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Sidewinder Gait: A Poor Prognosis No Matter The Cause - Horse Racing News


Sidewinder Gait: A Poor Prognosis No Matter The Cause
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Sidewinder gait in horses looks as odd as its name: An affected horse walks with his body and pelvis drifting out to one side; a severely affected horse may spin or circle with their hind legs moving in one direction and their thoracic limbs moving differently to compensate.
The disease is poorly understood, in part because it's difficult for the horse to stand in one place or symmetrically load his hind limbs. Sidewinder gait can come on gradually or suddenly.
Drs. Monica Aleman, Emily Berryhill, Kevin Woolard, Charlotte Easton‐Jones, Tania Kozikowski‐Nicholas, Sue Dyson and Isabelle Kilcoyne hypothesized that the gait might be caused by neurologic or musculoskeletal issues. They completed a retrospective study of 37 horses that were seen for sidewinder gait at the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital at the University of California, Davis, and the Centre for Equine Studies at the Animal Health Trust in Newmarket, England, between 2000 and 2019.

California , United-states , Monica-aleman , Kevin-woolard , Emily-berryhill , Williamr-pritchard , Tania-kozikowski , Charlotte-easton , Isabelle-kilcoyne , University-of-california , Animal-health-trust-in-newmarket , Centre-for-equine