I've only ridden Disco once since the Kate clinic, but boy do I have a legitimate reason.
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| At least it was a good ride. | 
Just after the Kate clinic, he started not finishing his feed. Long story short, I thought we were either dealing with ulcers or teeth, and started out treating it like ulcers, although I knew he already had a routine dental coming up anyway since he's on a 6 month schedule right now, so we were covered either way.
WELL. Guys. It was decidedly not ulcers.
Disco has a fractured first molar, tooth 309 in dentist parlance. We have no idea how it happened. We do know that it happened in the last six months because it was normal at his last dental in February. And we suspect based on when he went off his feed that it happened in the last month.
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| Healthy 409 shown in the lower right for comparison. | 
My dentist immediately referred me to Rood and Riddle. We are equidistant to Purdue University and R&R, but she said R&R is who you want for this one. Before they saw the photos, R&R quoted me a range of prices between $2,300 and $9,000, because depending on how it cracked, it could either be done under standing sedation and one overnight in the hospital, or it could require the "most advanced extraction type" which requires fully flat out sedation and 3-4 nights in the hospital.
Unsurprisingly, my man has expensive taste. After seeing the photos, Dr. Tanner suspects the that the tooth is fractured in just about the worst way possible, with the root likely still present across the entire tooth, but the above-the-gum part missing across half of it. He needs to go fully under for this procedure which they called a Lateral Wall Alveolectomy.
As you can imagine, that hit me with a big thud. We were supposed to be sending him off to Kate's soon, not dropping almost 5 figures on a surgery. But it makes it feel better to know it's worth it: since the dental we've been soaking his feed, and he immediately started cleaning his feed pan again, so I know he's in pain.
They can't get him in until mid-October, and I have no idea when he'll be able to wear a bit again at this point. So, we're in a holding pattern for now.
HORSES!


Oh no! I’m so sorry this happened. Ulcers would have been the better diagnosis as far as your wallet, lol.
ReplyDeleteOi. Poor Disco, but I glad for both your sakes that it's the tooth and NOT ulcers. Too bad about the delay in 'Kate camp,' though.
ReplyDeleteOuch for both of you! Although in the scheme of ways horses break, a fixable but expensive problem seems better than many other options.
ReplyDeleteOh for goodness' sake Disco!
ReplyDeleteI've managed a few Friesians who also fractured their molars, some with abscesses (Friesians seem to have really crap teeth). They all did unbelievably well afterward and had smooth recoveries!
Jeez!!!
ReplyDeleteOuch! That hurts in so many ways!
ReplyDeleteOh no :( That's rotten luck. I'm so sorry. Here's hoping for a straight forward procedure and full recovery without complications. Your poor wallet :(
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry. Hoping for a quick recovery.
ReplyDeleteDr. Tanner is the one who did Hampton's tooth fiasco! Top notch. Speedy recovery to Disco and your wallet. I love horses?
ReplyDeleteHorses sure do know how to ruin a good plan, don't they? Glad you figured it out pretty quickly though. Hopefully it goes more smoothly than anticipated for your wallet's sake. Poor Disco!
ReplyDeleteOh no, that stinks for both of you! And he's so young to have to have a tooth extracted too.
ReplyDeleteOh no!!! Poor Disco. And your poor wallet.
ReplyDeleteBasic question but I'm newish to horses. How did your dentist identify that the tooth was fractured? Visual exam? X-rays?
ReplyDeleteBoth, in the end, but my dentist DVM initially diagnosed it visually. If you look at the photos she took, there are 3 images of the broken tooth and one of its healthy counterpart on the other side of the mouth, and the broken tooth looks nothing like the healthy one - it's missing two "pulps" (the circles) and a lot of surface area. That was enough for R&R to diagnose as well, although they still asked my regular DVM for additional X-rays, which we took and sent over. Everything will be further confirmed with a CT scan the day before surgery this week. So, lots of diagnostics but it's obvious enough from the naked eye/photos.
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