. “Now imagine a disease that causes your foot [the bone] to break loose from your shoe; while you walk and stand your foot pushes through the sole of your shoe. Eventually the shoe wears away and you start walking on the bones in your foot. This is the reality of laminitis in horses.”
Richardson was convinced he could get Barbaro through the pain with all the medication. And he was right.
“I think we made the right decision on that,” Richardson said. "There’s hardly anybody out there that knows anything about horses that probably would have disagreed with that.
"Now, having said that, did I get crazy letters in the mail telling me I was inhumane, I should have put the horse down? Yeah, I got those. Did I get the phone calls telling me I was an awful person for spending money on a horse when there are starving people in Philadelphia? The answer is yeah, I got those.
“Cursing me out for wasting my time and rich people’s money on dumb farm animals. All those kind of hate mail and voice mail. I got all that, but that’s no big deal.”
There is a whole segment of society that never understood the outpouring for Barbaro anyway. The reality is that thousands of people are more attached to their animals than they are to fellow human beings. Thousands more just love animals because they do.
“There’s a whole group of people who understand that, and there’s some people who just don’t get it,” Richardson said. “Some people think just because someone really is wrapped up in an animal that they therefore don’t like people, and I don’t think that’s the case, either.”
Saying that, he pointed around the room at all the posters hanging from the walls.
“You look at all the people that signed all these [posters],” he said. “I am sure that not every one of these is a misanthrope. I’m pretty sure just because you like animals doesn’t make you misanthropic. I think that’s kind of an important point. I like people. I just happen to like horses.”

Richardson has always done his work in relative anonymity. Not this time.
“I’ve had a few name horses, but nothing like this,” Richardson said. "To my knowledge, nobody’s done anything with quite this much press.
“What you’re dealing with here is just modern media, too. The media now is so efficient at getting a story out. He did it in a Triple Crown race. If he’d been a horse that had run 10th in the Derby, it was hardly a story, even if the same surgery had been done. The deal was that he came out of the Derby looking to the world like he was a super horse.”
Richardson has handled the media equally as well as he has handled the horse. Very few people can do it and explain it so others can understand. He is one of those people.
He knew millions waited on the surgery that day.
“It is very easy to block that out,” Richardson said. "It makes absolutely no difference if it’s a 10-cent pony or [a multimillion-dollar horse like Barbaro]… It limits your options. It wasn’t like I would have to stop in the middle and wonder if the Jacksons will pay if I use a second plate. That’s the only thing where the value of the horse comes into play is how much money you can actually spend.
"Which is very different for us vs. a human orthopedic surgeon. If a human orthopedic surgeon gets into the middle of a surgery to fix your femur, he or she is not going to stop in the middle and go, ‘Well, I can’t spend more than a certain amount of money to fix it and I’ve run out of money,’ whereas we have to do that. That does happen to us.
"In this case, the money is not an issue just because the Jacksons would have paid whatever it took because they loved this horse. And they do love this horse. Money is just not an issue. That is one of the reasons I have steadfastly refused to discuss money. People keep wanting to ask how much does this cost. What difference does it make how much it costs?
"People, their imagination runs wild and that’s fine. As soon as I were to say, ‘Oh, it’s costing X-number of dollars’ then all of a sudden, that ends up the story. That’s not the story. The story is the horse is being cared for the best that we can.
“People ask me, ‘Well, how come you haven’t checked his semen to see if he’s fertile?’ It makes no difference. If he were a gelding, they’d be saving him for what he did for them.”

For 6 weeks, the story was that Barbaro was making steady progress. Then, the story changed dramatically.
“Before he got into that trouble in early July, I was really starting to get optimistic at about that point,” Richardson said. "He had no signs of infection, but then he started to break the pastern fusion down a little bit. We went back in, replaced a couple of screws, ended up with an infection…
“The point is that he started to have some problems much later than I thought [likely], but that’s the nature of it. It’s an unusual situation. And then he foundered so badly. If he hadn’t foundered, the right hind was definitely under control. The right hind was markedly stressed more by the foundering in the left hind, which made my life harder and his life harder.”
When problems start to manifest themselves in horses, they tend to multiply quickly.
“That’s true in human medicine as well, but not to the extent that it is in horses,” Richardson said. “Horses tend to snowball very fast.”
That’s what happened with Barbaro.
“He definitely had some pus in his left hind foot,” Richardson said. “The biggest problem was the acute problem in his right hind. He got super stressed by the whole situation. It was just a perfect storm of problems right in that one spot. I think that led to his acute laminitis.”
These days, Barbaro continues to have a cast on his right hind, which has healed wonderfully. His left hind is bandaged. The bandage is changed daily.
Without the laminitis, “he’d have been out of the cast [on his fractured leg] already,” Richardson said. “By now, he’d been in a splinted bandage.”
The right hind is still an issue, but not a major issue.
“There’s details about where it stands right now that aren’t perfect,” Richardson said. “We’ve had some collapse… He’s got a slight curvature of his leg, which is going to be something we are going to have to worry about down the road, the way he loads his leg. That’s not my worry right now. My biggest worry is his left hind foot.”
And only time will tell about that, much more time. Months, for sure.
“He’s just got to stay walking,” Richardson said. “If he stands and walks comfortably… As long as he does that, we can manage him a long time while the foot comes down. His foot is growing, but it is a long process.”
It is sort of the equine equivalent of a torn-off toenail.
“Only it’s bigger, takes longer,” Richardson said. "It’s more important to the exact structure of it. You’ll see people who have crushed fingers that their nails come back deformed. That’s no big deal. It doesn’t impair their function.
“If his foot doesn’t come back and have a reasonable structure, it’s not going to work. So we need him to get the foot to a reasonable structure and it is not an easy thing to do. Part of it’s going to be the way he heals and some of it’s going to probably be just dumb luck and another will be attention to detail.”
Much could still go wrong.
“He could get colic, pneumonia, get infections in his foot,” Richardson said. “He could founder in any of his other three feet. There’s all kinds of things that could happen, and he could have a setback in his left hind foot. He could lose ground.”
Even if Barbaro gets over the laminitis, there simply are no guarantees.
“Things break in horses’ legs,” Richardson said. "It’s conceivable he could rebreak anything that we have in there. A bone is a bone is a bone. They can break it.
"Eventually, his leg is just going to get stronger. If everything goes well, bone is the most miraculous substance in your body in terms of its ability to reconstitute itself. Everything else in your body heals in the sense of scar tissue. Bone gets as good as it ever was and better. It’s the only structure in your body like that.
“There’s nothing else in your body like that. Your brain sure as hell isn’t. People challenge their liver, but it’s not like that.”
Since the colt got through the immediate days after the laminitis when Richardson had to cut off much of the hoof wall on his left hind, Barbaro has been as comfortable as possible. He had a significant weight loss after all the trauma, but is slowly getting that back. The colt grazes outside daily. Still, his future remains uncertain.
"I have to correct people when they say, ‘Congratulations,’ " Richardson said. “Throw me a party when the horse leaves the hospital. I honestly don’t think anything’s been accomplished until the horse leaves. I really don’t. I know people don’t believe that, but that is the truth. I don’t think we’ve actually accomplished until the horse actually makes it. We certainly haven’t accomplished our goal.”
Now, Richardson, the Jacksons, Matz and everybody else can only wait.
“If I could have some miraculous way of speeding the process up… if I could have this horse out of the hospital, believe me, there’d be nobody happier,” Richardson said.
“It’s not because I don’t like the horse, because I’m actually very, very fond of him, but admit it, it’s intensely stressful, because you just worry about him all the time.”
Richardson has had 27 years’ worth of patients. He treats them all the same, but…
“Yeah, it is different,” Richardson said. "It’s become different. I’ve had lots of other horses that I’ve cried my eyes out over, been devastated when I lost them. I can reel you off dozens of them by name going back 27 years, but this is different.
“Part of it’s how much I have invested, but that’s not just it. It’s also the weight of the wider world wanting this horse to survive. Certainly, if good wishes could heal the horse, this horse would be running in a field right now.”

That is a fabulous interview.

Sally

Oh my…I am sobbing…what a fabulous interview! I had no idea the extent of the problems getting Barbaro to stand after the laminitis/hoof removal surgery. No wonder Dr. R looked so drawn and haggard in the press conference after that surgery! Holy-Moly…what a great, great interview. THANK YOU for sharing it!!

[QUOTE=eggbutt;1929445]
Oh my…I am sobbing…what a fabulous interview! I had no idea the extent of the problems getting Barbaro to stand after the laminitis/hoof removal surgery. No wonder Dr. R looked so drawn and haggard in the press conference after that surgery! Holy-Moly…what a great, great interview. THANK YOU for sharing it!![/QUOTE]

All I can add to Eggbutt’s comments are DITTO!

What a great interview!

Now, off to light a few more candles. :slight_smile: