Abstract

PURPOSE: To teach and to demonstrate the efficiency of ozone therapy in horses with chronic laminitis.
 
 MATERIAL AND METHODS: Six horses with chronic laminitis were treated with two ozonetherapy techniques. All horses were 4/5 or 5/5 grade lameness (1), showed severe pain in the fore limbs and were no able to move.
 Use used:
 - Inyectable distilled water
 - 14G Catheter needles
 - 500 ml blood transfusion bags
 - Venoset
 - Gloves
 - 60 ml syringes
 - 2% Lidocaine
 - Medicinal oxygen
 - Ozone generator
 - 21G butterfly needles
 1 Spanish horse and 2 Quarter horses were treated with hyperperfusion technique via cephalic vein injecting 60 ml of distilled water previously ozonized with 85 mcgr/mL of the oxygen-ozone mixture.
 1 Thoroughbred, 1 Appaloosa and 1 Quarter horse were treated with the hyperperfusion technique via the cephalic vein and with major autohemotherapy (2,3) extracting 250 ml of blood in a transfusion bag and ozonizing it with 250 ml of the ozone-oxygen mixture with concentration of 23-25 mcgr/mL.
 4 horses were treated weekly for 4 sessions (Spanish, 2 Quarter horse, Thoroughbred). Those patients improved between 90 and 95%. The grade of lameness were between 1/5 and 2/5 after treatment.
 2 horses (1 Quarter horse and Appaloosa) were treated once, they did not improved as they were not evaluated nor treated with the established protocol.
 
 DISCUSSION: Compared to conventional treatments (3), ozonetherapy yielded better results in time and quality of recovery.
 
 CONCLUSION: Ozonetherapy is the best choice we have developed for chronic laminitis in horses.

Full Text
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