1. #1
    Illusion
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    Doctor: 'Tough days ahead' for Barbaro

    KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. -- Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro was facing major problems for the first time since surgery to repair the right hind leg he shattered in the Preakness seven weeks ago, with Dr. Dean Richardson saying "we're in tough times right now."

    Barbaro had the cast on the leg replaced for a sixth time Monday -- the fourth time in a week. The latest development followed many hours of surgery Saturday night when doctors replaced the metal plate and many screws and also treated an infection.

    "I think we're in for tough times right now. I think we're going to have some tough days ahead," Richardson said at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center. "I'm being realistic about it. When a horse has a setback like this, it's a problem."

    Richardson, the chief surgeon at the New Bolton Center, looked haggard during the briefing, and said it took more than 15 hours from the start of Saturday's surgery before Barbaro had fully recovered from anesthesia.

    He said Barbaro was back in his stall in the intensive care unit, where he's been since the catastrophic injury occurred just a few hundred yards after the start of the Preakness.

    "Right now, he's happier," Richardson said. "He's got a normal heart rate, normal temperature, he's eating like crazy. He's very hungry. He's making lots of manure. He looks actually pretty happy today. Now we have to see how he responds to what's going on."

    The long cast applied Saturday night was replaced by a shorter cast Monday, and was done with Barbaro in a sling and under mild sedation, Richardson said.

    "The long cast was used as extra support during the anesthetic recovery phase," Richardson said. "It is much easier for him to move around his stall and get up and down with a short cast. We also found and treated an abscess in his left hind foot that was bothering him."

    Barbaro is receiving pain medication, antibiotics and other supportive care, Richardson added.

  2. #2
    Seattle Slew
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    Not surprising. I think this shows why 99.9 percent of horses with this injury are put down. One, the horse suffers a lot. Two, the cost of attempted care could reach millions of dollars. The infections the horse gets from the injury are likely worse than the broken bones. He could be put down if it gets worse.

  3. #3
    onlooker
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    Sad to say it, but its probably best for him to be put down. No need to make the horse suffer just because he won the Kentucky Derby. Im sure he wouldnt of got that much care and attention if he ever won it and was the favorite to win the triple crown.

  4. #4
    Illusion
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    Barbaro's medical condition is 'potentially serious'

    KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. -- Barbaro's condition turned "potentially serious" again Wednesday, a day after the Kentucky Derby winner's veterinarian gave a more upbeat report, saying the colt was stable and resting comfortably.

    Dean Richardson, the chief surgeon at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center, also said the colt faced "tough odds" and that doctors were looking at all possible treatments to keep the 3-year-old comfortable.

    "Our entire staff is determined to do all they can for this magnificent horse," Richardson said in a statement issued by the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals.

    A New Bolton Center spokeswoman said there will be an update on Barbaro's condition at a news conference Thursday.

    Barbaro, who shattered three bones in his right hind leg at the start of the Preakness at Pimlico Race Course on May 20, has undergone three surgical procedures in the past week. In the most recent one Saturday, Richardson replaced the titanium plate and 27 screws and treated two infections -- one in the injured leg and a small abscess on the sole of his uninjured left hind hoof.

    "Today we will focus on further diagnostics and keeping our patient comfortable," Richardson said.

    Doctors are also keeping watch for any signs of laminitis, a potentially fatal disease sometimes brought on by uneven weight balance.

    A major concern centers on the infection in the right rear pastern joint -- located above the hoof that was shattered into more than 20 pieces. While most of the fractured bones have healed, the joint that connects the long and short pastern bones remains problematic.

    Barbaro's recovery had been going smoothly until this recent series of setbacks. Saturday's surgery lasted three hours, and Richardson replaced the hardware that had been inserted into the leg the day after the Preakness.

    "He's facing tough odds, and his condition is guarded," Richardson said.

    Owner Roy Jackson said the sudden changes in Barbaro's condition made this a tough week.

    "We've been concerned all along," Jackson said Wednesday. "It's just one of those things. It's very difficult to climb the mountain when something like that happened."

  5. #5
    Illusion
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    Barbaro has life-threatening inflammation in hind foot

    I really think the end is getting near, but this horse is a true fighter.

    KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. -- He still looks every bit the champion. Only the fiberglass casts on not one but both of Barbaro's hind legs are indicators of something terribly wrong.

    "His ears are up, he's bright, he's looking around," Dr. Dean Richardson said Thursday. "If you look at this horse, it'd be hard to put him down."

    That precisely is the heartbreaking task that could be imminent because of a hoof disease so serious Richardson said the Kentucky Derby winner is "a long shot" to survive.

    "It could happen within 24 hours," Richardson said during a news conference at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center.

    Richardson said Barbaro has a severe case of laminitis in his left hind leg -- a painful, often fatal disease caused by uneven weight distribution in the limbs.

    "If he starts acting like he doesn't want to stand on the leg, that's it. That will be when we call it quits," he said.

    Richardson, who has treated Barbaro since the colt suffered catastrophic injuries in the Preakness on May 20, said 80 percent of the horse's left hoof wall was removed Wednesday with the sudden onset of the disease.

    Though he looks just fine, that doesn't reflect the true nature of his condition, termed "poor" by Richardson.

    "I'd be lying if I said anything other than poor," he said. "As long as the horse is not suffering, we are going to continue to try to save him. If we can keep him comfortable, we think it's worth the effort."

    Barbaro is being treated aggressively with pain medication and remains in the same stall he's been in since being brought to the intensive care unit at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals.

    Until his misstep at the Preakness, Barbaro's career was nothing short of brilliant.

    He won his first five starts, including the Florida Derby. His 6 1-2-length victory at the Derby was so convincing he was being hailed as the next likely Triple Crown champion and first since Affirmed since 1978.

    But seconds after the gates swung open at Pimlico, that career was cut short when the colt broke down, his right hind leg flaring out awkwardly because of three broken bones.

    Race fans at Pimlico wept and within 24 hours the entire nation seemed to be caught up in a "Barbaro watch," waiting for any news of his surgery and condition.

    And for the longest time, it all seemed to be going well.

    Barbaro's first six weeks of recovery were relatively smooth -- despite five hours of surgery to insert a titanium plate and 27 screws into his three shattered bones.

    Each day brought more optimism: Barbaro was eyeing the mares, nickering, gobbling up his feed and trying to walk out of his stall. There was great hope Barbaro somehow would overcome the odds and live a life of leisure on the farm, although he'd always have a hitch in his gait.

    Richardson, along with owners Gretchen and Roy Jackson and trainer Michael Matz, all believed the colt had a chance to recover.

    Until last week, when Barbaro's condition steadily worsened.

    The colt underwent three surgical procedures and four cast changes on the injured leg, followed by a hoof wall re-section to remove 80 percent of his left rear hoof.

    "I really thought we were going to make it two weeks ago," Richardson said. "Today I'm not as confident."

    Within hours of the grim update, roses and apples began arriving at the hospital, and hundreds of get-well e-mail messages were posted on a Web site set up by the New Bolton Center.

    The vet didn't mince words: "It's as bad a laminitis as you can have. It's as bad as it gets."

    He said he has discussed the situation closely with the Jacksons, who have stressed that their main concern is for Barbaro to be pain free.

    Several telephone messages left for the Jacksons and Matz were not returned.

    Richardson said Barbaro's injured right hind leg was healing well, but because a horse has to be evenly balanced to carry his weight, laminitis set in on the other foot. Secretariat, the 1973 Triple Crown, was euthanized due to laminitis in 1989.

    "The reason we cut away the hoof wall is because the hoof wall is not connected" to the bone, he said. "If you had a nail that was separated from the end you'd pull it off. It's dead tissue that's in the way of living tissue."

    Richardson said it would take several months for the hoof to grow back, and as long as six months to be completely healed.

    "What we're doing on this horse is absolutely unusual, but it's not unheard of," he said. "It's a devastating problem in horses that nobody has a solution to."

    Barbaro has been fitted with a sling to prevent sudden movements and allow him to shift his weight from side to side. The main goal is comfort.

    "The sling is on only some of the day, when it's off, he can lie down," Richardson said. "We are not torturing this horse."

    Edgar Prado, the jockey credited with saving Barbaro by quickly pulling him up in the Preakness, was devastated by the grim prognosis.

    "It's very upsetting," he said. "Barbaro has shown to everyone what a fighter he is. He showed it on the track and with all the surgeries he's had. It just goes to show what kind of courage he has. He's a true champion, and is fighting every step of the way.

    "All we can do now is hope and pray. We'll need a miracle, but maybe it will happen."

  6. #6
    Razz
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    Man this makes me sick. Thousands of people die every month that could be saved or at least taken better care of, and everyone is up in arms about this horse.

  7. #7
    bigboydan
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    i have to agree with you on this one razz.

    i really can't believe that espn news is airing press conferences with the vet the preformed the surgery on a horse!

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